Abstract:
Higher plants have evolved a well-conserved set of photoprotective mechanisms,
collectively designated Non-Photochemical Quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence
(qN), to deal with the inhibitory absorption of excess light energy by the photosystems.
Their main contribution originates from safe thermal deactivation of excited states
promoted by a highly-energized thylakoid membrane, detected via lumen acidification.
The precise origins of this energy- or LlpH-dependent quenching (qE), arising from
either decreased energy transfer efficiency in PSII antennae (~ Young & Frank,
1996; Gilmore & Yamamoto, 1992; Ruban et aI., 1992), from alternative electron
transfer pathways in PSII reaction centres (~ Schreiber & Neubauer, 1990;
Thompson &Brudvig, 1988; Klimov et aI., 1977), or from both (Wagner et aI., 1996;
Walters & Horton, 1993), are a source of considerable controversy. In this study, the
origins of qE were investigated in spinach thylakoids using a combination of
fluorescence spectroscopic techniques: Pulse Amplitude Modulated (PAM)
fluorimetry, pump-probe fluorimetry for the measurement of PSII absorption crosssections,
and picosecond fluorescence decay curves fit to a kinetic model for PSII.
Quenching by qE (,..,600/0 of maximal fluorescence, Fm) was light-induced in circulating
samples and the resulting pH gradient maintained during a dark delay by the lumenacidifying
capabilities of thylakoid membrane H+ ATPases. Results for qE were
compared to those for the addition of a known antenna quencher, 5-hydroxy-1,4naphthoquinone
(5-0H-NQ), titrated to achieve the same degree of Fm quenching as
for qE. Quenching of the minimal fluorescence yield, F0' was clear (8 to 130/0) during
formation of qE, indicative of classical antenna quenching (Butler, 1984), although the
degree was significantly less than that achieved by addition of 5-0H-NQ. Although
qE induction resulted in an overall increase in absorption cross-section, unlike the
decrease expected for antenna quenchers like the quinone, a larger increase in crosssection
was observed when qE induction was attempted in thylakoids with collapsed
pH gradients (uncoupled by nigericin), in the absence of xanthophyll cycle operation
(inhibited by DTT), or in the absence of quenching (LlpH not maintained in the dark
due to omission of ATP). Fluorescence decay curves exhibited a similar disparity
between qE-quenched and 5-0H-NQ-quenched thylakoids, although both sets
showed accelerated kinetics in the fastest decay components at both F0 and Fm. In
addition, the kinetics of dark-adapted thylakoids were nearly identical to those in qEquenched
samples at F0' both accelerated in comparison with thylakoids in which the
redox poise of the Oxygen-Evolving Complex was randomized by exposure to low
levels of background light (which allowed appropriate comparison with F0 yields from
quenched samples). When modelled with the Reversible Radical Pair model for PSII
(Schatz et aI., 1988), quinone quenching could be sufficiently described by increasing
only the rate constant for decay in the antenna (as in Vasil'ev et aI., 1998), whereas
modelling of data from qE-quenched thylakoids required changes in both the antenna
rate constant and in rate constants for the reaction centre. The clear differences
between qE and 5-0H-NQ quenching demonstrated that qE could not have its origins
in the antenna alone, but is rather accompanied by reaction centre quenching.
Defined mechanisms of reaction centre quenching are discussed, also in relation to
the observed post-quenching depression in Fm associated with photoinhibition.