What is it about?

Dark-grown plants accumulate protochlorophyllide, a chlorophyll precursor, under several protein-photoenzyme complexes. Depending of the nature of the cofactor, NADPH or NADP+, the complexes are photoactive or nonphotoactive. Photoactive means that the photoenzyme is able to transform protochlorophyllide to chlorophyllide under a short (<2ms). As several types of photoactive photoactive complexes exist in vivo, we wanted to determine how the individual type of complexes contribute to the kinetic

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Why is it important?

Absorbance and fluorescence kinetics of photoactive protochlorophyllide photoreduction were recorded simultaneously recorded for the first time at room temperature. The could be modelized using a monoexponential law, suggesting that the different types that the different types of photoactive protochlorophyllide are photoreduced at the same speed at room temperature

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This page is a summary of: Photoreduction of the Protochlorophyllide into Chlorophyllide in Etiolated Leaves and Cotyledons from Phaseolus vulgaris CV Commodore, January 1990, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-0511-5_602.
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