Search results for "PHOTOS"

showing 10 items of 701 documents

Quantifying water stress effect on daily light use efficiency in Mediterranean ecosystems using satellite data

2016

16 pages, 2 figures, 6 tables, supplemental material https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17538947.2016.1247301

Light use efficiency010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMeteorologyVapour Pressure DeficitWater stress0211 other engineering and technologiesEddy covariancePrimary production02 engineering and technologyPhotochemical Reflectance Index01 natural sciencesMonteithComputer Science ApplicationsGeographyPhotosynthetically active radiationEvapotranspirationMediterranean ecosystemsGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesSatelliteGPPPrecipitationSoftware021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesInternational Journal of Digital Earth
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Serine biosynthesis by photorespiratory and nonphotorespiratory pathways: and interesting interplay with unknown regulatory networks

2013

[EN] Photorespiration is a primary metabolic pathway, which, given its energy costs, has often been viewed as a wasteful process. Despite having reached the consensus that one important function of photorespiration is the removal of toxic metabolite intermediates, other possible functions have emerged, and others could well emerge in the future. As a primary metabolic pathway, photorespiration interacts with other routes; however the nature of these interactions is not well known. One of these interacting pathways could be the biosynthesis of serine, since this amino acid is synthesised through photorespiratory and non-photorespiratory routes. At present, the exact contribution of each rout…

LightCellular respirationCell RespirationGene regulatory networkPlant ScienceBiologyGlyceric AcidsSerinechemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisSerineBIOQUIMICA Y BIOLOGIA MOLECULARGene Regulatory NetworksPhotosynthesisEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicschemistry.chemical_classificationPhotorespirationGeneral MedicinePlantsGlycolatesAmino acidMetabolic pathwayGlycerate pathwayPhosphorylated pathwaychemistryBiochemistryPhotorespirationGlycolysisMetabolic Networks and PathwaysFunction (biology)Glycolate pathway
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The minimal model of Hahn for the Calvin cycle.

2018

There are many models of the Calvin cycle of photosynthesis in the literature. When investigating the dynamics of these models one strategy is to look at the simplest possible models in order to get the most detailed insights. We investigate a minimal model of the Calvin cycle introduced by Hahn while he was pursuing this strategy. In a variant of the model not including photorespiration it is shown that there exists exactly one positive steady state and that this steady state is unstable. For generic initial data either all concentrations tend to infinity at lates times or all concentrations tend to zero at late times. In a variant including photorespiration it is shown that for suitable v…

LightExistential quantificationMolecular Networks (q-bio.MN)02 engineering and technologyDynamical Systems (math.DS)Mathematical proofBiochemistryModels BiologicalMinimal modelsymbols.namesakeAdenosine Triphosphate0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringFOS: MathematicsApplied mathematicsQuantitative Biology - Molecular NetworksMathematics - Dynamical SystemsPhotosynthesisMathematicsCompactification (physics)Applied Mathematics05 social sciencesGeneral MedicineCarbon DioxideOxygenComputational MathematicsKineticsGlucoseModeling and SimulationFOS: Biological sciencesPoincaré conjecturesymbols020201 artificial intelligence & image processingGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences92C40 34C60050203 business & managementAlgorithmsMathematical biosciences and engineering : MBE
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Energy status and its control on embryogenesis of legumes: ATP distribution within Vicia faba embryos is developmentally regulated and correlated wit…

2003

To analyse the energy status of Vicia faba embryos in relation to differentiation processes, we measured ATP concentrations directly in cryosections using a quantitative bioluminescence-based imaging technique. This method provides a quantitative picture of the ATP distribution close to the in vivo situation. ATP concentrations were always highest within the axis. In pre-storage cotyledons, the level was low, but it increased strongly in the course of further development, starting from the abaxial region of cotyledons and moving towards the interior. Greening pattern, chlorophyll distribution and photosynthetic O2 production within embryos temporally and spatially corresponded to the ATP di…

LightPhotoperiodPlant ScienceBiologyPhotosynthesischemistry.chemical_compoundAdenosine TriphosphateGreeningBotanyGeneticsStorage proteinPhotosynthesischemistry.chemical_classificationfood and beveragesEmbryoCell BiologyDarknessPhotosynthetic capacityVicia fabaVicia fabaCell biologyOxygenchemistryChlorophyllSteady state (chemistry)Energy MetabolismThe Plant Journal
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Insertion of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein into the thylakoid

2000

The major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (Lhcb1,2) of photosystem II is inserted into the thylakoid via the signal recognition particle dependent pathway. However, the mechanism by which the protein enters the membrane is at this time unknown. In order to define some topographical restrictions for this process, we constructed several recombinant derivatives of Lhcb1 carrying hexahistidine tags at either protein terminus or in the stromal loop domain. Additionally, green fluorescent protein (GFP) was fused to either terminus. None of the modifications significantly impair the pigment-binding properties of the protein in the in vitro reconstitution of LHCII. With the excepti…

LightPhotosystem IIRecombinant Fusion ProteinsGreen Fluorescent ProteinsPhotosynthetic Reaction Center Complex ProteinsMutantLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesBiologyThylakoidsBiochemistryInsert (molecular biology)Green fluorescent proteinLight-harvesting complexchemistry.chemical_compoundNickelHistidinePlant ProteinsSignal recognition particlePeasPhotosystem II Protein ComplexBiological TransportIntracellular MembranesPigments BiologicalMolecular WeightLuminescent ProteinschemistryBiochemistryChlorophyllThylakoidMutationBiophysicsCarrier ProteinsEuropean Journal of Biochemistry
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Supplementary Ultraviolet-B Radiation Induces a Rapid Reversal of the Diadinoxanthin Cycle in the Strong Light-Exposed DiatomPhaeodactylum tricornutu…

2002

AbstractA treatment of the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum with high light (HL) in the visible range led to the conversion of diadinoxanthin (Dd) to diatoxanthin (Dt). In a following treatment with HL plus supplementary ultraviolet (UV)-B, the Dt was rapidly epoxidized to Dd. Photosynthesis of the cells was inhibited under HL + UV-B. This is accounted for by direct damage by UV-B and damage because of the UV-B-induced reversal of the Dd cycle and the associated loss of photoprotection. The reversal of the Dd cycle by UV-B was faster in the presence of dithiothreitol, an inhibitor of the Dd de-epoxidase. Our results imply that the reversal of the Dd cycle by HL + UV-B was caused by an incre…

LightUltraviolet RaysPhysiologyPlant ScienceXanthophyllsBiologyPhotosynthesisThylakoidsDithiothreitolchemistry.chemical_compoundGeneticsPhaeodactylum tricornutumDiatomsDiadinoxanthinDiatoxanthinDarknessHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAscorbic acidbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalDithiothreitolBiochemistrychemistryThylakoidPhotoprotectionBiophysicsOxidoreductasesSignal TransductionResearch ArticlePlant Physiology
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Light and Primary Production Shape Bacterial Activity and Community Composition of Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic Bacteria in a Microcosm Experiment

2020

ABSTRACT Phytoplankton is a key component of aquatic microbial communities, and metabolic coupling between phytoplankton and bacteria determines the fate of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Yet, the impact of primary production on bacterial activity and community composition remains largely unknown, as, for example, in the case of aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic (AAP) bacteria that utilize both phytoplankton-derived DOC and light as energy sources. Here, we studied how reduction of primary production in a natural freshwater community affects the bacterial community composition and its activity, focusing primarily on AAP bacteria. The bacterial respiration rate was the lowest when photosynthe…

Lightphytoplankton-bacteria couplingaerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteriabacterial community compositionAAP community compositionlcsh:QR1-502Fresh WaterBacterial growthPhotosynthesisBacterial Physiological Phenomenaphytoplankton-bacteria couplingPhotoheterotrophMicrobiologylcsh:Microbiology03 medical and health sciencesbacterial community compositionVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 470AAP community compositionSeawaterFood sciencePhotosynthesisMolecular BiologyEcosystem030304 developmental biologyaerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria2. Zero hunger0303 health sciencesPhototroph030306 microbiologyChemistryMicrobiotaAnoxygenic photosynthesisQR1-502Bacteria AerobicLight intensityPhototrophic ProcessesInternationalAerobic anoxygenic phototrophic bacteriaPlan_S-Compliant_OAErratumEnergy sourcemSphere
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Predictive First-Principles Modeling of a Photosynthetic Antenna Protein: The Fenna–Matthews–Olson Complex

2020

High efficiency of light harvesting in photosynthetic pigment–protein complexes is governed by evolutionary-perfected protein-assisted tuning of individual pigment properties and interpigment interactions. Due to the large number of spectrally overlapping pigments in a typical photosynthetic complex, experimental methods often fail to unambiguously identify individual chromophore properties. Here, we report a first-principles-based modeling protocol capable of predicting properties of pigments in protein environment to a high precision. The technique was applied to successfully uncover electronic properties of the Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) pigment–protein complex. Each of the three subunit…

Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes02 engineering and technologyMolecular Dynamics Simulation010402 general chemistryPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesChlorobiProtein environmentBacterial ProteinsGeneral Materials SciencePhotosynthesisPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryBacteriochlorophyll AFenna-Matthews-Olson complexElectronic propertiesStrongly coupledChemistryCircular DichroismBacteriochlorophyll AChromophore021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesEnergy TransferChemical physicsQuantum TheoryGasessense organsExperimental methods0210 nano-technologyThe Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
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Domain-specific Random Mutagenesis in Light Harvesting Chlorophyll a/b Protein (LHCII)

1998

In all photosynthesising organisms the presence of light harvesting complexes greatly enhances the efficiency of photosynthesis. The most abundant of these pigment binding complexes is the major light harvesting complex II (LHCII) of plants, associated with photosystem II. Its structure has largely been resolved to 3.4 A (1) showing light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP) with 12 chlorophyll (chl) and 2 xantophyll molecules, all non-covalently arranged around the three membrane spanning domains (MSD) and one amphipathic helix of LHCII. The functional significance of many amino acids in this structure is still unclear, particularly in those parts of the complex that are less …

Light-harvesting complexchemistry.chemical_classificationChlorophyll achemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPhotosystem IIChlorophyllPigment bindingMutagenesisMutantBiophysicsAmino acid
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Influence of Nutrients and Mixing on the Primary Production and Community Respiration in the Gulf of Riga

1999

Abstract Rates of plankton community production and respiration in relation to wind, solar radiation, biomass and nutrients were measured in the mixed layer during a late spring, a mid-summer and an early autumn situation in the Gulf of Riga. System metabolism was estimated by the in vitro oxygen method and from oxygen mass balance directly in the water. Gross production (GPP) remained fairly stable throughout the investigation periods with a mean of 1.8 g C m−2 day−1 (range: 0.5–3.9 g C m−2 day−1). Community respiration varied from 0.5 to 6.4 g C m−2 day−1 during the two summer studies (the high respiration rates ranging from 3.0 to 10.4 g C m−2 day−1 found during the autumn cruise were pr…

Limiting factorBiomass (ecology)Gulf of RigaAquatic SciencePlanktonOceanographyPhotosynthesisAtmospheric sciencesOceanographyNutrientWater columncommunity respirationRespirationPhytoplanktonphytoplanktonEnvironmental scienceEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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