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1.
《BBA》2022,1863(2):148519
PsbX is a 4.1 kDa intrinsic Photosystem II (PS II) protein, found together with the low-molecular-weight proteins, PsbY and PsbJ, in proximity to cytochrome b559. The function of PsbX is not yet fully characterized but PsbX may play a role in the exchange of the secondary plastoquinone electron acceptor QB with the quinone pool in the thylakoid membrane. To study the role of PsbX, we have constructed a PsbX-lacking strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Our studies indicate that the absence of PsbX causes sensitivity to high light and impairs electron transport within PS II. In addition to a change in the QB-binding pocket, PsbX-lacking cells exhibited sensitivity to sodium formate, suggesting altered binding of the bicarbonate ligand to the non-heme iron between the sequential plastoquinone electron acceptors QA and QB. Experiments using 35S-methionine revealed high-light-treated PsbX-lacking cells restore PS II activity during recovery under low light by an increase in the turnover of PS II-associated core proteins. These labeling experiments indicate the recovery after exposure to high light requires both selective removal and replacement of the D1 protein and de novo PS II assembly.  相似文献   

2.
The OJDIP rise in chlorophyll fluorescence during induction at different light intensities was mathematically modeled using 24 master equations describing electron transport through photosystem II (PSII) plus ordinary differential equations for electron budgets in plastoquinone, cytochrome f, plastocyanin, photosystem I, and ferredoxin. A novel feature of the model is consideration of electron in- and outflow budgets resulting in changes in redox states of Tyrosine Z, P680, and QA as sole bases for changes in fluorescence yield during the transient. Ad hoc contributions by transmembrane electric fields, protein conformational changes, or other putative quenching species were unnecessary to account for primary features of the phenomenon, except a peculiar slowdown of intra-PSII electron transport during induction at low light intensities. The lower than F m post-flash fluorescence yield F f was related to oxidized tyrosine Z. The transient J peak was associated with equal rates of electron arrival to and departure from QA and requires that electron transfer from QA ? to QB be slower than that from QA ? to QB ?. Strong quenching by oxidized P680 caused the dip D. Reduced plastoquinone, a competitive product inhibitor of PSII, blocked electron transport proportionally with its concentration. Electron transport rate indicated by fluorescence quenching was faster than the rate indicated by O2 evolution, because oxidized donor side carriers quench fluorescence but do not transport electrons. The thermal phase of the fluorescence rise beyond the J phase was caused by a progressive increase in the fraction of PSII with reduced QA and reduced donor side.  相似文献   

3.
Rita Khanna  T. Wydrzynski 《BBA》1977,462(1):208-214
Using artificial electron donors and acceptors, it is shown here that the major HCO3? effect in the Hill reaction is after the “primary” electron acceptor (Q) of Photosystem II and before the site of action of 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (at the plastoquinone pool). Chloroplasts in the presence of both 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, which blocks electron flow from the reduced primary acceptor Q? to the plastoquinone pool, and silicomolybdate, which accepts electrons from Q?, show no significant bicarbonate stimulation of electron flow. However, a 6–7-fold stimulation is clearly observed when oxidized diaminodurene, as an electron acceptor, and dibromothymoquinone, as an inhibitor of electron flow beyond the plastoquinone pool, are used. In the same chloroplast preparation no measurable effect of bicarbonate is observed in a Photosystem I reaction as monitored by electron flow from reduced diaminodurene to methyl viologen in the presence of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The insensitivity of the bicarbonate effect to uncouplers of photophosphorylation and the dependence of this effect on the presence of a weak acid anion and on external pH are also reported.  相似文献   

4.
When the photosystem II quinone acceptor complex has been singly reduced to the state QAQ?B, there is a 22 s half-time back-reaction of Q?B with an oxidized photosystem II donor (S2), directly measured here for the first time. From the back-reaction kinetics with and without inhibitors, kinetic and equilibrium parameters have been estimated. We suggest that the state QAQ?B of the complex is formed by a second-order reaction of vacant reaction centers in the state Q?A with plastoquinone from the pool, and discuss the physico-chemical parameters involved.  相似文献   

5.
Ryo Nagao  Sho Kitazaki  Takumi Noguchi 《BBA》2018,1859(2):129-136
Light-induced Fourier transformed infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy is a powerful method to study the structures and reactions of redox cofactors involved in the photosynthetic electron transport chain. So far, most of the FTIR studies of the reactions of oxygenic photosynthesis have been performed using isolated photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) preparations, which, however, could be modified during isolation procedures. In this study, we developed a methodology to evaluate the photosynthetic activities of thylakoids using FTIR spectroscopy. FTIR difference spectra upon successive flashes using thylakoids from spinach exhibited signals typical of the S-state cycle at the Mn4CaO5 cluster and QB reactions in PSII with period-four and -two oscillations, respectively. Similar measurement in the presence of an artificial quinone as an exogenous electron acceptor showed features specific to the S-state cycle. Simulations of the oscillation patterns provided the quantum efficiencies of the S-state cycle and electron transfer in PSII. Moreover, FTIR measurement under continuous illumination on thylakoids in the presence of DCMU showed signals due to QA reduction and P700 oxidation simultaneously. From the relative amplitudes of marker bands of QA? and P700+, the molar ratio of photoactive PSII and PSI centers in thylakoids was estimated. FTIR analyses of the photo-reactions in thylakoids, which are more intact than isolated photosystems, will be useful in investigations of the photosynthetic mechanism especially by genetic modification of photosystem proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Using thoroughly dark-adapted thylakoids and an unmodulated Joliot-type oxygen electrode, the following results were obtained. (i) At high flash frequency (4 Hz), the oxygen yield at the fourth flash (Y4) is lower compared to Y3 than at lower flash frequency. At 4 Hz, the calculated S0 concentration after thorough dark adaptation is found to approach zero, whereas at 0.5 Hz the apparent S0(S0 + S1) ratio increases to about 0.2. This is explained by a relatively fast donation (t12 = 1.0–1.5 s) of one electron by an electron donor to S2 and S3 in 15–25% of the Photosystem II reaction chains. The one-electron donor to S2 and S3 appears to be rereduced very slowly, and may be identical to the component that, after oxidation, gives rise to ESR signal IIs. (ii) The probability for the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 has nearly been the same in triazine-resistant and triazine-susceptible thylakoids. However, most of the slow phase of the S2 decay becomes 10-fold faster (t12 = 5–6 s) in the triazine-resistant ones. In a small part of the Photosystem II reaction chains, the S2 decay was extremely slow. The S3 decay in the triazine-resistant thylakoids was not significantly different from that in triazine-susceptible thylakoids. This supports the hypothesis that S2 is reduced mainly by Q?A, whereas S3 is not. (iii) In the absence of CO2/HCO?A and in the presence of formate, the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 does not occur. Addition of HCO?3 restores the fast decay of part of S2 and S3 to almost the same extent as in control thylakoids. The slow phase of S2 and S3 decay is not influenced significantly by CO2/HCO?3. The chlorophyll a fluorescence decay kinetics in the presence of DCMU, however, monitoring the Q?A oxidation without interference of QB, were 2.3-fold slower in the absence of CO2/HCO?3 than in its presence. (iv) An almost 3-fold decrease in decay rate of S2 is observed upon lowering the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. The kinetics of chlorophyll a fluorescence decay in the presence of DCMU are slightly accelerated by a pH change from 7.6 to 6.0. This indicates that the equilibrium Q?A concentration after one flash is decreased (by about a factor of 4) upon changing the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. When direct or indirect protonation of Q?B is responsible for this shift of equilibrium Q?A concentration, these data would suggest that the pKa value for Q?B protonation is somewhat higher than 7.6, assuming that the protonated form of Q?B cannot reduce QA.  相似文献   

7.
Disulfiram (tetraethylthiuram disulfide), a metal chelator, inhibits photosynthetic electron transport in broken chloroplasts. A major site of inhibition is detected on the electron-acceptor side of photosystem II between QA, the first plastoquinone electron-acceptor, and the second plastoquinone electron-acceptor, QB. This site of inhibition is shown by a severalfold increase in the half-time of QA oxidation, as monitored by the decay of the variable chlorophyll a flourescence after an actinic flash. Another site of inhibition is detected in the functioning of the reaction center of photosystem II; disulfiram is observed to quench the room temperature variable chlorophyll a fluorescence, as well as the intensity of the 695 nm peak, relative to the 685 nm peak, in the chlorophyll a fluorescence spectrum at 77 K. Electron transport from H2O to the photosystem II electron-acceptor silicomolybdate is also inhibited. Disulfiram does not inhibit electron flow before the site(s) of donation by exogenous electron donors to photosystem II, and no inhibition is detected in the partial reactions associated with photosystem I.  相似文献   

8.
《BBA》2013,1827(10):1183-1190
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a photoautotrophic green alga, which can be grown mixotrophically in acetate-supplemented media (Tris–acetate–phosphate). We show that acetate has a direct effect on photosystem II (PSII). As a consequence, Tris–acetate–phosphate-grown mixotrophic C. reinhardtii cultures are less susceptible to photoinhibition than photoautotrophic cultures when subjected to high light. Spin-trapping electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that thylakoids from mixotrophic C. reinhardtii produced less 1O2 than those from photoautotrophic cultures. The same was observed in vivo by measuring DanePy oxalate fluorescence quenching. Photoinhibition can be induced by the production of 1O2 originating from charge recombination events in photosystem II, which are governed by the midpoint potentials (Em) of the quinone electron acceptors. Thermoluminescence indicated that the Em of the primary quinone acceptor (QA/QA) of mixotrophic cells was stabilised while the Em of the secondary quinone acceptor (QB/QB) was destabilised, therefore favouring direct non-radiative charge recombination events that do not lead to 1O2 production. Acetate treatment of photosystem II-enriched membrane fragments from spinach led to the same thermoluminescence shifts as observed in C. reinhardtii, showing that acetate exhibits a direct effect on photosystem II independent from the metabolic state of a cell. A change in the environment of the non-heme iron of acetate-treated photosystem II particles was detected by low temperature electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. We hypothesise that acetate replaces the bicarbonate associated to the non-heme iron and changes the environment of QA and QB affecting photosystem II charge recombination events and photoinhibition.  相似文献   

9.
In cyanobacteria, Glu-244 and Tyr-246 of the Photosystem II (PS II) D1 protein are hydrogen bonded to two water molecules that are part of a hydrogen-bond network between the bicarbonate ligand to a non-heme iron and the cytosol. Ala substitutions were introduced in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to investigate the roles of these residues and the hydrogen-bond network on electron transfer between the primary plastoquinone acceptor, QA, and the secondary plastoquinone acceptor, QB, of the quinone-Fe-acceptor complex. All mutants assembled PS II; however, an increase in the PS II to PS I ratio was apparent, particularly in the E244A:Y246A double mutant. The mutants also showed impaired oxygen evolution and retarded chlorophyll a fluorescence decays following single turnover actinic flashes, which appeared to be primarily due to reduced QB binding in the E244A strain and an enhanced back reaction with the S2 state of the oxygen-evolving complex in the Y246A mutant. Impaired PS II in the Y246A and E244A:Y246A mutants resulted in inactivation of the psbA gene encoding D1. The Y246A and E244A:Y246A mutants also showed high light sensitivity whereas the E244A mutant showed enhanced resilience towards photodamage. Unlike the control strain, all of the mutants were insensitive to the addition of formate or bicarbonate in assays following chlorophyll decay kinetics that reflect electron transfer between QA and QB, suggesting the bicarbonate binding environment was perturbed. Our data also indicate that waters W582 and W622 (PDB: 4UB6) have essential roles in maintaining the architecture of the acceptor side of PS II.  相似文献   

10.
Thermoluminescence experiments have been carried out to study the effect of a transmembrane proton gradient on the recombination properties of the S2 and S3 states of the oxygen evolving complex with QA - and QB -, the reduced electron acceptors of Photosystem II. We first determined the properties of the S2QA - (Q band), S2QB - and S3QB - (B bands) recombinations in the pH range 5.5 to 9.0, using uncoupled thylakoids. The, a proton gradient was created in the dark, using the ATP-hydrolase function of ATPases, in coupled unfrozen thylakoids. A shift towards low temperature of both Q and B bands was observed to increase with the magnitude of the proton gradient measured by the fluorescence quenching of 9-aminoacridine. This downshift was larger for S3QB - than for S2QB - and it was suppressed by nigericin, but not by valinomycin. Similar results were obtained when a proton gradient was formed by photosystem I photochemistry. When Photosystem II electron transfer was induced by a flash sequence, the reduction of the plastoquinone pool also contributed to the downshift in the absence of an electron acceptor. In leaves submitted to a flash sequence above 0°C, a downshift was also observed, which was supressed by nigericin infiltration. Thus, thermoluminescence provides direct evidence on the enhancing effect of lumen acidification on the S3S2 and S2S1 reverse-transitions. Both reduction of the plastoquinone pool and lumen acidification induce a shift of the Q and B bands to lower temperature, with a predominance of lumen acidification in non-freezing, moderate light conditions.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - EA activation energy - F0 constant fluorescence level - FM maximum fluorescence, when all PS-II centers are closed - FV variable fluorescence (FM–F0) - PS I, PS II Photosystem I, photosystem II - PQ plastoquinone - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

11.
Non-photochemical (dark) increases in chlorophyll a fluorescence yield associated with non-photochemical reduction of redox carriers (Fnpr) have been attributed to the reduction of plastoquinone (PQ) related to cyclic electron flow (CEF) around photosystem I. In vivo, this rise in fluorescence is associated with activity of the chloroplast plastoquinone reductase (plastid NAD(P)H:plastoquinone oxidoreductase) complex. In contrast, this signal measured in isolated thylakoids has been attributed to the activity of the protein gradient regulation-5 (PGR5)/PGR5-like (PGRL1)-associated CEF pathway. Here, we report a systematic experimentation on the origin of Fnpr in isolated thylakoids. Addition of NADPH and ferredoxin to isolated spinach thylakoids resulted in the reduction of the PQ pool, but neither its kinetics nor its inhibitor sensitivities matched those of Fnpr. Notably, Fnpr was more rapid than PQ reduction, and completely insensitive to inhibitors of the PSII QB site and oxygen evolving complex as well as inhibitors of the cytochrome b6f complex. We thus conclude that Fnpr in isolated thylakoids is not a result of redox equilibrium with bulk PQ. Redox titrations and fluorescence emission spectra imply that Fnpr is dependent on the reduction of a low potential redox component (Em about − 340 mV) within photosystem II (PSII), and is likely related to earlier observations of low potential variants of QA within a subpopulation of PSII that is directly reducible by ferredoxin. The implications of these results for our understanding of CEF and other photosynthetic processes are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The nature of Cu2+ inhibition of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry in pea (Pisum sativum L.) thylakoids was investigated monitoring Hill activity and light emission properties of photosystem II. In Cu2+-inhibited thylakoids, diphenyl carbazide addition does not relieve the loss of Hill activity. The maximum yield of fluorescence induction restored by hydroxylamine in Tris-inactivated thylakoids is markedly reduced by Cu2+. This suggests that Cu2+ does not act on the donor side of PSII but on the reaction center of PSII or on components beyond. Thermoluminescence and delayed luminescence studies show that charge recombination between the positively charged intermediate in water oxidation cycle (S2) and negatively charged primary quinone acceptor of pSII (QA) is largely unaffected by Cu2+. The S2QB charge recombination, however, is drastically inhibited which parallels the loss of Hill activity. This indicates that Cu2+ inhibits photosystem II photochemistry primarily affecting the function of the secondary quinone electron acceptor, QB. We suggest that Cu2+ does not block electron flow between the primary and secondary quinone acceptor but modifies the QB site in such a way that it becomes unsuitable for further photosystem II photochemistry.  相似文献   

13.
The photosystem II electron acceptor 3,6-dichloro-2,5-dimethoxy-p-benzoquinone [DCDMQ] is suggested to replace the second quinone-type two electron acceptor B (or R); the DCDMQ Hill reaction is sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, but is insensitive to dry heptane extraction of thylakoids and other photosystem II inhibitors. Addition of HCO3? to CO2-depleted thylakoids in silicomolybdate, DCDMQ, diaminodurene and ferricyanide Hill reactions brought about 1,3,10 and 10 fold increase in the electron transport rates; these data confirm that HCO3? affects both Q? to B and B2? to PQ reactions.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetics of the dark relaxation of variable chlorophyll fluorescence, Fv, were studied after brief illumination of dark-adapted barley leaves in order to understand the rapid reversibility of pulse-induced fluorescence increases, which is observed even when fast linear electron transport to an external electron acceptor is not possible. Four kinetically distinct components were observed which reveal complexity in the oxidation of the reduced primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II, QA : the slowest component accounted for 4–5% of maximal Fv and had a life-time of several seconds. It is suggested to represent a minor population of inactive Photosystem II centers. The other three components displayed first-order kinetics with half-time of 6–8 ms (`fast' component), 60–80 ms (`middle' component) and 650–680 ms (`slow' component). The fast component dominated Fv when methyl viologen or far-red light accelerated oxidation of plastohydroquinone. It shows rapid oxidation of QA during electron flow to plastoquinone commensurate with maximum linear electron flow through the electron transport chain. The other two components were observed under conditions of restricted electron flow and excessive reduction of electron carriers. Unexpectedly, the slow component, which is interpreted to reflect the recombination between QA and an intermediate on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II, saturated already at low irradiances of actinic light when plastoquinone was not yet strongly reduced suggesting that dark-adaptation of leaves results not only in the loss of activity of light-regulated enzymes of the carbon cycle but affects also electron flow from QA to plastoquinone. KCN poisoning or high temperature treatment of leaves produced a nonexponential pattern of slow Fv relaxation. This effect was largely (heat treatment) or even completely (KCN) abolished by far-red light. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
It is well known that two photosystems, I and II, are needed to transfer electrons from H2O to NADP+ in oxygenic photosynthesis. Each photosystem consists of several components: (a) the light-harvesting antenna (L-HA) system, (b) the reaction center (RC) complex, and (c) the polypeptides and other co-factors involved in electron and proton transport. First, we present a mini review on the heterogeneity which has been identified with the electron acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) including (a) L-HA system: the PS II and PS II units, (b) RC complex containing electron acceptor Q1 or Q2; and (c) electron acceptor complex: QA (having two different redox potentials QL and QH) and QB (QB-type; Q'B type; and non-QB type); additional components such as iron (Q-400), U (Em,7=–450 mV) and Q-318 (or Aq) are also mentioned. Furthermore, we summarize the current ideas on the so-called inactive (those that transfer electrons to the plastoquinone pool rather slowly) and active reaction centers. Second, we discuss the bearing of the first section on the ratio of the PS II reaction center (RC-II) and the PS I reaction center (RC-I). Third, we review recent results that relate the inactive and active RC-II, obtained by the use of quinones DMQ and DCBQ, with the fluorescence transient at room temperature and in heated spinach and soybean thylakoids. These data show that inactive RC-II can be easily monitored by the OID phase of fluorescence transient and that heating converts active into inactive centers.Abbreviations DCBQ 2,5 or 2,6 dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DMQ dimethylquinone - QA primary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - QB secondary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - IODP successive fluorescence levels during time course of chlorophyll a fluorescence: O for origin, I for inflection, D for dip or plateau, and P for peak  相似文献   

16.
Thylakoid membranes contain the redox active complexes catalyzing the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria, algae and plants. Crude thylakoid membranes or purified photosystems from different organisms have previously been utilized for generation of electrical power and/or fuels. Here we investigate the electron transferability from thylakoid preparations from plants or the cyanobacterium Synechocystis. We show that upon illumination, crude Synechocystis thylakoids can reduce cytochrome c. In addition, this crude preparation can transfer electrons to a graphite electrode, producing an unmediated photocurrent of 15 μA/cm2. Photocurrent could be obtained in the presence of the PSII inhibitor DCMU, indicating that the source of electrons is QA, the primary Photosystem II acceptor. In contrast, thylakoids purified from plants could not reduce cyt c, nor produced a photocurrent in the photocell in the presence of DCMU. The production of significant photocurrent (100 μA/cm2) from plant thylakoids required the addition of the soluble electron mediator DCBQ. Furthermore, we demonstrate that use of crude thylakoids from the D1-K238E mutant in Synechocystis resulted in improved electron transferability, increasing the direct photocurrent to 35 μA/cm2. Applying the analogous mutation to tobacco plants did not achieve an equivalent effect. While electron abstraction from crude thylakoids of cyanobacteria or plants is feasible, we conclude that the site of the abstraction of the electrons from the thylakoids, the architecture of the thylakoid preparations influence the site of the electron abstraction, as well as the transfer pathway to the electrode. This dictates the use of different strategies for production of sustainable electrical current from photosynthetic thylakoid membranes of cyanobacteria or higher plants.  相似文献   

17.
High-temperature-induced inhibition of the acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) was studied in tobacco thylakoids using oxygen evolution, chlorophyll a (Chl a) fluorescence and redox potential measurements. When thylakoids were heated at 2 °C/min from 25 to 50 °C, the oxygen evolving complex became inhibited between 32 and 45 °C, whereas the acceptor side of PS II tolerated higher temperatures. Variable Chl a fluorescence decreased more slowly than oxygen evolution, suggesting that transitions between some S-states occurred even after heat-induced inhibition of the oxygen evolving activity. 77 K emission spectroscopy reveals that heating does not cause detachment of the light-harvesting complex II from PS II, and thus the heat-induced increase in the initial F0 fluorescence is due to loss of exciton trapping in the heated PS II centers. Redox titrations showed a heat-induced increase in the midpoint potential of the QA/QA -) couple from the control value of –80 mV to +40 mV at 50 °C, indicating a loss of the reducing power of QA -). When its driving force thus decreased, electron transfer from QA -) to QB in the PS II centers that still could reduce QA became gradually inhibited, as shown by measurements of the decay of Chl a fluorescence yield after a single turnover flash. Interestingly, the heat-induced loss of variable fluorescence and inhibition of electron transfer from QA -) to QB could be partially prevented by the presence of 5 mM bicarbonate during heating, suggesting that high temperatures cause release of the bicarbonate bound to PS II. We speculate that both the upshift in the redox potential of the QA/QA -) couple and the release of bicarbonate may be caused by a heat-induced structural change in the transmembrane D1 or D2 proteins. This structural change may, in turn, be caused by the inhibition of the oxygen evolving complex during heating.  相似文献   

18.
H.Y. Nakatani  A.W. Rutherford  Y. Inoue 《BBA》1984,766(2):416-423
In this paper, we present the first measurements on thermoluminescence from isolated thylakoids to probe the recombination reactions of S2 (or possibly S3) with Q?B or Q?A, after bicarbonate depletion and its readdition. The effects of bicarbonate depletion on the S2Q?B (or S3O?B) thermoluminescence band was (1) a 6–10°C shift to a higher temperature; (2) a reduction in its intensity upon prolonged depletion; and (3) elimination after the first few flashes of the characteristic period four oscillations in its intensity as a function of the flash number. On the other hand, addition of diuron (3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea), which blocks electron flow from Q?A to QB, produced the same thermoluminescence band, at about + 20°C, assigned to S2Q?A recombination, in both depleted and reconstituted samples. These results suggest (1) the initial effect of bicarbonate depletion is to increase the activation energy for S2(S3)Q?B recombination; (2) with further depletion, the incidence of this recombination decreases and the cycling of the S2Q?B and S3Q?B recombination is inhibited through effects at the QB apoprotein; and (3) the depletion effects are fully reversible. It is suggested that a conformational change of the PS II complex in the region of the QB apoprotein is responsible for these effects.  相似文献   

19.
Energy dependent reverse electron flow reactions in isolated thylakoids provide a unique tool to study, in the dark, the coupling between the ATP synthase, proton transport and the electron transfer system. Appropriate experimental conditions have been established to follow experimentally the following reactions:
  1. ATP driven proton uptake into the inner-thylakoid space, which requires preactivation of the ATP synthase.
  2. ATP driven reverse electron transport, which involves proton transport as an intermediate, and results in the reduction of QA by an externally added electron donor.
  3. ATP driven luminescence, which requires the presence of an oxidized partner on the water side of photosystem II, and involves electron transport from QB to QA.
  4. ΔpH driven reverse electron flow, which does not require the participation of the ATP synthase, and uses reduced intermediates between the two photosystems as electron donors for the reduction of QA.
  5. ΔpH driven luminescence which again uses reduced intermdiates between the two photosystems as electron donors for QA reduction, and requires the presence of an oxidized partner on the water side of photosystem II.
Several of these reactions have been shown to occur in intact chloroplasts and may provide an important regulatory mechanism in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Lumenal extrinsic proteins PsbO, PsbP, and PsbQ of photosystem II (PSII) protect the catalytic cluster Mn4CaO5 of oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) from the bulk solution and from soluble compounds in the surrounding medium. Extraction of PsbP and PsbQ proteins by NaCl-washing together with chelator EGTA is followed also by the depletion of Ca2+ cation from OEC. In this study, the effects of PsbP and PsbQ proteins, as well as Ca2+ extraction from OEC on the kinetics of the reduced primary electron acceptor (QA ?) oxidation, have been studied by fluorescence decay kinetics measurements in PSII membrane fragments. We found that in addition to the impairment of OEC, removal of PsbP and PsbQ significantly slows the rate of electron transfer from QA ? to the secondary quinone acceptor QB. Electron transfer from QA ? to QB in photosystem II membranes with an occupied QB site was slowed down by a factor of 8. However, addition of EGTA or CaCl2 to NaCl-washed PSII did not change the kinetics of fluorescence decay. Moreover, the kinetics of QA ? oxidation by QB in Ca-depleted PSII membranes obtained by treatment with citrate buffer at pH 3.0 (such treatment keeps all extrinsic proteins in PSII but extracts Ca2+ from OEC) was not changed. The results obtained indicate that the effect of NaCl-washing on the QA ? to QB electron transport is due to PsbP and PsbQ extrinsic proteins extraction, but not due to Ca2+ depletion.  相似文献   

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