CHLOROPLAST PIGMENTS and THEIR BIOSYNTHESIS IN RELATION TO LIGHT INTENSITY* |
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Authors: | Karl H Grumbach Hartmut K Lichtenthaler |
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Institution: | Botanisches Institut der Universität Karlsruhe, Kaiserstraße 12, 7500 Karlsruhe, W. Germany |
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Abstract: | Abstract— Depending on the light intensity that they received during growth, radish seedlings altered not only the pigment and quinone composition of the thylakoid membrane but also the chloroplast ultrastructure. In strong light, sun chloroplasts of radish were very similar to those from sun leaves of beech trees, while those developed under under dim light possessed a typical shade chloroplast. Radish shade chloroplasts contained a higher chlorophyll content and a higher concentration of xanthophylls resulting in a lower xanthophyll to carotene ratio as compared to sun chloroplasts. Chloroplasts from radish grown in strong light showed a much higher activity in their terpenoid metabolism than plastids from shade plants. Chlorophylls and carotenoids which are involved in the absorption of light and the transfer of energy during photosynthesis were labeled by 3H]-mevalonate to a much higher degree in plastids from sun leaves as compared to plastids from shade leaves. This shows that in strong light where pigments are continuously broken down and resynthesized in order to maintain photosynthesis, chlorophylls and carotenoids exhibit a much higher turnover rate than the pigments of shade plants. |
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