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1.
Cyclic electron flow around PSI, or cyclic photophosphorylation, is the photosynthetic process which recycles the reducing equivalents produced by photosystem I in the stroma towards the plastoquinone pool. Through the activity of cytochrome b 6 f, which also transfers protons across the membrane, it promotes the synthesis of ATP. The literature dealing with cyclic electron flow in unicellular algae is far less abundant than it is for plants. However, in the chloroplast of algae such as Chlorella or Chlamydomonas, an efficient carbohydrate catabolism renders the redox poise much more reducing than in plant chloroplasts. It is therefore worthwhile highlighting the specific properties of unicellular algae because cyclic electron flow is highly dependent upon the accumulation of these stromal reducing equivalents. Such an increase of reducing power in the stroma stimulates the reduction of plastoquinones, which is the limiting step of cyclic electron flow. In anaerobic conditions in the dark, this reaction can lead to a fully reduced plastoquinone pool and induce state transitions, the migration of 80% of light harvesting complexes II and 20% of cytochrome b 6 f complex from the PSII-enriched grana to the PSI-enriched lamella. These ultrastructural changes have been proposed to further enhance cyclic electron flow by increasing PSI antenna size, and forming PSI-cyt b 6 f supercomplexes. These hypotheses are discussed in light of recently published data.  相似文献   

2.
3.
A mathematical model is presented that describes the key steps of photosynthetic electron transport and transmembrane proton transfer in chloroplasts. Numerical modeling has been performed with due regard for regulatory processes at the donor and acceptor parts of photosystem (PS) I. The influence of pH-dependent activation of the Calvin cycle enzymes and energy dissipation in PS II (nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence) on the light-induced redox transients of P700, plastoquinone, and NADP as well as on the changes in intrathylakoid pH and ATP level is examined. It is demonstrated that pH-dependent regulatory processes alter the distribution of electron fluxes on the acceptor side of PS I and the total rate of electron flow between PS II and PS I. The light-induced activation of the Calvin cycle leads to significant enhancement of the electron flow from PS I to NADP+ and attenuation of the electron flow to molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

4.
The organization of the electron transport components in mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts of Zea mays was investigated. Grana-containing mesophyll chloroplasts (chlorophyll a to chlorophyll b ratio of about 3.0) possessed the full complement of the various electron transport components, comparable to chloroplasts from C3 plants. Agranal bundle sheath chloroplasts (Chl aChl b > 5.0) contained the full complement of photosystem (PS) I and of cytochrome (cyt) f but lacked a major portion of PS II and its associated Chl ab light-harvesting complex (LHC), and most of the cyt b559. The kinetic analysis of system I photoactivity revealed that the functional photosynthetic unit size of PS I was unchanged and identical in mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts. The results suggest that PS I is contained in stroma-exposed thylakoids and that it does not receive excitation energy from the Chl ab LHC present in the grana. A stoichiometric parity between PS I and cyt f in mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts indicates that biosynthetic and functional properties of cyt f and P700 are closely coordinated. Thus, it is likely that both cyt f and P700 are located in the membrane of the intergrana thylakoids only. The kinetic analysis of PS II photoactivity revealed the absence of PS IIαfrom the bundle sheath chloroplasts and helped identify the small complement of system II in bundle sheath chloroplasts as PS IIβ. The distribution of the main electron transport components in grana and stroma thylakoids is presented in a model of the higher plant chloroplast membrane system.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochrome b6f (cytb6f) lies at the heart of the light-dependent reactions of oxygenic photosynthesis, where it serves as a link between photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI) through the oxidation and reduction of the electron carriers plastoquinol (PQH2) and plastocyanin (Pc). A mechanism of electron bifurcation, known as the Q-cycle, couples electron transfer to the generation of a transmembrane proton gradient for ATP synthesis. Cytb6f catalyses the rate-limiting step in linear electron transfer (LET), is pivotal for cyclic electron transfer (CET) and plays a key role as a redox-sensing hub involved in the regulation of light-harvesting, electron transfer and photosynthetic gene expression. Together, these characteristics make cytb6f a judicious target for genetic manipulation to enhance photosynthetic yield, a strategy which already shows promise. In this review we will outline the structure and function of cytb6f with a particular focus on new insights provided by the recent high-resolution map of the complex from Spinach.  相似文献   

6.
In chloroplasts, photosynthetic electron transport complexes interact with each other via the mobile electron carriers (plastoquinone and plastocyanin) which are in surplus amounts with respect to photosystem I and photosystem II (PSI and PSII), and the cytochrome b 6 f complex. In this work, we analyze experimental data on the light-induced redox transients of photoreaction center P700 in chloroplasts within the framework of our mathematical model. This analysis suggests that during the action of a strong actinic light, even significant attenuation of PSII [for instance, in the result of inhibition of a part of PSII complexes by DCMU or due to non-photochemical quenching (NPQ)] will not cause drastic shortage of electron flow through PSI. This can be explained by “electronic” and/or “excitonic” connectivity between different PSII units. At strong AL, the overall flux of electrons between PSII and PSI will maintain at a high level even with the attenuation of PSII activity, provided the rate-limiting step of electron transfer is beyond the stage of PQH2 formation. Results of our study are briefly discussed in the context of NPQ-dependent mechanism of chloroplast protection against light stress.  相似文献   

7.
The cyanobacterial cytochrome b6f complex is central for the coordination of photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport and also for the balance between linear and cyclic electron transport. The development of a purification strategy for a highly active dimeric b6f complex from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 enabled characterization of the structural and functional role of the small subunit PetP in this complex. Moreover, the efficient transformability of this strain allowed the generation of a ΔpetP mutant. Analysis on the whole-cell level by growth curves, photosystem II light saturation curves, and P700+ reduction kinetics indicate a strong decrease in the linear electron transport in the mutant strain versus the wild type, while the cyclic electron transport via photosystem I and cytochrome b6f is largely unaffected. This reduction in linear electron transport is accompanied by a strongly decreased stability and activity of the isolated ΔpetP complex in comparison with the dimeric wild-type complex, which binds two PetP subunits. The distinct behavior of linear and cyclic electron transport may suggest the presence of two distinguishable pools of cytochrome b6f complexes with different functions that might be correlated with supercomplex formation.  相似文献   

8.
The energetic metabolism of photosynthetic organisms is profoundly influenced by state transitions and cyclic electron flow around photosystem I. The former involve a reversible redistribution of the light-harvesting antenna between photosystem I and photosystem II and optimize light energy utilization in photosynthesis whereas the latter process modulates the photosynthetic yield. We have used the wild-type and three mutant strains of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii—locked in state I (stt7), lacking the photosystem II outer antennae (bf4) or accumulating low amounts of cytochrome b6f complex (A-AUU)—and measured electron flow though the cytochrome b6f complex, oxygen evolution rates and fluorescence emission during state transitions. The results demonstrate that the transition from state 1 to state 2 induces a switch from linear to cyclic electron flow in this alga and reveal a strict cause–effect relationship between the redistribution of antenna complexes during state transitions and the onset of cyclic electron flow.  相似文献   

9.
Wolfgang Haehnel 《BBA》1982,682(2):245-257
Signal I, the EPR signal of P-700, induced by long flashes as well as the rate of linear electron transport are investigated at partial inhibition of electron transport in chloroplasts. Inhibition of plastoquinol oxidation by dibromothymoquinone and bathophenanthroline, inhibition of plastocyanin by KCN and HgCl2, and inhibition by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide are used to study a possible electron exchange between electron-transport chains after plastoquinone. (1) At partial inhibition of plastocyanin the reduction kinetics of P-700+ show a fast component comparable to that in control chloroplasts and a new slow component. The slow component indicates P-700+ which is not accessible to residual active plastocyanin under these conditions. We conclude that P-700 is reduced via complexed plastocyanin. (2) The rate of linear electron transport at continuous illumination decreases immediately when increasing amounts of plastocyanin are inhibited by KCN incubation. This is not consistent with an oxidation of cytochrome f by a mobile pool of plastocyanin with respect to the reaction rates of plastocyanin being more than an order of magnitude faster than the rate-limiting step of linear electron transport. It is evidence for a complex between the cytochrome b6 - f complex and plastocyanin. The number of these complexes with active plastocyanin is concluded to control the rate-limiting plastoquinol oxidation. (3) Partial inhibition of the electron transfer between plastoquinone and cytochrome f by dibromothymoquinone and bathophenanthroline causes decelerated monophasic reduction of total P-700+. The P-700 kinetics indicate an electron transfer from the cytochrome b6 - f complex to more than ten Photosystem I reaction center complexes. This cooperation is concluded to occur by lateral diffusion of both complexes in the membrane. (4) The proposed functional organization of electron transport from plastoquinone to P-700 in situ is supported by further kinetic details and is discussed in terms of the spatial distribution of the electron carriers in the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

10.
The cytochrome b 6 f complex occupies a central position in photosynthetic electron transport and proton translocation by linking PS II to PS I in linear electron flow from water to NADP+, and around PS I for cyclic electron flow. Cytochrome b 6 f complexes are uniquely located in three membrane domains: the appressed granal membranes, the non-appressed stroma thylakoids and end grana membranes, and also the non-appressed grana margins, in contrast to the marked lateral heterogeneity of the localization of all other thylakoid multiprotein complexes. In addition to its vital role in vectorial electron transfer and proton translocation across the membrane, cytochrome b 6 f complex is also involved in the regulation of balanced light excitation energy distribution between the photosystems, since its redox state governs the activation of LHC II kinase (the kinase that phosphorylates the mobile peripheral fraction of the chlorophyll a/b-proteins of LHC II of PS II). Hence, cytochrome b 6 f complex is the molecular link in the interactive co-regulation of light-harvesting and electron transfer.The importance of a highly dynamic, yet flexible organization of the thylakoid membranes of plants and green algae has been highlighted by the exciting discovery that a lateral reorganization of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes occurs in the state transition mechanism both in vivo and in vitro (Vallon et al. 1991). The lateral redistribution of phosphorylated LHC II from stacked granal membrane regions is accompanied by a concomitant movement of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes from the granal membranes out to the PS I-containing stroma thylakoids. Thus, the dynamic movement of cytochrome b 6 f complex as a multiprotein complex is a molecular mechanism for short-term adaptation to changing light conditions. With the concept of different membrane domains for linear and cyclic electron flow gaining credence, it is thought that linear electron flow occurs in the granal compartments and cyclic electron flow is localised in the stroma thylakoids at non-limiting irradiances. It is postulated that dynamic lateral reversible redistribution of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes are part of the molecular mechanism involved in the regulation of linear electron transfer (ATP and NADPH) and cyclic electron flow (ATP only). Finally, the molecular significance of the marked regulation of cytochrome b 6 f complexes for long-term regulation and optimization of photosynthetic function under varying environmental conditions, particularly light acclimation, is discussed.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - PS Photosystem  相似文献   

11.
Hardt H  Kok B 《Plant physiology》1977,60(2):225-229
Treatment of spinach chloroplasts with glutaraldehyde causes an inhibition in the electron transport chain between the two photosystems. Measurements of O2 flash yields, pH exchange, and fluorescence induction show that the O2 evolving apparatus, photosystem II and its electron acceptor pool are not affected. The behavior of P700 indicates that its reduction but not its oxidation, is severely inhibited. Cytochrome f is still reducible by photosystem II but also slowly oxidizable by photosystem I. The sensitivity of isolated plastocyanin to glutaraldehyde further supports the conclusion that glutaraldehyde inhibits at the plastocyanin level and thereby induces a break between P700 and cytochrome f.  相似文献   

12.
Implications of cytochromeb 6/f location for thylakoidal electron transport   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The cytochromeb 6/f complex of higher plant chloroplasts is uniformly distributed throughout both appressed and nonappressed thylakoids, in contrast to photosystem II and photosystem I, the other major membrane protein complexes involved in electron transport. We discuss how this distribution is likely to affect interactions of the cytochromeb 6/f complex with other electron transport components because of the resulting local stoichiometries, and how these may affect the regulation of electron transport.  相似文献   

13.
State transitions allow for the balancing of the light excitation energy between photosystem I and photosystem II and for optimal photosynthetic activity when photosynthetic organisms are subjected to changing light conditions. This process is regulated by the redox state of the plastoquinone pool through the Stt7/STN7 protein kinase required for phosphorylation of the light-harvesting complex LHCII and for the reversible displacement of the mobile LHCII between the photosystems. We show that Stt7 is associated with photosynthetic complexes including LHCII, photosystem I, and the cytochrome b6f complex. Our data reveal that Stt7 acts in catalytic amounts. We also provide evidence that Stt7 contains a transmembrane region that separates its catalytic kinase domain on the stromal side from its N-terminal end in the thylakoid lumen with two conserved Cys that are critical for its activity and state transitions. On the basis of these data, we propose that the activity of Stt7 is regulated through its transmembrane domain and that a disulfide bond between the two lumen Cys is essential for its activity. The high-light–induced reduction of this bond may occur through a transthylakoid thiol–reducing pathway driven by the ferredoxin-thioredoxin system which is also required for cytochrome b6f assembly and heme biogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of the diphenyl ether herbicides HOE 29152 (methyl-2[4-(4-trifluoromethoxy) phenoxy] propanoate) and nitrofluorfen (2-chloro-1-[4-nitrophenoxy]-4-[trifluoromethyl]benzene) on photosynthetic electron transport have been examined with pea seedling and spinach chloroplasts. Linear electron transport (water to ferricyanide or methylviologen) is inhibited in treated chloroplasts, but neither photosystem II activity (water to dimethylquinone plus dibromothymoquinone) nor photosystem I activity (diaminodurene to methylviologen) is affected. Cyclic electron flow, cata-lyzed by either phenazine methosulfate or diaminodurene, is resistant to inhibition by nitrofluorfen. In diphenyl ether-treated chloroplasts the half-time for the dark reduction of cytochrome f is increased 5- to 15-fold. These data indicate that the site of inhibition for the diphenyl ethers is between the two photosystems in the plastoquinone-cytochrome f region.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
We investigated the effect of growth light intensity on the photosynthetic apparatus of pea (Pisum sativum) thylakoid membranes. Plants were grown either in a growth chamber at light intensities that ranged from 8 to 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second, or outside under natural sunlight. In thylakoid membranes we determined: the amounts of active and inactive photosystem II, photosystem I, cytochrome b/f, and high potential cytochrome b559, the rate of uncoupled electron transport, and the ratio of chlorophyll a to b. In leaves we determined: the amounts of the photosynthetic components per leaf area, the fresh weight per leaf area, the rate of electron transport, and the light compensation point. To minimize factors other than growth light intensity that may alter the photosynthetic apparatus, we focused on peas grown above the light compensation point (20-40 microeinsteins per square meter per second), and harvested only the unshaded leaves at the top of the plant. The maximum difference in the concentrations of the photosynthetic components was about 30% in thylakoids isolated from plants grown over a 10-fold range in light intensity, 100 to 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second. Plants grown under natural sunlight were virtually indistinguishable from plants grown in growth chambers at the higher light intensities. On a leaf area basis, over the same growth light regime, the maximum difference in the concentration of the photosynthetic components was also about 30%. For peas grown at 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second we found the concentrations of active photosystem II, photosystem I, and cytochrome b/f were about 2.1 millimoles per mol chlorophyll. There were an additional 20 to 33% of photosystem II complexes that were inactive. Over 90% of the heme-containing cytochrome f detected in the thylakoid membranes was active in linear electron transport. Based on these data, we do not find convincing evidence that the stoichiometries of the electron transport components in the thylakoid membrane, the size of the light-harvesting system serving the reaction centers, or the concentration of the photosynthetic components per leaf area, are regulated in response to different growth light intensities. The concept that emerges from this work is of a relatively fixed photosynthetic apparatus in thylakoid membranes of peas grown above the light compensation point.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, we summarize results of computer simulation of electron and proton transport processes coupled to ATP synthesis in chloroplasts performed within the frames of a mathematical model developed as a system of differential equations for concentrations of electron carriers and hydrogen ion inside and outside the granal and stromal thylakoids. The model takes into account topological peculiarities and lateral heterogeneity of the chloroplast lamellar system. This allowed us to analyze the influence of restricted diffusion of protons inside small compartments of a chloroplast (e.g., in the narrow inter-thylakoid gap) on electron transport processes. The model adequately describes two modes of pH-dependent feedback control of electron transport associated with: (i) the acidification of the thylakoid lumen, which causes the slowing down of plastoquinol oxidation and stimulates an increase in dissipation of excess energy in PS2, and (ii) the alkalization of stroma, inducing the activation of the BBC (Bassham-Benson-Calvin) cycle and intensified consumption of ATP and NADPH. The influence of ATP on electron transport is mediated by modulation of the thylakoid membrane conductivity to protons through the ATP synthase complexes. We also analyze the contribution of alternative electron transport pathways to the maintenance of optimal balance between the energy donating and energy consuming stages of the light-induced photosynthetic processes.  相似文献   

18.
Radiation inactivation technique was employed to determine the functional size of photosynthetic electron transport chain of spinach chloroplasts. The functional size for photosystem I+II (H2O to methylviologen) was 623 ± 37 kilodaltons; for photosystem II (H2O to dimethylquinone/ferricyanide), 174 ± 11 kilodaltons; and for photosystem I (reduced diaminodurene to methylviologen), 190 ± 11 kilodaltons. The difference between 364 ± 22 (the sum of 174 ± 11 and 190 ± 11) kilodaltons and 623 ± 37 kilodaltons is partially explained to be due to the presence of two molecules of cytochrome b6/f complex of 280 kilodaltons. The molecular mass for other partial reactions of photosynthetic electron flow, also measured by radiation inactivation, is reported. The molecular mass obtained by this technique is compared with that determined by other conventional biochemical methods. A working hypothesis for the composition, stoichiometry, and organization of polypeptides for photosynthetic electron transport chain is proposed.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of the tertiary amines tetracaine, brucine and dibucaine on photophosphorylation and control of photosynthetic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts of Spinacia oleracea were investigated. Tertiary amines inhibited photophosphorylation while the related electron transport decreased to the rates, observed under non-phosphorylating conditions. Light induced quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and uptake of 14C-labelled methylamine in the thylakoid lumen declined in parallel with photophosphorylation, indicating a decline of the transthylakoid proton gradient. In the presence of ionophoric uncouplers such as nigericin, no effect of tertiary amines on electron transport was seen in a range of concentration where photophosphorylation was inhibited. Under the influence of the tertiary amines tested, pH-dependent feed-back control of photosystem II, as indicated by energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, was unaffected or even increased in a range of concentration where 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching and photophosphorylation were inhibited. The data are discussed with respect to a possible involvement of localized proton flow pathways in energy coupling and feed-back control of electron transport.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - J e flux of photosynthetic electron transport - PC photosynthetic control - pH1 H+ concentration in the thylakoid lumen - pmf proton motive force - P potential quantum yield of photochemistry of photosystem II (with open reaction centers) - Q A primary quinone-type electron acceptor of photosystem II - q Q photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - q E energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - q AA light-induced quenching of 9-amino-acridine fluorescence  相似文献   

20.
The activity of NADP and O2 photoreduction by water is essentially higher in chloroplasts isolated from pea seedlings (Pisum sativum L.) grown under blue light as compared with that from plants grown under red light. In contrast, the photoreduction of NADP and O2 with photosystem I only is practically the same or even lower in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light. The addition of plastocyanin does not affect the rate or the extent of NADP photoreduction by water in the chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light, whereas it sharply activates NADP reduction in the chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under red light. The extent of the light-induced oxidation of cytochrome f is appreciably higher in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light. Cytochrome b559 plays the predominant role in the oxidoreductive reactions of these chloroplasts. Furthermore, the fluorescence measurements indicate more effective transfer of excitation energy from chlorophyll to the photosystem II reaction center in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light.  相似文献   

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