Abstract

In osmotically shocked pea chloroplasts illuminated with modulated blue-green light (light 2), phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a b- protein complex (LHCP) accompanies the slow decrease in modulated fluorescence that indicates adaptation to light absorbed predominantly by Photosystem II (State 2). On subsequent additional illumination with continuous far-red light (absorbed predominantly by Photosystem I; light 1) both effects are reversed: modulated chlorophyll fluorescence emission increases (indicating adaptation towards State 1) and LHCP is dephosphorylated. Net phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of LHCP induced by light 2 and excess light 1, respectively, occur on the same time scale as the ATP-dependent chlorophyll fluorescence changes indicative of State 2 and State 1 transitions. The phosphatase inhibitor NaF (10 mM), stimulates the effect of blue-green light on fluorescence and prevents the effect of far-red light. These results provide a demonstration that light of different wavelengths can control excitation energy distribution between the two photosystems via the plastoquinol-activated LHCP phosphorylation mechanism suggested previously (Allen, J.F., Bennett, J., Steinback, K.E. and Arntzen, C.J. (1981) Nature 291, 25–29; and Horton, P. and Black, M.T. (1980) FEBS Lett. 119, 141–144).

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