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1.
Chlorophyll b is one of the major light-harvesting pigments produced by land plants, green algae and several cyanobacterial species. It is synthesized from chlorophyll a by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO), which in higher plants consists of three domains, namely, A, B, and C. We previously demonstrated that the C domain exhibits a catalytic function, whereas the A domain destabilizes the CAO protein in the presence of chlorophyll b, thus regulating the cellular level of CAO. In a previous study, we also presented genetic evidence demonstrating the involvement of Clp protease in the destabilization of CAO. In this study, in order to gain further insight into the regulatory mechanism of CAO, we screened for mutants defective in the control of CAO accumulation. Seeds from an Arabidopsis transgenic plant overexpressing a chimeric protein consisting of the A and B domains of CAO and green fluorescent protein (GFP) were mutagenized by ethyl methane sulfonate. We screened the progenies of the transgenic plants by laser-scanning confocal microscopy, and isolated a total of 66 mutants exhibiting significant GFP fluorescence. By immunoblotting analysis, we confirmed that these mutants accumulated the fusion protein of the N-terminal domains of CAO and GFP at a high level. We further divided these mutants into seven groups by distribution patterns of the fusion protein, and characterized them by pigment and immunoblotting analyses. Based on these analyses, we proposed a model to describe the regulatory mechanism of CAO.  相似文献   

2.
The light-harvesting efficiency of a photosystem is thought to be largely dependent on its photosynthetic antenna size. It has been suggested that antenna size is controlled by the biosynthesis of chlorophyll b. To verify this hypothesis, we overexpressed the enzyme for chlorophyll b biosynthesis, chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO), in Arabidopsis thaliana by transforming the plant with cDNA for CAO under the control of the 35S cauliflower mosaic virus promoter. In the early de-etiolation phase, when the intrinsic CAO expression is very low, the chlorophyll a: b ratio was drastically decreased from 28 to 7.3, indicating that enhancement of chlorophyll b biosynthesis had been successfully achieved. We made the following observations in full-green rosette leaves of transgenic plants. (1) The chlorophyll a : b ratio was reduced from 2.85 to 2.65. (2) The ratio of the peripheral light-harvesting complexes (LHCII) to the core antenna complex (CPa) resolved with the green-gel system increased by 20%. (3) The ratio of the light-harvesting complex II apoproteins (LHCP) to 47-kDa chlorophyll a protein (CP47), which was estimated by the results of immunoblotting, increased by 40%. These results indicated that the antenna size increased by at least 10-20% in transgenic plants, suggesting that chlorophyll b biosynthesis controls antenna size. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on enlargement of the antenna size by genetic manipulations.  相似文献   

3.
Chlorophyll b is one of the major light-harvesting pigments in green plants and it is essential for optimal light harvesting. Chlorophyll b is synthesized from chlorophyll a by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO) which consists of A, B and C domains. Previously, we demonstrated that the C domain alone has a catalytic function, while the A and B domains control the level of CAO protein in response to chlorophyll b accumulation. We hypothesized that the accumulation of chlorophyll b triggers the proteolytic degradation of CAO. In this study, in order to gain further insight into this regulatory mechanism we screened for mutants that have defects in the control of CAO accumulation. Seeds from a transgenic line of Arabidopsis which overexpressed a CAO-GFP fusion were mutagenized and their progenies were screened by laser-scanning confocal microscopy for mutants showing an elevated level of GFP fluorescence. One particular mutant (dca1) exhibited stronger GFP fluorescence and accumulated a GFP-CAO fusion protein at a higher level. Concomitantly, the chlorophyll a to b ratio decreased in this mutant. The mutation in the dca1 mutant was mapped to the ClpC1 gene, thereby indicating that a chloroplast Clp protease is involved in regulating chlorophyll b biosynthesis through the destabilization of CAO protein in response to the accumulation of chlorophyll b.  相似文献   

4.
Plants acclimate to variations in light intensity by changing the antenna size of photosystems. This acclimation allows them to undergo efficient photosynthesis and creates a protective strategy to minimize photodamage. Chlorophyll b synthesis by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO) is a key regulatory step in the control of antenna size. Recently, we found that higher plant CAOs consist of three domains (A, B, and C domains) and confirmed that the C domain possesses catalytic function. To investigate the function of the A domain, we fused various combinations of these three domains with green fluorescent protein (GFP) and introduced them into Arabidopsis thaliana. When a full-length CAO-GFP fusion protein was introduced into a chlorophyll b-less chlorina1-1 mutant, chlorophyll b accumulated to almost the same levels as in the chlorophyll b-containing Columbia wild type, but the CAO-GFP could not be detected by immunoblotting. By contrast, when a GFP-C domain fusion was introduced into chlorina1-1 or Columbia wild type, a large amount of GFP-C domain protein accumulated and the chlorophyll a/b ratio decreased drastically from 3.6 to 2.2 in Columbia wild type. When an A domain-GFP was introduced into Columbia wild type, A domain-GFP levels were very low. Conversely, a large amount of the protein accumulated when it was introduced into the chlorina1-1 mutant. These results indicate that the A domain may sense the presence of chlorophyll b and regulate the accumulation of CAO protein in the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

5.
The organization of pigment molecules in photosystems is strictly determined. The peripheral antennae have both chlorophyll a and b, but the core antennae consist of only chlorophyll a in green plants. Furthermore, according to the recent model obtained from the crystal structure of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complexes II (LHCII), individual chlorophyll-binding sites are occupied by either chlorophyll a or chlorophyll b. In this study, we succeeded in altering these pigment organizations by introducing a prokaryotic chlorophyll b synthesis gene (chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO)) into Arabidopsis. In these transgenic plants (Prochlirothrix hollandica CAO plants), approximately 40% of chlorophyll a of the core antenna complexes was replaced by chlorophyll b in both photosystems. Chlorophyll a/b ratios of LHCII also decreased from 1.3 to 0.8 in PhCAO plants. Surprisingly, these transgenic plants were capable of photosynthetic growth similar to wild type under low light conditions. These results indicate that chlorophyll organizations are not solely determined by the binding affinities, but they are also controlled by CAO. These data also suggest that strict organizations of chlorophyll molecules are not essential for photosynthesis under low light conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Kargul J  Barber J 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(6):1056-1068
In order to carry out photosynthesis, plants and algae rely on the co-operative interaction of two photosystems: photosystem I and photosystem II. For maximum efficiency, each photosystem should absorb the same amount of light. To achieve this, plants and green algae have a mobile pool of chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins that can switch between being light-harvesting antenna for photosystem I or photosystem II, in order to maintain an optimal excitation balance. This switch, termed state transitions, involves the reversible phosphorylation of the mobile chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins, which is regulated by the redox state of the plastoquinone-mediating electron transfer between photosystem I and photosystem II. In this review, we will present the data supporting the function of redox-dependent phosphorylation of the major and minor chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins by the specific thylakoid-bound kinases (Stt7, STN7, TAKs) providing a molecular switch for the structural remodelling of the light-harvesting complexes during state transitions. We will also overview the latest X-ray crystallographic and electron microscopy-derived models for structural re-arrangement of the light-harvesting antenna during State 1-to-State 2 transition, in which the minor chlorophyll a/b-binding protein, CP29, and the mobile light-harvesting complex II trimer detach from the light-harvesting complex II-photosystem II supercomplex and associate with the photosystem I core in the vicinity of the PsaH/L/O/P domain.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The composition and structural organization of thylakoid membranes of a low chlorophyll mutant of Beta vulgaris was investigated using spectroscopic, kinetic and electrophoretic techniques. The data obtained were compared with those of a standard F1 hybrid of the same species. The mutant was depleted in chlorophyll b relative to the hybrid and it had a higher photosystem II/photosystem I reaction center (Q/P700) ratio and a smaller functional chlorophyll antenna size. Analysis of thylakoid membranes by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the mutant lacked a portion of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex but was enriched in the photosystem II reaction center chlorophyll protein complex. Comparison of functional antenna sizes and of photosystem stoichiometries determined electrophoretically were in good agreement with those determined spectroscopically. Both approaches indicated that about 30% of the total chlorophyll was associated with photosystem I and about 70% with photosystem II. A greater proportion of photosystem IIβ was detected in the mutant. The results suggest that a higher photosystem II to photosystem I ratio in the sugar beet mutant has apparently compensated for the smaller photosystem II chlorophyll light-harvesting antenna in its chloroplasts. Moreover, a lack of chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex correlates with the abundance of photosystem IIβ. It is proposed that a developmental relationship exists between the two types of photosystem II where photosystem IIβ is a precursor form of photosystem IIα occurring prior to the addition of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex and grana formation.  相似文献   

9.
10.
A new potential light-harvesting protein, named Lhca5, was recently detected in higher plants. Because of the low amount of Lhca5 in thylakoid membranes, the isolation of a native Lhca5 pigment-protein complex has not been achieved to date. Therefore, we used in vitro reconstitution to analyze whether Lhca5 binds pigments and is actually an additional light-harvesting protein. By this approach we could demonstrate that Lhca5 binds pigments in a unique stoichiometry. Analyses of pigment requirements for light-harvesting complex formation by Lhca5 revealed that chlorophyll b is the only indispensable pigment. Fluorescence measurements showed that ligated chlorophylls and carotenoids are arranged in a way that allows directed energy transfer within the light-harvesting complex. Reconstitutions of Lhca5 together with other Lhca proteins resulted in the formation of heterodimers with Lhca1. This result demonstrates that Lhca5 is indeed a protein belonging to the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I. The properties of Lhca5 are compared with those of previously characterized Lhca proteins, and the consequences of an additional Lhca protein for the composition of the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I are discussed in view of the recently published photosystem I structure of the pea.  相似文献   

11.
12.
P Jahns  W Junge 《Biochemistry》1992,31(32):7390-7397
Thylakoid membranes were isolated from pea seedlings grown under intermittent light (2-min light/118-min dark cycles). These preparations differed from controls (thylakoids from plants grown under 16-h light/8-h dark cycles) in the following respects: 15 times smaller chlorophyll/protein ratio, 10 times greater chlorophyll a/b ratio, absence of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding proteins, and 2-3-fold greater ratio of photosystem II over photosystem I. In addition we found the following: (1) Electrogenic electron transfer around cytochrome b6/f under flashing light was greatly enhanced, probably as a consequence of the greater photosystem II/photosystem I ratio. (2) The rate of proton uptake from the medium at the acceptor side of photosystem II was enhanced, probably by unshielding of the quinone binding domain. (3) The N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide sensitivity of the proton-pumping activity of photosystem II was absent, which was consistent with the attribution of a N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-induced protonic short circuit to chlorophyll a/b binding proteins. (4) The sensitivity of oxygen evolution under continuous light to variations of pH or the concentration of Ca2+ was altered. Chlorophyll a/b binding proteins serve as light-harvesting antennas. We found in addition that they modulated the activity of water oxidation and, in particular, the proteolytic reactions around photosystem II.  相似文献   

13.
Chlorophyll b is synthesized by the oxidation of a methyl group on the B ring of a tetrapyrrole molecule to a formyl group by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO). The full-length CAO from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) was overexpressed in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) that grows well at light intensities much higher than those tolerated by Arabidopsis. This resulted in an increased synthesis of glutamate semialdehyde, 5-aminolevulinic acid, magnesium-porphyrins, and chlorophylls. Overexpression of CAO resulted in increased chlorophyll b synthesis and a decreased chlorophyll a/b ratio in low light-grown as well as high light-grown tobacco plants; this effect, however, was more pronounced in high light. The increased potential of the protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase activity and chlorophyll biosynthesis compensated for the usual loss of chlorophylls in high light. Increased chlorophyll b synthesis in CAO-overexpressed plants was accompanied not only by an increased abundance of light-harvesting chlorophyll proteins but also of other proteins of the electron transport chain, which led to an increase in the capture of light as well as enhanced (40%-80%) electron transport rates of photosystems I and II at both limiting and saturating light intensities. Although the quantum yield of carbon dioxide fixation remained unchanged, the light-saturated photosynthetic carbon assimilation, starch content, and dry matter accumulation increased in CAO-overexpressed plants grown in both low- and high-light regimes. These results demonstrate that controlled up-regulation of chlorophyll b biosynthesis comodulates the expression of several thylakoid membrane proteins that increase both the antenna size and the electron transport rates and enhance carbon dioxide assimilation, starch content, and dry matter accumulation.  相似文献   

14.
The light-harvesting antenna of barley photosystem I (LHCI) was isolated from native photosystem I (PSI) complexes and fractionated into three pigment-protein subcomplexes using two consecutive rounds of green gel electrophoresis. Each complex showed a characteristic polypeptide composition and low-temperature fluorescence emission spectrum; they were designated as LHCI-730, LHCI-680A and LHCI-680B. Their four apoproteins of 21, 22, 23 and 25 kDa were purified and NH2-terminal sequences were determined; in the case of the NH2-terminally blocked 25-kDa protein, an internal sequence was obtained after cleavage with endoproteinase Lys-C. This made possible an assignment of the four proteins to the four types (I-IV) of genes coding for chlorophyll a/b proteins of PSI (cab or lha genes). The LHCI-730 complex was isolated as a heterodimer composed of the 21-kDa (LHCI type IV) and the 22-kDa (LHCI type I) polypeptides. Each LHCI-680 complex had a single apoprotein. LHCI-680A consisted of the 25-kDa (LHCI type III) and LHCI-680B of the 23-kDa (LHCI type II) polypeptides. LHCI-680B was associated with the non-pigmented PSI-E subunit, indicating that this protein may function in the binding of this antenna to the reaction centre.  相似文献   

15.
Photosystem II of higher plants is a multisubunit transmembrane complex composed of a core moiety and an extensive peripheral antenna system. The number of antenna polypeptides per core complex is modulated following environmental conditions in order to optimize photosynthetic performance. In this study, we used a barley (Hordeum vulgare) mutant, viridis zb63, which lacks photosystem I, to mimic extreme and chronic overexcitation of photosystem II. The mutation was shown to reduce the photosystem II antenna to a minimal size of about 100 chlorophylls per photosystem II reaction centre, which was not further reducible. The minimal photosystem II unit was analysed by biochemical methods and by electron microscopy, and found to consist of a dimeric photosystem II reaction centre core surrounded by monomeric Lhcb4 (chlorophyll protein 29), Lhcb5 (chlorophyll protein 26) and trimeric light-harvesting complex II antenna proteins. This minimal photosystem II unit forms arrays in vivo, possibly to increase the efficiency of energy distribution and provide photoprotection. In wild-type plants, an additional antenna protein, chlorophyll protein 24 (Lhcb6), which is not expressed in viridis zb63, is proposed to associate to this minimal unit and stabilize larger antenna systems when needed. The analysis of the mutant also revealed the presence of two distinct signalling pathways activated by excess light absorbed by photosystem II: one, dependent on the redox state of the electron transport chain, is involved in the regulation of antenna size, and the second, more directly linked to the level of photoinhibitory stress perceived by the cell, participates in regulating carotenoid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Low-temperature emission spectra and excitation spectra for chlorophyll fluorescence were recorded from leaves of species of the genus Flaveria (Asteraceae) with C3, C3-C4-intermediate, C4-like, and C4 photosynthesis. Among the latter two groups, high chlorophyll b absorption was observed in excitation spectra for photosystem I (PSI) fluorescence. By comparing leaf data with those from isolated chloroplast fractions, the high chlorophyll b absorption was attributed to the specific properties of the bundle-sheath chloroplasts in leaves from C4 plants. The deconvolution of the PSI excitation spectra and the use of a model revealed that the contribution of photosystem II absorption to the functional antenna of PSI was markedly increased in leaves from three of the five C4-like and C4 species investigated in detail. The two other species exhibited normal, C3-like light-harvesting properties of PSI. The former species are known for efficient carbon assimilation, the latter for decreased efficiencies of carbon assimilation. It is concluded that photosystem II becomes a substantial part of the functional PSI antenna late in the evolution of C4 photosynthesis, and that the composite antenna optimizes the light-harvesting of PSI in bundle-sheath chloroplasts to meet the energy requirements of C4 photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Allosteric regulation of the light-harvesting system of photosystem II   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (NPQ) is symptomatic of the regulation of energy dissipation by the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem II (PS II). The kinetics of NPQ in both leaves and isolated chloroplasts are determined by the transthylakoid delta pH and the de-epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle. In order to understand the mechanism and regulation of NPQ we have adopted the approaches commonly used in the study of enzyme-catalysed reactions. Steady-state measurements suggest allosteric regulation of NPQ, involving control by the xanthophyll cycle carotenoids of a protonation-dependent conformational change that transforms the PS II antenna from an unquenched to a quenched state. The features of this model were confirmed using isolated light-harvesting proteins. Analysis of the rate of induction of quenching both in vitro and in vivo indicated a bimolecular second-order reaction; it is suggested that quenching arises from the reaction between two fluorescent domains, possibly within a single protein subunit. A universal model for this transition is presented based on simple thermodynamic principles governing reaction kinetics.  相似文献   

19.
Summary We have cloned and characterized members of a gene family encoding polypeptide constituents of the fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a/c protein complex, a light-harvesting complex associated with photosystem II of diatoms and brown algae. Three cDNA clones encoding proteins associated with this complex in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum have been isolated. As deduced from the nucleotide sequences, these light-harvesting proteins show homology to the chlorophyll a/b binding polypeptides of higher plants. Specifically, the N-terminal regions of the fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins are homologous to the chlorophyll a/b binding proteins in both the third membrane-spanning domain and the stroma-exposed region between membrane-spanning domains 2 and 3. Like the chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins, the mature fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a/c polypeptides have three hydrophobic -helical domains which could span the membrane bilayer. The similarities between the two light-harvesting proteins might reflect the fact that both bind chlorophyll molecules and/or might be important for maintaining certain structural features of the complex. There is little similarity between the N-terminal sequences of the primary translation products of the fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a/c proteins and any transit sequences that have been characterized. Instead, the N-terminal sequences have features resembling those of signal sequences. Thus either transit peptides used in P. tricornutum show little resemblance to those of higher plants and green algae or the nuclear-encoded plastid proteins enter the organelle via a mechanism different from that used in higher plants.  相似文献   

20.
Hartel H  Kruse E  Grimm B 《Plant physiology》1997,113(4):1113-1124
The formation of 5-aminolevulinate is a key regulatory step in tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. In higher plants, glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase (GSA-AT) catalyzes the last step in the sequential conversion of glutamate to 5-aminolevulinate. Antisense RNA synthesis for GSA-AT leads to reduced GSA-AT protein levels in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants. We have used these transgenic plants for studying the significance of chlorophyll (Chl) availability for assembly of the light-harvesting apparatus. To avoid interfering photoinhibitory stress, plants were cultivated under a low photon flux density of 70 [mu]mol photons m-2 s-1. Decreased GSA-AT expression does not seem to suppress other enzymic steps in the Chl pathway, indicating that reduced Chl content in transgenic plants (down to 12% of the wild-type level) is a consequence of reduced GSA-AT activity. Chl deficiency correlated with a drastic reduction in the number of photosystem I and photosystem II reaction centers and their surrounding antenna on a leaf area basis. Different lines of evidence from the transgenic plants indicate that complete assembly of light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes is given preference over synthesis of new reaction center/core complexes, resulting in fully assembled photosynthetic units with no reduction in antenna size. Photosynthetic oxygen evolution rates and in vivo Chl fluorescence showed that GSA-AT antisense plants are photochemically competent. Thus, we suggest that under the growth conditions chosen during this study, plants tend to maintain their light-harvesting antenna size even under limited Chl supply.  相似文献   

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