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SHORT-TERM ADAPTATION OF HIGHER PLANTS TO CHANGING LIGHT INTENSITIES AND EVIDENCE FOR THE INVOLVEMENT OF PHOSPHORYLATION OF THE LIGHT HARVESTING CHLOROPHYLL alb PROTEIN COMPLEX OF PHOTOSYSTEM II
Authors:Holger  Dau Ora  Canaani†
Institution:Department of Microbiology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA19107;Department of Biology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA19140, USA
Abstract:Abstract— The short-term adaptation of intact leaves to an increase in light intensity was studied by an analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence and oxygen evolution monitored by photoacoustics. An increase in light intensity led to an oxygen “gush”. This “gush” was followed by a large (up to 120%) biphasic increase in the yield of oxygen evolution characterized by a fast phase (T = 0.5–2 min) and a slow phase (T = 4–20 min). The fast phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to a decrease of fluorescence, whereas the slow phase was accompanied by a parallel fluorescence increase. A comparison of fluorescence parameters with oxygen yield indicates that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to an increase in the antenna size of photosystem II. The slow phase was not inhibited by the uncoupler Nigericin but it was absent in chlorophyll-b-less barley mutants deñcient in the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex of photosystem II (LHC II). These experiments indicate that changes in the LHC II mediated energy distribution, which occur in the time-range of several minutes, are involved in the adaptation to changing light intensities. Moreover, electrophoretic analysis of 32P orthophosphate labeled leaf discs adapted to low and high light intensities suggests that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen evolution involves dephosphorylation of the 25 kDa polypeptide of LHC II, by a small extent of 12%. The trigger for the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield does not involve the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool. It was found that in response to the increased light intensity, the plastoquinone pool became more reduced as judged by model calculations. Experiments with the uncoupler Nigericin suggest that the control of the slow phase of adaptation to increased light intensity was also not exerted by the pH gradient across the thylakoid membrane. The similarities between the adaptation to increased light intensity and the state II to state I transition suggest that both adaptation phenomena involve LHC II dephosphorylation possibly triggered by the cytochrome b6/f complex.
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