Abstract

Chlorophyll-deficient barley (Hordeum vulgare) mutants were studied that had chlorophyll a/b ratios either higher or lower than the wild type. Mutants with high ratios (>5.2) had a reduced proportion of their photosynthetic lamellae appressed into grana ("grana-deficient" mutants) compared with wild type (chlorophyll a/b = 3.2), while the majority of lamellae in the chloroplasts with low chlorophyll a/b ratios (2.0-2.4) were organized into grana ("grana-rich" mutants).All mutants catalyzed photosystem I and photosystem II electron transport, were tightly coupled as evidenced by increased rates of electron transport in the presence of methylamine, and were able to generate a light-dependent transmembrane proton gradient. Differences were evident in rates of electron transport per mole of chlorophyll. The mutants having high chlorophyll a/b ratios catalyzed 15- to 50-fold higher rates of ferricyanide photoreduction than the mutants having low chlorophyll a/b ratios, and 5- to 7-fold higher than the wild type.Low temperature absorption spectra of chloroplast fragments showed that the grana-deficient mutant with a high a/b ratio had a chlorophyll spectrum characteristic of a PSI preparation while mutants with the low ratio had a spectrum typical of a PSII preparation.The temperature fluorescence emission spectra of thylakoid membrane fragments from the two types of mutants were also strikingly different from one another, as were the electrophoretic patterns of the thylakoid polypeptides.

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