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Nichtmethan-Kohlenwasserstoffe sind in Gegenwart von Stickstoffoxiden (NO, NO2) wichtige Vorläufersubstanzen von troposphärischen Photooxidantien (z. B. Ozon), die beim photochemischen Metabolismus gasförmiger organischer Verbindungen durch Hydroxylradikale (OH) unter Einwirkung von Sonnenlicht gebildet werden. Experimenteller Beitrag dieser Arbeit ist die Charakterisierung, Modifizierung, Optimierung und Qualitätssicherung des zur Messung von leichtflüchtigen atmosphärischen C2-C10 Kohlenwasserstoffen verwendeten mobilen Gaschromatographen (GC) mit Flammenionisationsdetektor (AirmoVOC HC2010). Im Rahmen des vom BIvIBF geförderten Berlin Ozonexperiments BERLIOZ, das im Sommer 1998 im Großraum Berlin/Brandenburg stattfand, wurden an einer ländlichen Bodenstation in Blossin, 40 km südöstlich Berlins, in situ Messungen von 69 Nichtmethan-Kohlenwasserstoffen durchgeführt. im Vorfeld der Feldkampagne wurde der GC einer umfangreichen Qualitätssicherung unterzogen. Bei einer Immissionsvergleichsmessung, die unter Beteiligung aller Arbeitsgruppen stattfand, ergab sich eine mittlere konzentrationsabhängige Abweichung des HC-2010 von ± 16% und ein konstanter Offset (Bias) von 0,71 nmol/m3 (16 pptv) vom Referenzmeßverfahren des Forschungszentrums Jülich. Die Geräteblindwerte waren für die meisten Analyten kleiner 0,3 nmol/m3 (6 pptv). Aus der dreifachen Standardabweichung der Blindwerte ergaben sich die für Außenluftuntersuchungen geforderten Nachweisgrenzen um 0,4 nmol/m3 (10 pptv). Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde der BERLIOZ-Datensatz hinsichtlich einer Bestandsaufnahme ausgewertet. Die beobachteten Konzentrationen der einzelnen Kohlenwasserstoffe wiesen jeweils eine logarithmische Normalverteilung auf, die Charakterisierung des Datensatzes erfolgte deshalb nicht anhand von arithmetischem Mittelwert und Standardabweichung, sondern mit geometrischem Mittelwert und multiplikativer Standardabweichung. Anhand der OH-Verlustrate wurde der Einfluß der verschiedenen Kohlenwasserstoffe auf die lokale Bildung von Photooxidantien untersucht. Der natürliche Kohlenwasserstoff Isopren lieferte mit 70% den weitaus größten mittleren Beitrag zur Photooxidantienproduktion am Boden. In der Grenzschicht verlor isopren allerdings seine dominante Rolle. Sein Beitrag schrumpfte mit zunehmender Höhe auf 20-40%. in der in 200 m Höhe beobachteten Abluftfahne Berlins verursachten anthropogene Kohlenwasserstoffe rund 2/3 der OH-Verlustrate, wobei die reaktiven C3/C4-Alkene alleine bereits 50% beitrugen.
During photooxidation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) products can be formed which develop chemiluminescence on treatment with bases. Flash photolysis experiments show that this is the case only after previous formation of cation radicals, e.g. in the presence of CCl4 as solvent or of e-acceptors in aprotic solvents. These radicals react with oxygen to peroxy-radicals which can combine to several kinds of peroxides. Primary and secondary peroxides are the sources of chemiluminescent activity.
Chemiluminescent peroxides can also be obtained by irradiation of PA H carbonyl com pounds in protic solvents under nitrogen. It is assumed that two excited CO groups combine exceptionally with their O-atom s thus creating a peroxide bond. 24 aromatic aldehydes, ketones, dicarboxylic acid anhydrides and coumarines develop chemiluminescence after illumination with wavelengths ≥ 320 nm with intensities varying 4 magnitudes of order.
The sensitivity of the photochemiluminescent method is sufficient to detect amounts of PA H and their CO derivatives in the ppb to ppm range.
Physiological conditions which lead to changes in total carotenoid content in tomato plantlets were identified. Carotenoid levels were found to increase after the onset of a dark period during a normal 24h cycle. This rapid initial increase is followed by a steady decrease in carotenoid content throughout the night. A decrease in the expression of several carotenogenic genes, namely pds, zds (carotenoid desaturases) and ptox (plastid terminal oxidase), was observed following the removal of the light (when carotenoid content is at its highest). An increase in gene expression was observed before the return to light for pds and zds (when carotenoid levels were at their lowest), or following the return to light for ptox. The phytoene desaturation inhibitor norflurazon leads to a decrease coloured carotenoid content and, in the light, this correlated with pds and zds gene induction. In the dark, norflurazon treatment led to only a weak decrease in carotenoid content and only a small increase in pds and zds gene expression. The striking absence of phytoene accumulation under norflurazon treatment in the dark suggests a down-regulation of carotenoid formation in darkness. However, prolonged dark conditions, or treatment with photosynthetic inhibitors, surprisingly led to higher carotenoid levels, which correlated with decreased expression of most examined genes. In addition to light, which acts in a complex way on carotenoid accumulation and gene expression, our results are best explained by a regulatory effect of carotenoid levels on the expression of several biosynthetic genes. In addition, monitoring of protein amounts for phytoene desaturase and plastid terminal oxidase (which sometimes do not correlate with gene expression) indicate an even more complex regulatory pattern.
Bleaching of chlorophyll was studied in the leaves of rye seedlings (Secale cereale L.) treated with four chlorosis-inducing herbicides of different potency (weak photodestructions, group 1: aminotriazole, haloxidine; strong photodestructions, group 2: San 6706, difunone). Chlorophyll deficiency and particularly the inactivation of a chloroplast marker enzyme, NADP-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, that occurred in the presence of group 2 herbicides were stronger in red, than in blue, light.
When grown in white light of low intensity (10 lx) herbicide-treated leaves contained chloro phyll, 70 S ribosomes and unimpaired activities of NADP-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-P de hydrogenase. At 10 lx only the leaves treated with SAN 6706 and difunone were strongly carotenoid-deficient but not those treated with group 1 herbicides. After all herbicide treatments 10 lx-grown leaf tissue was, however, not capable of photosynthetic O2-evolution indicating some disorder of photosynthetic electron transport. Leaf segments grown at 10 lx were exposed to a high light intensity of 30000 lx at either 0 ° C or 30 °C. In treatments with group 1 herbicides chlorophyll accumulation was stopped in bright light at 30 °C but breakdown was not apparent. Only at 0 °C and in the presence of high, growth-reducing, herbicide concentrations chlorophyll was slightly degraded. The RNAs o f the 70S ribosomes were, however, clearly destroyed at 30000 lx and 30 °C in aminotriazole-treated leaves. In leaves treated with group 2 herbicides chlorophyll was rapidly degraded at 30000 lx both at 0 ° C and 30 °C, however, only in the presence of O2, indicating a true photooxidative and mainly photochemical nature o f the reactions involved. This chlorophyll breakdown was accompanied by the photodestruction of 70S ribosomes and the inactivation of NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase.In treatments with group 1 herbicides photoinactivation of the latter enzyme did not occur, although it was clearly localized in the bleached plastids, as demonstrated by gradient separation of organelles.
In the presence of group 2 herbicides the chlorosis was originating from a direct photo oxidation of chlorophyll, accompanied by a massive destruction of other plastid constituents and functions. In treatments with group 1 herbicides photodestructions appeared to be much weaker and insufficient to affect chlorophyll directly. Mediated through some photodestructive inter ference with obviously more sensitive plastid components, such as their ribosomes, further chlorophyll accumulation was, however, prevented.
Among chlorosis-inducing herbicides that interfere with carotenoid synthesis two groups of different potency can be discriminated (group 1: aminotriazole amd haloxidine; group 2 with more extensive photodestructions: pyridazinone herbicides and difunon). After application of herbicides of group 2 colored carotenoids were completely absent and preexisting chlorophyll was degraded by photochemical reactions requiring high light intensity and O2, that occurred also at 0°C. In treatments with group 1 herbicides direct photodegradation of chlorophyll was not sufficient to generate the chlorosis. Light-induced interference with constituents of the chloroplast protein synthesis apparatus being more sensitive to photooxidative damage than chlorophyll, appeared to indirectly mediate the chlorosis. In the absence of chloroplast protein synthesis further chlorophyll accumulation is prevented. Photodegradation of chlorophyll in the presence of group 2 herbicides involved the participation of O2- radicals and was accompanied by lipid peroxidation. In all herbicide treatments the catalase activity of the leaves was very low. Only in the presence of group 2 herbicides chloroplast enzymes of cytoplasmic origin (e.g. NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) were also inactivated. Rapid inactivation of catalase as well as of NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was induced by exposure of dim-light-grown herbicide-treated leaves to bright light, also at 0°C. In treatments with herbicides of group 2 also other peroxisomal enzymes (e.g. glycolate oxidate, hydroxy-pyruvate reductase) were affected. The elimination of these peroxisomal enzymes also appeared to depend on photooxidative processes of the chloroplast.