The effect of pretreatment with ultraviolet-B (UV-B) light (280-320 nanometers) on the enzymatic conversion of the diepoxyxanthophyll violaxanthin to the epoxy-free zeaxanthin occurring in thylakoid membranes was investigated. When isolated chloroplasts of pea (Pisum sativum) were exposed to UV-B, a biologically effective fluence of 7000 joules per square meter caused about 50% inhibition of the activity of the violaxanthin deepoxidase, measured as the first order rate constant of the absorbance change at 505 nanometers. The dose requirement for the inhibition of the deepoxidase in intact leaves, however, was about 2 orders of magnitude higher. The inhibition of the rate constant was observed for both the dark deepoxidation at pH 5, and for the light-driven deepoxidation induced by the lumen acidification due to electron transport from H20 to methylviologen or due to a photosystem I partial reaction with duroquinol as the electron donor. The availability of violaxanthin was not directly affected by UV-B radiation, as shown for UV-B-treated chloroplasts by the final extent of the 505 nanometer change measured in the dark at pH 5 or by the partial photosystem I reaction. A significant decrease in the violaxanthin availability was observed when lumen acidification was caused by electron transport from H20 to methylviologen. That effect was probably caused by the wellknown UV-B inhibition of photosystem 11 with a subsequent decreased ability to reduce the plastoquinone pool, the redox state of which is believed to regulate the final amount of converted violaxanthin.
Isoprene is emitted from the leaves of some plants. It was recently reported that exogenous isoprene delays the onset of leaf damage during controlled increases in leaf temperature (Singsaas et al. Plant Physiology 115: 1413-1420 [1997]171J). Thylakoid membranes are presumed to be the site of action based upon isoprene's hydrophobicity, production in chloroplasts, and effect upon chlorophyll fluorescence at high temperatures. In an attempt to discern the mechanistic basis for isoprene's thermoprotective role, we studied the effect of exogenous isoprene on the peroxidation, permeability, and stability of spinach thylakoids and phosphatidylcholine liposomes. Isoprene, supplied at either 18 or 21 p1 L_l, had no effect upon the rate of liposome peroxidation in the presence of a hydroxyl radical-generating system. Isoprene also did not affect liposome peroxidation at high temperatures. Neither the proton permeability of thylakoids nor the leakage of a fluorescent probe from liposomes was influenced by exogenous isoprene, when measured at several temperatures. Isoprene did not affect the stability of thylakoid membrane proteins during a temperature increase, as shown by differential scanning calorimetry. Therefore, despite the use of a variety of techniques to investigate fundamental membrane parameters, we were unable to demonstrate an effect of isoprene.
Part of the chloroplast photoprotection response to excess light absorption involves formation of zeaxanthin (and antheraxanthin) via the violaxanthin deepoxidase enzyme, the activity of which requires lumen acidity near or below pH 6.0. Clearly, the violaxanthin de-epoxidase activity is strongly regulated because at equivalent energization levels (including the parameters of H(+) accumulation and ATP formation rates), there can be either low or high violaxanthin de-epoxidase enzyme activity. This work shows that the factor or factors responsible for regulating the violaxanthin deepoxidase correlate directly with those which regulate the expression of membrane-localized or delocalized proton gradient (Delta[Formula: see text] (H+)) energy coupling. The most clearly identified factor regulating switching between localized and delocalized energy coupling modes is Ca(2+) binding to the lumen side of the thylakoid membrane; in particular, Ca(2+) binding to the 8 kDA subunit III of the CF(o) H(+) channel. The activity of violaxanthin deepoxidase in pea (Pisum sativa) and spinach (Spinacea oleracea) thylakoids is shown here to be strongly correlated with conditions known from previous work to displace Ca(2+) from the CF(o) H(+) channel and thus to modulate the extent of lumenal acidification while maintaining a fairly constant rate of ATP formation.
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