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1.
Old and very recent experiments on the extent and the rate of proton release during the four reaction steps of photosynthetic water oxidation are reviewed. Proton release is discussed in terms of three main sources, namely the chemical production upon electron abstraction from water, protolytic reactions of Mn-ligands (e.g. oxo-bridges), and electrostatic response of neighboring amino acids. The extent of proton release differs between the four oxidation steps and greatly varies as a function of pH both, but differently, in thylakoids and PS II-membranes. Contrastingly, it is about constant in PS II-core particles. In any preparation, and on most if not all reaction steps, a large portion of proton transfer can occur very rapidly (<20 s) and before the oxidation of the Mn-cluster by Yz + is completed. By these electrostatically driven reactions the catalytic center accumulates bases. An additional slow phase is observed during the oxygen evolving step, S3S4S0. Depending on pH, this phase consists of a release or an uptake of protons which accounts for the balance between the number of preformed bases and the four chemically produced protons. These data are compatible with the hypothesis of concerted electron/proton-transfer to overcome the kinetic and energetic constraints of water oxidation.Abbreviations BBY-membranes Photosystem II-enriched membrane fragments prepared after Berthold, Babcock and Yocum (1981) - BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - CAB-protein chlorophyll a/b-binding protein - core particles oxygen evolving reaction center core particles of Photosystem II - Cyt cytochrome - DCBQ 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - IML intermittent light - P-680 primary electron donor of Photosystem II - PS II Photosystem II - Yz tyrosine residue on the D1 polypeptide, electron carrier between manganese and P-680 - photochemical reaction   相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The inhibitory effect of Zn2+ on photosynthetic electron transport was investigated in native and CaCl2-treated (depleted in extrinsic polypeptides) Photosystem II (PS II) submembrane preparations. Inhibition of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol photoreduction by Zn2+ was much stronger in protein-depleted preparations in comparison to the native form. It was found that Ca2+ significantly reduced the inhibition in the native PS II preparations, as did Mn2+ in a combination with H2O2 in the protein-depleted counterparts. No other tested monovalent or divalent cations could replace Ca2+ or Mn2+ in the respective experiments. Diphenylcarbazide could partially relieve (40–45%) the inhibition in both types of preparations. The above indicates the presence of an active Zn2+ inhibitory site on the donor side of PS II. However, neither Ca2+ nor Mn2+ could completely prevent inhibition by high concentrations of Zn2+ (>1 mM). We propose that elevated levels of Zn2+ strongly perturb the conformation of the PS II core complex and might also affect the acceptor side of the photosystem.Abbreviations PMSF phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride - MES 2-(N-morpholino)ethane sulphonic acid - Chl chlorophyll - PS II Photosystem II - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC sym-diphenylcabazide - DCBQ 2,5-dichlorobenzoquinone  相似文献   

4.
Transfer of electrons between artificial electron donors diphenylcarbazide (DPC) and hydroxylamine (NH2OH) and reaction center of manganese-depleted photosystem 2 (PS2) complexes was studied using the direct electrometrical method. For the first time it was shown that reduction of redox-active amino acid tyrosine Y z · by DPC is coupled with generation of transmembrane electric potential difference (δΨ). The amplitude of this phase comprised ~17% of that of the δΨ phase due to electron transfer between YZ and the primary quinone acceptor QA. This phase is associated with vectorial intraprotein electron transfer between the DPC binding site on the protein-water interface and the tyrosine Y z · . The slowing of ΔΨ decay in the presence of NH2OH indicates effective electron transfer between the artificial electron donor and reaction center of PS2. It is suggested that NH2OH is able to diffuse through channels with diameter of 2.0–3.0 Å visible in PS2 structure and leading from the protein-water interface to the Mn4Ca cluster binding site with the concomitant electron donation to Y z · . Because the dielectrically-weighted distance between the NH2OH binding site and Y z · is not determined, the transfer of electrons from NH2OH to Y z · could be either electrically silent or contribute negligibly to the observed electrogenicity in comparison with hydrophobic donors.  相似文献   

5.
Flash-induced absorbance measurements at 830 nm on both nanosecond and microsecond timescales have been used to characterise the effect of ultraviolet light on Photosystem II core particles. A combination of UV-A and UV-B, closely simulating the spectrum of sunlight below 350 nm, was found to have a primary effect on the donor side of P680. Repetitive measurements indicated reductions in the nanosecond components of the absorbance decay with a concomitant appearance and increase in the amplitude of a component with a 10 s time constant attributed to slow reduction of P680+ by Tyrz when the function of the oxygen evolving complex is inhibited. Single-flash measurements show that the nanosecond components have amplitudes which vary with S-state. Increasing UV irradiation inhibited the amplitude of these components without changing their S-state dependence. In addition, UV irradiation resulted in a reduction in the total amplitude, with no change in the proportion of the 10 s contribution.Abbreviations BBY- PS II membrane fragments - P680- primary electron donor of PS II - PS II- Photosystem II - QA and QB– primary and secondary quinone electron acceptors of PS II - S-state- redox state of the oxygenevolving complex - Tyrz– tyrosine residue in PS II - UV-A- ultraviolet radiation 320–400 nm - UV-B- ultraviolet radiation 280–320 nm  相似文献   

6.
The functional connection between redox component Y z identified as Tyr-161 of polypeptide D-1 (Debus et al. 1988) and P680+ was analyzed by measurements of laser flash induced absorption changes at 830 nm in PS II membrane fragments from spinach. It was found that neither DCMU nor the ADRY agent 2-(3-chloro-4-trifluoromethyl) anilino-3,5-dinitrothiophene (ANT 2p) affects the rate of P680+ reduction by Y z under conditions where the catalytic site of water oxidation stays in the redox state S1. In contrast to that, a drastic retardation is observed after mild trypsin treatment at pH=6.0. This effect which is stimualted by flash illumination can be largely reversed by Ca2+. The above mentioned data lead to the following conclusions: (a) the segment of polypeptide D-1 containing Tyr-161 and coordination sites of P680 is not allosterically affected by structural changes due to DCMU binding at the QB-site which is also located in D-1. (b) ANT 2p as a strong protonophoric uncoupler and ADRY agent does not modify the reaction coordinate of P680+ reduction by Y z , and (c) Ca2+ could play a functional role for the electronic and vibrational coupling between the redox groups Y z and P680. The electron transport from Y z to P680+ is discussed within the framework of a nonadiabatic process. Based on thermodynamic considerations the reorganization energy is estimated to be in the order of 0.5 V.Abbreviations ADRY acceleration of the deactivation reactions of the water splitting enzyme system Y - ANT 2p 2-(3-chloro-4-trifluoromethyl)anilino-3,5 dinitrothiophene - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - MES 2[N-Morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid - PS II photosystem II - QA, QB primary and secondary plastoquinone acceptor of photosystem II - S i redox states of the catalytic site of water oxidation - Y z redox active Tyr-161 of polypeptide D-1  相似文献   

7.
After a complete removal of Mn from pea subchloroplast photosystem-II (PS II) preparations the electron phototransfer and oxygen evolution are restored upon addition of Mn2+ and Ca2+. Pre-illumination of the sample in the absence of Mn2+ leads to photoinhibition (PI) — irreversible loss of the capability of PS II to be reactivated by Mn2+. The effect of PI is considerably decreased in the presence of Mn2+ (4 Mn atoms per reaction center of PS II) and it is increased in the presence of ferricyanide or p-benzoquinone revealing the oxidative nature of the photoeffect. PI results in suppression of oxygen evolution, variable fluorescence, photoreduction of 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol from either water or diphenylcarbazide. However, photooxidation of chlorophyll P680, the primary electron donor of PS II as well as dark and photoinduced EPR signal II (ascribed to secondary electron donors D 1 and Z) are preserved. PI is accompanied by photooxidation of 2–3 carotenoid molecules per PS II reaction center (RC) that is accelerated in the presence of ferricyanide and is inhibited upon addition of Mn2+ or diuron. The conclusion is made that PI in the absence of Mn leads to irreversible oxidative inactivation of electron transfer from water to RC of PS II which remains photochemically active. A loss of functional interaction of RC with the electron transport chain as a common feature for different types of PS II photoinhibition is discussed.Abbreviations A photoinduced absorbance changes - DPC diphenylcarbazide - DPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - F o constant fluorescence of chlorophyll - F photoinduced changes of Chl fluorescence yield - Mn manganese - P680 the primary electron donor in PS II - PI photoinhibition - PS II photosystem II - Q the primary (quinone) electron acceptor in PS II - RC reaction center  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of the postillumination reduction of P700+ which reflects the rate constant for plastoquinol (PQH2) oxidation was recorded in sunflower leaves at different photon absorption densities (PAD), CO2 and O2 concentrations. The P700 oxidation state was calculated from the leaf transmittance at 830 nm logged at 50 s intervals. The P700+ dark reduction kinetics were fitted with two exponents with time constants of 6.5 and about 45 ms at atmospheric CO2 and O2 concentrations. The time constant of the fast component, which is the major contributor to the linear electron transport rate (ETR), did not change over the range of PADs of 14.5 to 134 nmol cm-2 s-1 in 21% O2, but it increased up to 40 ms under severe limitation of ETR at low O2 and CO2. The acceptor side of Photosystem I (PS I) became reduced in correlation with the downregulation of the PQH2 oxidation rate constant. It is concluded that thylakoid pH-related downregulation of the PQH2 oxidation rate constant (photosynthetic control) is not present under normal atmospheric conditions but appears under severe limitation of the availability of electron acceptors. The measured range of photosynthetic control fits with the maximum variation of ETR under natural stress in C3 plants. Increasing the carboxylase/oxygenase specificity would lead to higher reduction of the PS I acceptor side under stress.Abbreviations Cyt b 6 f cytochrome b 6 f complex - Cw cell-wall CO2 concentration, M - ETR electron transport rate - Fd ferredoxin - FNR ferredoxin-NADP reductase - FRL far-red light - PC plastocyanin - PAD photon absorption density nmol cm-2 s-1 - PFD photon flux density nmol cm-2 s-1 - PS I Photosystem I complex - PQ plastoquinon - PQH2 plastoquinol - PS II Photosystem II complex - P700 Photosystem I donor pigment, reduced - S830 830 nm signal (D830, difference of S830 from the dark level) - WL white light - Yl maximum quantum yield of PS I electron transport, rel. un  相似文献   

9.
S. Izawa  Donald R. Ort 《BBA》1974,357(1):127-143
NH2OH-treated, non-water oxidizing chloroplasts are shown to be capable of oxidizing ferrocyanide and I? via Photosystem II at appreciable rates (? 200 μequiv/h per mg chlorophyll). Using methylviologen as electron acceptor, ferrocyanide oxidation can be measured as O2 uptake, as ferricyanide formation, or as H+ consumption (2 Fe2+ + 2H+ + O2 → 2 Fe3+ + H2O2). I? oxidation can be measured as methylviologen-mediated O2 uptake, or spectrophotometrically, using ferricyanide as electron acceptor. The oxidation product I2 is re-reduced, as it is formed, by unknown reducing substances in the reaction system.The rate-saturating concentrations of these donors are very high: 30 mM with ferricyanide and 15 mM with I?. Relatively lipophilic Photosystem II donors such as catechol, benzidine and p-aminophenol saturate the photooxidation rate at much lower concentrations (< 0.5 mM). It thus seems that the oxidation of hydrophilic reductants such as ferricyanide and I? is limited by permeability barriers. Very likely the site of Photosystem II oxidation is embedded in the thylakoid membrane or is situated on the inner surface of the membrane.The efficiency of phosphorylation (P/e2) is 0.5 to 0.6 with ferrocyanide and about 0.5 with I?. In contrast the P/e2 ratio is 1.0 to 1.2 when water, catechol, p-aminophenol or benzidine serves as electron donor. These differences imply that only one of two phosphorylation sites operate when ferrocyanide and I? are oxidized. Ferrocyanide and I? are also chemically distinct from other Photosystem II donors in that their oxidation does not involve proton release. It is suggested that the mechanism of energy conservation associated with Photosystem II may be only operative when the removal of electrons from the donor results in release of protons (i.e. with water, hydroquinones, phenylamines, etc.).  相似文献   

10.
A light-driven reaction model for the Ca2+-depleted Photosystem (PS) II is proposed to explain the split signal observed in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra based on a comparison of EPR assignments with recent x-ray structural data. The split signal has a splitting linewidth of 160 G at around g = 2 and is seen upon illumination of the Ca2+-depleted PS II in the S2 state associated with complete or partial disappearance of the S2 state multiline signal. Another g=2 broad ESR signal with a 110 G linewidth was produced by 245 K illumination for a short period in the Ca2+-depleted PS II in S1 state. At the same time a normal YZ· radical signal was also efficiently trapped. The g=2 broad signal is attributed to an intermediate S1X· state in equilibrium with the trapped YZ· radical. Comparison with x-ray structural data suggests that one of the split signals (doublet signal) is attributable to interaction between His 190 and the YZ· radical, and other signals is attributable to interaction between His 337 and the manganese cluster, providing further clues as to the mechanism of water oxidation in photosynthetic oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Our recent EPR and EXAFS experiments investigating the structure of the oxygen-evolving complex of PS II are discussed. PS II treatments which affect the cofactors calcium and chloride have been used to poise samples in modified forms of the S-states, S1, S2 and S3. X-ray absorption studies indicate a similar overall structure for the manganese complex between treated and native samples although the influence of the treatments and cofactors is observed. Manganese oxidation (or oxidation of a ligand to the manganese cluster) is indicated to occur on each of the transitions S1 S2 and S2 S3 in these modified samples. The cluster appears to contain at least two inequivalent Mn-Mn pairs. In the native samples the Mn-Mn distance is 2.7 Å, but in samples where the calcium site is affected, one of the pairs has a 3.0 Å Mn-Mn distance. The intensity of the 3.3/3.6 Å interaction is reduced on sodium chloride treatment (calcium depletion) perhaps indicating calcium binding close to the manganese cluster. From EPR data we also propose that treatments which affect calcium and chloride binding cause a modification of the native S2 state, slow the reduction of Yz and allow an S3 EPR signal to be observed following illumination. The origin of the S3 EPR signal, a modified S3 or S2 X where X is an organic radical of unknown charge, is discussed in relation to the results from the EXAFS studies.Abbreviations EPR electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy - EXAFS extended X-ray absorption fine structure - HTG n-heptyl -d-thioglucoside - MES 2(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - OEC oxygen evolving complex - PPBQ phenyl-1,4-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - Yz redox active tyrosine  相似文献   

13.
The light-induced oxidation of the accessory donor tyrosine-D (YD) has been studied by measurements of the EPR Signal IIslow at room temperature in the autotrophically and photoheterotrophically cultivated alga Chlamydobotrys stellata. After illumination and dark adaptation, YD Signal IIslow was observed only in autotrophic algae, i.e. under conditions of a linear photosynthetic electron transfer from water to NADP+. The addition of artificial electron acceptors phenyl-p-benzoquinone (PPQ) or dichloro-p-benzoquinone (DCQ) to the autotrophic cells caused an almost negligible increase of this signal. When photosynthetic electron flow and oxygen evolution were diminished by removal of the carbon source CO2 and addition of acetate (photoheterotrophy), a pronounced YD Signal IIslow was seen only in presence of DCQ or PPQ. Several possibilities are discussed to explain the absence of YD Signal IIslow in photoheterotrophic Chl. stellata such as the existence of a cyclic PS II electron flow very effectively reducing P680 and thereby preventing the possibility of YD oxidation. Artificial electron acceptors withdraw electrons from this cycle thus keeping the primary quinone acceptor, QA, oxidized and thereby diminishing the reduction of P680 + by cyclic PSII. This leads to the appearance of the YD Signal IIslow also in the photoheterotrophically grown algae.Abbreviations A-band- thermoluminescence band associated with S2QA - charge recombination - DCQ- 2,5-dichlorobenzoquinone - D2- structure protein of Photosystem II - EPR- electron paramagnetic resonance - OEC- oxygen evolving complex - PPQ- phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II- Photosystem II - P680- reaction center of Photosystem II - Q-band- thermoluminescence band associated with S2QA - charge recombination - Si- oxidation levels of the OEC - YD- tyrosine-D accessory donor to P680 - YZ- tyrosine-Z electron donor to P680 Dedicated to Prof. Dr E. Schnepf/Heidelberg.  相似文献   

14.
We have measured the rate constant for the formation of the oxidized chlorophyll a electron donor (P680+) and the reduced electron acceptor pheophytin a (Pheo a ) following excitation of isolated Photosystem II reaction centers (PS II RC) at 15 K. This PS II RC complex consists of D1, D2, and cytochrome b-559 proteins and was prepared by a procedure which stabilizes the protein complex. Transient absorption difference spectra were measured from 450–840 nm as a function of time with 500fs resolution following 610 nm laser excitation. The formation of P680+-Pheo a is indicated by the appearance of a band due to P680+ at 820 nm and corresponding absorbance changes at 490, 515 and 546 nm due to the formation of Pheo a . The appearance of the 490 nm and 820 nm bands is monoexponenital with =1.4±0.2 ps. Treatment of the PS II RC with sodium dithionite and methyl viologen followed by exposure to laser excitation results in accumulation of Pheo a . Laser excitation of these prereduced RCs at 15 K results in formation of a transient absorption spectrum assigned to 1*P680. We observe wavelength-dependent kinetics for the recovery of the transient bleach of the Qy absorption bands of the pigments in both untreated and pre-reduced PS II RCs at 15K. This result is attributed to an energy transfer process within the PS II RC at low temperature that is not connected with charge separation.Abbreviations PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC reaction center - P680 primary electron donor in Photosystem II - Chl a chlorophyll a - Pheo a pheophytin a  相似文献   

15.
Short-term responses of Photosystem I to heat stress   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
When 23°C-grown potato leaves (Solanum tuberosum L.) were exposed for 15 min to elevated temperatures in weak light, a dramatic and preferential inactivation of Photosystem (PS) II was observed at temperatures higher than about 38°C. In vivo photoacoustic measurements indicated that, concomitantly with the loss of PS II activity, heat stress induced a marked gas-uptake activity both in far-red light (>715 nm) exciting only PS I and in broadband light (350–600 nm) exciting PS I and PS II. In view of its suppression by nitrogen gas and oxygen and its stimulation by high carbon-dioxide concentrations, the bulk of the photoacoustically measured gas uptake by heat-stressed leaves was ascribed to rapid carbon-dioxide solubilization in response to light-modulated stroma alkalization coupled to PS I-driven electron transport. Heat-induced gas uptake was observed to be insensitive to the PS II inhibitor diuron, sensitive to the plastocyanin inhibitor HgCl2 and saturated at a rather high photon flux density of around 1200 E m–2 s–1. Upon transition from far-red light to darkness, the oxidized reaction center P700+ of PS I was re-reduced very slowly in control leaves (with a half time t1/2 higher than 500 ms), as measured by leaf absorbance changes at around 820 nm. Heat stress caused a spectacular acceleration of the postillumination P700+ reduction, with t1/2 falling to a value lower than 50 ms (after leaf exposure to 48°C). The decreased t1/2 was sensitive to HgCl2 and insensitive to diuron, methyl viologen (an electron acceptor of PS I competing with the endogenous acceptor ferredoxin) and anaerobiosis. This acceleration of the P700+ reduction was very rapidly induced by heat treatment (within less than 5 min) and persisted even after prolonged irradiation of the leaves with far-red light. After heat stress, the plastoquinone pool exhibited reduction in darkness as indicated by the increase in the apparent Fo level of chlorophyll fluorescence which could be quenched by far-red light. Application (for 1 min) of far-red light to heat-pretreated leaves also induced a reversible quenching of the maximal fluorescence level Fm, suggesting formation of a pH gradient in far-red light. Taken together, the presented data indicate that PS I responded to the heat-induced loss of PS II photochemical activity by catalyzing an electron flow from stromal reductants. Heat-stress-induced PS I electron transport independent of PS II seems to constitute a protective mechanism since block of this electron pathway in anaerobiosis was observed to result in a dramatic photoinactivation of PS I.Abbreviations PFD photon flux density - PS Photosystem - Apt and Aox amplitude of the photothermal and photobaric components of the photoacoustic signal, respectively - P700 reaction center pigment of PS I - Fo and Fm initial and maximal levels of chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively - Fv=Fm Fo-variable chlorophyll fluorescence - QA primary (stable) electron acceptor of PS II - DCMU (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Cyt cytochrome  相似文献   

16.
Selective solubilization of Photosystem II membranes with the non-ionic detergent octyl thioglucopyranoside has allowed the isolation of a PS II system which has been depleted of the 22 and 10 kDa polypeptides but retains all three extrinsic proteins (33, 23 and 17 kDa). The PS II membranes which have been depleted of the 22 and 10 kDa species show high rates of oxygen evolution activity, external calcium is not required for activity and the manganese complex is not destroyed by exogenous reductants. When we compared this system to control PS II membranes, we observed a minor modification of the reducing side, and a conversion of the high-potential to the low-potential form of cytochrome b 559.Abbreviations Chl- chlorophyll - DCBQ- 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU- 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - ESR- electron spin resonance - MES- 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - OTG- octyl--d-thioglucopyranoside - PS II- Photosystem II - PEG- polyethylene glycol, Mr=6000 - Tris- 2-amino-2-hydroxyethylpropane-1,3-diol  相似文献   

17.
Regulation of electron transport rate through Photosystem I (PS I) was investigated in intact sunflower leaves. The rate constant of electron donation via the cytochrome b 6 f complex (kq, s–1) was obtained from the postillumination P700+ reduction rate, measured as the exponential decay of the light-dark difference (D830) of the 830 nm transmission signal. D830 corresponding to maximum oxidisable P700 (D830m) was obtained by applying white light flashes of different intensity and extrapolating the plot of the quantum yield Y vs. D830 to the axis of abscissae (Y->0). Maximum quantum yield of PS I at completely reduced P700 (Ym) was obtained by extrapolating the same plot to the axis of ordinates (D830->0). Regulation of kq, D830m and Ym under rate-limiting CO2 and O2 concentrations applied after air (21% O2, 310 ppm CO2) was investigated. The amplitude of the downregulation of kq (photosynthetic control) was maximal when electron transport rate (ETR) was limited to about 3 nmol cm–2 s–1 and decreased when ETR was higher or lower. Downregulation did not occur in the absence of CO2 and O2. These gases acted only as substrates of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, no high-affinity reaction of O2 leading to enhanced photosynthetic control (e.g. Mehler reaction) was detected. After the transition, D830m at first decreased and then increased again, showing that the reduction of the PS I acceptor side disappeared as a result of the downregulation of kq. The variation of Ym had two reasons, PS I acceptor side reduction and variable excitation capture efficiency by P700. It is concluded that electron transport through PS I is coregulated by the rate of plastoquinol oxidation at Cyt b 6 f, excitation capture efficiency by P700, and by acceptor side reduction.Abbreviations Cyt b 6 f cytochrome b 6 f complex - D830 difference of the 830 nm signal from the dark level - ETR electron transport rate - PAD photon absorption density nmol cm–2 s–1 - PFD incident photon flux density, nmol cm–2 s–1 - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - PQH2 plastoquinol - P700 Photosystem I donor pigment - Y quantum yield of PS I electron transport, rel. un.  相似文献   

18.
A series of experiments have been conducted with isolated reaction centers of photosystem two (PS II) with the aim to elucidate the functional role of cytochrome (Cyt b 559). At pH 6.5 it was found that Cyt b 559 was reversibly photoreduced by red actinic light when Mn2+ was present as an electron donor while at pH 8.5 a photo-oxidation was observed under the same lighting conditions, which was dark reversible in the presence of hydroquinone. These pH dependent light induced changes were measured under anaerobic conditions and correlated with changes in the relative levels of high (HP) and low (LP) potential forms of the cytochrome. At pH 6.5 the cytochrome was mainly in its LP form while at pH 8.5 a significant proportion was converted to the HP form as detected by dark titrations with hydroquinone. This pH dependent difference in the levels of HP and LP Cyt b 559 was also detected when bright white light was used to monitor the level of the LP form using a novel reaction involving direct electron donation from the flavin of glucose oxidase (present in the medium and used together with glucose and catalase as an oxygen trap). The results suggest that PS II directly oxidises and reduces the HP and LP forms, respectively and that the extent of these photo-reactions is dependent on the relative levels of the two forms, which are in turn governed by the pH. This conclusion is interpreted in terms of the model presented previously (Barber J and De Las Rivas J (1993) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 10942–10946) whereby the pH induced effect is considered as a possible mechanism by which interconversion of LP and HP forms of Cyt b 559 is achieved. In agreement with this was the finding that as the extent of photo-oxidisable HPCyt b 559 increases, with increasing pH, the rate of irreversible photo-oxidation of -carotene decreases, a result expected if the HP form protects against donor side photoinhibition.Abbreviations -car -carotene - CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chloro-phenylhydrazone - Chl chlorophyll - Cyt b 559 cytochrome b 559 - HPCyt b 559 high potential form of cytochrome b 559 which is reducible by hydroquinone - LPCyt b 559 low potential form of cytochrome b 559 which is non-reducible by hydroquinone - D1 and D2 products of the psbA and psbD genes, respectively - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll protein complex associated with PS II - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulphonic acid - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - Pheo pheophytin - PQ plastoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA first stable quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB second stable quinone electron acceptor of PS II - RC reaction center - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - SiMo silicomolybdate - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl) amino methane - YZ and YD tyrosine residues 161 in D1 and D2 proteins of the PS II RC which act as secondary electron donors to P680  相似文献   

19.
P. Jursinic 《BBA》1977,461(2):253-267
Parallel measurements of the rise in chlorophyll a fluorescence yield and delayed light emission decay, after a 10 ns saturating excitation flash, have been made in tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-washed chloroplasts. Various electron donor systems (Mn2+; ascorbate; reduced phenylenediamine and benzidine) were used in conjuction with different preillumination regimes to alter [P+-680], the oxidized form of the Photosystem II reaction center chlorophyll a. Conditions giving rise to high [P+-680] resulted in only a small rise in fluorescence yield, an inhibition of a 6 μs delayed light component, and an enhancement of a 60 μs component of delayed light emission. These results confirm the hypothesis that P+-680 acts as a quencher of fluorescence and that delayed light emission in the microsecond time range is due to the back reaction of P+-680 and Q?. (Q is the first “stable” electron acceptor of Photosystem II.) Two preillumination flashes are required before the full effect of Tris washing is observed in the delayed light emission decay and fluorescence yield rise; this suggests that a capacity to hold two charges exists between the Tris block and P+-680. Tris washing has no direct effect on the movement of electrons from Z (the first electron donor to P+-680) to P+-680. Finally, Mn2+ donates electrons to P+-680 via Z.  相似文献   

20.
Solar energy exploitation by photosynthetic water cleavage is of central relevance for the development and sustenance of all higher forms of living matter in the biosphere. The key steps of this process take place within an integral protein complex referred to as Photosystem II (PS II) which is anisotropically incorporated into the thylakoid membrane. This minireview concentrates on mechanistic questions related to i) the generation of strongly oxidizing equivalents (holes) at a special chlorophyll a complex (designated as P680) and ii) the cooperative reaction of four holes with two water molecules at a manganese containing unit WOC (water oxidizing complex) resulting in the release of molecular oxygen and four protons. The classical work of Pierre Joliot and Bessel Kok and their coworkers revealed that water oxidation occurs via a sequence of univalent oxidation steps including intermediary redox states Si (i = number of accumulated holes within the WOC). Based on our current stage of knowledge, an attempt is made a) to identify the nature of the redox states Si, b) to describe the structural arrangement of the (four) manganese centers and their presumed coordination and ligation within the protein matrix, and c) to propose a mechanism of photosynthetic water oxidation with special emphasis on the key step, i.e. oxygen-oxygen bond formation. It is assumed that there exists a dynamic equilibrium in S3 with one state attaining the nuclear geometry and electronic configuration of a complexed peroxide. This state is postulated to undergo direct oxidation to complexed dioxygen by univalent electron abstraction with YZ ox and simultaneous internal ligand to metal charge transfer.Key questions on the mechanism will be raised. The still fragmentary answers to these questions not only reflect our limited knowledge but also illustrate the challenges for future research.Abbreviations b559 cytochrome b559 - BChl bacteriochlorophyll - Chl chlorophyll - CP47 Chl a containing a 47 kDa polypeptide - D1/D2 polypeptides of the PS II reaction center - ENDOR electron nuclear double resonance - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - ESEEM electron spin echo envelope modulation - EXAFS extended X-ray absorption fine structure - FTIR Fourier transform infrared - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - P680, P700 photoactive Chl a of PS II and PS I, respectively - PS II Photosystem II - QA special plastoquinone of PS II - Si redox states of WOC - WOC water oxidizing complex - WOS water oxidizing site - UV/VIS ultraviolet/visible - YD, YZ redox active tyrosines of polypeptides D2 and D1, respectively  相似文献   

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