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1.
Phycobilisomes (PBS) are the major light-harvesting, protein-pigment complexes in cyanobacteria and red algae. PBS absorb and transfer light energy to photosystem (PS) II as well as PS I, and the distribution of light energy from PBS to the two photosystems is regulated by light conditions through a mechanism known as state transitions. In this study the quantum efficiency of excitation energy transfer from PBS to PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 was determined, and the results showed that energy transfer from PBS to PS I is extremely efficient. The results further demonstrated that energy transfer from PBS to PS I occurred directly and that efficient energy transfer was dependent upon the allophycocyanin-B alpha subunit, ApcD. In the absence of ApcD, cells were unable to perform state transitions and were trapped in state 1. Action spectra showed that light energy transfer from PBS to PS I was severely impaired in the absence of ApcD. An apcD mutant grew more slowly than the wild type in light preferentially absorbed by phycobiliproteins and was more sensitive to high light intensity. On the other hand, a mutant lacking ApcF, which is required for efficient energy transfer from PBS to PS II, showed greater resistance to high light treatment. Therefore, state transitions in cyanobacteria have two roles: (1) they regulate light energy distribution between the two photosystems; and (2) they help to protect cells from the effects of light energy excess at high light intensities.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract The cyanobacteria Fremyella diplosiphon 7601 and Synechocystis 6701 were grown in continuous cultures with monochromatic red light (680 nm). The distribution of light energy over photosystem I and II was determined from changes in PS II fluorescence at 685 nm. In both organisms, wavelengths absorbed primarily by chlorophyll a caused the high fluorescent state of PS II (State 1), while wavelengths absorbed by the phycobilisome led to low PS II fluorescence (State 2). Superimposing continuous light 2 on the excitation light yielded State 2 fluorescence patterns for Synechocystis 6701, while F. diplosiphon 7601 showed fluorescence patterns similar to state 1 → 2 transitions and changes in fluorescence yield were related to the intensity of the background light. Some ecological implications of energy (re)distribution in cyanobacterial photosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
《BBA》2021,1862(12):148494
Quenching of excess excitation energy is necessary for the photoprotection of light-harvesting complexes. In cyanobacteria, quenching of phycobilisome (PBS) excitation energy is induced by the Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP), which becomes photoactivated under high light conditions. A decrease in energy transfer efficiency from the PBSs to the reaction centers decreases photosystem II (PS II) activity. However, quantitative analysis of OCP-induced photoprotection in vivo is complicated by similar effects of both photochemical and non-photochemical quenching on the quantum yield of the PBS fluorescence overlapping with the emission of chlorophyll. In the present study, we have analyzed chlorophyll a fluorescence induction to estimate the effective cross-section of PS II and compared the effects of reversible OCP-dependent quenching of PBS fluorescence with reduction of PBS content upon nitrogen starvation or mutations of key PBS components. This approach allowed us to estimate the dependency of the rate constant of PS II primary electron acceptor reduction on the amount of PBSs in the cell. We found that OCP-dependent quenching triggered by blue light affects approximately half of PBSs coupled to PS II, indicating that under normal conditions, the concentration of OCP is not sufficient for quenching of all PBSs coupled to PS II.  相似文献   

4.
The cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina is unique because it mainly contains Chlorophyll d (Chl d) in the core complexes of PS I and PS II instead of the usually dominant Chl a. Furthermore, its light harvesting system has a structure also different from other cyanobacteria. It has both, a membrane-internal chlorophyll containing antenna and a membrane-external phycobiliprotein (PBP) complex. The first one binds Chl d and is structurally analogous to CP43. The latter one has a rod-like structure consisting of three phycocyanin (PC) homohexamers and one heterohexamer containing PC and allophycocyanin (APC). In this paper, we give an overview on the investigations of excitation energy transfer (EET) in this PBP-light-harvesting system and of charge separation in the photosystem II (PS II) reaction center of A. marina performed at the Technische Universität Berlin. Due to the unique structure of the PBP antenna in A. marina, this EET occurs on a much shorter overall time scale than in other cyanobacteria. We also briefly discuss the question of the pigment composition in the reaction center (RC) of PS II and the nature of the primary donor of the PS II RC.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism by which state 1-state 2 transitions in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 are controlled was investigated by examining the effects of a variety of chemical and illumination treatments which modify the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. The extent to which these treatments modify excitation energy distribution was determined by 77K fluorescence emission spectroscopy. It was found that treatment which lead to the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 1 whereas treatments which lead to the reduction of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 2. We therefore propose that state transitions in cyanobacteria are triggered by changes in the redox state of plastoquinone or a closely associated electron carrier. Alternative proposals have included control by the extent of cyclic electron transport around PS I and control by localised electrochemical gradients around PS I and PS II. Neither of these proposals is consistent with the results reported here.Abbreviations DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DQH2 duroquinol (tetramethyl-p-hydroquinone) - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of PS II - Light 1 light predominantly exciting PS I - Light 2 light predominantly exciting PS II - M.V. methyl viologen - PS photosystem  相似文献   

6.
Red algae are a group of eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms. Phycobilisomes (PBSs), which are composed of various types of phycobiliproteins and linker polypeptides, are the main light-harvesting antennae in red algae, as in cyanobacteria. Two morphological types of PBSs, hemispherical- and hemidiscoidal-shaped, are found in different red algae species. PBSs harvest solar energy and efficiently transfer it to photosystem II (PS II) and finally to photosystem I (PS I). The PS I of red algae uses light-harvesting complex of PS I (LHC I) as a light-harvesting antennae, which is phylogenetically related to the LHC I found in higher plants. PBSs, PS II, and PS I are all distributed throughout the entire thylakoid membrane, a pattern that is different from the one found in higher plants. Photosynthesis processes, especially those of the light reactions, are carried out by the supramolecular complexes located in/on the thylakoid membranes. Here, the supramolecular architecture, function and regulation of thylakoid membranes in red algal are reviewed.  相似文献   

7.
Glycoglycerolipids are dominant lipids of photosynthetic organisms, i.e. higher plants and cyanobacteria. X-ray crystallographic localization of glycerolipids revealed that they are present at functionally and structurally important sites of both the PS I and PS II reaction centres. Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) is an indispensible member of glycerolipids, including the formation of functionally active oligomers of the reaction centres both PS I and PS II. Lipids assist in the assembly of protein subunits of the photosynthetic machinery by pasting the individual protein components together. PG is needed to glue CP43 to the reaction centre core. PG and digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) interact in photosynthetic processes: PG alone controls electron transport at the acceptor site of PS II, and together with DGDG is involved in electron transport at the donor site of PS II. PG is crucial for the formation of division rings and is implicated in the fission of cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

8.
The activity of Photosystem II (PS II) is severely restricted by a variety of environmental factors and, under environmental stress, is determined by the balance between the rate of damage to PS II and the rate of the repair of damaged PS II. The effects of oxidative stress on damage and repair can be examined separately, and it appears that, while light can damage PS II directly, oxidative stress acts primarily by inhibiting the repair of PS II. Studies in cyanobacteria have demonstrated that oxidative stress suppresses the de novo synthesis of proteins, in particular, the D1 protein, which is required for the repair of PS II.  相似文献   

9.
The crystallographic data available for Photosystem II (PS II) in cyanobacteria has now provided complete structures for loop E from CP43 and CP47 as well as the extrinsic subunits PsbO, PsbU and PsbV. Protein interactions between these subunits are essential for stable water splitting and there is evidence that the binding of PsbU facilitates optimal energy transfer from the phycobilisome. Interactions between PsbO and CP47 may also play a role in dimer stabilization while loop E of CP43 contributes directly to the water-splitting reaction. Recent evidence also suggests that homologs of PsbP and PsbQ play key roles in cyanobacterial PS II, and under nutrient-deficient conditions PsbQ appears essential for photoautotrophic growth.  相似文献   

10.
Phycobilisomes (PBS) function as light-harvesting antenna complexes in cyanobacteria, red algae and cyanelles. They are composed of two substructures: the core and peripheral rods. Interposon mutagenesis of the cpcBA genes of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 resulted in a strain (PR6008) lacking phycocyanin and thus the ability to form peripheral rods. Difference absorption spectroscopy of whole cells showed that intact PBS cores were assembled in vivo in the cpcBA mutant strain PR6008. Fluorescence induction measurements demonstrated that the PBS cores are able to deliver absorbed light energy to photosystem (PS) II, and fluorescence induction transients in the presence of DCMU showed that PR6008 cells could perform a state 2 to state 1 transition with similar kinetics to that of the wild-type cells. Thus, PBS core assembly, light-harvesting functions and energy transfer to PS I were not dependent upon the assembly of the peripheral rods. The ratio of PS II:PS I in the PR6008 cells was significantly increased, nearly twice that of the wild-type cells, possibly a result of long-term adaptation to compensate for the reduced antenna size of PS II. However, the ratio of PBS cores:chlorophyll remained unchanged. This result indicates that approximately half of the PS II reaction centers in the PR6008 cells had no closely associated PBS cores.  相似文献   

11.
Iron is the quantitatively most important trace metal involved in thylakoid reactions of all oxygenic organisms since linear (= non-cyclic) electron flow from H2O to NADP+ involves PS II (2–3 Fe), cytochrome b6-f (5 Fe), PS I (12 Fe), and ferredoxin (2 Fe); (replaceable by metal-free flavodoxin in certain cyanobacteria and algae under iron deficiency). Cytochrome c6 (1 Fe) is the only redox catalyst linking the cytochrome b6-f complex to PS I in most algae; in many cyanobacteria and Chlorophyta cytochrome c6 and the copper-containing plastocyanin are alternatives, with the availability of iron and copper regulating their relative expression, while higher plants only have plastocyanin. Iron, copper and zinc occur in enzymes that remove active oxygen species and that are in part bound to the thylakoid membrane. These enzymes are ascorbate peroxidase (Fe) and iron-(cyanobacteria, and most al gae) and copper-zinc- (some algae; higher plants) superoxide dismutase. Iron-containing NAD(P)H-PQ oxidoreductase in thylakoids of cyanobacteria and many eukaryotes may be involved in cyclic electron transport around PS I and in chlororespiration. Manganese is second to iron in its quantitative role in the thylakoids, with four Mn (and 1 Ca) per PS II involved in O2 evolution. The roles of the transition metals in redox catalysts can in broad terms be related to their redox chemistry and to their availability to organisms at the time when the pathways evolved. The quantitative roles of these trace metals varies genotypically (e.g. the greater need for iron in thylakoid reactions of cyanobacteria and rhodophytes than in other O2-evolvers as a result of their lower PS II:PS I ratio) and phenotypically (e.g. as a result of variations in PS II:PS I ratio with the spectral quality of incident radiation).  相似文献   

12.
Exposure of algae or plants to irradiance from above the light saturation point of photosynthesis is known as high light stress. This high light stress induces various responses including photoinhibition of the photosynthetic apparatus. The degree of photoinhibition could be clearly determined by measuring the parameters such as absorption and fluorescence of chromoproteins. In cyanobacteria and red algae, most of the photosystem (PS) II associated light harvesting is performed by a membrane attached complex called the phycobilisome (PBS). The effects of high intensity light (1000-4000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) on excitation energy transfer from PBSs to PS II in a cyanobacterium Spirulina platensis were studied by measuring room temperature PC fluorescence emission spectra. High light (3000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) stress had a significant effect on PC fluorescence emission spectra. On the other hand, light stress induced an increase in the ratio of PC fluorescence intensity of PBS indicating that light stress inhibits excitation energy transfer from PBS to PS II. The high light treatment to 3000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1) caused disappearance of 31.5 kDa linker polypeptide which is known to link PC discs together. In addition we observed the similar decrease in the other polypeptide contents. Our data concludes that the Spirulina cells upon light treatment causes alterations in the phycobiliproteins (PBPs) and affects the energy transfer process within the PBSs.  相似文献   

13.
The oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PS II) complex of red algae contains four extrinsic proteins of 12 kDa, 20 kDa, 33 kDa and cyt c-550, among which the 20 kDa protein is unique in that it is not found in other organisms. We cloned the gene for the 20-kDa protein from a red alga Cyanidium caldarium. The gene consists of a leader sequence which can be divided into two parts: one for transfer across the plastid envelope and the other for transfer into thylakoid lumen, indicating that the gene is encoded by the nuclear genome. The sequence of the mature 20-kDa protein has low but significant homology with the extrinsic 17-kDa (PsbQ) protein of PS II from green algae Volvox Carteri and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, as well as the PsbQ protein of higher plants and PsbQ-like protein from cyanobacteria. Cross-reconstitution experiments with combinations of the extrinsic proteins and PS IIs from the red alga Cy. caldarium and green alga Ch. reinhardtii showed that the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was functional in place of the green algal 17-kDa protein on binding to the green algal PS II and restoration of oxygen evolution. From these results, we conclude that the 20-kDa protein is the ancestral form of the extrinsic 17-kDa protein in green algal and higher plant PS IIs. This provides an important clue to the evolution of the oxygen-evolving complex from prokaryotic cyanobacteria to eukaryotic higher plants. The gene coding for the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was named psbQ' (prime).  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of excitation energy distribution between the two photosystems (state transitions) is studied in Synechocystis 6714 wild type and in wild type and a mutant lacking phycocyanin of Synechocystis 6803. (i) Measurements of fluorescence transients and spectra demonstrate that state transitions in these cyanobacteria are controlled by changes in the efficiency of energy transfer from PS II to PS I (spillover) rather than by changes in association of the phycobilisomes to PS II (mobile antenna model). (ii) Ultrastructural study (freeze-fracture) shows that in the mutant the alignment of the PS II associated EF particles is prevalent in state 1 while the conversion to state 2 results in randomization of the EF particle distribution, as already observed in the wild type (Olive et al. 1986). In the mutant, the distance between the EF particle rows is smaller than in the wild type, probably because of the reduced size of the phycobilisomes. Since a parallel increase of spillover is not observed we suggest that the probability of excitation transfer between PS II units and between PS II and PS I depends on the mutual orientation of the photosystems rather than on their distance. (iii) Measurements of the redox state of the plastoquinone pool in state 1 obtained by PS I illumination and in state 2 obtained by various treatments (darkness, anaerobiosis and starvation) show that the plastoquinone pool is oxidized in state 1 and reduced in state 2 except in starved cells where it is still oxidized. In the latter case, no important decrease of ATP was observed. Thus, we propose that in Synechocystis the primary control of the state transitions is the redox state of a component of the cytochrome b 6/f complex rather than that of the plastoquinone pool.Abbreviations DCCD dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - EF exoplasmic face - PQ plasto-quinone - PS photosystem - PBS phycobilisome  相似文献   

15.
To determine the fluorescence properties of cyanobacterial Photosystem I (PS I) in relatively intact systems, fluorescence emission from 20 to 295 K and polarization at 77 K have been measured from phycobilisomes-less thylakoids of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and a mutant strain lacking Photosystem II (PS II). At 295 K, the fluorescence maxima are 686 nm in the wild type from PS I and PS II and at 688 nm from PS I in the mutant. This emission is characteristic of bulk antenna chlorophylls (Chls). The 690-nm fluorescence component of PS I is temperature independent. For wild-type and mutant, 725-nm fluorescence increases by a factor of at least 40 from 295 to 20 K. We model this temperature dependence assuming a small number of Chls within PS I, emitting at 725 nm, with an energy level below that of the reaction center, P700. Their excitation transfer rate to P700 decreases with decreasing temperature increasing the yield of 725-nm fluorescence.Fluorescence excitation spectra of polarized emission from low-energy Chls were measured at 77 and 295 K on the mutant lacking PS II. At excitation wavelengths longer than 715 nm, 760-nm emission is highly polarized indicating either direct excitation of the emitting Chls with no participation in excitation transfer or total alignment of the chromophores. Fluorescence at 760 nm is unpolarized for excitation wavelengths shorter than 690 nm, inferring excitation transfer between Chls before 760-nm fluorescence occurs.Our measurements illustrate that: 1) a single group of low-energy Chls (F725) of the core-like PS I complex in cyanobacteria shows a strongly temperature-dependent fluorescence and, when directly excited, nearly complete fluorescence polarization, 2) these properties are not the result of detergent-induced artifacts as we are examining intact PS I within the thylakoid membrane of S. 6803, and 3) the activation energy for excitation transfer from F725 Chls to P700 is less than that of F735 Chls in green plants; F725 Chls may act as a sink to locate excitations near P700 in PS I.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - BChl bacteriochlorophyll - PS Photosystem - S. 6803 Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 - PGP potassium glycerol phosphate  相似文献   

16.
To determine the mechanism of carotenoid-sensitized non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria, the kinetics of blue-light-induced quenching and fluorescence spectra were studied in the wild type and mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 grown with or without iron. The blue-light-induced quenching was observed in the wild type as well as in mutants lacking PS II or IsiA confirming that neither IsiA nor PS II is required for carotenoid-triggered fluorescence quenching. Both fluorescence at 660 nm (originating from phycobilisomes) and at 681 nm (which, upon 440 nm excitation originates mostly from chlorophyll) was quenched. However, no blue-light-induced changes in the fluorescence yield were observed in the apcE(-) mutant that lacks phycobilisome attachment. The results are interpreted to indicate that interaction of the Slr1963-associated carotenoid with--presumably--allophycocyanin in the phycobilisome core is responsible for non-photochemical energy quenching, and that excitations on chlorophyll in the thylakoid equilibrate sufficiently with excitations on allophycocyanin in wild type to contribute to quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence.  相似文献   

17.
PS II-H is a small hydrophobic protein that is universally present in the PS II core complex of cyanobacteria and plants. The role of PS II-H was studied by directed mutagenesis and biochemical analysis in the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1. The psbH disruptant could grow photoautotrophically; however, its growth was much slower than that of the wild type cell. Chromatography enabled the isolation of active oxygen-evolving PS II complexes from both the mutant and the wild type. The mutant yielded a relatively large amount of inactive PS II complex that lacked the following extrinsic proteins: the 33-kDa protein, the 12-kDa protein, and cytochrome c 550 . There were differences between the psbH disruptant and the wild type in terms of the oxygen evolution activities of the cells, thylakoids, and PS II complexes. At high concentrations of 2,6-DCBQ, the activity was much lower in the mutant than in the wild type. Gel filtration chromatography of the PS II complexes showed that both active and inactive PS II complexes isolated from the mutant were mostly in the monomeric form, while the active PS II complex from the wild type was in the dimeric form. The polypeptide composition of both active and inactive PS II complexes from the mutant showed the absence of another small polypeptide, PS II-X. These results suggest that the PS II-H protein is essential for stable assembly of native dimeric PS II complex containing PS II-X.  相似文献   

18.
Basic structural elements of the two photosystems and their component electron donors, acceptors, and carriers were revealed by newly developed spectroscopic methods in the 1960s and subsequent years. The spatial organization of these constituents within the functional membrane was elucidated by electrochromic band shift analysis, whereby the membrane-spanning chlorophyll-quinone couple of Photosystem (PS) II emerged as reaction center and as a model relevant also to other photosystems. A further step ahead for improved structural information was realized with the use of thermophilic cyanobacteria instead of plants which led to isolation of supramolecular complexes of the photosystems and their identification as PS I trimers and PS II dimers. The preparation of crystals of the PS I trimer, started in the late 1980s. Genes encoding the 11 subunits of PS I from Synechococcus elongatus were isolated and the predicted sequences of amino acid residues formed a basis for the interpretation of X-ray structure analysis of the PS I crystals. The crystallization of PS I was optimized by introduction of the 'reverse of salting in' crystallization with water as precipitating agent. On this basis the PS I structure was successively established from 6 A resolution in the early 1990s up to a model at 2.5 A resolution in 2001. The first crystals of the PS II dimer, capable of water oxidation, were prepared in the late 1990s; a PS II model at 3.8-3.6 A resolution was presented in 2001. Implications of the PS II structure for the mechanism of transmembrane charge separation are discussed. With the availability of PS I and PS II crystals, new directional structural results became possible also by application of different magnetic resonance techniques through measurements on single crystals in different orientations.  相似文献   

19.
A viewpoint: Why chlorophyll <Emphasis Type="Italic">a</Emphasis>?   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Chlorophyll a (Chl a) serves a dual role in oxygenic photosynthesis: in light harvesting as well as in converting energy of absorbed photons to chemical energy. No other Chl is as omnipresent in oxygenic photosynthesis as is Chl a, and this is particularly true if we include Chl a 2, (=[8-vinyl]-Chl a), which occurs in Prochlorococcus, as a type of Chl a. One exception to this near universal pattern is Chl d, which is found in some cyanobacteria that live in filtered light that is enriched in wavelengths >700 nm. They trap the long wavelength electronic excitation, and convert it into chemical energy. In this Viewpoint, we have traced the possible reasons for the near ubiquity of Chl a for its use in the primary photochemistry of Photosystem II (PS II) that leads to water oxidation and of Photosystem I (PS I) that leads to ferredoxin reduction. Chl a appears to be unique and irreplaceable, particularly if global scale oxygenic photosynthesis is considered. Its uniqueness is determined by its physicochemical properties, but there is more. Other contributing factors include specially tailored protein environments, and functional compatibility with neighboring electron transporting cofactors. Thus, the same molecule, Chl a in vivo, is capable of generating a radical cation at +1 V or higher (in PS II), a radical anion at −1 V or lower (in PS I), or of being completely redox silent (in antenna holochromes).
Govindjee (Corresponding author)Email:
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20.
A profile of high light to intense self-shading conditions was constructed using a white light source and cultures of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301; this profile approximates to a natural self-shading gradient of decreasing light intensity and PS II/PS I excitation ratio. Samples of S.6301 were placed along this profile and allowed to state adapt. To separate the effects of light intensity and wavelength on state adaptation, samples were also placed in a shade profile produced by a white light source and neutral density filters. After adaptation, samples were fixed in their resulting state by the addition of glutaraldehyde, and fluorescence measurements were made at 35° C or –160 °C. It is concluded:
  1. Under conditions of deep shade (<5 μmol m?2s?1 PAR) and weak shade (>200 μmol m?2s?1 PAR), cells adapt to a low PS II fluorescence state (state 2); in moderate shade (20–60 μmol m?2s?1PAR) cells adapt to a high PS II fluorescence state (state 1). We suggest these findings provide evidence for the operation of different factors on the control of state adaptations in cyanobacteria; one set operates at low light and another at high light intensities.
  2. Under conditions of self-shading, there is little evidence to support the contention that state adaptations in cyanobacteria are produced by wavelength-dependent changes in the PS II/PS I excitation ratio, instead, it appaers they are produced by changes in the intensity of incident irradiation.
  3. The observed fluorescence changes do not appear to involve major changes in the phycobilisome sensitisation of PS II and PS I. Instead, it appears that these changes are effected by alterations in ΦF of PS II (i.e. changes in PS II excitation density caused by alterations in the rate constants controlling spillover to PS I, photochemistry, fluorescence emission or thermal deactivation.
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