Richard E. Glick
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Richard E. Glick.
Plant Physiology | 1993
Jeong Hee Kim; Richard E. Glick; Anastasios Melis
Long-term imbalance in light absorption and electron transport by photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) in chloroplasts brings about changes in the composition, structure, and function of thylakoid membranes. The response entails adjustment in the photosystem ratio, which is optimized to help the plant retain a high quantum efficiency of photosynthesis (W.S. Chow, A. Melis, J.M. Anderson [1990] Proc Nat Acad Sci USA 87: 7502–7506). The dynamics of photosystem ratio adjustment were investigated upon the transfer of pea {Pisum sativum} plants from a predominantly PSI-light to a predominantly PSII-light environment and vice versa. The concentration of functional components (primary electron accepting plastoquinone of PSII [QA], P700) and that of constituent proteins were monitored during acclimation by A difference spectrophotometry and immunoblot analysis, respectively. Fully reversible changes in photosystem ratio occurred with a half-time of about 20 h. They involved closely coordinated changes in the concentration of the QA, reaction center protein D1, D2, and the 9-kD apoprotein of the cytochrome b559 for PSII. Similarly, closely coordinated changes in the relative concentration of P700 and reaction center proteins of PSI were observed. The level of chlorophyll b and that of the light-harvesting complex II changed in accordance with the concentration of PSII in the acclimating thylakoids. Overall, adjustments in the photosystem ratio in response to PSI- or PSII-light conditions appeared to be a well-coordinated reaction in the chloroplast. The response was absent in the chlorophyll b-less chlorina f2 mutant of barley (Hordeum vulgare) and in a phycobilisomeless mutant of Agmenellum quadruplicatum, suggesting that photosystem accessory pigments act as the light-quality perception molecules and that PSI and PSII themselves play a role in the signal transduction pathway.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1988
Richard E. Glick; Anastasios Melis
The minimum functional chlorophyll antenna size of Photosystem I and of Photosystem II was measured in the chlorophyll b-less chlorina f2 mutant of barley grown under intermittent light conditions. In spite of the severely limiting rate of chlorophyll biosynthesis, the chloroplasts assembled functional Photosystem I and Photosystem II complexes containing 95 and 37 chlorophyll a molecules, respectively. This may constitute the smallest functional chlorophyll antenna that can be stably assembled in the thylakoid membrane of developing chloroplasts.
Planta | 1985
Richard E. Glick; Steven W. McCauley; Anastasios Melis
The effect of light quality during plant growth of chloroplast membrane organization and function in peas (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) was investigated. In plants grown under photosystem (PS) I-enriched (far-red enriched) illumination both the PSII/PSI stoichiometry and the electrontransport capacity ratios were high, about 1.9. In plants grown under PSII-enriched (far-red depleted) illumination both the PSII/PSI stoichiometry and the electron-transport capacity ratios were significantly lower, about 1.3. In agreement, steady-state electron-transport measurements under synchronous illumination of PSII and PSI demonstrated an excess of PSII in plants grown under far-red-enriched light. Sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of chlorophyll-containing complexes showed greater relative amounts of the PSII reaction center chlorophyll-protein complex in plants grown under farred-enriched light. Additional changes were observed in the ratio of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein to PSII reaction center chlorophyll-protein under the two different light-quality regimes. The results demonstrate the dynamic nature of chloroplast structure and support the notion that light quality is an important factor in the regulation of chloroplast membrane organization and-function.
Plant Physiology | 1994
Richard E. Glick; Barbara B. Sears
Comparision of chloroplast from plants with one of four plastome types (I, II, III, IV) in the nuclear background of Oenothera elata strain Johansen addressed the effects of plastome-genome incompatibility with respect to leaf pigmentation, plastid ultrastructure, chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b ratio, and photosynthetic electron transport. Previous observations of plastomes I, II, and IV in this nuclear background have revealed no indications of incompatibility, but the studies reported here demonstrate that chloroplasts of plastome IV have subtle alterations in their photosynthetic abilities, in particular, deficiencies in photosystem II. The well-characterized “hybrid bleaching” of plants with the AA genotype and plastome III involves leaves that become bleached in the center while remaining green at the tips, edges, and veins. Electron transport assays performed on fractionated bleached and green tissue from the same plants show photosynthetic defects in both the green and bleached regions, although defects in the latter are more severe. Ultrastructural studies show that chloroplasts in the bleached areas enlarge, thylakoid membranes become swollen and vesiculated, and production of new thylakoids is blocked, with chloroplasts appearing to undergo a programmed senescence. A time course revealed that the senescence is actually a reversible dedifferentiation. Alterations in the composition of medium to which AA/III seedlings were transferred showed that the presence of auxin can prevent the development of the typical incompatibility response, with leaf tissue remaining green rather than bleaching. It is proposed that differences in concentrations of plant growth regulators may be responsible for the persistence of normal chloroplasts near the vascular tissue and leaf blade edges and that seasonal fluctuations in auxin levels could explain the periodic bleaching that occurs in older plants.
Plant Physiology | 1987
Birgit Piechulla; Richard E. Glick; Hubert Bahl; Anastasios Melis; Wilhelm Gruissem
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1986
Richard E. Glick; Steven W. McCauley; Wilhelm Gruissem; Anastasios Melis
Plant and Cell Physiology | 1989
Peter J. Morrissey; Richard E. Glick; Anastasios Melis
Plant Physiology | 1981
Barbara A. Zilinskas; Richard E. Glick
Plant Physiology | 1982
Richard E. Glick; Barbara A. Zilinskas
Plant Physiology | 1985
Javier Abadía; Richard E. Glick; Scott E. Taylor; Norman Terry; Anastasios Melis