Abstract

A comparison has been made between the changes in absorption spectra and chlorophyll fluorescence emission occurring upon the induction of non-photochemical dissipation of excitation energy (qE) in isolated thylakoids and those accompanying the aggregation of detergent-solubilised spinach light-harvesting complex (LHCII). In support of a recent hypothesis for the mechanism of qE (Horton et al. (1991) FEBS Lett. 292, 1–4), it was found that absorbence changes at 530 nm were associated with qE and LHCII aggregation. Antimycin A inhibited these changes and prevented LHCII aggregation, as indicated by the electrophoretic mobility of the complex and its low-temperature fluorescence spectrum. An antimycin-insensitive partial aggregation of LHCII was associated with an absorbance change at 505 nm. Low concentration of detergent caused disaggregation of LHCII and the reversal of qE. These data are discussed in terms of the relationship between structural change in LHCII and the mechanism of non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in thylakoids.

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