Abstract

Lowering the pH of the incubation medium to pH 5.4 leads to grana formation morphologically similar to that induced by metal cations. The same phenomenon is observed in EDTA-washed chloroplasts, indicating that it is not due in part to electrostatic ‘masking’ by residual cations associated with the membranes. Digitonin fractionation studies have indicated that the distribution of the major chlorophyll-protein complexes between granal and stromal membrane regions is similar at pH 5.4 in the absence of Mg 2+, and at pH 7.4 in the presence of Mg 2+. Chlorophyll fluorescence induction studies have indicated that the primary photochemistry of Photosystem II (PS II) is stimulated by lowering the pH to 5.4, just as it is upon metal cation addition at higher pH values. The failure to observe such an increase at pH 5.4 by measuring electron transport to ferricyanide is attributed to a combination of an inhibition by this pH of electron transport at a site after Q reduction and an increase in the number of PS II centres detached from the plastoquinone pool. We conclude that the stacked configuration of chloroplast membranes leads to increased PS II primary photochemistry, which is most simply explained in terms of a redistribution of excitation energy towards PS II.

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