Abstract
The possibility of a Photosystem II (PS II) cyclic electron flow via Cyt b-559 catalyzed by carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) was further examined by studying the effects of the PS II electron acceptor 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone (DCBQ) on the light-induced changes of the redox states of Cyt b-559. Addition to barley thylakoids of micromolar concentrations of DCBQ completely inhibited the changes of the absorbance difference corresponding to the photoreduction of Cyt b-559 observed either in the presence of 10 μM ferricyanide or after Cyt b-559 photooxidation in the presence of 2 μM CCCP. In CCCP-treated thylakoids, the concentration of photooxidized Cyt b-559 decreased as the irradiance of actinic light increased from 2 to 80 W m(-2) but remained close to the maximal concentration (0.53 photooxidized Cyt b-559 per photoactive Photosystem II) in the presence of 50 μM DCBQ. The stimulation of Cyt b-559 photooxidation in parallel with the inhibition of its photoreduction caused by DCBQ demonstrate that the extent of the light-induced changes of the redox state of Cyt b-559 in the presence of CCCP is determined by the difference between the rates of photooxidation and photoreduction of Cyt b-559 occuring simultaneously in a cyclic electron flow around PS II.We also observed that the Photosystem I electron acceptor methyl viologen (MV) at a concentration of 1 mM barely affected the rate and extent of the light-induced redox changes of Cyt b-559 in the presence of either FeCN or CCCP. Under similar experimental conditions, MV strongly quenched Chl-a fluorescence, suggesting that Cyt b-559 is reduced directly on the reducing side of Photosystem II.
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