Abstract

A pulse of red light acting through phytochrome accelerates the formation of chlorophyll upon subsequent transfer of dark-grown seedlings to continuous white light. Specific antibodies were used to follow the accumulation of representative subunits of the major photosynthetic complexes during greening of seedlings of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). The time course for accumulation of the various subunits was compared in seedlings that received a red light pulse 4 h prior to transfer to continuous white light and parallel controls that did not receive a red light pulse. The light-harvesting chlorophyll-binding proteins of photosystem II (LHC II), the 33-kD extrinsic polypeptide of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC1), and subunit II of photosystem I (psaD gene product) all increased in the light, and did so much faster in seedlings that received the inductive red light pulse. The red light pulse had no significant effect on the abundance of the small subunit of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), nor on several plastid-encoded polypeptides: the large subunit of Rubisco, the beta subunit of the CF(1) complex of plastid ATPase, and the 43- and 47-kD subunits of photosystem II (CP43, CP47). Subunits I (cytochrome b(6)f) and III (Rieske Fe-S protein) of the cytochrome b(6)f complex showed a small or no increase as a result of the red pulse. The potentiation of greening by a pulse of red light, therefore, is not expressed uniformly in the abundance of all the photosynthetic complexes and their subunits.

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