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1.
Photosystem II (PSII) reaction center core complexes have been isolated and characterized from wild type (WT) Scenedesmus obliquus and from its LF-1 mutant. LF-1 thylakoids are blocked on the oxidizing side of PSII and have a reduced Mn content. Visible absorption and low temperature fluorescence spectra of both core complexes are identical and resemble those reported for spinach (Satoh, Butler 1978 Plant Physiol 61: 373-379). Lithium dodecyl sulfate-polycrylamide gel electrophoresis reveals that a protein alteration, originally observed in thylakoid membranes (Metz, Wong, Bishop 1980 FEBS Lett 114: 61-66), is retained in the PSII core particles. That is, a 34-kilodalton (kD) polypeptide, present in the WT core complex, is missing in the mutant, and the core complex of the mutant contains a 36-kD protein not present in the WT. The 34-kD intrinsic protein is also observed in O2-evolving PSII preparations and PSII core complexes from spinach. It is distinct from the 33-kD extrinsic protein first reported by T. Kuwabara and N. Murata (1979 Biochim Biophys Acta 581: 228-236). We suggest that the 34-kD protein is a site of Mn binding in the PSII membrane.  相似文献   

2.
(1) Five minor chlorophyll-protein complexes were isolated from thylakoid membranes of the green alga Acetabularia by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, after SDS or octylglucoside solubilization. None of them were related to CP I (Photosystem I reaction center core) or CP II (chlorophyll ab light-harvesting complex). (2) Two complexes (CPa-1 and CPa-2) contained only chlorophyll (Chl) a, with absorption maxima of 673 and 671 nm, and fluorescence emission maxima of 683 nm compared to 676 nm for CP II. The complexes had apparent molecular masses of 43–47 and 38–40 kDa, and contained a single polypeptide of 41 and 37 kDa, respectively. They each account for about 3% of the total chlorophyll. (3) Three complexes had identical spectra, with Chl ab ratios of 3–4 compared to 2 for thylakoid membranes, and a pronounced shoulder around 485 nm indicating enrichment in carotenoids. One of them was the complex ‘CP 29’ (Camm, E.L. and Green, B.R. (1980) Plant Physiol. 66, 428–432) and the other two were slightly different oligomeric forms of CP 29. They could be formed from CP 29 during reelectrophoresis; but about half the complex was isolated originally in an oligomeric form. Together they account for at least 7% of the total chlorophyll. Their function is unknown.  相似文献   

3.
To analyze the role of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in photosynthetic membranes of cyanobacteria we used two mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803: the PAL mutant which has no phycobilisomes and shows a high PSII/PSI ratio, and a mutant derived from it by inactivating its cdsA gene encoding cytidine 5'-diphosphate diacylglycerol synthase, a key enzyme in PG synthesis. In a medium supplemented with PG the PAL/ΔcdsA mutant cells grew photoautotrophically. Depletion of PG in the medium resulted (a) in an arrest of cell growth and division, (b) in a slowdown of electron transfer from the acceptor QA to QB in PSII and (c) in a modification of chlorophyll fluorescence curve. The depletion of PG affected neither the redox levels of QA nor the S2 state of the oxygen-evolving manganese complex, as indicated by thermoluminescence studies. Two-dimensional PAGE showed that in the absence of PG (a) the PSII dimer was decomposed into monomers, and (b) the CP43 protein was detached from a major part of the PSII core complex. [35S]-methionine labeling confirmed that PG depletion did not block de novo synthesis of the PSII proteins. We conclude that PG is required for the binding of CP43 within the PSII core complex.  相似文献   

4.
It was shown earlier that in etiolated bean (Phaseolus vulgaris, var. red kidney) leaves exposed to continuous light for a short time and then transferred to darkness a reorganization of their photosystem II (PSII) unit components occurs. This reorganization involves disorganization of the light-harvesting complex of PSII (LHC-II), destruction of its chlorophyll b and the 25 kilodalton polypeptide, and reuse of its chlorophyll a for the formation of additional, small in size, PSII units (Argyroudi-Akoyunoglou, Akoyunoglou, Kalosakas, Akoyunoglou 1982 Plant Physiol 70: 1242-1248). The present study further shows that parallel to the PSII unit reorganization a reorganization of the PSI unit components also occurs: upon transfer to darkness the 24, 23, and 21 kilodalton polypeptides, components of the light-harvesting complex of PSI (LHC-I), are decreased, the 69 kilodalton polypeptide, component of the chlorophyll a-rich P700-protein complex (CPI), is increased and new smallsized PSI units are formed. Concomitantly, the cytochrome f/chlorophyll and the cytochrome b/chlorophyll ratios are gradually increased. This suggests that the concentration of the electron transport components is also modulated in darkness to allow for adequate electron flow to occur between the newly synthesized PSII and PSI units.  相似文献   

5.
The role of individual photosynthetic antenna complexes of Photosystem II (PSII) both in membrane organization and excitation energy transfer have been investigated. Thylakoid membranes from wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana, and three mutants lacking light-harvesting complexes CP24, CP26, or CP29, respectively, were studied by picosecond-fluorescence spectroscopy. By using different excitation/detection wavelength combinations it was possible for the first time, to our knowledge, to separate PSI and PSII fluorescence kinetics. The sub-100 ps component, previously ascribed entirely to PSI, turns out to be due partly to PSII. Moreover, the migration time of excitations from antenna to PSII reaction center (RC) was determined for the first time, to our knowledge, for thylakoid membranes. It is four times longer than for PSII-only membranes, due to additional antenna complexes, which are less well connected to the RC. The results in the absence of CP26 are very similar to those of wild-type, demonstrating that the PSII organization is not disturbed. However, the kinetics in the absence of CP29 and, especially, of CP24 show that a large fraction of the light-harvesting complexes becomes badly connected to the RCs. Interestingly, the excited-state lifetimes of the disconnected light-harvesting complexes seem to be substantially quenched.  相似文献   

6.
State transitions represent a photoacclimation process that regulates the light‐driven photosynthetic reactions in response to changes in light quality/quantity. It balances the excitation between photosystem I (PSI) and II (PSII) by shuttling LHCII, the main light‐harvesting complex of green algae and plants, between them. This process is particularly important in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in which it is suggested to induce a large reorganization in the thylakoid membrane. Phosphorylation has been shown to be necessary for state transitions and the LHCII kinase has been identified. However, the consequences of state transitions on the structural organization and the functionality of the photosystems have not yet been elucidated. This situation is mainly because the purification of the supercomplexes has proved to be particularly difficult, thus preventing structural and functional studies. Here, we have purified and analysed PSI and PSII supercomplexes of C. reinhardtii in states 1 and 2, and have studied them using biochemical, spectroscopic and structural methods. It is shown that PSI in state 2 is able to bind two LHCII trimers that contain all four LHCII types, and one monomer, most likely CP29, in addition to its nine Lhcas. This structure is the largest PSI complex ever observed, having an antenna size of 340 Chls/P700. Moreover, all PSI‐bound Lhcs are efficient in transferring energy to PSI. A projection map at 20 Å resolution reveals the structural organization of the complex. Surprisingly, only LHCII type I, II and IV are phosphorylated when associated with PSI, while LHCII type III and CP29 are not, but CP29 is phosphorylated when associated with PSII in state2.  相似文献   

7.
The light-sensitive chlorophyll b (Chl b)-deficient oil yellow-yellow green (OY-YG) mutant of maize (Zea mays) grown under conditions of high light exhibits differential reductions in the accumulation of the three major Chl b-containing antenna complexes and characteristic changes in thylakoid architecture. When observed by freeze-fracture electron microscopy, the most notable changes in the OY-YG thylakoid structure are: (a) a major reduction in the number of 8 nanometer particles of the protoplasmic fracture face of stacked membrane regions (PFs) paralleled by a 60% reduction in the chlorophyll-proteins (CP) associated with the peripheral light harvesting complex (LHCII) for photosystem II (PSII) and which give rise to the LHCII oligomer/monomer (CPII*/CPII) bands on mildly dissociated green gels; (b) a sizable decrease in the proportion of 11 to 13 nanometer particles of the protoplasmic fracture face of unstacked membrane regions (PFu) that parallels the loss of light harvesting complex I (LHCI) antennae from photosystem I (PSI) centers and a 40% reduction of the band containing CP1 and LHCI (CPI*) on mildly dissociating green gels; (c) an unchanged or slightly increased average size of particles of the exoplasmic fracture face of stacked (or appressed) membrane regions (EFs) along with a relative increase in CP29, the postulated bound LHC of PSII, and of CP47 and CP43, PSII core antenna complexes. This latter result sets the OY-YG mutant apart from all other Chl b-deficient mutants studied to date, all of which possess EFs particles that are substantially reduced in size. Based on these findings, we postulate that the bound LHCII associated with EFs particles consists mostly of CP29 chlorophyll proteins and very little, if any, CPII*/CPII chlorophyll proteins. Indeed, the CPII*/CPII chlorophyll proteins may be exclusively associated with the `peripheral' LHCII units that give rise to 8 nanometer PF particles. The differential effect of the Chl b deficiency on the accumulation of the three main antenna complexes (CPII*/CPII>CPI*>CP29) suggests, furthermore, that there is a hierarchy among Chl b-binding proteins, and that this hierarchy might be an integral part of long-term photoregulation mediating Chl b partitioning in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

8.
Spectrophotometric and kinetic measurements were applied to yield photosystem (PS) stoichiometries and the functional antenna size of PSI, PSIIα, and PSIIβ in Zea mays chloroplasts in situ. Concentrations of PSII and PSI reaction centers were determined from the amplitude of the light-induced absorbance change at 320 and 700 nm, which reflect the photoreduction of the primary electron acceptor Q of PSII and the photooxidation of the reaction center P700 of PSI, respectively. Determination of the functional chlorophyll antenna size (N) for each photosystem was obtained from the measurement of the rate of light absorption by the respective reaction center. Under the experimental conditions employed, the rate of light absorption by each reaction center was directly proportional to the number of light-harvesting chlorophyll molecules associated with the respective photosystem. We determined NP700 = 195, Nα = 230, Nβ = 50 for the number of chlorophyll molecules in the light-harvesting antenna of PSI, PSIIα, and PSIIβ, respectively. The above values were used to estimate the PSII/PSI electron-transport capacity ratio (C) in maize chloroplasts. In mesophyll chloroplasts C > 1.4, indicating that, under green actinic excitation when Chl a and Chl b molecules absorb nearly equal amounts of excitation, PSII has a capacity to turn over electrons faster than PSI. In bundle sheath chloroplasts C < 1, suggesting that such chloroplasts are not optimally poised for linear electron transport and reductant generation.  相似文献   

9.
Dvorah Ish-Shalom  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(3):498-507
The polypeptide pattern, chlorophyll-protein complexes, fluorescence emission spectra and light intensity required for saturation of electron flow via Photosystem (PS) II and PS I in a pale-green photoautotrophic mutant, y-lp, were compared to those of the parent strain, Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1 cells. The mutant exhibits a 686 nm fluorescence yield at 25°C and 77 K 2–6-fold higher than that of the parent strain cells, and is deficient in thylakoid polypeptides 14, 17.2, 18 and 22 according to the nomenclature of Chua (Chua, N.-H. (1980) Methods Enzymol. 60C, 434–446). All chlorophyll-protein complexes ascribed to PS II and the CP I complex were present in both type of cells. However, a chlorophyll-protein complex CP Ia containing — in the parent strain — the 66–68 kDa polypeptides of CP I and the four above-mentioned polypeptides, was absent in the mutant. It was previously reported that a chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, obtained from C. reinhardii contains five polypeptides, namely, 14, 15, 17.2, 18 and 22 (Wollman, F.A. and Bennoun, P. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 352–360). A CP O-like complex was present also in the mutant y-lp cells but it contains only one polypeptide, 15. Energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not impaired in the mutant, although a 4-fold higher light intensity was required for the saturation of PS I electron flow in the y-lp cells as compared with the parent strain. No difference was found in the light saturation curves for PS II activity between the mutant and parent strain cells. Based on these and additional data (Gershoni, J.M., Shochat, S., Malkin, S. and Ohad, I. (1982) Plant Physiol. 70, 637–644), it is concluded that the chlorophyll-protein complexes of PS I in Chlamydomonas comprise a reaction center-core antenna complex containing the 66–68 kDa polypeptides (CP I), a connecting antenna consisting of four polypeptides (14, 17.2, 18 and 22), and a light-harvesting antenna containing one polypeptide, 15. These appear to be organized as a complex, CP Ia. The interconnecting antenna is deficient in the y-lp mutant and thus the CP Ia complex is unstable and energy is not transferred from CP O to CP I. The effective cross-section of PS I antenna is thus reduced and a high fluorescence is emitted at 686 nm.  相似文献   

10.
An O2-evolving Photosystem (PS) II preparation was isolated from maize by a Triton X-100 procedure (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1982) Plant Cell Physiol. 23, 533–539). A highly active O2-evolving preparation was obtained which evolved O2 at 76% the rate of fresh chloroplasts (H2O → 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone) and was very sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. There was no detectable PS I activity in the preparation (2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine → methyl viologen). When analyzed by lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the O2-evolving preparation was shown to be highly depleted in CP I, CF1, and devoid of cytochromes f and b-563 (the absence of which was confirmed by difference spectroscopy). The preparation was enriched in the PS II reaction center polypeptides I and II, the 34 kDa polypeptide (Metz, J., Wong, J. and Bishop, N.I. (1980) FEBS Lett. 114, 61–66), the Coomassie blue-stainable 32 kDa polypeptide (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 581, 228–236), LHCP-associated polypeptides and cytochrome b-559. Polypeptides of unknown function at 40.5, 25, 24, 22, 16.6 and 14 kDa were also present in the O2-evolving preparation. Triton X-114 phase partitioning (Bricker, T.M. and Sherman, L.A. (1982) FEBS Lett. 149, 197–202) indicated that the majority of these polypeptides were intrinsic. Only the polypeptides at 32, 25, 24 and 14 kDa were extrinsic. When examined by the octylglucoside procedure of Camm and Green (Camm, E.L. and Green, B.R. (1980) Plant Physiol. 66, 428–432) the PS II O2-evolving preparation was shown to contain the chlorophyll-proteins CP 27, CP 29, CP II1, D, and CP a-1 and CP a-2. Chlorophyll-proteins associated with PS I were highly depleted. The visible absorption spectra indicated an enrichment of chlorophyll b and carotenoids in the preparation. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum (excitation wavelength = 435 nm) exhibits a strong F-686 with little F-695 shoulder and a broad, low-intensity F-735 emission.  相似文献   

11.
Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to light absorbed primarily by photosystem I (PSI) or by photosystem II (PSII) was studied in the unicellular red alga Porphyridium cruentum (ATCC 50161). Cultures grown under green light of 15 microeinsteins per square meter per second (PSII light; absorbed predominantly by the phycobilisomes) exhibited a PSII/PSI ratio of 0.26 ± 0.05. Under red light (PSI light; absorbed primarily by chlorophyll) of comparable quantum flux, cells contained nearly five times as many PSII per PSI (1.21 ± 0.10), and three times as many PSII per cell. About 12% of the chlorophyll was attributed to PSII in green light, 22% in white light, and 39% in red light-grown cultures. Chlorophyll antenna sizes appeared to remain constant at about 75 chlorophyll per PSII and 140 per PSI. Spectral quality had little effect on cell content or composition of the phycobilisomes, thus the number of PSII per phycobilisome was substantially greater in red light-grown cultures (4.2 ± 0.6) than in those grown under green (1.6 ± 0.3) or white light (2.9 ± 0.1). Total photosystems (PSI + PSII) per phycobilisome remained at about eight in each case. Carotenoid content and composition was little affected by the spectral composition of the growth light. Zeaxanthin comprised more than 50% (mole/mole), β-carotene about 40%, and cryptoxanthin about 4% of the carotenoid pigment. Despite marked changes in the light-harvesting apparatus, red and green light-grown cultures have generation times equal to that of cultures grown under white light of only one-third the quantum flux.  相似文献   

12.
Lutescens-1, a tobacco mutant with a maternally inherited dysfunction, displayed an unusual developmental phenotype. In vivo measurement of chlorophyll fluorescence revealed deterioration in photosystem II (PSII) function as leaves expanded. Analysis of thylakoid membrane proteins by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated the physical loss of nuclear- and chloroplast-encoded polypeptides comprising the PSII core complex concomitant with loss of activity. Freeze fracture electron micrographs of mutant thylakoids showed a reduced density, compared to wild type, of the EFs particles which have been shown previously to be the structural entity containing PSII core complexes and associated pigment-proteins. The selective loss of PSII cores from thylakoids resulted in a higher ratio of antenna chlorophyll to reaction centers and an altered 77 K chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra; these data are interpreted to indicate functional isolation of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complexes in the absence of PSII centers. Examination of PSII reaction centers (which were present at lower levels in mutant membranes) by monitoring the light-dependent phosphorylation of PSII polypeptides and flash-induced O2 evolution patterns demonstrated that the PSII cores which were assembled in mutant thylakoids were functionally identical to those of wild type. We conclude that the lutescens-1 mutation affected the correct stoichiometry of PSII centers, in relation to other membrane constituents, by disrupting the proper assembly and maintenance of PSII complexes in lutescens-1 thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

13.
In most oxygenic phototrophs, including cyanobacteria, two independent enzymes catalyze the reduction of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyllide, which is the penultimate step in chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis. One is light-dependent NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (LPOR) and the second type is dark-operative protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (DPOR). To clarify the roles of both enzymes, we assessed synthesis and accumulation of Chl-binding proteins in mutants of cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 that either completely lack LPOR or possess low levels of the active enzyme due to its ectopic regulatable expression. The LPOR-less mutant grew photoautotrophically in moderate light and contained a maximum of 20 % of the wild-type (WT) Chl level. Both Photosystem II (PSII) and Photosystem I (PSI) were reduced to the same degree. Accumulation of PSII was mostly limited by the synthesis of antennae CP43 and especially CP47 as indicated by the accumulation of reaction center assembly complexes. The phenotype of the LPOR-less mutant was comparable to the strain lacking DPOR that also contained <25 % of the wild-type level of PSII and PSI when cultivated under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions. However, in the latter case, we detected no reaction center assembly complexes, indicating that synthesis was almost completely inhibited for all Chl-proteins, including the D1 and D2 proteins.  相似文献   

14.
To analyze the role of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) in photosynthetic membranes of cyanobacteria we used two mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803: the PAL mutant which has no phycobilisomes and shows a high PSII/PSI ratio, and a mutant derived from it by inactivating its cdsA gene encoding cytidine 5'-diphosphate diacylglycerol synthase, a key enzyme in PG synthesis. In a medium supplemented with PG the PAL/DeltacdsA mutant cells grew photoautotrophically. Depletion of PG in the medium resulted (a) in an arrest of cell growth and division, (b) in a slowdown of electron transfer from the acceptor Q(A) to Q(B) in PSII and (c) in a modification of chlorophyll fluorescence curve. The depletion of PG affected neither the redox levels of Q(A) nor the S(2) state of the oxygen-evolving manganese complex, as indicated by thermoluminescence studies. Two-dimensional PAGE showed that in the absence of PG (a) the PSII dimer was decomposed into monomers, and (b) the CP43 protein was detached from a major part of the PSII core complex. [(35)S]-methionine labeling confirmed that PG depletion did not block de novo synthesis of the PSII proteins. We conclude that PG is required for the binding of CP43 within the PSII core complex.  相似文献   

15.
Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to changes in the light environment was studied in the unicellular red alga Porphyridium cruentum (American Type Culture Collection No. 50161). Absolute or relative amounts of four photosynthetic enzymes and electron carriers were measured, and the data were compared with earlier observations on light-harvesting components (F.X. Cunningham, Jr., R.J. Dennenberg, L. Mustárdy, P.A. Jursinic, E. Gantt [1989] Plant Physiol 91: 1179-1187; F.X. Cunningham, Jr., R.J. Dennenberg, P.A. Jursinic, E. Gantt [1990] Plant Physiol 93: 888-895) and with measurements of photosynthetic capacity. Pmax, the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis on a chlorophyll (Chl) basis, increased more than 4-fold with increase in growth irradiance from 6 to 280 μeinsteins·m−2·s−1. Amounts of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, and cytochrome f increased in parallel with Pmax, whereas numbers of the light-harvesting complexes (photosystem [PS] I, PSII, and phycobilisomes) changed little, and ATP synthase increased 7-fold relative to Chl. The calculated minimal turnover time for PSII under the highest irradiance, 5 ms, was thus about 4-fold faster than that calculated for cultures grown under the lowest irradiance (19 ms). A change in the spectral composition of the growth light (irradiance kept constant at 15 μeinsteins·m−2·s−1) from green (absorbed predominantly by the phycobilisome antenna of PSII) to red (absorbed primarily by the Chl antenna of PSI) had little effect on the amounts of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, ATP synthase, and phycobilisomes on a Chl, protein, or thylakoid area basis. However, the number of PSI centers declined by 40%, cytochrome f increased by 40%, and both PSII and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase increased approximately 3-fold on a thylakoid area basis. The substantial increase in ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase under PSI light is inconsistent with a PSI-mediated reduction of NADP as the sole function of this enzyme. Our results demonstrate a high degree of plasticity in content and composition of thylakoid membranes of P. cruentum.  相似文献   

16.
A divinyl chlorophyll (DV-Chl) a harboring mutant of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, in which chlorophyll species is replaced from monovinyl(normal)-Chl a to DV-Chl a, was characterized. The efficiency of light utilization for photosynthesis was decreased in the mutant. Absorption spectra at 77 K and their fourth derivative analyses revealed that peaks of each chlorophyll forms were blue-shifted by 1–2 nm, suggesting lowered stability of chlorophylls at their binding sites. This was also true both in PSI and PSII complexes. On the other hand, fluorescence emission spectra measured at 77 K were not different between wild type and the mutant. This indicates that the mode of interaction between chlorophyll and its binding pockets responsible for emitting fluorescence at 77 K is not altered in the mutant. P700 difference spectra of thylakoid membranes and PSI complexes showed that the spectrum in Soret region was red-shifted by 7 nm in the mutant. This is a characteristic feature of DV-Chl a. Microenvironments of iron–sulfur center of a terminal electron acceptor of PSI complex, P430, were practically the same as that of wild type.  相似文献   

17.
In the present work we study the regulation of the distribution of the phosphorylated photosystem II (PSII) core populations present in grana regions of the thylakoids from several plant species. The heterogeneous nature of PSII core phosphorylation has previously been reported (M.T. Giardi, F. Rigoni, R. Barbato [1992] Plant Physiol 100: 1948-1954; M.T. Giardi [1993] Planta 190: 107-113). The pattern of four phosphorylated PSII core populations in the grana regions appears to be ubiquitous in higher plants. In the dark, at least two phosphorylated PSII core populations are always detected. A mutant of wheat (Triticum durum) that shows monophasic room-temperature photoreduction of the primary quinone electron acceptor of PSII as measured by chlorophyll fluorescence increase in the presence and absence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and by fluorescence upon flash illumination in intact leaves also lacks the usual distribution of phosphorylated PSII core populations. In this mutant, the whole PSII core population pattern is changed, probably due to altered threonine kinase activity, which leads to the absence of light-induced phosphorylation of CP43 and D2 proteins. The results, correlated to previous experiments in vivo, support the idea that the functional heterogeneity observed by fluorescence is correlated in part to the PSII protein phosphorylation in the grana.  相似文献   

18.
Bruce BD  Malkin R 《Plant physiology》1988,88(4):1201-1206
A native PSI complex and a PSI core complex have been isolated from the halophilic green alga, Dunaliella salina. The composition and properties of these complexes are similar to previously described PSI complexes from spinach membranes. By growth on 14C-NaHCO3, it has been possible to isolate uniformly labeled 14C-PSI complexes in order to determine PSI subunit stoichiometry. This analysis has shown a ratio of one copy of three low molecular weight subunits (22,000; 15,000; 8,000) per two copies of high molecular weight subunits (84,000). Using a 14C-labeled cytochrome b6-f complex as an internal protein standard, it has been possible to estimate the molecular weight of a PSI core complex as about 330,000. This complex contains one P700, two 84,000 subunits, and one subunit of 22,000, 15,000, and 8,000.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》2022,1863(5):148555
In land plants, both efficient light capture and photoprotective dissipation of chlorophyll excited states in excess require proper assembly of Photosystem II supercomplexes PSII-LHCs. These include a dimeric core moiety and a peripheral antenna system made of trimeric LHCII proteins connected to the core through monomeric LHC subunits. Regulation of light harvesting involves re-organization of the PSII supercomplex, including dissociation of its LHCII-CP24-CP29 domain under excess light. The Chl a603-a609-a616 chromophore cluster within CP29 was recently identified as responsible for the fast component of Non-Photochemical Quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. Here, we pinpointed a chlorophyll-protein domain of CP29 involved in the macro-organization of PSII-LHCs. By complementing an Arabidopsis knock-out mutant with CP29 sequences deleted in the residue binding chlorophyll b614/b3-binding, we found that the site is promiscuous for chlorophyll a and b. By plotting NPQ amplitude vs. CP29 content we observed that quenching activity was significantly reduced in mutants compared to the wild type. Analysis of pigment-binding supercomplexes showed that the missing Chl did hamper the assembly of PSII-LHCs supercomplexes, while observation by electron microscopy of grana membranes highlighted the PSII particles were organized in two-dimensional arrays in mutant grana partitions. As an effect of such array formation electron transport rate between QA and QB reduced, likely due to restricted plastoquinone diffusion. We conclude that chlorophyll b614, rather being part of pigment cluster responsible for quenching, is needed to maintain full rate of electron flow in the thylakoids by controlling protein-protein interactions between PSII units in grana partitions.  相似文献   

20.
Photosystem II (PSII) is a multisubunit membrane protein complex that is assembled in a sequence of steps. However, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the assembly of the individual subunits into functional PSII complexes are still largely unknown. Here, we report the identification of a chloroplast protein, Low PSII Accumulation3 (LPA3), which is required for the assembly of the CP43 subunit in PSII complexes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). LPA3 interacts with LPA2, a previously identified PSII CP43 assembly factor, and a double mutation of LPA2 and LPA3 is more deleterious for assembly than either single mutation, resulting in a seedling-lethal phenotype. Our results indicate that LPA3 and LPA2 have overlapping functions in assisting CP43 assembly and that cooperation between LPA2 and LPA3 is essential for PSII assembly. In addition, we provide evidence that LPA2 and LPA3 interact with Albino3 (Alb3), which is essential for thylakoid protein biogenesis. Thus, the function of Alb3 in some PSII assembly processes is probably mediated through interactions with LPA2 and LPA3.Oxygenic photosynthesis, in which oxygen and organic carbon are produced from water and carbon dioxide using sunlight, provides energy for nearly all living organisms on Earth. Four major multiprotein complexes, located in thylakoid membranes, are responsible for the capture of light and its conversion to chemical energy in eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms: PSI, PSII, cytochrome b6/f, and ATP synthase (Wollman et al., 1999; Nelson and Yocum, 2006). PSII catalyzes one of the most important of all biochemical reactions, the light-induced transfer of electrons from water to plastoquinone, which generates most of the oxygen in the Earth’s atmosphere. PSII consists of more than 20 subunits in higher plants (Wollman et al., 1999; Iwata and Barber, 2004; Nelson and Yocum, 2006). The PSII reaction center consists of the D1 and D2 proteins, the α- and β-subunits of cytochrome b559, and the PsbI protein, and the D1 and D2 heterodimers bind all the redox components essential for the primary charge separation (Nanba and Satoh, 1987). The PSII core complex additionally contains CP47, CP43, the oxygen-evolving complex, and several low molecular mass proteins (Wollman et al., 1999; Nelson and Yocum, 2006). CP47 and CP43, two inner chlorophyll a-binding proteins, are closely associated with, and located on opposite sides of, the PSII reaction center (Hankamer et al., 1999). The functional form of PSII cores in thylakoid membranes is dimeric and is associated with light-harvesting complex (LHC). In PSII-LHCII supercomplexes, PSII core dimers are surrounded by LHCII trimers, which consist of Lhcb1 and Lhcb2 proteins (Wollman et al., 1999; Iwata and Barber, 2004; Nelson and Yocum, 2006).Our knowledge of the molecular mechanisms involved in the biogenesis and assembly of PSII in the thylakoid membranes is still limited, although the structure and function of PSII have been extensively studied. Genetic and biochemical studies have elucidated several distinct steps that occur in PSII assembly. D2 and cytochrome b559 form an initial complex, which serves as a receptor for the cotranslational assembly of D1 (Adir et al., 1990; van Wijk et al., 1997; Müller and Eichacker, 1999; Zhang et al., 1999). The next step involves the association of CP47 with the PSII reaction center (Zhang et al., 1999; Rokka et al., 2005), while CP43 is synthesized independently and then continuously associates and dissociates with PSII (de Vitry et al., 1989; Zhang et al., 2000). The biogenesis of PSII involves “a control by epistasy of synthesis” process (Minai et al., 2006). D2 is required for D1 synthesis, which itself is needed for CP47 synthesis. However, many aspects of the processes involved in the oligomerization and coordination of the various PSII subunits are still unclear (Rochaix, 2001). Due to the structural complexity of PSII, its assembly consists of multiple assembly steps, which is likely to require the participation of a number of assembly factors.Several assembly factors involved in the biosynthesis and assembly of the PSII complex have been identified recently. For instance, the thylakoid lumen protein HCF136 is known to be required for the formation of PSII, since the hcf136 mutant is capable of synthesizing plastid-encoded proteins, but it does not appear to accumulate any stable PSII complexes, due to blockage of the assembly of the PSII reaction center (Meurer et al., 1998; Plücken et al., 2002). Alb3.1, a homolog of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Albino3 (Alb3), is essential for the efficient assembly of PSII in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, probably through interactions with D1 following its insertion (Ossenbühl et al., 2004), and another Alb3 homolog, Alb3.2, appears to be required for photosystem assembly in Chlamydomonas (Göhre et al., 2006). Coimmunoprecipitation analysis has shown that Alb3.1 and Alb3.2 interact directly, while Alb3.2 reportedly interacts with the PSI and PSII reaction centers proteins (Göhre et al., 2006). The lumenal immunophilins, AtCYP38 and FKBP20-2, have also been shown to be involved in PSII assembly (Lima et al., 2006; Fu et al., 2007; Sirpiö et al., 2008). In addition, we recently identified two PSII assembly factors, Low PSII Accumulation1 (LPA1) and LPA2, involved in PSII assembly. The LPA1 protein appears to be an integral membrane chaperone required for efficient assembly of the PSII core complex, probably through direct interaction with D1 (Peng et al., 2006). LPA2, which interacts with Alb3, forms a protein complex that assists CP43 assembly within PSII (Ma et al., 2007). These findings suggest that each stage of the PSII assembly process is assisted by one or more specific assembly factors, most of which have not yet been identified.Here, we report the identification of a lpa3 mutant with reduced levels of PSII. Functional characterization points to the possible role of LPA3 in assisting CP43 assembly within PSII. In addition, biochemical and genetic analyses indicate that an assembly complex of LPA3 and LPA2 is essential for PSII assembly.  相似文献   

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