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Entropy-assisted stacking of thylakoid membranes
Authors:Eun-Ha Kim  Peter Horton
Affiliation:a Photobioenergetics Group, Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, GPO Box 475, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
b Robert Hill Institute, Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
Abstract:Chloroplasts in plants and some green algae contain a continuous thylakoid membrane system that is structurally differentiated into stacked granal membranes interconnected by unstacked thylakoids, the stromal lamellae. Experiments were conducted to test the hypothesis that the thermodynamic tendency to increase entropy in chloroplasts contributes to thylakoid stacking to form grana. We show that the addition of bovine serum albumin or dextran, two very different water-soluble macromolecules, to a suspension of envelope-free chloroplasts with initially unstacked thylakoids induced thylakoid stacking. This novel restacking of thylakoids occurred spontaneously, accompanied by lateral segregation of PSII from PSI, thereby mimicking the natural situation. We suggest that such granal formation, induced by the macromolecules, is partly explained as a means of generating more volume for the diffusion of macromolecules in a crowded stromal environment, i.e., greater entropy overall. This mechanism may be relevant in vivo where the stroma has a very high concentration of enzymes of carbon metabolism, and where high metabolic fluxes are required.
Keywords:ATP, adenosine triphosphate   BSA, bovine serum albumin   Chl, chlorophyll   Fm, maximal PSII fluorescence yield when the traps are closed   HEPES, N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N&prime  -2-ethansulfoinc acid   PSII, Photosystem II   PSI, Photosystem I   Rubisco, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
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