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1.
Malate valves act as powerful systems for balancing the ATP/NAD(P)H ratio required in various subcellular compartments in plant cells. As components of malate valves, isoforms of malate dehydrogenases (MDHs) and dicarboxylate translocators catalyse the reversible interconversion of malate and oxaloacetate and their transport. Depending on the co‐enzyme specificity of the MDH isoforms, either NADH or NADPH can be transported indirectly. Arabidopsis thaliana possesses nine genes encoding MDH isoenzymes. Activities of NAD‐dependent MDHs have been detected in mitochondria, peroxisomes, cytosol and plastids. In addition, chloroplasts possess a NADP‐dependent MDH isoform. The NADP‐MDH as part of the ‘light malate valve’ plays an important role as a poising mechanism to adjust the ATP/NADPH ratio in the stroma. Its activity is strictly regulated by post‐translational redox‐modification mediated via the ferredoxin‐thioredoxin system and fine control via the NADP+/NADP(H) ratio, thereby maintaining redox homeostasis under changing conditions. In contrast, the plastid NAD‐MDH (‘dark malate valve’) is constitutively active and its lack leads to failure in early embryo development. While redox regulation of the main cytosolic MDH isoform has been shown, knowledge about regulation of the other two cytosolic MDHs as well as NAD‐MDH isoforms from peroxisomes and mitochondria is still lacking. Knockout mutants lacking the isoforms from chloroplasts, mitochondria and peroxisomes have been characterised, but not much is known about cytosolic NAD‐MDH isoforms and their role in planta. This review updates the current knowledge on MDH isoforms and the shuttle systems for intercompartmental dicarboxylate exchange, focusing on the various metabolic functions of these valves.  相似文献   

2.
Respiration in cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes is interwoven with photosynthetic processes. We have constructed a range of mutants that are impaired in several combinations of respiratory and photosynthetic electron transport complexes and have examined the relative effects on the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool by using a quinone electrode. Succinate dehydrogenase has a major effect on the PQ redox poise, as mutants lacking this enzyme showed a much more oxidized PQ pool. Mutants lacking type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases also had more oxidized PQ pools. However, in the mutant lacking type I NADPH dehydrogenase, succinate was essentially absent and effective respiratory electron donation to the PQ pool could be established after addition of 1 mM succinate. Therefore, lack of the type I NADPH dehydrogenase had an indirect effect on the PQ pool redox state. The electron donation capacity of succinate dehydrogenase was found to be an order of magnitude larger than that of type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases. The reason for the oxidized PQ pool upon inactivation of type II NADH dehydrogenase may be related to the facts that the NAD pool in the cell is much smaller than that of NADP and that the NAD pool is fully reduced in the mutant without type II NADH dehydrogenase, thus causing regulatory inhibition. The results indicate that succinate dehydrogenase is the main respiratory electron transfer pathway into the PQ pool and that type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases regulate the reduction level of NADP and NAD, which, in turn, affects respiratory electron flow through succinate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

3.
The goal was to determine whether endogenous cytosolic NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1) preferentially uses NADPH or NADH in intact pulmonary arterial endothelial cells in culture. The approach was to manipulate the redox status of the NADH/NAD(+) and NADPH/NADP(+) redox pairs in the cytosolic compartment using treatment conditions targeting glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway alone or with lactate, and to evaluate the impact on the intact cell NQO1 activity. Cells were treated with 2-deoxyglucose, iodoacetate, or epiandrosterone in the absence or presence of lactate, NQO1 activity was measured in intact cells using duroquinone as the electron acceptor, and pyridine nucleotide redox status was measured in total cell KOH extracts by high-performance liquid chromatography. 2-Deoxyglucose decreased NADH/NAD(+) and NADPH/NADP(+) ratios by 59 and 50%, respectively, and intact cell NQO1 activity by 74%; lactate restored NADH/NAD(+), but not NADPH/NADP(+) or NQO1 activity. Iodoacetate decreased NADH/NAD(+) but had no detectable effect on NADPH/NADP(+) or NQO1 activity. Epiandrosterone decreased NQO1 activity by 67%, and although epiandrosterone alone did not alter the NADPH/NADP(+) or NADH/NAD(+) ratio, when the NQO1 electron acceptor duroquinone was also present, NADPH/NADP(+) decreased by 84% with no impact on NADH/NAD(+). Duroquinone alone also decreased NADPH/NADP(+) but not NADH/NAD(+). The results suggest that NQO1 activity is more tightly coupled to the redox status of the NADPH/NADP(+) than NADH/NAD(+) redox pair, and that NADPH is the endogenous NQO1 electron donor. Parallel studies of pulmonary endothelial transplasma membrane electron transport (TPMET), another redox process that draws reducing equivalents from the cytosol, confirmed previous observations of a correlation with the NADH/NAD(+) ratio.  相似文献   

4.
Simon Hald 《BBA》2008,1777(5):433-440
When plants experience an imbalance between the absorption of light energy and the use of that energy to drive metabolism, they are liable to suffer from oxidative stress. Such imbalances arise due to environmental conditions (e.g. heat, chilling or drought), and can result in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Here, we present evidence for a novel protective process — feedback redox regulation via the redox poise of the NADP(H) pool. Photosynthetic electron transport was studied in two transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) lines — one having reduced levels of ferredoxin NADP+-reductase (FNR), the enzyme responsible for reducing NADP+, and the other reduced levels of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), the principal consumer of NADPH. Both had a similar degree of inhibition of carbon fixation and impaired electron transport. However, whilst FNR antisense plants were obviously stressed, with extensive bleaching of leaves, GAPDH antisense plants showed no visible signs of stress, beyond having a slowed growth rate. Examination of electron transport in these plants indicated that this difference is due to feedback regulation occurring in the GAPDH but not the FNR antisense plants. We propose that this reflects the occurrence of a previously undescribed regulatory pathway responding to the redox poise of the NADP(H) pool.  相似文献   

5.
We measured the kinetics of light-induced NADPH formation and subsequent dark consumption by monitoring in vivo its fluorescence in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. Spectral data allowed the signal changes to be attributed to NAD(P)H and signal linearity vs the chlorophyll concentration was shown to be recoverable after appropriate correction. Parameters associated to reduction of NADP+ to NADPH by ferredoxin–NADP+-oxidoreductase were determined: After single excitation of photosystem I, half of the signal rise is observed in 8 ms; Evidence for a kinetic limitation which is attributed to an enzyme bottleneck is provided; After two closely separated saturating flashes eliciting two photosystem I turnovers in less than 2 ms, more than 50% of the cytoplasmic photoreductants (reduced ferredoxin and photosystem I acceptors) are diverted from NADPH formation by competing processes. Signal quantitation in absolute NADPH concentrations was performed by adding exogenous NADPH to the cell suspensions and by estimating the enhancement factor of in vivo fluorescence (between 2 and 4). The size of the visible (light-dependent) NADP (NADP+ + NADPH) pool was measured to be between 1.4 and 4 times the photosystem I concentration. A quantitative discrepancy is found between net oxygen evolution and NADPH consumption by the light-activated Calvin–Benson cycle. The present study shows that NADPH fluorescence is an efficient probe for studying in vivo the energetic metabolism of cyanobacteria which can be used for assessing multiple phenomena occurring over different time scales.  相似文献   

6.
Redox Transfer across the Inner Chloroplast Envelope Membrane   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
In leaves of spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L.) grown in ambient CO2 the subcellular contents of adenylates, pyridine nucleotides, 3-phosphoglycerate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, malate, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, and aspartate were assayed in the light and in the dark by nonaqueous fractionation technique. From the concentrations of NADP and NADPH determined in the chloroplast fraction of illuminated leaves the stromal NADPH to NADP ratio is calculated to be 0.5. For the cytosol a NADH to NAD ratio of 10−3 is calculated from the assay of the concentrations of NAD, malate, glutamate, aspartate, and 2-oxoglutarate on the assumption that the reactions catalyzed by the cytosolic glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase and malate dehydrogenase are not far away from equilibrium. For the transfer of redox equivalents from the chloroplastic NADPH to the cytosolic NAD two metabolite shuttles are operating across the inner envelope membrane: the triosephosphate-3-phosphoglycerate shuttle and the malate-oxaloacetate shuttle. Although both shuttles would have the capacity to level the redox state of the stromal and cytosolic compartment, this apparently does not occur. To gain an insight into the regulatory processes we calculated the free energy of the enzymic reactions and of the translocation steps involved. From the results it is concluded that the triosephosphate-3-phosphoglycerate shuttle is mainly controlled by the chloroplastic reaction of 3-phosphoglycerate reduction and of the cytosolic reaction of triosephosphate oxidation. The malate-oxaloacetate shuttle is found to be regulated by the chloroplastic NADP-malate dehydrogenase and also by the translocating step across the envelope membrane.  相似文献   

7.
Forti G  Meyer EM 《Plant physiology》1969,44(11):1511-1514
Inorganic pyrophosphate is found to inhibit the ferredoxin-dependent photoreduction of NADP by isolated chloroplasts. The reduction of ferricyanide is not inhibited, nor is the activity of photosystem 1 as measured with methyl viologen as the electron acceptor. All other ferredoxin-depended reactions are inhibited, such as cytochrome c photoreduction and the reaction sequence: NADPH →Flavoprotein→ferredoxin→cytochrome c. The inhibition by pyrophosphate is, in all cases, competitive with ferredoxin and independent of NADP concentration. Pyrophosphate inhibition of the formation of the ferredoxin-flavoprotein complex is demonstrated spectrophotometrically.  相似文献   

8.
When plants experience an imbalance between the absorption of light energy and the use of that energy to drive metabolism, they are liable to suffer from oxidative stress. Such imbalances arise due to environmental conditions (e.g. heat, chilling or drought), and can result in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Here, we present evidence for a novel protective process - feedback redox regulation via the redox poise of the NADP(H) pool. Photosynthetic electron transport was studied in two transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) lines - one having reduced levels of ferredoxin NADP+-reductase (FNR), the enzyme responsible for reducing NADP+, and the other reduced levels of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), the principal consumer of NADPH. Both had a similar degree of inhibition of carbon fixation and impaired electron transport. However, whilst FNR antisense plants were obviously stressed, with extensive bleaching of leaves, GAPDH antisense plants showed no visible signs of stress, beyond having a slowed growth rate. Examination of electron transport in these plants indicated that this difference is due to feedback regulation occurring in the GAPDH but not the FNR antisense plants. We propose that this reflects the occurrence of a previously undescribed regulatory pathway responding to the redox poise of the NADP(H) pool.  相似文献   

9.
Chlorophyll a fluorescence rise kinetics (from 50 μs to 1 s) were used to investigate the non-photochemical reduction of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool in osmotically broken spinach chloroplasts (Spinacia oleracea L.). Incubation of the chloroplasts in the presence of exogenous NADPH or NADH resulted in significant changes in the shape of the fluorescence transient reflecting an NAD(P)H-dependent accumulation of reduced PQ in the dark, with an extent depending on the concentration of NAD(P)H and the availability of oxygen; the dark reduction of the PQ pool was saturated at lower NAD(P)H concentrations and reached a higher level when the incubation took place under anaerobic conditions than when it occurred under aerobic conditions. Under both conditions NADPH was more effective than NADH in reducing PQ, however only at sub-saturating concentrations. Neither antimycin A nor rotenone were found to alter the effect of NAD(P)H. The addition of mercury chloride to the chloroplast suspension decreased the NAD(P)H-dependent dark reduction of the PQ pool, with the full inhibition requiring higher mercury concentrations under anaerobic than under aerobic conditions. This is the first time that this inhibitory role of mercury is reported for higher plants. The results demonstrate that in the dark the redox state of the PQ pool is regulated by the reduction of PQ via a mercury-sensitive NAD(P)H-PQ oxidoreductase and the reoxidation of reduced PQ by an O2-dependent pathway, thus providing additional evidence for the existence of a chlororespiratory electron transport chain in higher plant chloroplasts. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

10.
NADP is a key electron carrier for a broad spectrum of redox reactions, including photosynthesis. Hence, chloroplastic NADP status, as represented by redox status (ratio of NADPH to NADP+) and pool size (sum of NADPH and NADP+), is critical for homeostasis in photosynthetic cells. However, the mechanisms and molecules that regulate NADP status in chloroplasts remain largely unknown. We have now characterized an Arabidopsis mutant with imbalanced NADP status (inap1), which exhibits a high NADPH/NADP+ ratio and large NADP pool size. inap1 is a point mutation in At2g04700, which encodes the catalytic subunit of ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase. Upon illumination, inap1 demonstrated earlier increases in NADP pool size than the wild type did. The mutated enzyme was also found in vitro to inefficiently reduce m‐type thioredoxin, which activates Calvin cycle enzymes, and NADP‐dependent malate dehydrogenase to export reducing power to the cytosol. Accordingly, Calvin cycle metabolites and amino acids diminished in inap1 plants. In addition, inap1 plants barely activate NADP‐malate dehydrogenase, and have an altered redox balance between the chloroplast and cytosol, resulting in inefficient nitrate reduction. Finally, mutants deficient in m‐type thioredoxin exhibited similar light‐dependent NADP dynamics as inap1. Collectively, the data suggest that defects in ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase and m‐type thioredoxin decrease the consumption of NADPH, leading to a high NADPH/NADP+ ratio and large NADP pool size. The data also suggest that the fate of NADPH is an important influence on NADP pool size.  相似文献   

11.
Oxygen reduction by isolated chloroplast lamellae from spinach, yielding the superoxide free radical in the light, is stimulated by a fluorescent factor (“compound No. 4”, isolated from Euglena gracilis strain Z) in a ferredoxin-dependent reaction. This reaction is not observed with Euglena chloroplasts, although there is a stimulation by compound No. 4 of ferredoxin-dependent oxygen reduction at the expense of NADPH + H+ as electron donor in the dark. Evidence is provided that in Euglena chloroplasts in the absence of NADP as electron acceptor a cyclic electron transport is predominating, including photosystem I, ferredoxin, NADP-ferredoxin reductase, and cytochrome552. Isolated spinach chloroplast lamellae show a similar “cyclic” electron transport after treatment with digitonin, depending on the addition of the above cofactors. This result might indicate that Euglena chloroplast lamellae show this cyclic electron transport only as an artifact due to the isolation procedure. The results furthermore indicate that the pteridine-like, fluorescent compound No. 4 is not active as the primary electron acceptor of photosystem I; it may however be involved in oxygen activation by Euglena gracilis chloroplasts.  相似文献   

12.
The oxidation level of P700 induced by far-red light (DeltaA(FR)) in briefly dark-treated leaves of some sun plants decreased during the daytime and recovered at night. The dark recovery of decreased DeltaA(FR) proceeded slowly, with a half-time of about 5 h. We propose that stromal over-reduction induced by sunlight was the direct cause of the depression of DeltaA(FR). The depression of DeltaA(FR) found during the daytime was reproduced by controlled illumination with saturating light of fully dark-treated leaves. Simultaneous measurement of P700 redox and chlorophyll fluorescence showed that the depression of DeltaA(FR) was associated with dark reduction of the plastoquinone pool, which represented cyclic electron transport activity. The decrease of DeltaA(FR) in the light-stressed chloroplasts was partly reversed by treatment with 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, an inhibitor of electron transport at the cytochrome b6/f complex, and the subsequent addition of methyl viologen, an efficient electron acceptor from photosystem I (PSI), stimulated further recovery, showing that both cyclic electron flow around PSI and the charge recombination within PSI were responsible for the light-induced depression of DeltaA(FR). The dark level of blue-green fluorescence, an indicator of NAD(P)H concentration, from intact chloroplasts was increased by high-light stress, suggesting that NADPH accumulated in stroma as a result of the high-light treatment. Possible effects on photosynthetic activity of over-reduction and its physiological relevance are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
This study provides evidence for enhanced electron flow from the stromal compartment of the photosynthetic membranes to P700+ via the cytochrome b6/f complex (Cyt b6/f) in leaves of Cucumis sativus L. submitted to chilling-induced photoinhibition. The above is deduced from the P700 oxidation–reduction kinetics studied in the absence of linear electron transport from water to NADP+, cyclic electron transfer mediated through the Q-cycle of Cyt b6/f and charge recombination in photosystem I (PSI). The segregation of these pathways for P700+ rereduction were achieved by the use of a 50-ms multiple turnover white flash or a strong pulse of white or far-red illumination together with inhibitors. In cucumber leaves, chilling-induced photoinhibition resulted in ∼20% loss of photo-oxidizible P700. The measurement of P700+ was greatly limited by the turnover of cyclic processes in the absence of the linear mode of electron transport as electrons were rapidly transferred to the smaller pool of P700+. The above is explained by integrating the recent model of the cyclic electron flow in C3 plants based on the Cyt b6/f structural data [Joliot and Joliot (2006) Biochim Biophys Acta 1757:362–368] and a photoprotective function elicited by a low NADP+/NAD(P)H ratio [Rajagopal et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42:11839–11845]. Over-reduction of the photosynthetic apparatus results in the accumulation of NAD(P)H in vivo to prevent NADP+-induced reversible conformational changes in PSI and its extensive damage. As the ferredoxin:NADP reductase is fully reduced under these conditions, even in the absence of PSII electron transport, the reduced ferredoxin generated during illumination binds at the stromal openings in the Cyt b6/f complex and activates cyclic electron flow. On the other hand, the excess electrons from the NAD(P)H pool are routed via the Ndh complex in a slow process to maintain moderate reduction of the plastoquinone pool and redox poise required for the operation of ferredoxin:plastoquinone reductase mediated cyclic flow.  相似文献   

15.
According to the concept of the Q-cycle, the H+/e- ratio of the electron transport chain of thylakoids can be raised from 2 to 3 by means of the rereduction of plastoquinone across the cytochrome b6f complex. In order to investigate the H+/e- ratio we compared stationary rates of electron transport and proton translocation in spinach thylakoids both in the presence of the artificial electron acceptor ferricyanide and in the presence of the natural acceptor system ferredoxin+NADP. The results may be summarised as follows: (1) a variability of the H+/e- ratio occurs with either acceptor. H+/e- ratios of 3 (or even higher in the case of the natural acceptor system, see below) are decreased towards 2 if strong light intensity and low membrane permeability are employed. Mechanistically this could be explained by proton channels connecting the plastoquinol binding site alternatively to the lumenal or stromal side of the cytochrome b6f complex, giving rise to a proton slip reaction at high transmembrane DeltapH. In this slip reaction protons are deposited on the stromal instead of the lumenal side. In addition to the pH effect there seems to be a contribution of the redox state of the plastoquinone pool to the control of proton translocation; switching over to stromal proton deposition is favoured when the reduced state of plastoquinone becomes dominant. (2) In the presence of NADP a competition of both NADP and oxygen for the electrons supplied by photosystem I takes place, inducing a general increase of the H+/e- ratios above the values obtained with ferricyanide. The implications with respect to the adjustment of a proper ATP/NADPH ratio for CO2 reduction are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Present evidence suggests that skin is an important organ of prostaglandin metabolism. To clarify its role, the basic kinetics of 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase (PGDH) from rat skin were investigated with either NAD+ of NADP+ as co-substrate. Prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) were used as substrates and preliminary studies were made of the inhibitory effects of the reduced co-substrates NADH and NADPH. A radiochemical assay was used in which [3H]PGF2 alpha or [14C]PGE2 were incubated with high-speed supernatant of rat skin homogenates. The substrate and products were then extracted by solvent partition, separated by t.l.c. and quantified by liquid-scintillation counting. At linear reaction rates and at an NAD+ concentration of 10 mM the mean apparent Km for PGF2 alpha was 24 microM with a mean apparent Vmax. of 9.8 nmol/s per litre of reaction mixture. For PGE2 the mean apparent Km was 8 microM, with a mean apparent Vmax, of 2.7 nmol/s per litre of reaction mixture. With NADP+ as a co-substrate at a concentration of 5 mM a mean apparent Km of 23 microM was obtained for PGF2 alpha with a mean apparent Vmax. of 5.2 nmol/s per litre. For PGE2 values of 7.5 microM and 3.0 nmol/s per litre were obtained respectively. These results show that skin contains NAD+- and NADP+-dependent PGDH. An important finding was that the NADP+-linked enzyme gave Km values for PGE2 that were considerably lower than those reported for NADP+-linked PGDH from other tissues. Furthermore, preliminary inhibition studies with the NAD+-linked PGDH system indicate that this enzyme is not only inhibited by NADH, but also by NADPH, a property not previously reported for NAD+-linked PGDH derived from other tissues.  相似文献   

17.
p-Nitroacetophenoxime N-methylcarbamate (MCPNA) is a rather potent inhibitor of the electron transfer in spinach class A chloroplasts. In isolated thylakoids, MCPNA is an electron acceptor at the level of photosystem I (PS I). It inhibits O2 evolution in the presence of NADP and ferredoxin but not the reduction of ferricyanide. MCPNA is active as an acceptor between 3 μM and 100 μM. At concentrations higher than 300 μM, inhibition of photosystem II (PS II) occurs. MCPNA has no uncoupling effect on photophosphorylation. Reduction of MCPNA by thylakoids in the presence of light is in accordance with the Eo of this compound (??0.57 V) and is followed by an electron transfer to O2. This reaction probably explains the inhibitory effect of MCPNA on class A chloroplasts.  相似文献   

18.
NADPH is an important component of the antioxidant defense system and a proposed mediator in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) from pancreatic β-cells. An increase in the NADPH/NADP(+) ratio has been reported to occur within minutes following the rise in glucose concentration in β-cells. However, 30 min following the increase in glucose, the total NADPH pool also increases through a mechanism not yet characterized. NAD kinase (NADK) catalyzes the de novo formation of NADP(+) by phosphorylation of NAD(+). NAD kinases have been shown to be essential for redox regulation, oxidative stress defense, and survival in bacteria and yeast. However, studies on NADK in eukaryotic cells are scarce, and the function of this enzyme has not been described in β-cells. We employed INS-1 832/13 cells, an insulin-secreting rat β-cell line, and isolated rodent islets to investigate the role of NADK in β-cell metabolic pathways. Adenoviral-mediated overexpression of NADK resulted in a two- to threefold increase in the total NADPH pool and NADPH/NADP(+) ratio, suggesting that NADP(+) formed by the NADK-catalyzed reaction is rapidly reduced to NADPH via cytosolic reductases. This increase in the NADPH pool was accompanied by an increase in GSIS in NADK-overexpressing cells. Furthermore, NADK overexpression protected β-cells against oxidative damage by the redox cycling agent menadione and reversed menadione-mediated inhibition of GSIS. Knockdown of NADK via shRNA exerted the opposite effect on all these parameters. These data suggest that NADK kinase regulates intracellular redox and affects insulin secretion and oxidative defense in the β-cell.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of two molecular forms of water-soluble ferredoxin (Fd I and Fd II) on the kinetics of electron transport in bean chloroplasts (class B) were studied. The light-induced redox transitions of the photosystem I reaction center P700 were measured by the intensity of the EPR signal I produced by P700+. Both forms of ferredoxin, Fd I and Fd II, when added to the chloroplasts in catalytic amounts, stimulate the light-induced electron transfer from P700 to NADP+. Nevertheless, Fd I is a better mediator of the back reactions from NADPH to P700+. This electron transfer pathway is sensitive to the cyclic electron transport inhibitor, antimycin A, and to DCMU inhibitor of electron transport between photosystem II and plastoquinone. It may be concluded that the two molecular forms of ferredoxin, Fd I and Fd II, differ in their ability to catalyze cyclic electron transport in photosystem I. The role of Fd I and Fd II in regulation of electron transport at the acceptor site of photosystem I is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Ma W  Deng Y  Mi H 《Current microbiology》2008,56(2):189-193
A highly active NADPH dehydrogenase supercomplex, which is essential for cyclic electron transport around photosystem I (cyclic PSI) and respiration, was newly identified in cyanobacteria. Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 cells were treated with exogenous glucose (Glc) or 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU); subsequently, active staining of NADPH-nitroblue tetrazolium oxidoreductase, western blot, and the initial rate of P700+ dark reduction were assessed in the cyanobacterium at several time points. The expression and enzyme activity levels of NADPH dehydrogenase supercomplex were gradually inhibited and closely associated with the decrease in the rate of cyclic PSI accompanying the addition of exogenous Glc to the cultures. In contrast, the activity levels were significantly stimulated but did not cause an increase in the rate of cyclic PSI as expected in the presence of DCMU. Since Glc results in the partial reduction of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool while DCMU results in the overoxidation of the PQ pool, the present results demonstrate that the expression and activity of NADPH dehydrogenase supercomplex are under the influence of the redox control of the PQ pool while the operation of cyclic PSI as mediated by this supercomplex requires an appropriate redox poise of the PQ pool.  相似文献   

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