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1.
Regulation of photosynthetic electron transport   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The photosynthetic electron transport chain consists of photosystem II, the cytochrome b(6)f complex, photosystem I, and the free electron carriers plastoquinone and plastocyanin. Light-driven charge separation events occur at the level of photosystem II and photosystem I, which are associated at one end of the chain with the oxidation of water followed by electron flow along the electron transport chain and concomitant pumping of protons into the thylakoid lumen, which is used by the ATP synthase to generate ATP. At the other end of the chain reducing power is generated, which together with ATP is used for CO(2) assimilation. A remarkable feature of the photosynthetic apparatus is its ability to adapt to changes in environmental conditions by sensing light quality and quantity, CO(2) levels, temperature, and nutrient availability. These acclimation responses involve a complex signaling network in the chloroplasts comprising the thylakoid protein kinases Stt7/STN7 and Stl1/STN7 and the phosphatase PPH1/TAP38, which play important roles in state transitions and in the regulation of electron flow as well as in thylakoid membrane folding. The activity of some of these enzymes is closely connected to the redox state of the plastoquinone pool, and they appear to be involved both in short-term and long-term acclimation. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled "Regulation of Electron Transport in Chloroplasts".  相似文献   

2.
In order to maintain optimal photosynthetic activity under a changing light environment, plants and algae need to balance the absorbed light excitation energy between photosystem I and photosystem II through processes called state transitions. Variable light conditions lead to changes in the redox state of the plastoquinone pool which are sensed by a protein kinase closely associated with the cytochrome b 6 f complex. Preferential excitation of photosystem II leads to the activation of the kinase which phosphorylates the light-harvesting system (LHCII), a process which is subsequently followed by the release of LHCII from photosystem II and its migration to photosystem I. The process is reversible as dephosphorylation of LHCII on preferential excitation of photosystem I is followed by the return of LHCII to photosystem II. State transitions involve a considerable remodelling of the thylakoid membranes, and in the case of Chlamydomonas, they allow the cells to switch between linear and cyclic electron flow. In this alga, a major function of state transitions is to adjust the ATP level to cellular demands. Recent studies have identified the thylakoid protein kinase Stt7/STN7 as a key component of the signalling pathways of state transitions and long-term acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus. In this article, we present a review on recent developments in the area of state transitions.  相似文献   

3.
Optimal photosynthetic performance requires that equal amounts of light are absorbed by photosystem ii (PSii) and photosystem i (PSi), which are functionally linked through the photosynthetic electron transport chain. However, photosynthetic organisms must cope with light conditions that lead to the preferential stimulation of one or the other of the photosystems. Plants react to such imbalances by mounting acclimation responses that redistribute excitation energy between photosystems and restore the photosynthetic redox poise. in the short term, this involves the so-called state transition process, which, over periods of minutes, alters the antennal crosssections of the photosystems through the reversible association of a mobile fraction of light-harvesting complex ii (LHCii) with PSi or PSii. Longer-lasting changes in light quality initiate a long-term response (LTr), occurring on a timescale of hours to days, that redresses imbalances in excitation energy by changing the relative amounts of the two photosystems. Despite the differences in their timescales of action, state transitions and LTr are both triggered by the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, via the activation of the thylakoid kinase STN7, which appears to act as a common redox sensor and/or signal transducer for both responses. This review highlights recent findings concerning the role of STN7 in coordinating short- and long-term photosynthetic acclimation responses.Key words: state transitions, long-term acclimation, photosynthesis, STN7, Arabidopsis  相似文献   

4.
Heber U  Walker D 《Plant physiology》1992,100(4):1621-1626
Coupled cyclic electron transport is assigned a role in the protection of leaves against photoinhibition in addition to its role in ATP synthesis. In leaves, as in reconstituted thylakoid systems, cyclic electron transport requires “poising,” i.e. availability of electrons at the reducing side of photosystem I (PSI) and the presence of some oxidized plastoquinone between photosystem II (PSII) and PSI. Under self-regulatory poising conditions that are established when carbon dioxide limits photosynthesis at high light intensities, and particularly when stomata are partially or fully closed as a result of water stress, coupled cyclic electron transport controls linear electron transport by helping to establish a proton gradient large enough to decrease PSII activity and electron flow to PSI. This brings electron donation by PSII, and electron consumption by available electron acceptors, into a balance in which PSI becomes more oxidized than it is during fast carbon assimilation. Avoidance of overreduction of the electron transport chain is a prerequisite for the efficient protection of the photosynthetic apparatus against photoinactivation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
7.
Lennon AM  Prommeenate P  Nixon PJ 《Planta》2003,218(2):254-260
The chloroplasts of many plants contain not only the photosynthetic electron transport chain, but also two enzymes, Ndh and IMMUTANS, which might participate in a chloroplast respiratory chain. IMMUTANS encodes a protein with strong similarities to the mitochondrial alternative oxidase and hence is likely to be a plastoquinol oxidase. The Ndh complex is a homologue of complex I of mitochondria and eubacteria and is considered to be a plastoquinone reductase. As yet these components have not been purified to homogeneity and their expression and orientation within the thylakoid remain ill-defined. Here we show that the IMMUTANS protein, like the Ndh complex, is a minor component of the thylakoid membrane and is localised to the stromal lamellae. Protease digestion of intact and broken thylakoids indicates that both Ndh and IMMUTANS are orientated towards the stromal phase of the membrane in Spinacia oleracea L. Such an orientation is consistent with a role for the Ndh complex in the energisation of the plastid membrane. In expression studies we show that IMMUTANS and the Ndh complex are present throughout the development of both Pisum sativum L. cv Progress No. 9 and Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. leaves, from early expansion to early senescence. Interestingly, both the Ndh complex and the IMMUTANS protein accumulate within etiolated leaf tissue, lacking the photosystem II complex, consistent with roles outside photosynthetic electron transport.Abbreviations PQ plastoquinone - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
N K Packham 《FEBS letters》1988,231(2):284-290
Although the amino acid sequence of the 9 kDa (phospho)protein of chloroplasts has been determined, the function of this thylakoid membrane protein in photosynthetic electron transport and the reason for its physiological control remains unclear. In this paper, I briefly review the evidence which indicates that the phosphorylation of the 9 kDa protein results in a partial inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution by increasing the stability of the semiquinone bound to QA the primary, plastoquinone-binding site of photosystem II (PS II). I propose that in its dephosphorylated state, the 9 kDa thylakoid membrane protein may serve PS II to ensure efficient photochemical charge separation by aiding the transfer of reducing equivalents out of the reaction centre to the attendant plastoquinone pool. This function is analogous to that proposed for the H-subunit of the reaction centre of photosynthetic eubacteria. Whether these two proteins have evolved from a common ancestral reaction centre protein is discussed in the light of a comparison of their amino acid sequences and predicted secondary structures.  相似文献   

10.
Experimental work on the control of photosystem II in the photosynthetic apparatus of higher plants, mosses and lichens is reviewed on a background of current literature. Transmembrane proton transport during photoassimilatory and photorespiratory electron flows is considered insufficient for producing the intrathylakoid acidification necessary for control of photosystem II activity under excessive illumination. Oxygen reduction during the Mehler reaction is slow. Together with associated reactions (the water-water cycle), it poises the electron transport chain for coupled cyclic electron transport rather than acting as an efficient electron sink. Coupled electron transport not accompanied by ATP consumption in associated reactions provides the additional thylakoid acidification needed for the binding of zeaxanthin to a chlorophyll-containing thylakoid protein. This results in the formation of energy-dissipating traps in the antennae of photosystem II. Competition for energy capture decreases the activity of photosystem II. In hydrated mosses and lichens, but not in leaves of higher plants, protein protonation and zeaxanthin availability are fully sufficient for effective energy dissipation even when photosystem II reaction centres are open. In leaves, an additional light reaction is required, and energy dissipation occurs not only in the antennae but also in reaction centres. Loss of chlorophyll fluorescence during the drying of predarkened poikilohydric mosses and lichens indicates energy dissipation in the dry state which is unrelated to protonation and zeaxanthin availability. Excitation of photosystem II by sunlight is not destructive in these dry organisms, whereas photosystem II activity of dried leaves is rapidly lost under strong illumination.  相似文献   

11.
A mathematical model of a chloroplast was constructed, which takes into account the inhomogeneous distribution of complexes of photosystems I and II between granal and intergranal thylakoids. The structural and functional complexes of photosystems I and II, which are localized in intergranal and granal thylakoids, respectively, and the b/f complex, which is uniformly distributed in thylakoid membranes, are assumed to be immobile. The interactions between spatially distant electron transport complexes are provided by plastoquinone and plastocyanine, which diffuse in the thylakoid membrane and intrathylakoid space, respectively. The main stages of proton transport associated with the functioning of photosystem II and oxidation-reduction transformations of plastoquinone are considered. The model takes into account the interactions of protons with membrane-bound buffer groups, the lateral diffusion of hydrogen ions in the intrathylakoid space and in the lumen between adjacent granal thylakoids, and the transmembrane proton transport associated with the function of ATP synthase and passive leakage of protons from thylakoids outside. The numerical integration of two systems of differential equations describing the behavior of some variables in two different regions: granal and intergranal thylakoids was performed. The model describes adequately the kinetics of processes being studied and predicts the occurrence of inhomogeneous lateral profiles of proton potentials and redox state of electron carriers. Modeling the electron and proton transport with allowance for the topological features of chloroplasts (lateral heterogeneity of thylakoids) is important for correct interpretation of "power-flux" interactions and the experimentally measured kinetic parameters averaged over the entire spatially inhomogeneous thylakoid system.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Cyanobacteria dominate the world's oceans where iron is often barely detectable. One manifestation of low iron adaptation in the oligotrophic marine environment is a decrease in levels of iron-rich photosynthetic components, including the reaction center of photosystem I and the cytochrome b6f complex [R.F. Strzepek and P.J. Harrison, Photosynthetic architecture differs in coastal and oceanic diatoms, Nature 431 (2004) 689-692.]. These thylakoid membrane components have well characterised roles in linear and cyclic photosynthetic electron transport and their low abundance creates potential impediments to photosynthetic function. Here we show that the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus WH8102 exhibits significant alternative electron flow to O2, a potential adaptation to the low iron environment in oligotrophic oceans. This alternative electron flow appears to extract electrons from the intersystem electron transport chain, prior to photosystem I. Inhibitor studies demonstrate that a propyl gallate-sensitive oxidase mediates this flow of electrons to oxygen, which in turn alleviates excessive photosystem II excitation pressure that can often occur even at relatively low irradiance. These findings are also discussed in the context of satisfying the energetic requirements of the cell when photosystem I abundance is low.  相似文献   

14.
Reversible protein phosphorylation plays a major role in the acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to changes in light. Two paralogous kinases phosphorylate subsets of thylakoid membrane proteins. STATE TRANSITION7 (STN7) phosphorylates LHCII, the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem II (PSII), to balance the activity of the two photosystems through state transitions. STN8, which is mainly involved in phosphorylation of PSII core subunits, influences folding of the thylakoid membranes and repair of PSII after photodamage. The rapid reversibility of these acclimatory responses requires the action of protein phosphatases. In a reverse genetic screen, we identified the chloroplast PP2C phosphatase, PHOTOSYSTEM II CORE PHOSPHATASE (PBCP), which is required for efficient dephosphorylation of PSII proteins. Its targets, identified by immunoblotting and mass spectrometry, largely coincide with those of the kinase STN8. The recombinant phosphatase is active in vitro on a synthetic substrate or on isolated thylakoids. Thylakoid folding is affected in the absence of PBCP, while its overexpression alters the kinetics of state transitions. PBCP and STN8 form an antagonistic kinase and phosphatase pair whose substrate specificity and physiological functions are distinct from those of STN7 and the counteracting phosphatase PROTEIN PHOSPHATASE1/THYLAKOID-ASSOCIATED PHOSPHATASE38, but their activities may overlap to some degree.  相似文献   

15.
The thylakoid‐associated kinases STN7 and STN8 are involved in short‐ and long‐term acclimation of photosynthetic electron transport to changing light conditions. Here we report the identification of STN7/STN8 in vivo targets that connect photosynthetic electron transport with metabolism and gene expression. Comparative phosphoproteomics with the stn7 and stn8 single and double mutants identified two proteases, one RNA‐binding protein, a ribosomal protein, the large subunit of Rubisco and a ferredoxin‐NADP reductase as targets for the thylakoid‐associated kinases. Phosphorylation of three of the above proteins can be partially complemented by STN8 in the stn7 single mutant, albeit at lower efficiency, while phosphorylation of the remaining three proteins strictly depends on STN7. The properties of the STN7‐dependent phosphorylation site are similar to those of phosphorylated light‐harvesting complex proteins entailing glycine or another small hydrophobic amino acid in the ?1 position. Our analysis uncovers the STN7/STN8 kinases as mediators between photosynthetic electron transport, its immediate downstream sinks and long‐term adaptation processes affecting metabolite accumulation and gene expression.  相似文献   

16.
In photosynthesis in chloroplasts, control of thylakoid protein phosphorylation by redox state of inter-photosystem electron carriers makes distribution of absorbed excitation energy between the two photosystems self-regulating. During operation of this regulatory mechanism, reduction of plastoquinone activates a thylakoid protein kinase which phosphorylates the light-harvesting complex LHC II, causing a change in protein recognition that results in redistribution of energy to photosystem I at the expense of photosystem II, thus tending to oxidise the reduced plastoquinone pool. These events correspond to the transition from light-state 1 to light-state 2. The reverse transition (to light-state 1) is initiated by transient oxidation of plastoquinone, inactivation of the LHC II kinase, and return of dephosphorylated LHC II from photosystem I to photosystem II, supplying excitation energy to photosystem II and thereby reducing plastoquinone. State 1-state 2 transitions therefore operate by means of redox control of reversible, post-translational modification of pre-existing proteins. A balance in the rates of light utilization by photosystem I and photosystem II can also be achieved, on longer time-scales and between wider limits, by adjustment of the relative quantities, or stoichiometry, of photosystem I and photosystem II. Recent evidence suggests that adjustment of photosystem stoichiometry is also a response to perturbation of the redox state of inter-photosystem electron carriers, and involves specific redox control of de novo protein synthesis, assembly, and breakdown. It is therefore suggested that the same redox sensor initiates these different adaptations by control of gene expression at different levels, according to the time-scale and amplitude of the response. This integrated feedback control may serve to maintain redox homeostasis, and, as a result, quantum yield. Evidence for the components required by such systems is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In response to changing light quantity and quality, photosynthetic organisms perform state transitions, a process which optimizes photosynthetic yield and mitigates photo-damage. The serine/threonine-protein kinase STN7 phosphorylates the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II (PSII; light-harvesting complex II), which then migrates from PSII to photosystem I (PSI), thereby rebalancing the light excitation energy between the photosystems and restoring the redox poise of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Two conserved cysteines forming intra- or intermolecular disulfide bonds in the lumenal domain (LD) of STN7 are essential for the kinase activity although it is still unknown how activation of the kinase is regulated. In this study, we show lumen thiol oxidoreductase 1 (LTO1) is co-expressed with STN7 in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and interacts with the LD of STN7 in vitro and in vivo. LTO1 contains thioredoxin (TRX)-like and vitamin K epoxide reductase domains which are related to the disulfide-bond formation system in bacteria. We further show that the TRX-like domain of LTO1 is able to oxidize the conserved lumenal cysteines of STN7 in vitro. In addition, loss of LTO1 affects the kinase activity of STN7 in Arabidopsis. Based on these results, we propose that LTO1 helps to maintain STN7 in an oxidized active state in state 2 through redox interactions between the lumenal cysteines of STN7 and LTO1.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Dubinskiĭ AIu 《Biofizika》2002,47(3):482-489
On the basis of the earlier proposed model of electron transport, which takes into account the Mitchell Q-cycle, stationary values for the fluxes of electrons Je along the electron transport chain and of protons JH across the thylakoid membrane were obtained, which are calculated now as the functions of photoexcitation of reaction centers and the medium acidity inside and outside of the thylakoid, pHin and pHout. In the framework of the model, the stoichiometric ratio JH/Je is determined virtually only by the time of reduction of plastoquinone (tau B) on the B site of photosystem II and restoration of plastoquinone (tau C) on the C site to the b/f complex.  相似文献   

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