Search results for "Photos"

showing 10 items of 701 documents

A field study on solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and pigment parameters along a vertical canopy gradient of four tree species in an urban envi…

2013

Abstract: To better understand the potential uses of vegetation indices based on the sun-induced upward and downward chlorophyll fluorescence at leaf and at canopy scales, a field study was carried out in the city of Valencia (Spain). Fluorescence yield (FY) indices were derived for trees at different traffic intensity locations and at three canopy heights. This allowed investigating within-tree and between-tree variations of FY indices for four tree species. Several FY indices showed a significant (p < 0.05) and important effect of tree location for the species Morus alba (white mulberry) and Phoenix canariensis (Canary Island date palm). The upward FY parameters of M. alba, and the upward…

ChlorophyllCanopyEnvironmental EngineeringPhotosynthesisAtmospheric sciencesFiresFluorescenceTreesLight-harvesting complexchemistry.chemical_compoundBotanyEnvironmental ChemistryCitiesWaste Management and DisposalChlorophyll fluorescenceBiologyAir PollutantsbiologyVegetationbiology.organism_classificationPollutionPlant LeavesChemistrychemistrySpainPhoenix canariensisChlorophyllEnvironmental scienceParticulate MatterShadingEnvironmental MonitoringThe science of the total environment
researchProduct

A new tool for direct non-invasive evaluation of chlorophyll a content from diffuse reflectance measurements

2017

Abstract Chlorophyll is a key biochemical component that is responsible for photosynthesis and is an indicator of plant health. The effect of stressors can be determined by measuring the amount of chlorophyll a , which is the most abundant chlorophyll, in vegetation in general. Nowadays, invasive methods and vegetation indices are used for establishing chlorophyll amount or an approximation to this value, respectively. This paper demonstrates that H-point curve isolation method (HPCIM) is useful for isolating the signal of chlorophyll a from non-invasive diffuse reflectance measurements of leaves. Spinach plants have been chosen as an example. For applying the HPCIM only the registers of bo…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll aEnvironmental Engineering010501 environmental sciencesPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesNormalized Difference Vegetation Indexchemistry.chemical_compoundSpinacia oleraceaStress PhysiologicalEnvironmental ChemistryPhotosynthesisWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingbiologyChlorophyll A010401 analytical chemistryfood and beveragesVegetationbiology.organism_classificationPollution0104 chemical sciencesPlant LeaveschemistryChlorophyllContent (measure theory)Environmental scienceSpinachDiffuse reflectionEnvironmental MonitoringScience of The Total Environment
researchProduct

Linking chlorophyll a fluorescence to photosynthesis for remote sensing applications: mechanisms and challenges

2014

Chlorophyll a fluorescence (ChlF) has been used for decades to study the organization, functioning, and physiology of photosynthesis at the leaf and subcellular levels. ChlF is now measurable from remote sensing platforms. This provides a new optical means to track photosynthesis and gross primary productivity of terrestrial ecosystems. Importantly, the spatiotemporal and methodological context of the new applications is dramatically different compared with most of the available ChlF literature, which raises a number of important considerations. Although we have a good mechanistic understanding of the processes that control the ChlF signal over the short term, the seasonal link between ChlF…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll aMETIS-306570PhysiologyRemote sensing applicationEcologyChlorophyll AContext (language use)Plant ScienceBiologyPhotochemical Reflectance IndexPhotosynthesisFluorescencePlant Leaveschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryITC-ISI-JOURNAL-ARTICLEPhotosynthetic acclimationRemote Sensing TechnologyThylakoid membrane organizationBiomassSeasonsPhotosynthesisBiological systemChlorophyll fluorescenceJournal of Experimental Botany
researchProduct

Pigment binding of photosystem I light-harvesting proteins.

2002

Light-harvesting complexes (LHC) of higher plants are composed of at least 10 different proteins. Despite their pronounced amino acid sequence homology, the LHC of photosystem II show differences in pigment binding that are interpreted in terms of partly different functions. By contrast, there is only scarce knowledge about the pigment composition of LHC of photosystem I, and consequently no concept of potentially different functions of the various LHCI exists. For better insight into this issue, we isolated native LHCI-730 and LHCI-680. Pigment analyses revealed that LHCI-730 binds more chlorophyll and violaxanthin than LHCI-680. For the first time all LHCI complexes are now available in t…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll aPhotosystem IIPigment bindingPhotosynthetic Reaction Center Complex ProteinsLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesBiologyXanthophyllsPhotosystem IBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundPigmentSolanum lycopersicumMolecular BiologyP700Binding SitesPhotosystem I Protein ComplexChlorophyll Afood and beveragesPhotosystem II Protein ComplexCell BiologyPigments Biologicalbeta CarotenePlant LeavesSpectrometry FluorescencechemistryBiochemistryChlorophyllvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumViolaxanthinThe Journal of biological chemistry
researchProduct

Pigment Binding, Fluorescence Properties, and Oligomerization Behavior of Lhca5, a Novel Light-harvesting Protein

2005

A new potential light-harvesting protein, named Lhca5, was recently detected in higher plants. Because of the low amount of Lhca5 in thylakoid membranes, the isolation of a native Lhca5 pigment-protein complex has not been achieved to date. Therefore, we used in vitro reconstitution to analyze whether Lhca5 binds pigments and is actually an additional light-harvesting protein. By this approach we could demonstrate that Lhca5 binds pigments in a unique stoichiometry. Analyses of pigment requirements for light-harvesting complex formation by Lhca5 revealed that chlorophyll b is the only indispensable pigment. Fluorescence measurements showed that ligated chlorophylls and carotenoids are arran…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll bPigment bindingArabidopsisLight-Harvesting Protein Complexesmacromolecular substancesBiologyPhotosystem IBiochemistryFluorescencechemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structureProtein Structure QuaternaryMolecular BiologyPhotosystemPhotosystem I Protein ComplexArabidopsis ProteinsPigments BiologicalCell BiologyCarotenoidsFluorescenceBiochemistrychemistryThylakoidChlorophyll Binding ProteinsChlorophyll Binding ProteinsDimerizationJournal of Biological Chemistry
researchProduct

Decreasing the chlorophyll a/b ratio in reconstituted LHCII: Structural and functional consequences

1999

Trimeric (bT) and monomeric (bM) light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) with a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 0.03 were reconstituted from the apoprotein overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Chlorophyll/xanthophyll and chlorophyll/protein ratios of bT complexes and 'native' LHCII are rather similar, namely, 0.28 vs 0. 27 and 10.5 +/- 1.5 vs 12, respectively, indicating the replacement of most chlorophyll a molecules with chlorophyll b, leaving one chlorophyll a per trimeric complex. The LD spectrum of the bT complexes strongly suggests that the chlorophyll b molecules adopt orientations similar to those of the chlorophylls a that they replace. The circular dichroism (CD) spectra of bM and bT complexes…

ChlorophyllChlorophyll bProtein FoldingChlorophyll aCircular dichroismPhotosynthetic Reaction Center Complex ProteinsLight-Harvesting Protein Complexesmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryAbsorptionStructure-Activity Relationshipchemistry.chemical_compoundThermolysinmedicineEscherichia colichemistry.chemical_classificationPigmentationChlorophyll ACircular DichroismCrystallographySpectrometry FluorescenceMonomerEnergy TransferchemistrySpectrophotometryChlorophyllXanthophyllBiochemistry
researchProduct

Exchange of Pigment-Binding Amino Acids in Light-Harvesting Chlorophyll a/b Protein

1999

Four amino acids in the major light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b complex (LHCII) that are thought to coordinate Chl molecules have been exchanged with amino acids that presumably cannot bind Chl. Amino acids H68, Q131, Q197, and H212 are positioned in helixes B, C, A, and D, respectively, and, according to the LHCII crystal structure [Kühlbrandt, W., et al. (1994) Nature 367, 614-621], coordinate the Chl molecules named a(5), b(6), a(3), and b(3). Moreover, a double mutant was analyzed carrying exchanges at positions E65 and H68, presumably affecting Chls a(4) and a(5). All mutant proteins could be reconstituted in vitro with pigments, although the thermal stability of the resulting mut…

ChlorophyllChloroplastsMacromolecular SubstancesStereochemistryMolecular Sequence DataPhotosynthetic Reaction Center Complex ProteinsPigment bindingLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesTrimerBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundAmino Acid SequenceAmino AcidsPeptide sequencePlant Proteinschemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesChlorophyll APeasPhotosystem II Protein Complexfood and beveragesAmino acidChloroplastB vitaminsAmino Acid SubstitutionchemistryChlorophyllThylakoidMutagenesis Site-DirectedCarrier ProteinsBiochemistry
researchProduct

Inactivation of a plastid evolutionary conserved gene affects PSII electron transport, life span and fitness of tobacco plants

2007

Chloroplasts contain a plastoquinone-NADH-oxidoreductase (Ndh) complex involved in protection against stress and the maintenance of cyclic electron flow. Inactivation of the Ndh complex delays the development of leaf senescence symptoms. Chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, blue native gel electrophoresis, immunodetection and other techniques were employed to study tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Ndh-defective mutants (DeltandhF). The DeltandhF mutants compared with wild-type plants presented: (i) higher photosystem II : photosystem I (PSII : PSI) ratios; (ii) similar or higher levels of ascorbate, carotenoids, thylakoid peroxidase and superoxide dismutase, yield (Phi(PSII)) and maximal pho…

ChlorophyllChloroplastsTime FactorsLightPhotosystem IIPhysiologyNicotiana tabacumPlant SciencePhotosystem IPhotosynthesisAntioxidantsFluorescenceElectron Transportchemistry.chemical_compoundTobaccoBotanyGene SilencingPhotosynthesisChlorophyll fluorescencePlant ProteinsPhotosystem I Protein ComplexbiologyChlorophyll AReproductionPhotosystem II Protein Complexfood and beveragesNADH Dehydrogenasebiology.organism_classificationChloroplastPhenotypechemistryChlorophyllThylakoidBiophysicsNew Phytologist
researchProduct

Calcium signatures and signaling in cytosol and organelles of tobacco cells induced by plant defense elicitors

2011

Calcium signatures induced by two elicitors of plant defense reactions, namely cryptogein and oligogalacturonides, were monitored at the subcellular level, using apoaequorin-transformed Nicotiana tabacum var Xanthi cells, in which the apoaequorin calcium sensor was targeted either to cytosol, mitochondria or chloroplasts. Our study showed that both elicitors induced specific Ca2+ signatures in each compartment, with the most striking difference relying on duration. Common properties also emerged from the analysis of Ca2+ signatures: both elicitors induced a biphasic cytosolic [Ca2+] elevation together with a single mitochondrial [Ca2+] elevation concomitant with the first cytosolic [Ca2+] p…

ChlorophyllChloroplastsTime FactorsPhysiology[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Nicotiana tabacumAequorinMitochondrionMITOCHONDRIALAntiportersCA2+CytosolPlant defenseINTACT CHLOROPLASTSCation Transport ProteinsCalcium signalingRECOMBINANT AEQUORINDEATHfood and beveragesARABIDOPSISOligogalacturonidesMitochondriaChloroplastBiochemistry[SDE]Environmental SciencesCryptogeinPhytophthorachemistry.chemical_elementCalciumBiologyChloroplastFluorescenceFungal ProteinsPHOTOSYSTEM-IIPlant CellsTobaccoOrganelle[SDV.BV]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Vegetal BiologyCalcium SignalingMolecular BiologyHYPERSENSITIVE RESPONSENITRIC-OXIDECell MembraneCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationSALICYLIC-ACIDOxygenCytosolchemistryBiophysicsbiology.proteinCalciumCell Calcium
researchProduct

The negatively charged amino acids in the lumenal loop influence the pigment binding and conformation of the major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b c…

2008

AbstractThe major chlorophyll (Chl) a/b complexes of photosystem II (LHCIIb), in addition to their primary light-harvesting function, play key roles in the organization of the granal ultrastructure of the thylakoid membranes and in various regulatory processes. These functions depend on the structural stability and flexibility of the complexes. The lumenal side of LHCIIb is exposed to broadly variable pH environments, due to the build-up and decay of the pH gradient during photosynthesis. Therefore, the negatively charged amino acids in the lumenal loop might be of paramount importance for adjusting the structure and functions of LHCIIb. In order to clarify the structural roles of these res…

ChlorophyllCircular dichroismPhotosystem IIPigment bindingMolecular ConformationBiophysicsPhotosynthesisBiochemistryMajor light-harvesting a/b complex of photosystem IILow pHAmino AcidsSpectroscopyPhotosystemchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryCircular DichroismPhotosystem II Protein ComplexPigments BiologicalCell BiologyHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAmino acidCrystallographyB vitaminsMutagenesisThylakoidBiophysicsElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelProtein BindingBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics
researchProduct