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1.
We investigated the organization of photosystem II (PSII) in agranal bundle sheath thylakoids from a C(4) plant maize. Using blue native/SDS-PAGE and single particle analysis, we show for the first time that PSII in the bundle sheath (BS) chloroplasts exists in a dimeric form and forms light-harvesting complex II (LHCII).PSII supercomplexes. We also demonstrate that a similar set of photosynthetic membrane complexes exists in mesophyll and agranal BS chloroplasts, including intact LHCI.PSI supercomplexes, PSI monomers, PSII core dimers, PSII monomers devoid of CP43, LHCII trimers, LHCII monomers, ATP synthase, and cytochrome b(6)f complex. Fluorescence functional measurements clearly indicate that BS chloroplasts contain PSII complexes that are capable of performing charge separation and are efficiently sensitized by the associated LHCII. We identified a fraction of LHCII present within BS thylakoids that is weakly energetically coupled to the PSII reaction center; however, the majority of BS LHCII is shown to be tightly connected to PSII. Overall, we demonstrate that organization of the photosynthetic apparatus in BS agranal chloroplasts of a model C(4) plant is clearly distinct from that of the stroma lamellae of the C(3) plants. In particular, supramolecular organization of the dimeric LHCII.PSII in the BS thylakoids strongly suggests that PSII in the BS agranal membranes may donate electrons to PSI. We propose that the residual PSII activity may supply electrons to poise cyclic electron flow around PSI and prevent PSI overoxidation, which is essential for the CO(2) fixation in BS cells, and hence, may optimize ATP production within this compartment.  相似文献   

2.
Photodamage of Photosystem II (PSII) has been considered as an unavoidable and harmful reaction that decreases plant productivity. PSII, however, has an efficient and dynamically regulated repair machinery, and the PSII activity becomes inhibited only when the rate of damage exceeds the rate of repair. The speed of repair is strictly regulated according to the energetic state in the chloroplast. In contrast to PSII, Photosystem I (PSI) is very rarely damaged, but when occurring, the damage is practically irreversible. While PSII damage is linearly dependent on light intensity, PSI gets damaged only when electron flow from PSII exceeds the capacity of PSI electron acceptors to cope with the electrons. When electron flow to PSI is limited, for example in the presence of DCMU, PSI is extremely tolerant against light stress. Proton gradient (ΔpH)-dependent slow-down of electron transfer from PSII to PSI, involving the PGR5 protein and the Cyt b6f complex, protects PSI from excess electrons upon sudden increase in light intensity. Here we provide evidence that in addition to the ΔpH-dependent control of electron transfer, the controlled photoinhibition of PSII is also able to protect PSI from permanent photodamage. We propose that regulation of PSII photoinhibition is the ultimate regulator of the photosynthetic electron transfer chain and provides a photoprotection mechanism against formation of reactive oxygen species and photodamage in PSI.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.

Cyclic electron transport (CET) is an attractive hypothesis for regulating photosynthetic electron transport and producing the additional ATP in oxygenic phototrophs. The concept of CET has been established in the last decades, and it is proposed to function in the progenitor of oxygenic photosynthesis, cyanobacteria. The in vivo activity of CET is frequently evaluated either from the redox state of the reaction center chlorophyll in photosystem (PS) I, P700, in the absence of PSII activity or by comparing PSI and PSII activities through the P700 redox state and chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively. The evaluation of CET activity, however, is complicated especially in cyanobacteria, where CET shares the intersystem chain, including plastoquinone, cytochrome b6/f complex, plastocyanin, and cytochrome c6, with photosynthetic linear electron transport (LET) and respiratory electron transport (RET). Here we sought to distinguish the in vivo electron transport rates in RET and CET in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The reduction rate of oxidized P700 (P700+) decreased to less than 10% when PSII was inhibited, indicating that PSII is the dominant electron source to PSI but P700+ is also reduced by electrons derived from other sources. The oxidative pentose phosphate (OPP) pathway functions as the dominant electron source for RET, which was found to be inhibited by glycolaldehyde (GA). In the condition where the OPP pathway and respiratory terminal oxidases were inhibited by GA and KCN, the P700+ reduction rate was less than 1% of that without any inhibitors. This study indicate that the electron transport to PSI when PSII is inhibited is dominantly derived from the OPP pathway in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.

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5.
The light-dependent control of photosynthetic electron transport from plastoquinol (PQH(2)) through the cytochrome b(6)f complex (Cyt b(6)f) to plastocyanin (PC) and P700 (the donor pigment of Photosystem I, PSI) was investigated in laboratory-grown Helianthus annuus L., Nicotiana tabaccum L., and naturally-grown Solidago virgaurea L., Betula pendula Roth, and Tilia cordata P. Mill. leaves. Steady-state illumination was interrupted (light-dark transient) or a high-intensity 10 ms light pulse was applied to reduce PQ and oxidise PC and P700 (pulse-dark transient) and the following re-reduction of P700(+) and PC(+) was recorded as leaf transmission measured differentially at 810-950 nm. The signal was deconvoluted into PC(+) and P700(+) components by oxidative (far-red) titration (V. Oja et al., Photosynth. Res. 78 (2003) 1-15) and the PSI density was determined by reductive titration using single-turnover flashes (V. Oja et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1658 (2004) 225-234). These innovations allowed the definition of the full light response curves of electron transport rate through Cyt b(6)f to the PSI donors. A significant down-regulation of Cyt b(6)f maximum turnover rate was discovered at low light intensities, which relaxed at medium light intensities, and strengthened again at saturating irradiances. We explain the low-light regulation of Cyt b(6)f in terms of inactivation of carbon reduction cycle enzymes which increases flux resistance. Cyclic electron transport around PSI was measured as the difference between PSI electron transport (determined from the light-dark transient) and PSII electron transport determined from chlorophyll fluorescence. Cyclic e(-) transport was not detected at limiting light intensities. At saturating light the cyclic electron transport was present in some, but not all, leaves. We explain variations in the magnitude of cyclic electron flow around PSI as resulting from the variable rate of non-photosynthetic ATP-consuming processes in the chloroplast, not as a principle process that corrects imbalances in ATP/NADPH stoichiometry during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

6.
The cytochrome b(6)f (Cyt b(6)f) complex in flowering plants contains nine conserved subunits, of which three, PetG, PetL, and PetN, are bitopic plastid-encoded low-molecular-weight proteins of largely unknown function. Homoplastomic knockout lines of the three genes have been generated in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum 'Petit Havana') to analyze and compare their roles in assembly and stability of the complex. Deletion of petG or petN caused a bleached phenotype and loss of photosynthetic electron transport and photoautotrophy. Levels of all subunits that constitute the Cyt b(6)f complex were faintly detectable, indicating that both proteins are essential for the stability of the membrane complex. In contrast, DeltapetL plants accumulate about 50% of other Cyt b(6)f subunits, appear green, and grow photoautotrophically. However, DeltapetL plants show increased light sensitivity as compared to wild type. Assembly studies revealed that PetL is primarily required for proper conformation of the Rieske protein, leading to stability and formation of dimeric Cyt b(6)f complexes. Unlike wild type, phosphorylation levels of the outer antenna of photosystem II (PSII) are significantly decreased under state II conditions, although the plastoquinone pool is largely reduced in DeltapetL, as revealed by measurements of PSI and PSII redox states. This confirms the sensory role of the Cyt b(6)f complex in activation of the corresponding kinase. The reduced light-harvesting complex II phosphorylation did not affect state transition and association of light-harvesting complex II to PSI under state II conditions. Ferredoxin-dependent plastoquinone reduction, which functions in cyclic electron transport around PSI in vivo, was not impaired in DeltapetL.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Oxygenic photosynthesis in cyanobacteria, algae, and plants requires photosystem II (PSII) to extract electrons from H(2)O and depends on photosystem I (PSI) to reduce NADP(+). Here we demonstrate that mixotrophically-grown mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 that lack PSI (ΔPSI) are capable of net light-induced O(2) evolution in vivo. The net light-induced O(2) evolution requires glucose and can be sustained for more than 30min. Utilizing electron transport inhibitors and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, we show that in these mutants PSII is the source of the light-induced O(2) evolution, and that the plastoquinone pool is reduced by PSII and subsequently oxidized by an unidentified electron acceptor that does not involve the plastoquinol oxidase site of the cytochrome b(6)f complex. Moreover, both O(2) evolution and chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics of the ΔPSI mutants are highly sensitive to KCN, indicating the involvement of a KCN-sensitive enzyme(s). Experiments using (14)C-labeled bicarbonate show that the ΔPSI mutants assimilate more CO(2) in the light compared to the dark. However, the rate of the light-minus-dark CO(2) assimilation accounts for just over half of the net light-induced O(2) evolution rate, indicating the involvement of unidentified terminal electron acceptors. Based on these results we suggest that O(2) evolution in ΔPSI cells can be sustained by an alternative electron transport pathway that results in CO(2) assimilation and that includes PSII, the platoquinone pool, and a KCN-sensitive enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Nostoc   punctiforme strain Pasteur Culture Collection (PCC) 73102, a sequenced filamentous cyanobacterium capable of nitrogen fixation, is used as a model organism for characterization of bioenergetic processes during nitrogen fixation in Nostoc . A protocol for isolating thylakoid membranes was developed to examine the biochemical and biophysical aspects of photosynthetic electron transfer. Thylakoids were isolated from filaments of N.   punctiforme by pneumatic pressure-drop lysis. The activity of photosynthetic enzymes in the isolated thylakoids was analysed by measuring oxygen evolution activity, fluorescence spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Electron transfer was found functional in both PSII and PSI. Electron transfer measurements in PSII, using diphenylcarbazide as electron donor and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron acceptor, showed that 80% of the PSII centres were active in water oxidation in the final membrane preparation. Analysis of the membrane protein complexes was made by 2D gel electrophoresis, and identification of representative proteins was made by mass spectrometry. The ATP synthase, several oligomers of PSI, PSII and the NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH)-1L and NDH-1M complexes, were all found in the gels. Some differences were noted compared with previous results from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Two oligomers of PSII were found, monomeric and dimeric forms, but no CP43-less complexes. Both dimeric and monomeric forms of Cyt b 6/ f could be observed. In all, 28 different proteins were identified, of which 25 are transmembrane proteins or membrane associated ones.  相似文献   

10.
Photosynthetic electron transport can involve either a linear flow from water to NADP, via Photosystems (PS) II and I or a cyclic flow just involving PSI. Little is known about factors regulating the relative flow through each of these pathways. We have examined photosynthetic electron transport through each system in plants of Arabidopsis thaliana in which either the PSI-D1 or PSI-E1 subunits of PSI have been knocked out. In both cases, this results in an imbalance in the turnover of PSI and PSII, such that PSII electron transport is limited by PSI turnover. Phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) and its migration to PSI is enhanced but only partially reversible and not sufficient to balance photosystem turnover. In spite of this, cyclic electron flow is able to compete efficiently with PSI across a range of conditions. In dark-adapted leaves, the efficiency of cyclic relative to linear flow induced by far-red light is increased, implying that the limiting step of cyclic flow lies in the re-injection of electrons into the electron transport chain. Illumination of leaves with white light resulted in transient induction of a significant non-photochemical quenching in knockout plants which is probably high energy state quenching induced by cyclic electron flow. At high light and at low CO(2), non-photochemical quenching was greater in the knockout plants than in the wildtype. Comparison of PSI and PSII turnover under such conditions suggested that this is generated by cyclic electron flow around PSI. We conclude that, when the concentration of PSI is limiting, cyclic electron flow is still able to compete effectively with linear flow to maintain a high DeltapH to regulate photosynthesis.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of protein phosphorylation on electron transportactivities of thylakoids isolated from wheat leaves was investigated.Protein phosphorylation resulted in a reduction in the apparentquantum yield of whole chain and photosystem II (PSII) electrontransport but had no effect on photosystem I (PSI) activity.The affinity of the D1 reaction centre polypeptide of PSII tobind atrazine was diminished upon phosphorylation, however,this did not reduce the light-saturated rate of PSII electrontransport. Phosphorylation also produced an inhibition of thelight-saturated rate of electron transport from water or durohydroquinoneto methyl viologen with no similar effect being observed onthe light-saturated rate of either PSII or PSI alone. This suggeststhat phosphorylation produces an inhibition of electron transportat a site, possibly the cytochrome b6/f complex, between PSIIand PSI. This inhibition of whole-chain electron transport wasalso observed for thylakoids isolated from leaves grown underintermittent light which were deficient in polypeptides belongingto the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex associatedwith photosystem II (LHCII). Consequently, this phenomenon isnot associated with phosphorylation of LCHII polypeptides. Apossible role for cytochrome b6/f complexes in the phosphorylation-inducedinhibition of whole chain electron transport is discussed. Key words: Electron transport, light harvesting, photosystem 2, protein phosphorylation, thylakoid membranes, wheat (Triticum aestivum)  相似文献   

12.
Although photosystem I (PSI) cyclic electron transport is essential for plants, our knowledge of the route taken by electrons is very limited. To assess whether ferredoxin (Fd) donates electrons directly to plastoquinone (PQ) or via a Q-cycle in the cytochrome (cyt) b(6)f complex in PSI cyclic electron transport, we characterized the activity of PSI cyclic electron transport in an Arabidopsis mutant, pgr1 (proton gradient regulation). In pgr1, Q-cycle activity was hypersensitive to acidification of the thylakoid lumen because of an amino acid alteration in the Rieske subunit of the cyt b(6)f complex, resulting in a conditional defect in Q-cycle activity. In vitro assays using ruptured chloroplasts did not show any difference in the activity of PGR5-dependent PQ reduction by Fd, which functions in PSI cyclic electron transport in vivo. In contrast to the pgr5 defect, the pgr1 defect did not show any synergistic effect on the quantum yield of photosystem II in crr2-2, a mutant in which NDH (NAD(P)H dehydrogenase) activity was impaired. Furthermore, the simultaneous determination of the quantum yields of both photosystems indicated that the ratio of linear and PSI cyclic electron transport was not significantly affected in pgr1. All the results indicated that the pgr1 mutation did not affect PGR5-dependent PQ reduction by Fd. The phenotypic differences between pgr1 and pgr5 indicate that maintenance of the proper balance of linear and PSI cyclic electron transport is essential for preventing over-reduction of the stroma.  相似文献   

13.
The responses of the quantum efficiencies of photosystem (PS) II and PSI measured in vivo simultaneously with estimations of the activities and activation states of NADP-malate dehydrogenase, chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase were used to study the relationship between electron transport and carbon metabolism. The effects of varying irradiance and CO2 partial pressure on the relationship between the quantum efficiencies of PSI and II, and the activity of these enzymes shows that the interrelationships vary according to the limitations placed on the system. The relationship between the quantum efficiencies of PSII and PSI was linear in most situations. In response to increasing irradiance, the activity of all three enzymes increased. In the case of NADP-malate dehydrogenase this increase was well correlated with the estimated flux of electrons through PSI and PSII. The other two enzymes showed a more complex relationship with the estimated flux of electrons through both photosystems. These relationships are consistent with the known interactions between these stromal enzymes and the thylakoids. The response to varying CO2 partial pressure is more complex. The efficiencies of PSI and II declined with decreasing CO2 partial pressure and the activity of each enzyme varied uniquely. However, there are clear correlations between the activities of the enzymes and the flux of electrons through the photosystems. In contrast to the data obtained under conditions of varying irradiance, there is clear evidence of photosynthetic control of electron transport when the CO2 concentration is varied.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Simon Hald  Dario Leister  Giles N. Johnson 《BBA》2008,1777(9):1173-1183
Photosynthetic electron transport can involve either a linear flow from water to NADP, via Photosystems (PS) II and I or a cyclic flow just involving PSI. Little is known about factors regulating the relative flow through each of these pathways. We have examined photosynthetic electron transport through each system in plants of Arabidopsis thaliana in which either the PSI-D1 or PSI-E1 subunits of PSI have been knocked out. In both cases, this results in an imbalance in the turnover of PSI and PSII, such that PSII electron transport is limited by PSI turnover. Phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) and its migration to PSI is enhanced but only partially reversible and not sufficient to balance photosystem turnover. In spite of this, cyclic electron flow is able to compete efficiently with PSI across a range of conditions. In dark-adapted leaves, the efficiency of cyclic relative to linear flow induced by far-red light is increased, implying that the limiting step of cyclic flow lies in the re-injection of electrons into the electron transport chain. Illumination of leaves with white light resulted in transient induction of a significant non-photochemical quenching in knockout plants which is probably high energy state quenching induced by cyclic electron flow. At high light and at low CO2, non-photochemical quenching was greater in the knockout plants than in the wildtype. Comparison of PSI and PSII turnover under such conditions suggested that this is generated by cyclic electron flow around PSI. We conclude that, when the concentration of PSI is limiting, cyclic electron flow is still able to compete effectively with linear flow to maintain a high ΔpH to regulate photosynthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Cyanobacterial glycogen-deficient mutants display impaired degradation of light-harvesting phycobilisomes under nitrogen-limiting growth conditions and secrete a suite of organic acids as a putative reductant-spilling mechanism. This genetic background, therefore, represents an important platform to better understand the complex relationships between light harvesting, photosynthetic electron transport, carbon fixation, and carbon/nitrogen metabolisms. In this study, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of the dynamics of photosynthesis as a function of reductant sink manipulation in a glycogen-deficient glgC mutant of Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002. The glgC mutant showed increased susceptibility to photoinhibition during the initial phase of nitrogen deprivation. However, after extended periods of nitrogen deprivation, glgC mutant cells maintained higher levels of photosynthetic activity than the wild type, supporting continuous organic acid secretion in the absence of biomass accumulation. In contrast to the wild type, the glgC mutant maintained efficient energy transfer from phycobilisomes to photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers, had an elevated PSII/PSI ratio as a result of reduced PSII degradation, and retained a nitrogen-replete-type ultrastructure, including an extensive thylakoid membrane network, after prolonged nitrogen deprivation. Together, these results suggest that multiple global signals for nitrogen deprivation are not activated in the glgC mutant, allowing the maintenance of active photosynthetic complexes under conditions where photosynthesis would normally be abolished.  相似文献   

17.
Gloiopeltis furcata (Postels & Ruprecht) J. Agardh, a macroalga, which grows in an upper, intertidal zone, can withstand drastic environmental changes caused by the periodic tides. In this study, the photosynthetic and morphological characteristics of G. furcata were investigated. The photosynthetic performance and electron flows of the thalli showed significant variations in response to desiccation and salinity compared with the control group. Both PSII and PSI activities declined gradually when the thalli were under stress. However, the electron transport rate of PSI showed still a low value during severe conditions, while the rate of PSII approached zero. Furthermore, PSI activity of the treated thalli recovered faster than PSII after being submerged in seawater. Even though the linear electron flow was inhibited by DCMU [3-(3, 4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea], the cyclic electron flow could still be restored. The rate of cyclic electron flow recovery declined with the increasing time of dark treatment, which suggested that stromal reductants from starch degradation played an important role in the donation of electrons to PSI. This study demonstrated that PSII was more sensitive than PSI to desiccation and salinity in G. furcata and that the cyclic electron flow around PSI played a significant physiological role. In addition, G. furcata had branches, which were hollow inside and contained considerable quantities of funoran. These might be the most important factors in allowing G. furcata to adapt to adverse intertidal environments.  相似文献   

18.
The photosynthetic acclimation of Tradescantia albiflora (Kunth), a trailing ground species naturally occurring in the deep shade of rainforests, was studied in relation to growth irradiance (glasshouse; direct light and 1 to 4 layers of shade cloth, giving 100 to 1.4% relative growth irradiance). Contrary to other irradiance studies of higher plants grown in natural habitats or controlled light environments, the chlorophyll a/b ratios of Tradescantia leaves were low (∼2.2) and constant. Acclimation to growth irradiance caused no changes in the relative amounts of specific Chl-proteins or the numbers of photosystem I (PSI) and PSII reaction centres on a chlorophyll basis, indicating that the light-harvesting antenna sizes of PSII and PSI, as well as the photosystem stoichiometry, were independent of growth irradiance. However, the amount of cytochrome f and ATP synthase on a chlorophyll basis increased with increasing the relative growth irradiance from 1.4 to 35%, showing acclimation of electron transport and photophosphorylation capacity. The photosynthetic capacity and ribulose 1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) activity also increased with increase of the growth irradiance to 35%. Beyond that, the inflexible PSII/PSI stoichiometry and shade-type photosystem II/light-harvesting units in Tradescaniia are a disadvantage for long-term exposure to high irradiance since the leaves are more prone to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

19.
Parallel measurements of CO2 assimilation and 800 nm transmission were carried out on intact leaves of wild type and cytochrome b6/f deficient transgenic tobacco grown at different light intensities and temperatures, with the aim to diagnose rate-limiting processes in photosynthesis and investigate their adaptations to growth conditions. Maximum CO2- and light-saturated photosynthetic rate, mesophyll conductance, assimilatory charge and specific carboxylation efficiency were determined from CO2 fixation measurements and postillumination P700 rereduction time constant was measured from the transient of the 800 nm signal. Results show that growth conditions continue to modulate the expression of genes in transgenic plants, interfering with the antisense modulation, but under all environmental conditions the antisense treatment to decrease Cyt b6/f complexes ensured that the control of electron/proton transport rate by proton backpressure on the PSI donor side was stronger than the control by electron backpressure on the PSI acceptor side. Coordinated control of gene expression and enzyme activation ensures that different parts of the photosynthetic machinery--components of the electron transport chain, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, enzymes of the sucrose and starch synthesis chains-are synthesized more or less proportionally under different environmental conditions and in case of mild genetic interference.  相似文献   

20.
Photosystem (PSII) is a supramolecular polypeptide complex found in oxygenic photosynthetic membranes, which is capable of extracting electrons from water for the reduction of plastoquinone. An intriguing feature of this assembly is the fact that it includes more than a dozen low-mass polypeptides of generally unknown function. Using a transplastomic approach, we have individually disrupted the genes of the psbEFLJoperon in Nicotiana tabacum, which encode four such polypeptides, without impairing expression of downstream loci of the operon. All four mutants exhibited distinct phenotypes; none of them was capable of photoautotrophic growth. All mutants bleached rapidly in the light. Disruption of psbEand psbF, which code for the alpha and beta apoproteins of cytochrome b(559), abolished PSII activity, as expected; Delta psbL and Delta psbJ plants displayed residual PSII activity in young leaves. Controlled partial solubilisation of thylakoid membranes uncovered surprisingly severe impairment of PSII structure, with subunit and assembly patterns varying depending on the mutant considered. In the Delta psbL mutant PSII was assembled primarily in a monomeric form, the homodimeric form was preponderant in Delta psbJ, and, unlike the case in Delta psbZ, the thylakoids of both mutants released some PSII supercomplexes. On the other hand, Photosystem I (PSI), the cytochrome b(6)f complex, ATP synthase, LHCII, and CP24/CP26/CP29 antennae were present in near wild-type levels. The data are discussed in terms of their implications for structural, biogenetic and functional aspects of PSII.  相似文献   

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