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  • Articles: DFG German National Licenses  (4)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1365-3040
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Leaves of Stephania japonica and Smilax australis were characterized in situ on the coast of north-eastern New South Wales, Australia, where they were growing naturally in three different light environments: deep shade, in the understory of an open Eucalyptus forest where they received frequent sunflecks of high intensity, and in an exposed site receiving full sunlight. In deep shade the xanthophyll cycle remained epoxidized during the day and the vast majority of absorbed light was utilized for photosynthesis. In the exposed site both deepoxidation and epoxidation of the xanthophyll cycle and changes in the level of xanthophyll-dependent thermal energy dissipation largely tracked the diurnal changes in photon flux density (PFD). In the understory the xanthophyll cycle became largely deepoxidized to zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin upon exposure of the leaves to the first high intensity sunfleck and this high level of deepoxidation was maintained throughout the day both during and between subsequent sunflecks. In contrast, thermal energy dissipation activity, and the efficiency of photosystem II, fluctuated rapidly in response to the changes in incident PFD. These findings suggest a fine level of control over the engagement of zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin in energy dissipation activity, presumably through rapid changes in thylakoid acidification, such that they became rapidly engaged for photoprotection during the sunflecks and rapidly disengaged upon return to low light when continued engagement might limit carbon gain.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1365-3040
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Overwintering needles of the evergreen conifer Douglas fir exhibited an association between arrest of the xanthophyll cycle in the dissipating state (as zeaxanthin +  antheraxanthin; Z + A) with a strongly elevated predawn phosphorylation state of the D1 protein of the photosystem II (PSII) core. Furthermore, the high predawn phosphorylation state of PSII core proteins was associated with strongly increased levels of TLP40, the cyclophilin-like inhibitor of PSII core protein phosphatase, in winter versus summer. In turn, decreases in predawn PSII efficiency, Fv/Fm, in winter were positively correlated with pronounced decreases in the non-phosphorylated form of D1. In contrast to PSII core proteins, the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II (LHCII) did not exhibit any nocturnally sustained phosphorylation. The total level of the D1 protein was found to be the same in summer and winter in Douglas fir when proteins were extracted in a single step from whole needles. In contrast, total D1 protein levels were lower in thylakoid preparations of overwintering needles versus needles collected in summer, indicating that D1 was lost during thylakoid preparation from overwintering Douglas fir needles. In contrast to total D1, the ratio of phosphorylated to non-phosphorylated D1 as well as the levels of the PsbS protein were similar in thylakoid versus whole needle preparations. The level of the PsbS protein, that is required for pH-dependent thermal dissipation, exhibited an increase in winter, whereas LHCII levels remained unchanged.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words  Opuntia macrorhiza ; Crassulacean acid metabolism ; Energy dissipation ; Xanthophyll cycle ; Zeaxanthin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract   Diurnal changes in titratable acidity, photosynthesis, energy dissipation activity, and the carotenoid composition of differently oriented cladodes of the cactus Opuntia macrorhiza were characterized during exposure to full sunlight in the field. Four cladode faces were chosen such that each was exposed to maximum photon flux densities (PFD) at different times of the day in addition to receiving different daily integrated PFDs. The sum of all carotenoids per chlorophyll was found to increase with increasing exposure to PFD, with the carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle present in the most exposed face at more than twice the concentration found in the least exposed face. All faces exhibited large increases in xanthophyll cycle-dependent energy dissipation as the sun rose in the morning, even those receiving only minimal levels of diffuse radiation. The transient high levels of energy dissipation in those faces that did not receive direct sunlight in the morning may have been due to low temperature inhibition of photosynthesis (predawn low of 2°C). For the two faces receiving peak PFDs in the morning hours (north and east faces), the level of energy dissipation activity increased rapidly during exposure to direct sunlight in the early morning, gradually declining in the late morning under warm temperatures, and was negligible during the afternoon low light conditions. Changes in the xanthophyll cycle paralleled the changes in energy dissipation with the majority of the cycle present as violaxanthin (V) prior to sunrise, largely de-epoxidized to zeaxanthin (Z) and antheraxanthin (A) during exposure to direct sunlight, and reconverted to V during the afternoon. For the two faces receiving peak PFDs in the afternoon (south and west faces), energy dissipation activity increased dramatically during the early morning low light period, subsequently decreasing during midday as decarboxylation of malic acid proceeded maximally (providing a high concentration of CO2 for photosynthesis), and then increased to the highest level in the late afternoon as the supply of malic acid was depleted and rates of photosynthetic electron transport declined. The xanthophyll cycle, largely present as Z and A prior to sunrise in the south and west faces, was de-epoxidized to the greatest extent in the late afternoon, followed by epoxidation back to the predawn level by sunset. In all cladode faces high levels of energy dissipation activity were accompanied by decreases in the intrinsic efficiency of photosystem II (PSII), indicative of a regulatory process that diverted the excess energy away from the reaction centers during periods of excess light. Furthermore, the overnight retention of Z and A by the south and west faces was accompanied by a sustained reduction in PSII efficiency (i.e., “photoinhibition”). We suggest that this “photoinhibition” represents the sustained engagement of nocturnally retained Z and A in the photoprotective down-regulation of PSII.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Energy dissipation ; Low-temperature stress ; Malva neglecta ; Pinus ponderosa ; Xanthophyll cycle ; Zeaxanthin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Seasonal differences in the efficiency of open PSII units (F v/F m), leaf pigment composition and xanthophyll cycle conversion (Z+A)/(V+A+Z), leaf adenylate status, and photosynthetic capacity were investigated in Pinus ponderosa (Ponderosa pine) and Malva neglecta. In P. ponderosa, acclimation to winter involved a lower photosynthetic capacity, higher carotenoid to chlorophyll ratio, persistent reductions in F v/F m corresponding to persistent retention of Z+A, and no change in foliar ATP/ADP ratios. In contrast, M. neglecta characterized in winter exhibited higher rates of photosynthesis than in summer with no change in carotenoid to chlorophyll ratio, while small nocturnally persistent reductions in F v/F m were observed exclusively on colder winter nights when nocturnal retention of Z+A, and high ATP/ADP ratios were also present. Upon removal of winter-stressed leaves or needles from the field to room temperature, a portion of F v/F m relaxed within 15 min of warming and recovery was completed within 5 h in M. neglecta but required 100 h in P. ponderosa. In M. neglecta, the entire recovery of F v/F m correlated with decreases in the foliar ATP/ADP ratio, while in P. ponderosa this ratio remained unchanged. Possible ATP-dependent forms of sustained (Z+A)-dependent energy dissipation are discussed including a nocturnally retained pH gradient on cold winter nights. The slow recovery in pine involved not only retention of Z+A, but apparently also a persistent engagement of Z+A for energy dissipation via an unidentified mechanism.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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