Plant Physiology 52:590-594 (1973)
© 1973 American Society of Plant Biologists
Articles
The Conversion of Photoinactive Protochlorophyllide633 to Phototransformable Protochlorophyllide650 in Etiolated Bean Leaves Treated with -Aminolevulinic Acid 1
Merrill L. Gassman
a Department of Biological Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, Chicago, Illinois 60680
The relationship of phototransformable protochlorophyllide to photoinactive protochlorophyllide has been studied in primary leaves of 7- to 9-day-old dark-grown bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. var. Red Kidney) seedlings. Various levels of photoinactive protochlorophyllide, absorbing at 633 nm in vivo, were induced by administering -aminolevulinic acid to the leaves in darkness. Phototransformable protochlorophyllide, absorbing at 650 nm in vivo, was subsequently transformed to chlorophyllide by a light flash, and the regeneration of the photoactive pigment was followed by monitoring the absorbance increase at 650 nm in vivo. A small increase in the level of protochlorophyllide633 causes a marked increase in the extent of regeneration of protochlorphyllide650 following a flash. High levels of the inactive pigment species, however, retard the capacity to reform photoactive protochlorophyllide. A nonstoichiometric and kinetically complex decrease in absorbance at 633 nm in vivo accompanied the absorbance increase at 650 nm. The half-time for protochlorophyllide650 regeneration in control leaves was found to be three times longer than the half-time for conversion of chlorophyllide678 to chlorophyllide683 at 22 C. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that protochlorophyllide633 is a direct precursor of protochlorophyllide650 and that the protein moiety of the protochlorophyllide holochrome acts as a "photoenzyme" in the conversion of protochlorophylide to chlorophyllide.
1 This research was supported in part by National Science Foundation Grant GB-35627 and by a grant from the University of Illinois Chicago Circle Research Board. An abstract of these studies was presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Photobiology, Sarasota, Florida, June, 1973.
|
|