| Energy balance and acclimation to light and cold Trends in Plant Science, Volume 3, Issue 6, 1 June 1998, Pages 224-230 Norman P.A Huner, Gunnar Öquist and Fathey Sarhan Abstract Changes in environmental conditions such as light intensity or temperature result in an imbalance between the light energy absorbed through photochemistry versus the energy utilized through metabolism. Such an energy imbalance is sensed through alterations in photosystem II excitation pressure, which reflects the relative reduction state of the photosystem. Modulation of this novel, chloroplastic redox signal either by excess light or by low temperature initiates a signal transduction pathway. This appears to coordinate photosynthesis-related gene expression and to influence the nuclear expression of a specific cold-acclimation gene, plant morphology and differentiation in cyanobacteria. Thus, in addition to its traditional role in energy transduction, the photosynthetic apparatus might also be an environmental sensor. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (331 kb) |
| Photosystem-II damage and repair cycle in chloroplasts: what modulates the rate of photodamage in vivo? Trends in Plant Science, Volume 4, Issue 4, 1 April 1999, Pages 130-135 Anastasios Melis Abstract Organisms that rely on oxygenic photosynthesis are subject to the effects of photo-oxidative damage, which impairs the function of photosystem-II (PSII). This phenomenon has the potential to lower rates of photosynthesis and diminish plant growth. Experimental evidence shows that the steady-state oxidation–reduction level of the primary quinone acceptor (Q) of PSII is the parameter that controls photodamage under a variety of physiological and environmental conditions. When Q is reduced, excitation energy at PSII is dissipated via a charge-recombination reaction. Such non-assimilatory dissipation of excitation generates singlet oxygen that might act to covalently modify the photochemical reaction center chlorophyll. Under steady-state photosynthesis conditions, the reduction state of Q increases linearly with irradiance, thereby causing a correspondingly linear increase in the probability of photodamage. It is concluded that there is a low probability that photodamage will occur when Q is oxidized and excitation energy is utilized in electron transport, and a significantly higher probability when Q is reduced in the course of steady-state photosynthesis. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (96 kb) |
| Hydrogenases in green algae: do they save the algae's life and solve our energy problems? Trends in Plant Science, Volume 7, Issue 6, 1 June 2002, Pages 246-250 Thomas Happe, Anja Hemschemeier, Martin Winkler and Annette Kaminski Abstract Biophotolysis-one small step for algae, one giant leap for mankind? Green algae produce hydrogen from sunlight and water using photosynthesis and a new type of [Fe]-hydrogenase. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (337 kb) |
Copyright © 1976 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 16, Issue 1, 87-91, 1 January 1976
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(76)85665-2
Research Article
D. Mauzerall
The yield of fluorescence in Chlorella from a 7 ns pulse of light is found to decrease gradually as a function of the number of hits in the photosynthetic units. The fivefold decrease in yield is spread over some three orders of magnitude of pulse energy and strongly suggests another random process in addition to that of photon absorption. Evidence supports the view that this random process is not in the time but in the spatial domain. The model used to fit the data is that of a unit with multiple traps for the singlet excitation. An excitation is captured by an open trap or destroyed by a filled trap with equal probability. These studies give evidence for the connectivity of the photosynthetic energy transfer apparatus on the short time scale. The short fluorescence lifetimes following picosecond pulse excitation of photosynthetic systems reported by several laboratories may be explained by the effect of multiple excitations.