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1.
Summary iserum against two polypeptides of the major fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex of the diatomPhaeodactylum tricornutum and heterologous antiserum against purified photosystem I particles of maize were used to localize these two complexes on the thylakoid membranes ofP. tricornutum. As in many chromophyte algae, the thylakoids are loosely appressed and organized into extended bands of three, giving a ratio of 21 for appressed versus non-appressed membranes. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that the fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex, which is believed to be associated with photosystem II, was equally distributed on the appressed and non-appressed thylakoid membranes. Photosystem I was also found on both types of membranes, but was slightly more concentrated on the two outer non-appressed membranes of each band. Similarly, photosystem I activity, as measured by the photooxidation of 3,3-diaminobenzidine, was higher in the outer thylakoids than in the central thylakoid of each band. We conclude that the thylakoids of diatoms differ from those of green algae and higher plants in their macromolecular organization as well as in their morphological arrangement.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - DAB 3,3-diaminobenzidine - FCPC fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex - LHC light-harvesting complex - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PS photosystem  相似文献   

2.
Cline K 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1120-1126
The apoprotein of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP) is a major integral thylakoid membrane protein that is normally complexed with chlorophyll and xanthophylls and serves as the antenna complex of photosystem II. LHCP is encoded in the nucleus and synthesized in the cytosol as a higher molecular weight precursor that is subsequently imported into chloroplasts and assembled into thylakoids. In a previous study it was established that the LHCP precursor can integrate into isolated thylakoid membranes. The present study demonstrates that under conditions designed to preserve thylakoid structure, the inserted LHCP precursor is processed to mature size, assembled into the LHC II chlorophyll-protein complex, and localized to the appressed thylakoid membranes. Under these conditions, light can partially replace exogenous ATP in the membrane integration process.  相似文献   

3.
We previously showed that most subunits in the oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) preparation from the diatom Chaetoceros gracilis are proteolytically unstable. Here, we focused on identifying the proteases that cleave PSII subunits in thylakoid membranes. Major PSII subunits and fucoxanthin chlorophyll (Chl) a/c‐binding proteins (FCPs) were specifically degraded in thylakoid membranes. The PSI subunits, PsaA and PsaB, were slowly degraded, and cytochrome f was barely degraded. Using zymography, proteolytic activities for three metalloproteases (116, 83, and 75 kDa) and one serine protease (156 kDa) were detected in thylakoid membranes. Two FCP fractions (FCP-A and FCP-B/C) and a photosystem fraction were separated by sucrose gradient centrifugation using dodecyl maltoside‐solubilized thylakoids. The FCP-A fraction featured enriched Chl c compared with the bulk of FCP-B/C. Zymography revealed that 116, 83, and 94 kDa metalloproteases were mostly in the FCP-A fraction along with the 156 kDa serine protease. When solubilized thylakoids were separated with clear-native PAGE, zymography detected only the 83 kDa metalloprotease in the FCP-A band. Because FCP-A is selectively associated with PSII, these FCP-A-associated metalloproteases and serine protease may be responsible for the proteolytic degradation of FCPs and PSII in thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

4.
When 100 mM KCl replaced sucrose in a chloroplast thylakoid stock suspension buffer, the membranes were converted from a localized proton gradient to a delocalized proton gradient energy coupling mode. The KCl-suspended but not the sucrose-suspended thylakoids showed pyridine-dependent extensions of the ATP onset lag and pyridine effects on post-illumination phosphorylation. The ATP formation assays were performed in a medium of identical composition, using about a 200-fold dilution of the stock thylakoid suspension; hence the different responses were due to the pretreatment, and not the conditions present in the phosphorylation assay. Such permeable buffer effects on ATP formation provide a clear indicator of delocalized proton gradients as the driving force for phosphorylation. The pyridine-dependent increases in the onset lags (and effects on post-illumination phosphorylation) were not due to different ionic conductivities of the membranes (measured by the 515 nm electrochromic absorption change), H+/e ratios, or electron transport capacities for the two thylakoid preparations. Thylakoid volumes and [ 14C]pyridine equilibration were similar with both preparations. The KCl-induced shift toward a bulk-phase delocalized energy coupling mode was reversed when the thylakoids were placed back in a low-salt medium.Proton uptake, at the ATP-formation energization threshold flash number, was much larger in the KCl-treated thylakoids and they also had a longer ATP formation onset lag, when no pyridine was present. These results are consistent with the salt treatment exposing additional endogenous buffering groups for interaction with the proton gradient. The concomitant appearance of the pyridine buffer effects implies that the additional endogenous buffering groups must be located on proteins directly exposed in the aqueous lumen phase.Kinetic analysis of the decay of the post-illumination phosphorylation in the two thylakoid preparations showed different apparent first-order rate constants, consistent with there being two different compartments contributing to the proton reservoirs that energize ATP formation. We suggest that the two compartments are a membrane-phase localized compartment operative in the sucrose-treated thylakoids and the bulk lumen phase into which protons readily equilibrate in the KCl-treated thylakoids.  相似文献   

5.
The cryptophyte algae, or cryptomonads, comprise a small algal group with a unique photosynthetic apparatus. Both a chlorophyll a/c2 light-harvesting complex and a phycobiliprotein antenna (which can be either phycoerythrin or phycocyanin) are present, with the phycobiliprotein playing the major role in harvesting light for photosynthesis. Longstanding circumstantial evidence suggested that, in cryptophytes, the phycobiliprotein is located in the intrathylakoid space (thylakoid lumen) rather than on the outer surface of the thylakoid as part of a phycobilisome as in other algae. We used immunogold labeling to show conclusively that 1) the phycoerythrin (PE) of the cryptophyte Rhodomonas lens Pascher and Ruttner is located within the intrathylakoid space, 2) the PE is not exclusively bound to the thylakoid membrane but instead is distributed across the thylakoid lumen and 3) a fraction of this PE is tightly associated with the thylakoid membrane. The thylakoids are not everted to compensate for this unusual arrangement. The location of the major light-harvesting pigment on the “wrong” side of the otherwise very normal photo-synthetic membrane is unexpected, unique to the cryptophytes, and, remarkably, does not impair the photosynthetic abilities of this organism. A model is presented which incorporates these results -with previous information to give a complete structural picture of the cryptophyte light-harvesting apparatus.  相似文献   

6.
Stroma, envelope and thylakoid membranes were prepared from chloroplasts isolated from leaves of Beta vulgaris. Out of total plastidic protochlorophyllide, envelope membranes contained 1.5%, thylakoids had the maximum 98.48% and stroma had a trace fraction of 0.02%. Distribution of the Mg-protoporphyrin IX and its monoester was 89.0% in thylakoids, 10.0% in stroma and 1.0% in envelope. A substantial fraction (33.77%) of plastidic protoporphyrin IX was partitioned into stroma. Envelope contained 0.66% and thylakoids had 65.57% of the total plastidic protoporphyrin IX pool. The proportion of monovinyl and divinyl forms of protochlorophyllide was almost similar in intact plastid, thylakoids, and outer and inner envelope membranes suggesting a tight regulation of vinyl reductase enzyme. The significance of differential distribution of chlorophyll biosynthetic intermediates among thylakoids, envelope and stroma is discussed. This work was supported by a grant from the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (38/1079/03/EMRII) to BCT.  相似文献   

7.
Maria Mubarakshina 《BBA》2006,1757(11):1496-1503
Hydrogen peroxide production in isolated pea thylakoids was studied in the presence of cytochrome c to prevent disproportionation of superoxide radicals outside of the thylakoid membranes. The comparison of cytochrome c reduction with accompanying oxygen uptake revealed that hydrogen peroxide was produced within the thylakoid. The proportion of electrons from water oxidation participating in this hydrogen peroxide production increased with increasing light intensity, and at a light intensity of 630 μmol quanta m− 2 s− 1 it reached 60% of all electrons entering the electron transport chain. Neither the presence of a superoxide dismutase inhibitor, potassium cyanide or sodium azide, in the thylakoid suspension, nor unstacking of the thylakoids appreciably affected the partitioning of electrons to hydrogen peroxide production. Also, osmolarity-induced changes in the thylakoid lumen volume, as well as variation of the lumen pH induced by the presence of Gramicidin D, had negligible effects on such partitioning. The flow of electrons participating in lumen hydrogen peroxide production was found to be near 10% of the total electron flow from water. It is concluded that a considerable amount of hydrogen peroxide is generated inside thylakoid membranes, and a possible mechanism, as well as the significance, of this process are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
M. Vesk  D. Dwarte  S. Fowler  R. G. Hiller 《Protoplasma》1992,170(3-4):166-176
Summary Immunocytochemical techniques using colloidal gold as the marker have been used to examine the location of the two light harvesting pigment-protein complexes in cryptophyte chloroplasts. A comparison of post-embedding thin section labelling and freeze fracture labelling has been carried out onRhodomonas salina using polyclonal antibodies to a chlorophylla/c 2 light-harvesting complex, phycoerythrin and the -subunit of phycoerythrin. The effect of different fixation procedures on the intensity of labelling and ac curacy of antigen location have been examined and the effectiveness of uranyl acetate and tannic acid in improving both the preservation of thylakoid structure and labelling density of phycoerythrin has been demonstrated. Freeze fracture labelling gives better spatial res olution of the different antigens than post-embedding labelling, as well as better definition of thylakoid membranes. It confirms the location of phycoerythrin in the thylakoid lumen and the location of the chlorophylla/c 2 LHC in both appressed and unappressed thylakoid membranes.Abbreviations PE phycoerythrin - chl chlorophyll - LHC light-har-vesting complex  相似文献   

9.
Pure plasma membrane and thylakoid membrane fractions from Synechocystis 6803 were isolated to study the localisation and processing of the precursor form of the D1 protein (pD1) of photosystem II (PSII). PSII core proteins (D1, D2 and cytb559) were localised both to plasma and thylakoid membrane fractions, the majority in thylakoids. pD1 was found only in the thylakoid membrane where active PSII is known to function. Membrane fatty acid unsaturation was shown to be critical in processing of pD1 into mature D1 protein. This was concluded from pulse-labelling experiments at low temperature using wild type and a mutant Synechocystis 6803 with a low level of membrane fatty acid unsaturation. Further, pD1 was identified as two distinct bands, an indication of two cleavage sites in the precursor peptide or, alternatively, two different conformations of pD1. Our results provide evidence for thylakoid membranes being a primary synthesis site for D1 protein during its light-activated turnover. The existence of the PSII core proteins in the plasma membrane, on the other hand, may be related to the biosynthesis of new PSII complexes in these membranes.  相似文献   

10.
The precursor to the nuclear-coded 17 kDa early light-inducible protein (ELIP) of pea has been transported into isolated intact chloroplasts. The location of the mature protein in the thylakoid membranes was investigated after using cleavable crosslinkers such as DSP and SAND in conjunction with immuno-fractionation methods and by application of mild detergent fractionation. We show that ELIP is integrated into the membranes via the unstacked stroma thylakoids. After isolation of protein complexes by solubilization of membranes with Triton X-100 and sucrose density-gradient centrifugation the crosslinked ELIP comigrates with the PS II core complex. Using SAND we identified ELIP as a 41–51 kDa crosslinked product while with DSP four products of 80 kDa, 70 kDa, 50–42 kDa and 23–21 kDa were found. The immunoprecipitation data suggested that the D1-protein of the PS II complex is one of the ELIP partners in crosslinked products.Abbreviations chl chlorophyll - D1 herbicide-binding protein - DSP dithiobis-(succinimidylpropionate) - ELIP early light-inducible protein - LHC I and LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex associated with photosystem I or II - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - poly(A)-rich RNA polyadenyd mRNA - PS I and PS II photosystems I and II - SAND sulfosuccinimidyl 2-(m-azido-o-nitro-benzamido)-ethyl-1,3-dithiopropionate - Triton X-100 octylphenoxypolyethoxyethanol  相似文献   

11.
The effect of high salt concentration on photosystem II (PS II) electron transport rates and chlorophyll a fluorescence induction kinetics was investigated in coupled and uncoupled spinach thylakoid membranes. With increase in salt concentration, the rates of electron transport mediated by PS II and the F v/F m ratio were affected more in uncoupled thylakoids as compared to coupled thylakoid membranes. The uncoupled thylakoid membranes seemed to behave like coupled thylakoid membranes at high NaCl concentration (∼1 M). On increasing the salt concentration, the uncoupler was found to be less effective and Na+ probably worked as a coupling enhancer or uncoupling suppressor. We suggest that positive charge of Na+ mimics the function of positive charge of H+ in the thylakoid lumen in causing coupled state. The function of NaCl (monovalent cation) could be carried out by even lower concentration of Ca2+ (divalent cation) or Al3+ (trivalent cation). We conclude that this function of NaCl as coupling enhancer is not specific, and in general a positive charge is required for causing coupling in uncoupled thylakoid membranes. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2009, Vol. 74, No. 6, pp. 761–767.  相似文献   

12.
Eight chlorophyll b deficient nuclear mutants of pea (Pisum sativum L.) have been characterized by low temperature fluorescence emission spectra of their leaves and by the ultrastructure, photochemical activities and polypeptide compositions of the thylakoid membranes. The room temperature fluorescence induction kinetics of leaves and isolated thylakoids have also been recorded. In addition, the effects of Mg2+ on the fluorescence kinetics of the membranes have been investigated. The mutants are all deficient in the major polypeptide of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein of photosystem II. The low temperature fluorescence emission spectra of aurea-5106, xantha-5371 and –5820 show little or no fluorescence around 730 nm (photosystem I fluorescence), but possess maxima at 685 and 695 nm (photosystem II fluorescence). These three mutants have low photosystem II activities, but significant photosystem I activities. The long-wavelength fluorescence maximum is reduced for three other mutants. The Mg2+ effect on the variable component of the room temperature fluorescence (685 nm) induction kinetics is reduced in all mutants, and completely absent in aurea-5106 and xantha-5820. The thylakoid membranes of these 2 mutants are appressed pairwise in 2-disc grana of large diameter. Chlorotica-1-206A and–130A have significant long-wavelength maxima in the fluorescence spectra and show the largest Mg2+ enhancement of the variable part of the fluorescence kinetics. These two mutants have rather normally structured chloroplast membranes, though the stroma regions are reduced. The four remaining mutants are in several respects of an intermediate type.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CPI Chi-protein complex I, Fo, Fv - Fm parameters of room temperature chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics - F685, F695 and F-1 components of low temperature chlorophyll emission with maximum at 685, 695 and ca 735 nm, respectively - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II - LHCI and LHCII light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complexes associated with PSI and PSII, respectively - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

13.
Comparative measurements were made of the fluidity of chloroplast thylakoids, total membrane lipids and polar lipids utilizing the order parameter and motion of spin labels.No significant differences were found in the fluidity of membranes or total membrane lipids from a wild type and a mutant barley (Hordeum vulgare chlorina f2 mutant) which lacks chlorophyll b and a 25 000 dalton thylakoid polypeptide. Redistribution of intrinsic, exoplasmic face (EF) membrane particles by unstacking thylakoid membranes in low salt medium also had no effect on membrane fluidity. However, heating of isolated thylakoids decreased membrane fluidity.The fluidity of vesicles composed of membrane lipids is much greater than that of the corresponding membranes. Fluidity of the membranes, however, increased during greening indicating that the rigidity of the membranes, compared with that of total membrane lipids, is not caused by chlorophyll or its associated peptides. It is concluded that the restriction of motion in the acyl chains in the thylakoids is not caused by chlorophyll or the major intrinsic polypeptide but by some other protein components.  相似文献   

14.
Electrophoresis of thylakoid membrane polypeptides from Chlamydomonas reinhardi revealed two major polypeptide fractions. But electrophoresis of the total protein of green cells showed that these membrane polypeptides were not major components of the cell. However, a polypeptide fraction whose characteristics are those of fraction c (a designation used for reference in this paper), one of the two major polypeptides of thylakoid membranes, was resolved in the electrophoretic pattern of total protein of green cells. This polypeptide could not be detected in dark-grown, etiolated cells. Synthesis of the polypeptide occurred during greening of etiolated cells exposed to light. When chloramphenicol (final concentration, 200 µg/ml) was added to the medium during greening to inhibit chloroplastic protein synthesis, synthesis of chlorophyll and formation of thylakoid membranes were also inhibited to an extent resulting in levels of chlorophyll and membranes 20–25% of those found in control cells. However, synthesis of fraction c was not affected by the drug. This polypeptide appeared in the soluble fraction of the cell under these conditions, indicating that this protein was synthesized in the cytoplasm as a soluble component. When normally greening cells were transferred from light to dark, synthesis of the major membrane polypeptides decreased. Also, it was found that synthesis of both subunits of ribulose 1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase was inhibited by chloramphenicol, and that synthesis of this enzyme stopped when cells were transferred from light to dark.  相似文献   

15.
W.S. Chow  J. Barber 《BBA》1980,593(1):149-157
Salt-induced changes in thylakoid stacking and chlorophyll fluorescence do not occur with granal membranes obtained by treatment of stacked thylakoids with digitonin. In contrast to normal untreated thylakoids, digitonin prepared granal membranes remain stacked under all ionic conditions and exhibit a constant high level of chlorophyll fluorescence. However, unstacking of these granal membranes is possible if they are pretreated with either acetic anhydride or linolenic acid.Trypsin treatment of the thylakoids inhibits the salt induced chlorophyll fluorescence and stacking changes but stacking of these treated membranes does occur when the pH is lowered, with the optimum being at about pH 4.5. This type of stacking is due to charge neutralization and does not require the presence of the 2000 dalton fragment of the polypeptide associated with the chlorophyll achlorophyll b light harvesting complex and known to be lost during treatment with trypsin (Mullet, J.E. and Arntzen, C.J. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 589, 100–117).Using the method of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching it is argued that the surface charge density, on a chlorophyll basis, of unstacked thylakoid membranes is intermediate between digitonin derived granal and stromal membranes, with granal having the lowest value.The results are discussed in terms of the importance of surface negative charges in controlling salt induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thylakoid stacking changes. In particular, emphasis is placed on a model involving lateral diffusion of different types of chlorophyll protein complex within the thylakoid lipid matrix.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The repartition of light-harvesting complex (LHC) and photosystem I (PS I) complex has been examined in isolated plastids ofFucus serratus by immunocytochemical labelling. LHC is distributed equally all along the length of thylakoid membranes, without any special repartition in the appressed membranes of the three associated thylakoids ofFucus. PS I is present on all the thylakoid membranes, but the external membranes of the three associated thylakoids are largely enriched relatively to the inner ones. This specific repartition of PSI on non-appressed membranes can be compared to the localization of PSI on stroma thylakoid membranes of higher plants and green algae. Consequently, although they share some common features with those of higher plants and green algae, the appressions of thylakoids in brown algae has neither the same structure nor the same functional role as typical grana stacked membranes in the repartition of the harvested energy.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - GAR goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G - LHC light-harvesting complex - PBS phosphatebuffered saline - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II  相似文献   

17.
Kinetic studies of protein dephosphorylation in photosynthetic thylakoid membranes revealed specifically accelerated dephosphorylation of photosystem II (PSII) core proteins at elevated temperatures. Raising the temperature from 22 degrees C to 42 degrees C resulted in a more than 10-fold increase in the dephosphorylation rates of the PSII reaction center proteins D1 and D2 and of the chlorophyll a binding protein CP43 in isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea) thylakoids. In contrast the dephosphorylation rates of the light harvesting protein complex and the 9-kD protein of the PSII (PsbH) were accelerated only 2- to 3-fold. The use of a phospho-threonine antibody to measure in vivo phosphorylation levels in spinach leaves revealed a more than 20-fold acceleration in D1, D2, and CP43 dephosphorylation induced by abrupt elevation of temperature, but no increase in light harvesting protein complex dephosphorylation. This rapid dephosphorylation is catalyzed by a PSII-specific, intrinsic membrane protein phosphatase. Phosphatase assays, using intact thylakoids, solubilized membranes, and the isolated enzyme, revealed that the temperature-induced lateral migration of PSII to the stroma-exposed thylakoids only partially contributed to the rapid increase in the dephosphorylation rate. Significant activation of the phosphatase coincided with the temperature-induced release of TLP40 from the membrane into thylakoid lumen. TLP40 is a peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase, which acts as a regulatory subunit of the membrane phosphatase. Thus dissociation of TLP40 caused by an abrupt elevation in temperature and activation of the membrane protein phosphatase are suggested to trigger accelerated repair of photodamaged PSII and to operate as possible early signals initiating other heat shock responses in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

18.
Heterokont algae such as diatoms, brown seaweeds and the raphidophyte Heterosigma akashiwo acquired their chloroplasts via a secondary endosymbiosis involving a red algal endosymbiont and a eukaryote host, resulting in chloroplasts surrounded by four membranes rather than two. The precursor of a nuclear-encoded thylakoid lumen protein, PsbO, from Heterosigma has a presequence composed of a typical ER signal peptide followed by putative stromal and thylakoid targeting domains. A processing enzyme associated with Heterosigma thylakoids cleaved the presequence (with or without the ER signal sequence) in a single step, giving a product of the size of the mature protein. Its sensitivity to a penem inhibitor and insensitivity to other protease inhibitors suggest that it is a member of the Type I signal peptidase family. Furthermore the Heterosigma enzyme appeared to have similar substrate specificity to the pea thylakoidal processing peptidase.  相似文献   

19.
When grown heterotrophically in the dark on enriched culture medium, the pigment-deficient strain of Scenedesmus obliquus, mutant C-6E, is uniquely characterized by a complete deficiency in carotenoids and chlorophyll b while retaining a low level of chlorophyll a which is exclusively utilized in photosystem I-type reactions. The strain lacks photosystem II activity but exhibits all PS-I reactions tested, including P700 redox reactions, photoreduction of CO2 with hydrogen as electron donor, and O2 uptake following methyl viologen reduction. The mutant contains 10 times more P700 per chlorophyll than the wild type and develops the pigment-protein complex of PS-I, CP-I. The action spectrum for methyl viologen reduction compares favorable to the low temperature absorption spectrum of whole cells. Both the chlorophyll fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of pigment-protein complexes derived from cells of C-6E show patterns typical of PS-I. The strain lacks the LHCs and CP-II as well as their respective apoproteins. The absence of carotenoids appears to prevent the development of the normal variety of pigment-protein complexes and the accumulation of Chl b. This inability is also expressed by the presence of only single stranded thylakoid membranes in the chloroplast of C-6E. When heterotrophically grown cells of this mutant are exposed to white light of 8 or 22 W m?2, 50% of its chlorophyll is lost by photooxidation within 4 or 1.5 hours, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
A method is described for the isolation and purification of active oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PS II) membranes from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The isolation procedure is a modification of methods evolved for spinach (Berthold et al. 1981). The purity and integrity of the PS II preparations have been assesssed on the bases of the polypeptide pattern in SDS-PAGE, the rate of oxygen evolution, the EPR multiline signal of the S2 state, the room temperature chlorophyll a fluorescence yield, the 77 K emission spectra, and the P700 EPR signal at 300 K. These data show that the PS II characteristics are increased by a factor of two in PS II preparations as compared to thylakoid samples, and the PS I concentration is reduced by approximately a factor ten compared to that in thylakoids.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - DCBQ 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DMQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - MES 2-[N-Morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid - OEE oxygen evolving enhancer - PS II photosystem II - SDS-PAGE sodium dedocyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

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