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Journal of Cell Science, Vol 8, 185-200, Copyright © 1971 by Company of Biologists
Submitted on May 21, 1970
1 Department of Plant Biology and Microbiology, Queen Mary College, Mile End Road, London, E. 1, England, Department of Botany, The University, Manchester,13,England; Department of Applied Microbiology, The University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland.
2 Department of Plant Biology and Microbiology, Queen Mary College, Mile End Road, London, E. 1, England, Department of Botany, The University Manchester, 13, England
The etioplasts of fully dark-grown barley leaves exhibit a relatively low frequency of crystalline prolamellar bodies (ca. 16-20%). Brief red-light treatment leads to rapid disruption of all prolamellar bodies followed by a slow reformation in the subsequent dark period. When several red-light treatments are given with intervening 3-h dark periods, a marked increase in the proportion of crystalline prolamellar bodies is seen. It is suggested that this phenomenon may be associated with the regeneration of protochlorophyll.
Red-light pretreatment stimulates the formation of granal thylakoids upon subsequent transfer to continuous white light. This response is correlated with the phytochrome-mediated shortening of the lag phase in chlorophyll-synthesis under identical conditions.
Regular arrays of hexagonal tubules 16-19 nm in diameter have been observed often in close juxtaposition to the newly forming thylakoid membranes. These may be aggregations of Fraction I protein, although their exact nature and function is at present Unknown.
Submitted on May 21, 1970