Abstract

The hypothesis that chloroplasts having different light-saturated rates of photosynthesis will have different proportions of the intrinsic thylakoid complexes engaged in light-harvesting and electron transport (Anderson, J.M. (1982) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 46, 161–172) has been tested. Peas were grown in light regimes which varied in light intensity, quality and time of irradiance, and ranged from sunlight through red to blue-enriched light of very low radiation. The electron-transport capacity at saturating light of Photosystem I and Photosystem II of chloroplasts isolated from light-adapted peas was 2-fold and 5–6-fold lower, respectively, in the lowest radiation compared to sunlight. There was a marked increase in the amount of total chlorophyll associated with the main chlorophyll a b- proteins (LHCP 1, LHCP 2 and LHCP 3) and a 2-fold decrease in the core reaction centre complex of Photosystem II (CP a) as the radiation decreased; the LHCP 1–3 CP a ratio changed from 3.5 to 9.0. The amount of chlorophyll associated with Photosystem I varied from 34% in sunlight to 27% in the lowest radiation, but the antenna size of Photosystem I was not markedly different; there was a 2-fold decrease in the amount of cytochrome f on a chlorophyll basis, which partly accounted for the decreased electron-transport capacity of Photosystem I. Since the increases or decreases in the levels of each of the components correlated with decreasing radiation, it is clear that the light-adaptation of both light-harvesting and electron-transport components is indeed closely co-ordinated.

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