Abstract

Phosphon-D (tributyl-2, 4-dichlorobenzylphosphonium chloride), known as an inhibitor of gibberellin biosynthesis, enhances photosynthetic electron transport by up to 200%, with Fe(CN) 6 (3-) and NADP(+) being the electron acceptors. Maximum stimulation is reached at phosphon-D concentrations around 2-5 μM. At the same time photosynthetic ATP formation is gradually inhibited. Phosphon-D concentrations over 0.1 mM inhibit electron transport. The uncoupling activity of phosphon-D is manifested by inhibition of noncyclic ATP synthesis and by stimulation of light-induced electron flow. The inhibition of ATP synthesis drastically decreases photosynthetic carbon assimilation in a reconstituted spinach chloroplast system. The two ATP-dependent kinase reactions of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle become the rate-limiting steps. On the other hand a stimulated photoelectron transport increases the NADPH/NADP(+) ratio, resulting in a drastic inhibition of chloroplast glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49), the key enzyme of the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle. When light-induced electron flow is inhibited by high phosphon-D concentrations and the NADPH/NADP(+) ratio is low, the light-dependent inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is gradually abolished.

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