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1.
Electric field-induced charge recombination in Photosystem II (PS II) was studied in osmotically swollen spinach chloroplasts (blebs) by measurement of the concomitant chlorophyll luminescence emission (electroluminescence). A pronounced dependence on the redox state of the two-electron gate QB was observed and the earlier failure to detect it is explained. The influence of the QB/QB oscillation on electroluminescence was dependent on the redox state of the oxygen evolving complex; at times around one millisecond after flash illumination a large effect was observed in the states S2 and S3, but not in the state S4 (actually Z+S3). The presence of the oxidized secondary electron donor, tyrosine Z+, appeared to prevent expression of the QB/QB effect on electroluminescence, possibly because this effect is primarily due to a shift of the redox equilibrium between Z/Z+ and the oxygen evolving complex.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - EDTA ethylene-diaminetetraacetic acid - EL electroluminescence - FCCP carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethyloxyphenyl-hydrazone - HEPESI 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid - I primary electron acceptor - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino) propane sulfonic acid - P680 primary electron donor of Photosystem II - P700 primary electron donor of Photosystem I - QA and QB secondary and tertiary electron acceptors of Photosystem II - Z secondary electron donor (D1 Tyr 161)  相似文献   

2.
Persistent photochemical hole burned profiles are reported for the primary electron donor state P700 of the reaction center of PS I. The hole profiles at 1.6 K for a wide range of burn wavelengths (B) are broad (FWHM310 cm-1) and for the 45:1 enriched particles studied exhibit no sharp zero-phonon hole feature coincident with B. The B hole profiles are analyzed using the theory of Hayes et al. [J Phys Chem 1986, 90: 4928] for hole burning in the presence of arbitrarily strong linear electron-phonon coupling. A Huang-Rhys factor S in the range 4–6 and a corresponding mean phonon frequency in the range 35–50 cm-1 together with an inhomogeneous line broadening of100 cm-1 are found to provide good agreement with experiment. The zero-point level of P700* is predicted to lie at710 nm at 1.6K with an absorption maximum at702 nm. The hole spectra are discussed in the context of the hole spectra for the primary electron donor states of PS II and purple bacteria.Abbreviations NPHB nonphotochemical hole burning - O.D. optical density - PSBH phonon sideband hole - PS I Photosystem I P680 - P700, P870, P960 the primary electron donors of Photosystem II, Photosystem I, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Rhodopseudomonas viridis - PED primary electron donor - RC reaction center - ZPH zero-phonon holes  相似文献   

3.
The functional size of Photosystem II (PS II) was investigated by radiation inactivation. The technique provides an estimate of the functional mass required for a specific reaction and depends on irradiating samples with high energy -rays and assaying the remaining activity. The analysis is based on target theory that has been modified to take into account the temperature dependence of radiation inactivation of proteins. Using PS II enriched membranes isolated from spinach we determined the functional size of primary charge separation coupled to water oxidation and quinone reduction at the QB site: H2O (Mn)4 Yz P680 Pheophytin Q phenyl-p-benzoquinone. Radiation inactivation analysis indicates a functional mass of 88 ± 12 kDa for electron transfer from water to phenyl-p-benzoquinone. It is likely that the reaction center heterodimer polypeptides, D1 and D2, contribute approximately 70 kDa to the functional mass, in which case polypeptides adding up to approximately 20 kDa remain to be identified. Likely candidates are the and subunits of cytochrome b 559and the 4.5 kDa psbI gene product.Abbreviations Cyt cytochrome - PS Photosystem - P680 primary electron donor of Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II - Yz tyrosine donor to P680  相似文献   

4.
The aim of this article is to assemble and integrate, from a personal perspective of a research participant, seldom examined evidence that is incompatible with some basic tenets of photosynthetic electron transport, the cornerstone of which is the Z scheme. The nonconforming evidence pertaining to the mode of ferredoxin reduction and the role of the copper redox protein, plastocyanin, indicates that contrary to the Z scheme ferredoxin is reduced in two experimentally distinguishable ways: oxygenically by PS II (renamed the oxygenic photosystem), without the participation of PS I, and anoxygenically by PS I (renamed the anoxygenic photosystem). It also indicates that plastocyanin is not only, as the Z scheme asserts, the electron donor to the reaction center chlorophyll of PS I (P700) but also to the reaction center chlorophyll of PS II (P680). Other unconventional findings include evidence that the fully functional oxygenic photosystem, when operating separately from the anoxygenic photosystem, reduces plastoquinone to plastoquinol and subsequently oxidizes plastoquinol by two pathways acting in concert: one being the universally recognized DBMIB-sensitive pathway via the Rieske iron-sulfur center of the cytochrome bf complex and the other, a hitherto unrecognized, DBMIB-insensitive electron transport pathway around P680 that centers on cytochrome b-559. These nonconforming findings form the basis of an alternate hypothesis of photosynthetic electron transport that modifies and complements the Z scheme.Abbreviations PS photosystem - PQ oxidized plastoquinone - PQH2 reduced plastoquinone (plastoquinol) - QA and QB specialized membrane-bound forms of PQ - PC plastocyanin - Fd ferredoxin - BISC FAFB, membrane-bound iron-sulfur centers of PS I - DBM1B 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-n-benzoquinone (dibromothymoquinone) - DNP-INT dinitrophenol ether of iodonitrothymol - NADP+ NADPH, oxidized and reduced forms of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate - FCCP carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenyl-hydrazone - CCCP carbonyl cyanide-3-chlorophenylhydrazone - SF 6847 2,6,-di-(t-butyl)-4-(2,2-dicyanovinyl) phenol - diuron (DCMU) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - DCIP 2,6-dichloro-phenolindophenol - UHDBT 5-(n-undecyl)-6-hydroxy-4-7-dioxobenzothiazole; cytochrome b-559HP-cytochrome b-559LP, high- and low potential states of cytochrome b-559 - oxygenic reductions reductions in which water is the electron donor - BBY PS II preparation made according to Berthold et al. (1981) Dedicated to Professor Achim Trebst on his 65th birthday.Based in part on lecture in Advanced Course on Trends in Photosynthesis Research, Palma de Mallorca, Spain, September 18, 1990.  相似文献   

5.
Photoinhibition was analyzed in O2-evolving and in Tris-treated PS II membrane fragments by measuring flash-induced absorption changes at 830 nm reflecting the transient P680+ formation and oxygen evolution. Irradiation by visible light affects the PS II electron transfer at two different sites: a) photoinhibition of site I eliminates the capability to perform a stable charge separation between P680+ and QA - within the reaction center (RC) and b) photoinhibition of site II blocks the electron transfer from YZ to P680+. The quantum yield of site I photoinhibition (2–3×10-7 inhibited RC/quantum) is independent of the functional integrity of the water oxidizing system. In contrast, the quantum yield of photoinhibition at site II depends strongly on the oxygen evolution capacity. In O2-evolving samples, the quantum yield of site II photoinhibition is about 10-7 inhibited RC/quantum. After selective elimination of the O2-evolving capacity by Tris-treatment, the quantum yield of photoinhibition at site II depends on the light intensity. At low intensity (<3 W/m2), the quantum yield is 10-4 inhibited RC/quantum (about 1000 times higher than in oxygen evolving samples). Based on these results it is inferred that the dominating deleterious effect of photoinhibition cannot be ascribed to an unique target site or a single mechanism because it depends on different experimental conditions (e.g., light intensity) and the functional status of the PS II complex.Abbreviations A830 absorption change at 830 nm - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - PS II photosystem II - Mes 2(N-morpholino)ethansulfonic acid - QA, QB primary and secondary acceptors of PS II - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbohydrazide - FWHM fullwidth at half maximum - Ph-p-BQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PFR photon fluence rate - Pheo pheophytin - RC reaction center  相似文献   

6.
This minireview addresses questions on the mechanism of oxidative water cleavage with special emphasis on the coupling of electron (ET) and proton transfer (PT) of each individual redox step of the reaction sequence and on the mode of O-O bond formation. The following topics are discussed: (1) the multiphasic kinetics of Y(Z)(ox) formation by P680(+*) originate from three different types of rate limitations: (i) nonadiabatic electron transfer for the "fast" ns reaction, (ii) local "dielectric" relaxation for the "slow" ns reaction, and (iii) "large-scale" proton shift for the micros kinetics; (2) the ET/PT-coupling mode of the individual redox transitions within the water oxidizing complex (WOC) driven by Y(Z)(ox) is assumed to depend on the redox state S(i): the oxidation steps of S(0) and S(1) comprise separate ET and PT pathways while those of S(2) and S(3) take place via proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) analogous to Jerry Babcock's hydrogen atom abstractor model [Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1458 (2000) 199]; (3) S(3) is postulated to be a multistate redox level of the WOC with fast dynamic equilibria of both redox isomerism and proton tautomerism. The primary event in the essential O-O bond formation is the population of a state S(3)(P) characterized by an electronic configuration and nuclear geometry that corresponds with a complexed hydrogen peroxide; (4) the peroxidic type S(3)(P) is the entatic state for formation of complexed molecular oxygen through S(3) oxidation by Y(Z)(ox); and (5) the protein matrix itself is proposed to exert catalytic activity by functioning as "PCET director". The WOC is envisaged as a supermolecule that is especially tailored for oxidative water cleavage and acts as a molecular machine.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of P680+ reduction in oxygen-evolving spinach Photosystem II (PS II) core particles were studied using both repetitive and single-flash 830 nm transient absorption. From measurements on samples in which PS II turnover is blocked, we estimate radical-pair lifetimes of 2 ns and 19 ns. Nanosecond single-flash measurements indicate decay times of 7 ns, 40 ns and 95 ns. Both the longer 40 ns and 95 ns components relate to the normal S-state controlled Yz P680+ electron transfer dynamics. Our analysis indicates the existence of a 7 ns component which provides evidence for an additional process associated with modified interactions involving the water-splitting catalytic site. Corresponding microsecond measurements show decay times of 4 s and 90 s with the possibility of a small component with a decay time of 20–40 s. The precise origin of the 4 s component remains uncertain but appears to be associated with the water-splitting center or its binding site while the 90 s component is assigned to P680+-QA recombination. An amplitude and kinetic analysis of the flash dependence data gives results that are consistent with the current model of the oxygen-evolving complex.Abbreviations PS II- Photosystem II- - P680- primary donor (Chl-aII dimer) of PS II - Yz- Tyr 161 donor to P680 - QA- quinone secondary acceptor to P680 - LHC- light-harvesting chlorophyll protein of PS II - BBY- Berthold, Babcock and Yocum PS II membrane fragment preparation - PPBQ- phenyl-p-benzoquinone  相似文献   

8.
Electroluminescence   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
An overview is presented of research based on the observation by Arnold and Azzi (1971) (Photochem Photobiol 14: 233–240), that an electric field induces charge-recombination luminescence in a suspension of photosynthetic membrane vesicles. The electroluminescence signals from Photosystems I and II are discussed in relation to the shape of the vesicles and the membrane potentials generated by the externally applied electric field. The use of the electroluminescence amplitude as a probe to study the kinetics and energetics of charge separation, and of its kinetics to monitor the electric-field induced charge recombination process are reviewed. Currently unresolved issues regarding the emission yield of electroluminescence are briefly discussed and the properties are summarized of the unexplained Photosystem II luminescence which is not sensitive to the membrane potential.Abbreviations DCMU 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EL electroluminescence - PS I, II Photosystem I, II - TPB tetraphenylboron, an artificial electron donor for PS II - P primary electron donor - Si Yz P680 Pheo QA QB sequence of electron transfer components in PS II - plastocyanin P700 A0 A1 Fx FA (or FB) sequence of electron transfer components in PS I  相似文献   

9.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and O2 evolution assays were performed on photosystem II (PSII) membranes which had been treated with 1 M CaCl2 to release the 17, 23 and 33 kilodalton (kDa) extrinsic polypeptides. Manganese was not released from PSII membranes by this treatment as long as a high concentration of chloride was maintained. We have quantitated the EPR signals of the several electron donors and acceptors of PSII that are photooxidized or reduced in a single stable charge separation over the temperature range of 77 to 240 K. The behavior of the samples was qualitatively similar to that observed in samples depleted of only the 17 and 23 kDa polypeptides (de Paula et al. (1986) Biochemistry25, 6487–6494). In both cases, the S2 state multiline EPR signal was observed in high yield and its formation required bound Ca2+. The lineshape of the S2 state multiline EPR signal and the magnetic properties of the manganese site were virtually identical to those of untreated PSII membranes. These results suggest that the structure of the manganese site is unaffected by removal of the 33 kDa polypeptide. Nevertheless, in samples lacking the 33 kDa polypeptide a stable charge separation could only be produced in about one half of the reaction centers below 160 K, in contrast to the result obtained in untreated or 17 and 23 kDa polypeptide-depleted PSII membranes. This suggests that one function of the 33 kDa polypeptide is to stabilize conformations of PSII that are active in secondary electron transfer events.Abbreviations Chl- chlorophyll - DCBQ- 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU- (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EGTA- ethylene glycol bis-(-aminoethyl ether) N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - EPR- electron paramagnetic resonance - HSB- high salt buffer - HSCaB- high salt Ca2+ buffer - kDa- kilodalton - MES- 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - P680- primary electron donor in PSII - PaGE- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PSII- Photosystem II - QA- primary quinone electron acceptor in PSII - RB- resuspension buffer - TMPD- N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p- phenylenediamine - Tris- tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - TX100- Triton X-100 - Z- endogenous electron donor to P680+  相似文献   

10.
The objective of the present study is to delineate the role of active site arginine and histidine residues of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in controlling iodide oxidation using chemical modification technique. The arginine specific reagent, phenylglyoxal (PGO) irreversibly blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 25.12 min-1 M-1. Radiolabelled PGO incorporation studies indicate an essential role of a single arginine residue in enzyme inactivation. The enzyme can be protected both by iodide and an aromatic donor such as guaiacol. Moreover, guaiacol-protected enzyme can oxidise iodide and iodide-protected enzyme can oxidise guaiacol suggesting the regulatory role of the same active site arginine residue in both iodide and guaiacol binding. The protection constant (Kp) for iodide and guaiacol are 500 and 10 M respectively indicating higher affinity of guaiacol than iodide at this site. Donor binding studies indicate that guaiacol competitively inhibits iodide binding suggesting their interaction at the same binding site. Arginine-modified enzyme shows significant loss of iodide binding as shown by increased Kd value to 571 mM from the native enzyme (Kd = 150 mM). Although arginine-modified enzyme reacts with H2O2 to form compound II presumably at a slow rate, the latter is not reduced by iodide presumably due to low affinity binding.The role of the active site histidine residue in iodide oxidation was also studied after disubstitution reaction of the histidine imidazole nitrogens with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), a histidine specific reagent. DEPC blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 0.66 min-1 M-1. Both the nitrogens (, ) of histidine imidazole were modified as evidenced by the characteristic peak at 222 nm. The enzyme is not protected by iodide suggesting that imidazolium ion is not involved in iodide binding. Moreover, DEPC-modified enzyme binds iodide similar to the native enzyme. However, the modified enzyme does not form compound II but forms compound I only with higher concentration of H2O2 suggesting the catalytic role of this histidine in the formation and autoreduction of compound I. Interestingly, compound I thus formed is not reduced by iodide indicating block of electron transport from the donor to the compound I. We suggest that an active site arginine residue regulates iodide binding while the histidine residue controls the electron transfer to the heme ferryl group during oxidation.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined tobacco transformed with an antisense construct against the Rieske-FeS subunit of the cytochromeb 6 f complex, containing only 15 to 20% of the wild-type level of cytochrome f. The anti-Rieske-FeS leaves had a comparable chlorophyll and Photosystem II reaction center stoichiometry and a comparable carotenoid profile to the wild-type, with differences of less than 10% on a leaf area basis. When exposed to high irradiance, the anti-Rieske-FeS leaves showed a greatly increased closure of Photosystem II and a much reduced capacity to develop non-photochemical quenching compared with wild-type. However, contrary to our expectations, the anti-Rieske-FeS leaves were not more susceptible to photoinhibition than were wild-type leaves. Further, when we regulated the irradiance so that the excitation pressure on photosystem II was equivalent in both the anti-Rieske-FeS and wild-type leaves, the anti-Rieske-FeS leaves experienced much less photoinhibition than wild-type. The evidence from the anti-Rieske-FeS tobacco suggests that rapid photoinactivation of Photosystem II in vivo only occurs when closure of Photosystem II coincides with lumen acidification. These results suggest that the model of photoinhibition in vivo occurring principally because of limitations to electron withdrawal from photosystem II does not explain photoinhibition in these transgenic tobacco leaves, and we need to re-evaluate the twinned concepts of photoinhibition and photoprotection.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlophenyl)-1,-dimethylurea - Fo and Fo minimal fluorescence when all PS II reaction centers are open in dark- and light-acclimated leaves, respectively - Fm and Fm maximal fluorescence when all PS II reaction centers are closed in dark- and light-acclimated leaves, respectively - Fv variable fluorescence (Fm-Fo) in dark acclimated leaves - Fv variable fluorescence (Fm-Fo) in lightacclimated leaves - NPQ non-photochemical quenching of fluorescence - PS I and PS II Photosystem I and II - P680 primary electron donor of the reaction center of PS II - PFD photosynthetic flux density - QA primary acceptor quinone of PS II - qp photochemical quenching of fluorescence - V+A+Z violaxanthin+antheraxanthin+zeaxanthin  相似文献   

12.
The linear, four-step oxidation of water to molecular oxygen by photosystem II requires cooperation between redox reactions driven by light and a set of redox reactions involving the S-states within the oxygen-evolving complex. The oxygenevolving complex is a highly ordered structure in which a number of polypeptides interact with one another to provide the appropriate environment for productive binding of cofactors such as manganese, chloride and calcium, as well as for productive electron transfer within the photoact. A number of recent advances in the knowledge of the polypeptide structure of photosystem II has revealed a correlation between primary photochemical events and a core complex of five hydrophobic polypeptides which provide binding sites for chlorophyll a, pheophytin a, the reaction center chlorophyll (P680), and its immediate donor, denoted Z. Although the core complex of photosystem II is photochemically active, it does not possess the capacity to evolve oxygen. A second set of polypeptides, which are water-soluble, have been discovered to be associated with photosystem II; these polypeptides are now proposed to be the structural elements of a special domain which promotes the activities of the loosely-bound cofactors (manganese, chloride, calcium) that participate in oxygen evolution activity. Two of these proteins (whose molecular weights are 23 and 17 kDa) can be released from photosystem II without concurrent loss of functional manganese; studies on these proteins and on the membranes from which they have been removed indicate that the 23 and 17 kDa species from part of the structure which promotes retention of chloride and calcium within the oxygen-evolving complex. A third water-soluble polypeptide of molecular weight 33 kDa is held to the photosystem II core complex by a series of forces which in some circumstances may include ligation to manganese. The 33 kDa protein has been studied in some detail and appears to promote the formation of the environment which is required for optimal participation by manganese in the oxygen evolving reaction. This minireview describes the polypeptides of photosystem II, places an emphasis on the current state of knowledge concerning these species, and discusses current areas of uncertainty concerning these important polypeptides.Abbreviations A 23187 ionophore that exchanges divalent cations with H+ - Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - DCPIP dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC diphenylcarbazide - EGTA ethyleneglycoltetraacetic acid - P680 the chlorophyll a reaction center of photosystem II - pheo pheophytin - PQ plastoquinone - PS photosystem - QA and QB primary and secondary plastoquinone electron acceptors of photosystem II - Sn (n=0, 1, 2, 3, 4) charge accumulating state of the oxygen evolving system - Signals IIvf, IIf and IIs epr-detectable free radicals associated with the oxidizing side of photosystem II - Z primary electron donor to the photosystem II reaction center The survey of literature for this review ended in September, 1984.  相似文献   

13.
We have measured, under Cu (II) toxicity conditions, the oxygen-evolving capacity of spinach PS II particles in the Hill reactions H2OSiMo (in the presence and absence of DCMU) and H2OPPBQ, as well as the fluorescence induction curve of Tris-washed spinach PS II particles. Cu (II) inhibits both Hill reactions and, in the first case, the DCMU-insensitive H2O SiMo activity. In addition, the variable fluorescence is lowered by Cu (II). We have interpreted our results in terms of a donor side inhibition close to the reaction center. The same polarographic and fluorescence measurements carried out at different pHs indicate that Cu (II) could bind to amino acid residues that can be protonated and deprotonated. In order to reverse the Cu (II) inhibition by a posterior EDTA treatment, in experiments of preincubation of PS II particles with Cu (II) in light we have demonstrated that light is essential for the damage due to Cu (II) and that this furthermore is irreversible.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethyl urea - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenilcarbazide - Fo initial non-variable fluorescence - FI intermediate fluorescence yield - Fm maximum fluorescence yield - Fv variable fluorescence yield - Mes 2,-(N-morpholino)ethanosulfonic acid - OEC oxygen-evolving complex - P680 Primary electron donor chlorophyll - Pheo pheophytin - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzo-quinone - PS II Photosystem II - SiMo Silicomolybdate - QB secondary quinone acceptor - QA primary quinone aceptor - Tris N-tris(hydroxymethyl)amino ethane - Tyrz electron carrier functioning between P680 and the Mn cluster This article is dedicated to Prof. Dr. Harmut Lichtenthaler on the occasion of his 60th birthday.  相似文献   

14.
Extraction of PS II particles with 50 mM cholate and 1 M NaCl releases several proteins (33-, 23-, 17- and 13 kDa) and lipids from the thylakoid membrane which are essential for O2 evolution, dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP) reduction and for stable charge separation between P680+ and QA -. This work correlates the results on the loss of steady-state rates for O2 evolution and PS II mediated DCIP photo-reduction with flash absorption changes directly monitoring the reaction center charge separation at 830 nm due to P680+, the chlorophyll a donor. Reconstitution of the extracted lipids to the depleted membrane restores the ability to photo-oxidize P680 reversibly and to reduce DCIP, while stimulating O2 evolution minimally. Addition of the extracted proteins of masses 33-, 23- and 17- kDa produces no further stimulation of DCIP reduction in the presence of an exogenous donor like DPC, but does enhance this rate in the absence of exogenous donors while also stimulating O2 evolution. The proteins alone in the absence of lipids have little influence on charge separation in the reaction center. Thus lipids are essential for stable charge separation within the reaction center, involving formation of P680+ and QA -.Abbreviations A830 Absorption change at 830 nm - Chl Chlorophyll - D1 primary electron donor to P680 - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid - P680 reaction center chlorophyll a molecule of photosystem II - PPBQ Phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA, QB first and second quinone acceptors in PS II - V-DCIP rate of DCIP reduction - V-O2 rate of oxygen evolution - Y water-oxidizing enzyme system - CHAPS 3-Cyclohexylamino-propanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

15.
A linkage map with RFLP and isozyme markers for almond   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Inheritance and linkage studies were conducted with seven isozyme genes and 120 RFLPs in the F1 progeny of a cross between almond cultivars Ferragnes and Tuono. RFLPs were detected using 57 genomic and 43 cDNA almond clones. Eight of the cDNA probes corresponded to known genes (extensin, prunin (2), -tubulin, endopolygalacturonase, oleosin, actin depolymerizing factor and phosphoglyceromutase). Single-copy clones were found more frequently in the cDNA (65%) than in the genomic libraries (26%). Two maps were elaborated, one with the 93 loci heterozygous in Ferragnes and another with the 69 loci heterozygous in Tuono. Thirty-five loci were heterozygous in both parents and were used as bridges between both maps. Most of the segregations (91%) were of the 11 or 1111 types, and data were analyzed as if they derived from two backcross populations. Eight linkage groups covering 393 cM in Ferragnes and 394 in Tuono were found for each map. None of the loci examined in either map was found to be unlinked. Distorted segregation ratios were mainly concentrated in two linkage groups of the Ferragnes map.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Inward currents carried by external Cs, Rb, NH4 and K through theI K1 channel were studied using a whole-cell voltage clamp technique. Cs, NH4, and Rb currents could be recorded negative to –40 mV following depolarizing prepulses (0 mV and 200–1000 msec in duration). The current activation displayed an instantaneous component followed by a monoexponential increase () to a peak amplitude. Subsequent inactivation was fit by a single exponential, i. With hyperpolarization, and i decreasede-fold per 36 and 25 mV, respectively. In Ca-free external solutions (pipette [Mg]0.3mm), inactivation was absent, consistent with the hypothesis that inactivation represents time- and voltage-dependent block of Cs, NH4, and Rb currents by external Ca. The inactivation and degree of steady-state block was greatest when Cs was the charge carrier, followed by NH4, and then Rb. K currents, however, did not inactivate in the presence of Ca. Na and Li did not carry any significant current within the resolution of our recordings. Comparison ofpeak inward current ratios (I x/IK) as an index of permeability revealed a higher permeance of Cs (0.15), NH4 (0.30), and Rb (0.51) relative to K (1.0) than that obtained by comparing thesteady-state current ratios (CsNH4RbK0.010.060.211.0). At any given potential, was smaller the more permeant the cation. In the absence of depolarizing prepulses, the amplitude of was reduced. Divalent-free solutions did not significantly affect activatio in the presence of 0.3mm pipette [Mg]. When pipette [Mg] was buffered to 50 m, however, removal of external Ca and Mg lead to a four- to fivefold increase in Cs currents and loss of both time-dependent activation and inactivation (reversible upon repletion of external Ca).These results suggest that (i) permeability ratios forI K1 should account for differences in the degree to which monovalent currents are blocked by extracellular Ca and (ii) extracellular or intracellular divalent cations contribute to the slow phase of activation which may represent either (a) the actual rate of Mg or Ca extrusion from the channel into the cell, a process which may be enhanced by repulsive interaction with the incoming permeant monovalent cation or (b) an intrinsic gating process that is strongly modulated by the permeant monovalent ion and divalent cations.  相似文献   

17.
To further characterize the role of D1-His190 in the oxidation of tyrosine Y(Z) in photosystem II, the pH dependence of P(680)(*)()(+) reduction was measured in H190A and Mn-depleted wild-type PSII particles isolated from the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Measurements were conducted in the presence and absence of imidazole and other small organic bases. In H190A PSII particles, rapid reduction of P(680)(*)()(+) attributed to electron transfer from Y(Z) increased dramatically above pH 9, with an apparent pK(A) of approximately 10.3. In the presence of ethanolamine and imidazole, this dramatic increase occurred at lower pH values, with the efficiency of Y(Z) oxidation correlating with the solution pK(A) value of the added base. We conclude that the pK(A) of Y(Z) is approximately 10.3 in D1-H190A PSII particles. In Mn-depleted wild-type PSII particles, P(680)(*)()(+) reduction was accelerated by all exogenous bases examined (substituted imidazoles, histidine, Tris, and 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane). We conclude that Y(Z) is solvent accessible in Mn-depleted wild-type PSII particles and that its pK(A) is near that of tyrosine in solution. In Mn-depleted wild-type PSII particles, over 80% of the kinetics of P(680)(*)()(+) reduction after a flash could be described by three kinetic components. The individual rate constants of these components varied slightly with pH, but their relative proportions varied dramatically with pH, showing apparent pK(A) values of 7.5 and 6.25 (6.9 and 5.8 in the presence of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) ions). An additional pK(A) value (pK(A) < 4.5) may also be present. To describe these data, we propose (1) the pK(A) of His190 is 6.9-7.5, depending on buffer ions, (2) the deprotonation of Y(Z) is facilitated by the transient formation of a either a hydrogen bond or a hydrogen-bonded water bridge between Y(Z) and D1-His190, and (3) when protonated, D1-His190 interacts with nearby residues having pK(A) values near 6 and 4. Because Y(Z) and D1-His190 are located near the Mn cluster, these residues may interact with the Mn cluster in the intact system.  相似文献   

18.
Formation of thermoluminescence signals is characteristics of energy- and charge storage in Photosystem II. In isolated D1/D2/cytochrome b-559 Photosystem II reaction centre preparation four thermoluminescence components were found. These appear at -180 (Z band), between -80 and -50 (Zv band), at -30 and at +35°C. The Z band arises from pigment molecules but not correlated with photosynthetic activity. The Zv and -30°C bands arise from the recombination of charge pairs stabilized in the Photosystem II reaction centre complex. The +35°C band probably corresponds to the artefact glow peak resulting from a pigment-protein-detergent interaction in subchloroplast preparations (Rózsa Zs, Droppa M and Horváth G (1989) Biochim Biophys Acta 973, 350–353).Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - Cyt cytochrome - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - D1 psbA gene product - D2 psbD gene product - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - Pheo pheophytin - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - RC reaction centre of PS II - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

19.
-Toxin (perfringolysin O) binds to cell surface cholesterol and forms oligomeric pores that cause membrane damage. Both in cytotoxicity and cell survival assays, a mutant Chinese hamster ovary cell line NPC1(–) that lacked Niemann-Pick C1 showed reduced sensitivity to -toxin, compared with wild-type (wt) cells. BC is a derivative of -toxin that retains cholesterol-binding activity but lacks cytotoxicity. Confocal and electron microscopy revealed the presence of multiple vesicles which bound BC, both on the cell surface and in the extracellular space of these cells. BC binding to raft microdomains was verified by its resistance to 1% Triton X-100 at 4°C and recovery of bound BC in floating low-density fractions on sucrose density gradient fractionation. BC-labeled vesicles were abolished when NPC1(–) cells were depleted of lipoproteins and also when treated with a Rho-associated kinase inhibitor Y-27632. In addition, similar vesicles were observed in wt cells treated with progesterone. In parallel with these results, -toxin sensitivity of NPC1(–) cells was increased when cells were depleted of lipoproteins or treated with Y-27632, whereas that of wt cells was decreased by progesterone. Our findings suggest that sequestration of toxin to raft-enriched cell surface vesicles may underlie reduced sensitivity of NPC1-deficient cells to -toxin.  相似文献   

20.
The psbP gene product, the so called 23 kDa extrinsic protein, is involved in water oxidation carried out by Photosystem II. However, the protein is not absolutely required for water oxidation. Here we have studied Photosystem II mediated electron transfer in a mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the FUD 39 mutant, that lacks the psbP protein. When grown in dim light the Photosystem II content in thylakoid membranes of FUD 39 is approximately similar to that in the wild-type. The oxygen evolution is dependent on the presence of chloride as a cofactor, which activates the water oxidation with a dissociation constant of about 4 mM. In the mutant, the oxygen evolution is very sensitive to photoinhibition when assayed at low chloride concentrations while chloride protects against photoinhibition with a dissociation constant of about 5 mM. The photoinhibition is irreversible as oxygen evolution cannot be restored by the addition of chloride to inhibited samples. In addition the inhibition seems to be targeted primarily to the Mn-cluster in Photosystem II as the electron transfer through the remaining part of Photosystem II is photoinhibited with slower kinetics. Thus, this mutant provides an experimental system in which effects of photoinhibition induced by lesions at the donor side of Photosystem II can be studied in vivo.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide - HEPES 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinethanesulfonic acid - P680 the primary electron donor to PS II - PpBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA the first quinone acceptor of PS II - QB the second quinone acceptor of PS II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - TyrD accessory electron donor on the D2-protein - TyrZ tyrosine residue, acting as electron carrier between P680 and the water oxidizing system  相似文献   

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