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Polypeptide composition,assembly and phosphorylation patterns of the photosystem II antenna system of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
Authors:Keith D Allen  L Andrew Staehelin
Institution:(1) Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, 80309 Boulder, CO, USA;(2) Present address: Department of Plant Biology, University of California, 111 Koshland Hall, 94720 Berkeley, CA, USA
Abstract:In recent years major progress has been made in describing the gene families that encode the polypeptides of the light-harvesting antenna system of photosystem II (PSII). At the same time, advances in the biochemical characterization of these antennae have been hampered by the high degree of similarity between the apoproteins. To help interpret the molecular results, we have re-examined the composition, the assembly and the phosphorylation patterns of the light-harvesting antenna of PSII (LHCII) in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang, using a non-Tris SDS-PAGE system capable of resolving polypeptides that differ by as little as 200 daltons. Research to date has suggested that in C. reinhardtii the LHCII comprises just four polypeptides (p11, p13, p16 and p17), and CP29 and CP26 just one polypeptide each (p9 and p10, respectively), i.e. a total of six polypeptides. We report here that these antenna systems contain at least 15 polypeptides, 10 associated with LHCII, 3 with CP29, and 2 with CP26. All of these polypeptides have been positively identified by means of appropriate antibodies. We also demonstrate substantial heterogeneity to the pattern of in-vitro phosphorylation, with major differences found among members of closely spaced and immunologically related polypeptides. Most intriguing is the fact that the polypeptides that cross-react with the anti-type 2 LHCII antibodies of higher plants (p16, and to a lesser extent p11) are not phosphorylated, whereas in higher plants these are the most highly phosphorylated polypeptides. Also, unlike in higher plants, CP29 is heavily phosphorylated. Phosphorylation does not appear to have any effect on the mobility of polypeptides on fully denaturing SDS-PAGE gels. To learn more about the accumulation and organization of the light-harvesting polypeptides, we have also investigated a chlorophyll b-less mutant, cbn1-48. The LHCII is almost completely lost in this mutant, along with at least some LHCI. But the accumulation of CP29 and CP26 and their binding to PSII core complexes, is relatively unaffected. As expected, the loss of antenna polypeptides is accompanied by a reduction of the size of large reaction-center complexes. Following in-vitro phosphorylation the number of phosphorylated proteins is greatly increased in the mutant thylakoids compared to wildtype thylakoids. We present a model of the PSII antenna system to account for the new polypeptide complexity we have demonstrated.This work was supported by National Institute of Health grant GM22912 to L.A.S. We would like to thank Anastasios Melis for helpful discussions.
Keywords:Chlamydomonas (photosystem II)  Chlorophyll b deficiency  Chlorophyll-protein complex  Phosphorylation (light-harvesting antenna of PSII)
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