Abstract
Abstract— We studied the magnitude and the rise kinetics of proton release into the interior of thylakoids by flash spectrophotometty with neutral red as pH indicator. Excitation of dark‐adapted thylakoids by a series of between 4 and 11 flashes produced a complex pattern of proton release into the thylakoid lumen. Proton release upon each flash was time resolved.A slow component of proton release oscillated weakly in magnitude with period of two as function of flash number. It exhibited a half‐rise time of approximately 20 ms from the very first flash on, and it was abolished by inhibitors of plastohydroquinone oxidation. This component was attributed to the oxidation of plastohydroquinone by PS I via the Cytb6/f complex.Additionally, rapid and multiphasic proton release was observed with half‐rise times of less than 2 ms which exhibited a pronounced and damped oscillation with period of four as function of flash number. This rapid proton release was attributed to water oxidation. A detailed kinetic analysis suggested that proton release occurred with the following stoichiometry and with the following half‐rise times during the transitions S1 Si+1 of water oxidation: 1 H+(250 μs, S0→1): 0 H+(S1→ S2):1 H+(200 μs, S2→S3):2 H+(1.2 ms, S3→ S4→ S0). Proton release and proton rebinding upon oxidation and reduction of the intermediate electron carrier Z, respectively, may have influenced the kinetics of the respective proton yields but not the stoichiometric pattern.
Published Version
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