Abstract

Light-induced changes of EPR signals in Photosystem-I subchloroplast particles at temperatures between 225 and 13 °K showed that the rates of onset of photooxidation of P700 and photoreduction of iron-sulfur protein(s) are identical and instantaneous within the limits of resolution of our instruments. The fraction of the P700 + EPR signal that appears reversibly decreased with decreasing temperature down to 13 °K when the photoreaction was completely irreversible. At temperatures below 225 °K, the reversible fraction consists of two approximately equal portions with decay halftimes of approx. 3 and 75 s, respectively. Light-induced absorption changes due to P700 photooxidation at low temperatures monitored at 700 nm showed a similar kinetic pattern. Since the reduced iron-sulfur protein signals can only be detected at very low temperature, their decay kinetics cannot be continuously monitored at higher temperatures. Therefore, exposure at appropriate temperatures and reaction times were selected according to the decay kinetics of P700 +, after which decay was stopped by lowering the temperature to 13 °K and the P700 + and reduced iron-sulfur protein signals were recorded and compared. In the temperature range (225-13 °K) studied, the decay of P700 + and reduced iron-sulfur protein signals appears identical, suggesting that the two oppositely charged species recombine in the dark. These experiments support the view that iron-sulfur protein(s) is the reaction partner of P700 in the primary photochemical act of Photosystem I.

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