965
ing 7.1, 46.9 and 65.0
hown in Fig. 6 . The
ncrease of chlorophyll
lions of F680 and F685
: chlorophyll contents
Ition.
scence varied among a
d chlorina mutant plants
nd almost completely
b, which have similar
r, P700 (Kano, 1987).
es of the mutant plants
defect of chlorophyll b,
lecreased in the chlorina
defects in chlorophyll b
a the two peaks was the
a of the chlorina mutant
I b (MGS- 88 ) showed a
a
b
I I ■
D 780 810
H (nm)
ence spectra of rice wild-
; (a) 65.0 nmol cm . 0 >)
nmol cm " 2 chlorophylls-
by the Ar laser light (477
0 20 40 60
CHLOROPHYLL CONTENTS (nmol/cm 2 )
Fig. 7 Relationship between the Fi/F» ratio and
chlorophyll content of rice wild-type plant leaves.
Chlorophyll contents in the leaves were varied by
controlling the supply of nutrients. The data used were
the same as Fig. 6 .
broad top with little humps at Fi and Fn positions (Fig.
8 c). Relationships between chlorophyll a/b ratio and
proportion of emitters in fluorescence spectra are shown
in Fig. 9. The F680, F685 and F745 decreased and F695
and F725 increased according to the increase of the
chlorophyll a/b ratio.
Spectra induced by 693 nm diode-laser light in leaves
of the wild-type rice plant (Norm 8 ) and the chlorina
mutant plant (MGS- 88 ) (Fig. 10) were measured. The
spectra were overlapped with those of the laser light
(693 nm), therefore, the signal of the excitation light was
subtracted by a computer. Large Fi peaks were
observed, while the ranges of the Fn peaks around 693
nm were null from characteristics of the spectrometer
and the data processing system used, by which signals of
high intensity in the region of the excitation light were
out of scale in order to measure weak signals of
fluorescence. Considering slopes at both sides of the
region, the Fn peaks are surmised to be not large. In the
spectrum of the wild-type plant, a steep emission peak
was detected at 745 nm while a gentle slope from
710 nm to 740 nm was observed in the spectrum of the
chlorina mutant plant (Fig. 10), which corresponded to
the results of Fig. 8 .
4. DISCUSSION
Chlorophyll fluorescence induced by Ar (477 &
^88 nm) laser light showed two peaks around 685 nm
(Fn) and 740 nm (Fi). The spectral profile changed with
chlorophyll content of leaves (Fig. 6 ) as reported by
Kocsa nyi et al. (1988), Rinderle & Lichtenthaler (1988)
Md Takahashi et al. (1991); intensity of the Fi peak
»gainst that of the F» peak (the Fi/Fn ratio) was
elevated with the increase of chlorophyll content of
leaves (Fig. 7). The spectral profile was also changed by
other factors, high temperature (Figs.1 & 2), fumigations
of air-pollutants (Figs. 3 & 4), preilluminations of
photosystem II (Fig. 5), and genetic inheritances of
photosystems (Figs. 8 & 9). To obtain clues to analyze
the spectral changes, we resolved the spectra into
tentative Gaussian emitter components, F680, F685,
F695, F725, F745 and other one or two minor emitters al
longer wavelengths (Takahashi et al., 1991;
Wittmershaus et al., 1985). Although it has to be taken
into account that the spectra are severely distorted in the
region of the Fn peak from self-absorption of
fluorescence by dense pigments in intact leaves, this
direction of approach may provide useful information to
understand the changes.
Leaves of rice chlorina mutant plants are partly or
almost completely deficient in chlorophyll b associated
with loss of light-harvesting peripheral antenna
chlorophylls (Kano, 1987; Kano et al., 1988). Spectral
changes of chlorophyll fluorescence in relation to
chlorophyll contents were different in the chlorina
mutant plants (Figs. 8 & 9) from in the wild-type rice
plant (Figs. 6 & 7). The Fi/Fn ratio lowered with the
decrease of chlorophyll content in the wild-type plant
while the bend between the two peaks became shallow
without lowering the Fi/Fn ratio, in spite of the decrease
of chlorophyll content and self-absorption of the Fn peak
in the mutant plants. Reduced emissions from F680,
F685 and F745 in the mutant plants suggest that F680,
F685 and F745 are closely related to light-harvesting
peripheral antennas, and F695 and F725 core antennas.
Spectra induced by 693 nm diode-laser light (Fig. 10)
which preferentially excites photosystem I (Koizumi et
al., 1990) demonstrated fluorescence at longer
wavelengths than 700 nm, where fluorescence of
photosystem I is located at low temperature
(Wittmershaus et al., 1985). Hence, emissions of F725
and F745 are ascribed to emitters related to photosystem
I (Holzwarth et al., 1990; Marchiarullo & Ross, 1985),
even if they include vibrational bands of emitters related
to photosystem II (Seely & Connolly, 1986). The
finding that pre illuminations of photosystem II brought
about from a 25 to 30% decrease of proportions of F680
and F685 and a slight (15%) increase of F745 (Figs.
5b, c & d), suggests that light-harvesting peripheral
antennas migrate from photosystem II to photosystem I
(Islam, 1987; Telfer et al., 1984) by the state transition
(Canaani & Malkin, 1984; Fork & Sat oh, 1986). Based
on these results, F680 and F685 are considered to be
related to peripheral antenna of photosystem II, F695
core antenna of photosystem II, F725 mainly core
antenna of photosystem I including possible vibrational
bands of photosystem II, and F745 mainly peripheral
antenna of photosystem I including possible vibrational
bands of photosystem II. The emissions of longer
wavelengths than 750 nm (Rijgersberg et al., 1979) are
considered to be ascribed to vibrational bands of
photosystem I (Oquist & Fork, 1982).
Light capture by peripheral antennas of photosystem
D (F680 and F685) was considered to be affected at 45 °C