Abstract

Measurement of the photochemical reflectance index (PRI) is a simple and non-invasive method for the evaluation of photosynthetic processes in higher plants. At the same time, the relationship between photosynthetic parameters and PRI can be significantly modified at the initial stages of illumination; thus, the study of the mechanisms of development of PRI after the beginning of illumination is an important task. The aim of this work was to analyze the relationship between the acidification of chloroplast lumen, which was assessed as an increase in the absorption of light by the leaf at a wavelength of 535 nm (light scattering, LS), and changes in PRI under short-term illumination in the leaves of pea and geranium. It was shown that the illumination caused an increase in LS and a decrease in PRI in both studied objects. Significant differences were found for the amplitude of the photochemical reflectance index decrease, while the differences in the absolute values of PRI at different stages of illumination were not reliable. Correlation analysis showed that the increase in LS during the first two minutes of illumination, reflecting light-induced acidification of chloroplast lumen, strongly correlated with the amplitude of the decrease in PRI; at the same time, at later stages of illumination, such a relationship was absent. Additional analysis carried out on geranium showed that the cessation of illumination caused the opposite dynamics: the decrease in LS was accompanied by an increase in PRI. The results show that the changes in PRI at the first minutes after the beginning of illumination, apparently, were due to the acidification of the chloroplast lumen.

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