Non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qN) and its three components (qNf, qNm, and qNs) in the flag leaves of wheat grown in the field were studied by a fluorometer PAM-2000 on clear days. The diurnal variation patterns of qN in just fully extended (JFEL) and aging leaves (AL) were similar, but qNm declined markedly in JFEL while it remained at a relatively high level in AL under strong sunlight at noon. Furthermore, at midday qNf was higher than qNs in JFEL, but much lower in AL. The results show the relative contributions of different mechanisms in preventing the photosynthetic apparatus from photodamage change during leaf development. and S.-S. Hong ... [et al.].
In eukaryotic oxygenic photosynthetic organisms (both plants and algae), the maximum fluorescence is at peak P, with peak M lying much lower, or being even absent. Thus, the PSMT phase, where S is semisteady state, and T is terminal state, is replaced by a monotonous P→T fluorescence decay. In the present study, we found that dimethoate-treated wheat plant leaves showed SM transient, whereas in the case of control plants monotonous P→T fluorescence decay occured. We suggest that this was partly due to quenching of fluorescence due to [H+], responsible for P to S (T) decay in control plants (Briantais et al. 1979) being replaced by state transition (state 2 to state 1) in dimethoate-treated plants (Kaňa et al. 2012)., J. K. Pandey, R. Gopal., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics was used to investigate the effect of 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT) on the distribution of excitation energy between photosystem 1 (PS1) and photosystem 2 (PS2) in soybean leaves under high irradiance (HI). The maximum PS2 quantum yield (Fv/Fm) was hardly affected by the presence of DTT, however, photon-saturated photosynthesis was depressed distinctly. Photochemical efficiency of open PS2 reaction centres during irradiation (Fv'/Fm') was enhanced by about 30-40 % by DTT treatment, whereas photochemical quenching (qP) was depressed by about 40 % under HI. DTT treatment caused a 30 % decrease in allocation of excitation energy to PS1 under HI and a 20 % increase to PS2. An obvious shift in the balance of excitation energy distribution between photosystems was observed in DTT-treated leaves. Though high excitation pressure (1 - qP) resulted from DTT treatment, non-photochemical quenching (qN) was lower. DTT completely inhibited the formation of zeaxanthin and also distinctly depressed the state transition (qT). The shift in the balance of excitation distribution between the two photosystems induced by DTT was mainly due to the enhancement of excitation energy capture by PS2 antenna and the inhibition of state transition. It might be the shift in the balance between the two photosystems that mainly induced the depression of photosynthesis. Thus, to keep high utilization efficiency of absorbed photon energy, it is necessary to maintain the balance of excitation distribution between PS2 and PS1. and C.-D. Jiang ... [et al.].
Regulation mechanism of excitation energy transfer between phycobilisomes (PBS) and the photosynthetic reaction centres was studied by the state transition techniques in PBS-thylakoid membrane complexes. DCMU, betaine, and N-ethylmaleimide were applied to search for the details of energy transfer properties based on the steady fluorescence measurement and individual deconvolution spectra at state 2 or state 1. The closure of photosystem (PS) 2 did not influence on fluorescence yields of PS1, i.e., energy could not spill to PS1 from PS2. When the energy transfer pathway from PBS to PS1 was disturbed, the relative fluorescence yield of PS2 was almost the same as that of PS2 in complexes without treatment. If PBSs were fixed by betaine, the state transition process was restrained. Hence PBS may detach from PS2 and become associated to PS1 at state 2. Our results contradict the proposed "spill-over" or "PBS detachment" models and support the mobile "PBS model". and Ye Li ... [et al.].