Etiolated bean leaves supplied δ-amino-levulinic acid in the dark synthesize large amounts of protochlorophyllide which is not converted to chlorophyllide upon illumination of the leaves. The fine structure of the proplastids is not affected by the treatment. When leaves containing "inactive" protochlorophyllide are exposed to light of 700 ft-c for 3 hours, they lose practically all their green pigments. During this period large stacks of closed membrane structures are built up in the region of the prolamellar body. These lamellar structures remain even when no or only traces of pigment are left in the leaves. In untreated control leaves the pigment content remained constant during similar illumination and the structural changes in the plastids consisted of a rearrangement of the vesicles from the prolamellar bodies into strands dispersed through the stroma; lamellae and grana formation occurred later.
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1 August 1964
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August 01 1964
FINE STRUCTURAL CHANGES IN PROPLASTIDS DURING PHOTODESTRUCTION OF PIGMENTS
Shimon Klein,
Shimon Klein
From the Department of Botany, The University of Chicago, Chicago
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Lawrence Bogorad
Lawrence Bogorad
From the Department of Botany, The University of Chicago, Chicago
Search for other works by this author on:
Shimon Klein
From the Department of Botany, The University of Chicago, Chicago
Lawrence Bogorad
From the Department of Botany, The University of Chicago, Chicago
Received:
October 17 1963
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
Copyright © 1964 by The Rockefeller Institute Press
1964
J Cell Biol (1964) 22 (2): 443–451.
Article history
Received:
October 17 1963
Citation
Shimon Klein, Lawrence Bogorad; FINE STRUCTURAL CHANGES IN PROPLASTIDS DURING PHOTODESTRUCTION OF PIGMENTS . J Cell Biol 1 August 1964; 22 (2): 443–451. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.22.2.443
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