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Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of photosynthesis in Phaseolus vulgaris by treatment with toxic concentrations of zinc: effects on electron transport and photophosphorylation

F. Van Assche, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 66, Iss: 4, pp 717-721
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TLDR
In this paper, the electron transport and photophosphorylation activities of dwarf beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Limburgse Vroege) were compared.
Abstract
Dwarf beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Limburgse Vroege) were grown on a nutrient medium containing a toxic non-lethal ZnSO4 concentration. The electron transport and photophosphorylation activities of chloroplasts, isolated from these beans, and from control plants, grown under standard nutrient conditions, were compared. Electron transport was significantly inhibited by Zn2+ treatment. Photosystem 2 activity proved to be more sensitive than photosystem 1 activity. Inhibition was dependent on electron flow rate. Activity was fully restored with semicarbazide. EDTA-washed thylakoid membranes were strongly manganese-deficient. The results suggest that photolysis of water was primarily inhibited, due to a zinc-induced deficiency in loosely bound manganese at the water-splitting site. Manganese is probably substituted by zinc, since the zinc content of thylakoids increased five-fold. Non-cyclic photophosphorylation capacity was also limited as a result of inhibition of electron transport. Phosphorylation efficiency (ATP/2e ratio) involving both energy conserving sites was hardly affected.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Zinc in plants

TL;DR: The dominant fluxes of Zn in the soil-root-shoot continuum are described, including Zn inputs to soils, the plant availability of soluble Zn(2+) at the root surface, and plant uptake and accumulation of ZN.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of metals on enzyme activity in plants

TL;DR: The induction of enzymes and metal-specific changes in isoperoxidase pattern can be used as diagnostic criteria to evaluate the phytotoxicity of soils, contaminated by several metals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity of heavy metals (Zn, Cu, Cd, Pb) to vascular plants

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the literature on heavy metal toxicity to vascular plants and the role of mycorrhizal infection as well, focusing on forest plant species, especially trees, and effects at low metal concentrations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel: An Overview of Uptake, Essentiality and Toxicity in Plants

TL;DR: This review article encompasses the dual behavior of Ni in plants emphasizing its systemic partitioning, essentiality and ill effects and the core mechanism of molecules involved is still elusive, and varies among the plants.
BookDOI

Physiology and biochemistry of metal toxicity and tolerance in plants

TL;DR: In this paper, Mysliwa-Kurdziel et al. studied the effect of heavy metal on the light phase of photosynthesis in plants and found that heavy metal influence on photosynthetic pigments was significant.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Physiology of Metal Toxicity in Plants

TL;DR: Aluminum toxicity is discussed in this paper, including general effects (symptoms and physiological effects), differential aluminum tolerance in plants, beneficial effects of aluminum, and the genetic control of aluminum tolerance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Mineral Nutrition of Higher Plants

TL;DR: This review of mineral nutrients shall not be considering two most important, but frequently reviewed, aspects of the subject, namely biological fixation of N/sub 2/ and its assimilation and mechanisms of membrane transport.
Journal ArticleDOI

THE QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF CHLOROPHYLLS a AND b IN PLANT EXTRACTS

TL;DR: A detailed survey of the complications encountered in the quantitative determination of chlorophyll can be found in this article, with a detailed description of one of the most commonly used methods for the extraction and determination of these pigments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photosynthetic activities of cadmium-treated tomato plants

TL;DR: The principal symptom of cadmium action was the occurrence of large plastoglobules and a disorganization of the lamellar structure, mainly grana stacks, which caused grana stacking and restoration of photosystem II activity.
Book ChapterDOI

[39] Acceptors and donors and chloroplast electron transport

S. Izawa
TL;DR: This chapter discusses new developments in chloroplast electron-transport studies using exogenous electron acceptors and donors since 1970s, and deals only with experiments which utilize the envelopefree “class II” chloroplasts 7 (or “type D”chloroplasts according to Hall's terminology), the standard material for electron-Transport and photophosphorylation studies.