Abstract

Two blue-light responses of Phaeophyta that are expressed within a few seconds of a blue-light stimulus were characterized with respect to their photoreception properties. The first response is the activation of red-light-saturated photosynthesis which can be stimulated to values up to 5 times the rates in red light, depending on the species. The second response is a blue-light-induced acidification measurable at the plant surface. Both responses have similar kinetic characteristics and thus led us initially to hypothesise that they were causally connected in the same transduction mechanism. The two responses have action spectra [measured for Ectocarpus siliculosus (Dillwyn) Lyngb. and Laminaria saccharina (L.) Lamouroux] that are indistinguishable within the relatively large limits of error. However, in all species tested, the threshold sensitivity for blue light of the photosynthetic response is lower than that of the pH-shift by a factor of 2 to 150. Furthermore, stimulation of photosynthesis is sensitive to the flavin inhibitors, KI and phenylacetic acid, but the pH response is not affected by these inhibitors. Thus, the blue-light-induced pH-shift does not cause the stimulation of photosynthesis. In contrast, the different fluence-response relationships of the two responses and particularly the differential effect of the inhibitors are clear evidence for the action of two independent transduction pathways and photoreceptor systems for blue light. At least photoreception for stimulation of photosynthesis involves a flavin-or and a pterin.

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