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Query: UMLS:C1832526 (
PCC
)
5,967
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
At room temperature, the chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence induction (FI) kinetics of plants, algae and cyanobacteria go through two maxima, P at approximately 0.2-1 and M at approximately 100-500 s, with a minimum S at approximately 2-10 s in between. Thus, the whole FI kinetic pattern comprises a fast
OPS
transient (with O denoting origin) and a slower SMT transient (with T denoting terminal state). Here, we examined the phenomenology and the etiology of the SMT transient of the phycobilisome (PBS)-containing cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp
PCC
7942 by modifying PBS-->Photosystem (PS) II excitation transfer indirectly, either by blocking or by maximizing the PBS-->PS I excitation transfer. Blocking the PBS-->PS I excitation transfer route with N-ethyl-maleimide [NEM; A. N. Glazer, Y. Gindt, C. F. Chan, and K.Sauer, Photosynth. Research 40 (1994) 167-173] increases both the PBS excitation share of PS II and Chl a fluorescence. Maximizing it, on the other hand, by suspending cyanobacterial cells in hyper-osmotic media [G. C. Papageorgiou, A. Alygizaki-Zorba, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1335 (1997) 1-4] diminishes both the PBS excitation share of PS II and Chl a fluorescence. Here, we show for the first time that, in either case, the slow SMT transient of FI disappears and is replaced by continuous P-->T fluorescence decay, reminiscent of the typical P-->T fluorescence decay of higher plants and algae. A similar P-->T decay was also displayed by DCMU-treated Synechococcus cells at 2 degrees C. To interpret this phenomenology, we assume that after dark adaptation cyanobacteria exist in a low fluorescence state (state 2) and transit to a high fluorescence state (state 1) when, upon light acclimation, PS I is forced to run faster than PS II. In these organisms, a state 2-->1 fluorescence increase plus electron transport-dependent dequenching processes dominate the SM rise and maximal fluorescence output is at M which lies above the P maximum of the fast FI transient. In contrast, dark-adapted plants and algae exist in state 1 and upon illumination they display an extended P-->T decay that sometimes is interrupted by a shallow SMT transient, with M below P. This decay is dominated by a state 1-->2 fluorescence lowering, as well as by electron transport-dependent quenching processes. When the regulation of the PBS-->PS I electronic excitation transfer is eliminated (as for example in hyper-osmotic suspensions, after NEM treatment and at low temperature), the FI pattern of Synechococcus becomes plant-like.
...
PMID:Fluorescence induction in the phycobilisome-containing cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp PCC 7942: analysis of the slow fluorescence transient. 1744 39
We present here three-dimensional time-wavelength-intensity displays of changes in variable fluorescence, during the O(JI)PSMT transient, observed in cyanobacterium at room temperature. We were able to measure contributions of individual chromophores to fluorescence spectra at various times of fluorescence induction (FI). The method was applied to a freshwater cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. (
PCC
7942). Analysis of our experimental results provides the following new conclusions: (i) the main chlorophyll (Chl) a emission band at approximately 685 nm that originates in Photosystem (PS) II exhibits typical fast (
OPS
) and slow (SMT) FI kinetics with both orange (622 nm) and blue (464 nm) excitation. (ii) Similar kinetics are exhibited for its far-red emission satellite band centered at approximately 745 nm, where the PS II contribution predominates. (iii) A significant
OPS
-SMT-type kinetics of C-phycocyanin emission at approximately 650 nm are observed with the blue light excitation, but not with orange light excitation where the signal rose only slightly to a maximum. The induction of F650 was not caused by an admixture of the F685 fluorescence and thus our data show light-inducible and dark-reversible changes of phycobilin fluorescence in vivo. We discuss possible interpretations of this new observation.
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PMID:Spectral characteristic of fluorescence induction in a model cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. (PCC 7942). 1941 May 52