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1.
The cyanobacterial NADPH:plastoquinone oxidoreductase complex (NDH-1), that is related to Complex I of eubacteria and mitochondria, plays a pivotal role in respiration as well as in cyclic electron transfer (CET) around PSI and is involved in a unique carbon concentration mechanism (CCM). Despite many achievements in the past, the complex protein composition and the specific function of many subunits of the different NDH-1 species remain elusive. We have recently discovered in a NDH-1 preparation from Thermosynechococcus elongatus two novel single transmembrane peptides (NdhP, NdhQ) with molecular weights below 5 kDa. Here we show that NdhP is a unique component of the ∼450 kDa NDH-1L complex, that is involved in respiration and CET at high CO2 concentration, and not detectable in the NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS'' complexes that play a role in carbon concentration. C-terminal fusion of NdhP with his-tagged superfolder GFP and the subsequent analysis of the purified complex by electron microscopy and single particle averaging revealed its localization in the NDH-1L specific distal unit of the NDH-1 complex, that is formed by the subunits NdhD1 and NdhF1. Moreover, NdhP is essential for NDH-1L formation, as this type of NDH-1 was not detectable in a ΔndhP::Km mutant.  相似文献   

2.
蓝藻NAD(P)H脱氢酶(NDH-1)是一种重要的光合膜蛋白复合体,参与CO2吸收、围绕光系统I的循环电子传递和细胞呼吸。就几种蓝藻NDH-1复合体的鉴定、结构、生理功能等研究的新进展进行了综述与分析,并对今后NDH-1复合体的研究作了展望。  相似文献   

3.
Cyanobacterial NADPH:plastoquinone oxidoreductase, or type I NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, or the NDH-1 complex is involved in plastoquinone reduction and cyclic electron transfer (CET) around photosystem I. CET, in turn, produces extra ATP for cell metabolism particularly under stressful conditions. Despite significant achievements in the study of cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes during the past few years, the entire subunit composition still remains elusive. To identify missing subunits, we screened a transposon-tagged library of Synechocystis 6803 cells grown under high light. Two NDH-1-mediated CET (NDH-CET)-defective mutants were tagged in the same ssl0352 gene encoding a short unknown protein. To clarify the function of Ssl0352, the ssl0352 deletion mutant and another mutant with Ssl0352 fused to yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and the His(6) tag were constructed. Immunoblotting, mass spectrometry, and confocal microscopy analyses revealed that the Ssl0352 protein resides in the thylakoid membrane and associates with the NDH-1L and NDH-1M complexes. We conclude that Ssl0352 is a novel subunit of cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes and designate it NdhS. Deletion of the ssl0352 gene considerably impaired the NDH-CET activity and also retarded cell growth under high light conditions, indicating that NdhS is essential for efficient operation of NDH-CET. However, the assembly of the NDH-1L and NDH-1M complexes and their content in the cells were not affected in the mutant. NdhS contains a Src homology 3-like domain and might be involved in interaction of the NDH-1 complex with an electron donor.  相似文献   

4.
Cyanobacteria possess functionally distinct multiple NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH-1) complexes that are essential to CO2 uptake, photosystem-1 cyclic electron transport and respiration. The unique nature of cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes is the presence of subunits involved in CO2 uptake. Other than CO2 uptake, chloroplastic NDH-1 complex has a similar role as cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes in photosystem-1 cyclic electron transport and respiration (chlororespiration). In this mini-review we focus on the structure and function of cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes and their phylogeny. The function of chloroplastic NDH-1 complex and characteristics of plants defective in NDH-1 are also described for comparison.  相似文献   

5.
In cyanobacteria, the NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NDH-1) is involved in a variety of functions like respiration, cyclic electron flow around PSI and CO2 uptake. Several types of NDH-1 complexes, which differ in structure and are responsible for these functions, exist in cyanobacterial membranes. This minireview is based on data obtained by reverse genetics and proteomics studies and focuses on the structural and functional differences of the two types of cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes: NDH-1L, important for respiration and PSI cyclic electron flow, and NDH-1MS, the low-CO2 inducible complex participating in CO2 uptake. The NDH-1 complexes in cyanobacteria share a common NDH-1M 'core' complex and differ in the composition of the distal membrane domain composed of specific NdhD and NdhF proteins, which in complexes involved in CO2 uptake is further associated with the hydrophilic carbon uptake (CUP) domain. At present, however, very important questions concerning the nature of catalytically active subunits that constitute the electron input device (like NADH dehydrogenase module of the eubacterial 'model' NDH-1 analogs), the substrate specificity and reaction mechanisms of cyanobacterial complexes remain unanswered and are shortly discussed here.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of the multifunctional NAD(P)H dehydrogenase type 1 (NDH-1) complexes from cyanobacteria was investigated by growing the wild type and specific ndh His-tag mutants of Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 under different CO(2) conditions, followed by an electron microscopy (EM) analysis of their purified membrane protein complexes. Single particle averaging showed that the complete NDH-1 complex (NDH-1L) is L-shaped, with a relatively short hydrophilic arm. Two smaller complexes were observed, differing only at the tip of the membrane-embedded arm. The smallest one is considered to be similar to NDH-1M, lacking the NdhD1 and NdhF1 subunits. The other fragment, named NDH-1I, is intermediate between NDH-1L and NDH-1M and only lacks a mass compatible with the size of the NdhF1 subunit. Both smaller complexes were observed under low- and high-CO(2) growth conditions, but were much more abundant under the latter conditions. EM characterization of cyanobacterial NDH-1 further showed small numbers of NDH-1 complexes with additional masses. One type of particle has a much longer peripheral arm, similar to the one of NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) in E. coli and other organisms. This indicates that Thermosynechococcus elongatus must have protein(s) which are structurally homologous to the E. coli NuoE, -F, and -G subunits. Another low-abundance type of particle (NDH-1U) has a second labile hydrophilic arm at the tip of the membrane-embedded arm. This U-shaped particle has not been observed before by EM in a NDH-I preparation.  相似文献   

7.
The larger protein complexes of the cyanobacterial photosynthetic membrane of Thermosynechoccus elongatus and Synechocystis 6803 were studied by single particle electron microscopy after detergent solubilization, without any purification steps. Besides the "standard" L-shaped NDH-1L complex, related to complex I, large numbers of a U-shaped NDH-1MS complex were found in both cyanobacteria. In membranes from Synechocystis DeltacupA and DeltacupA/cupB mutants the U-shaped complexes were absent, indicating that CupA is responsible for the U-shape by binding at the tip of the membrane-bound arm of NDH-1MS. Comparison of membranes grown under air levels of CO(2) or 3% CO(2) indicates that the number of NDH-1MS particles is 30-fold higher under low-CO(2).  相似文献   

8.
Cyanobacteria possess multiple, functionally distinct NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH-1) complexes. In this mini-review, we describe the cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes by focusing on their identification, regulatory properties, and multiple functions. The multiple functions can be divided into basic and extending functions, and the basic functions are compared with those in chloroplasts. Many questions related to cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes remain unanswered and are briefly summarized here.  相似文献   

9.
The cyanobacterial type I NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH-1) complexes play a crucial role in a variety of bioenergetic reactions such as respiration, CO2 uptake, and cyclic electron transport around photosystem I. Two types of NDH-1 complexes, NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′, are involved in the CO2 uptake system. However, the composition and function of the complexes still remain largely unknown. Here, we found that deletion of ndhM caused inactivation of NDH-1-dependent cyclic electron transport around photosystem I and abolishment of CO2 uptake, resulting in a lethal phenotype under air CO2 condition. The mutation of NdhM abolished the accumulation of the hydrophilic subunits of the NDH-1, such as NdhH, NdhI, NdhJ, and NdhK, in the thylakoid membrane, resulting in disassembly of NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ as well as NDH-1L. In contrast, the accumulation of the hydrophobic subunits was not affected in the absence of NdhM. In the cytoplasm, the NDH-1 subcomplex assembly intermediates including NdhH and NdhK were seriously affected in the ΔndhM mutant but not in the NdhI-deleted mutant ΔndhI. In vitro protein interaction analysis demonstrated that NdhM interacts with NdhK, NdhH, NdhI, and NdhJ but not with other hydrophilic subunits of the NDH-1 complex. These results suggest that NdhM localizes in the hydrophilic subcomplex of NDH-1 complexes as a core subunit and is essential for the function of NDH-1MS and NDH-1MS′ involved in CO2 uptake in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803.  相似文献   

10.
The structure of the multifunctional NAD(P)H dehydrogenase type 1 (NDH-1) complexes from cyanobacteria was investigated by growing the wild type and specific ndh His-tag mutants of Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 under different CO2 conditions, followed by an electron microscopy (EM) analysis of their purified membrane protein complexes. Single particle averaging showed that the complete NDH-1 complex (NDH-1L) is L-shaped, with a relatively short hydrophilic arm. Two smaller complexes were observed, differing only at the tip of the membrane-embedded arm. The smallest one is considered to be similar to NDH-1M, lacking the NdhD1 and NdhF1 subunits. The other fragment, named NDH-1I, is intermediate between NDH-1L and NDH-1M and only lacks a mass compatible with the size of the NdhF1 subunit. Both smaller complexes were observed under low- and high-CO2 growth conditions, but were much more abundant under the latter conditions. EM characterization of cyanobacterial NDH-1 further showed small numbers of NDH-1 complexes with additional masses. One type of particle has a much longer peripheral arm, similar to the one of NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) in E. coli and other organisms. This indicates that Thermosynechococcus elongatus must have protein(s) which are structurally homologous to the E. coli NuoE, -F, and -G subunits. Another low-abundance type of particle (NDH-1U) has a second labile hydrophilic arm at the tip of the membrane-embedded arm. This U-shaped particle has not been observed before by EM in a NDH-I preparation.  相似文献   

11.
Cyanobacteria possess multiple,functionally distinct NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH-1) complexes.In this mini-review,we describe the cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes by focusing on their identification,regulatory properties,and multiple functions.The multiple functions can be divided into basic and extending functions,and the basic functions are compared with those in chloroplasts.Many questions related to cyanobacterial NDH-1 complexes remain unanswered and are briefly summarized here.  相似文献   

12.
《BBA》2020,1861(11):148254
Photosynthetic NADH dehydrogenase-like complex type-1 (a.k.a, NDH, NDH-1, or NDH-1L) is a multi-subunit, membrane-bound oxidoreductase related to the respiratory complex I. Although originally discovered 30 years ago, a number of recent advances have revealed significant insight into the structure, function, and physiology of NDH-1. Here, we highlight progress in understanding the function of NDH-1 in the photosynthetic light reactions of both cyanobacteria and chloroplasts from biochemical and structural perspectives. We further examine the cyanobacterial-specific forms of NDH-1 that possess vectorial carbonic anhydrase (vCA) activity and function in the CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM). We compare the proposed mechanism for the cyanobacterial NDH-1 vCA-activity to that of the DAB (DABs accumulates bicarbonate) complex, another putative vCA. Finally, we discuss both new and remaining questions pertaining to the mechanisms of NDH-1 complexes in light of these recent advances.  相似文献   

13.
Patricia Saura  Ville R.I. Kaila 《BBA》2019,1860(3):201-208
NDH-1 is a gigantic redox-driven proton pump linked with respiration and cyclic electron flow in cyanobacterial cells. Based on experimentally resolved X-ray and cryo-EM structures of the respiratory complex I, we derive here molecular models of two isoforms of the cyanobacterial NDH-1 complex involved in redox-driven proton pumping (NDH-1L) and CO2-fixation (NDH-1MS). Our models show distinct structural and dynamic similarities to the core architecture of the bacterial and mammalian respiratory complex I. We identify putative plastoquinone-binding sites that are coupled by an electrostatic wire to the proton pumping elements in the membrane domain of the enzyme. Molecular simulations suggest that the NDH-1L isoform undergoes large-scale hydration changes that support proton-pumping within antiporter-like subunits, whereas the terminal subunit of the NDH-1MS isoform lacks such structural motifs. Our work provides a putative molecular blueprint for the complex I-analogue in the photosynthetic energy transduction machinery and demonstrates that general mechanistic features of the long-range proton-pumping machinery are evolutionary conserved in the complex I-superfamily.  相似文献   

14.
During aerobic growth of Escherichia coli, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) can initiate electron transport at either of two sites: Complex I (NDH-1 or NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase) or a single-subunit NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2). We report evidence for the specific coupling of malate dehydrogenase to Complex I. Membrane vesicles prepared from wild type cultures retain malate dehydrogenase and are capable of proton translocation driven by the addition of malate+NAD. This activity was inhibited by capsaicin, an inhibitor specific to Complex I, and it proceeded with deamino-NAD, a substrate utilized by Complex I, but not by NDH-2. The concentration of free NADH produced by membrane vesicles supplemented with malate+NAD was estimated to be 1 μM, while the rate of proton translocation due to Complex I was consistent with a some what higher concentration, suggesting a direct transfer mechanism. This interpretation was supported by competition assays in which inactive mutant forms of malate dehydrogenase were able to inhibit Complex I activity. These two lines of evidence indicate that the direct transfer of NADH from malate dehydrogenase to Complex I can occur in the E. coli system.  相似文献   

15.
The NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (NDH-1 or Complex I) of Escherichia coli is a smaller version of the mitochondrial enzyme, being composed of 13 protein subunits in comparison to the 43 of bovine heart complex I. The bacterial NDH-1 from an NDH-2-deficient strain was purified using a combination of anion exchange chromatography and sucrose gradient centrifugation. All 13 different subunits were detected in the purified enzyme by either N-terminal sequencing or matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectral analysis. In addition, some minor contaminants were observed and identified. The activity of the enzyme was studied and the effects of phospholipid and dodecyl maltoside were characterized. Kinetic analyses were performed for the enzyme in the native membrane as well as for the purified NDH-1, using ubiquinone-1, ubiquinone-2 or decylubiquinone as the electron acceptors. The purified enzyme exhibited between 1.5- and 4-fold increase in the apparent K(m) for these acceptors. Both ubiquinone-2 and decylubiquinone are good acceptors for this enzyme, while affinity of NDH-1 for ubiquinone-1 is clearly lower than for the other two, particularly in the purified state.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the (co)expression, interaction, and membrane location of multifunctional NAD(P)H dehydrogenase type 1 (NDH-1) complexes and their involvement in carbon acquisition, cyclic photosystem I, and respiration, we grew the wild type and specific ndh gene knockout mutants of Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 under different CO2 and pH conditions, followed by a proteome analysis of their membrane protein complexes. Typical NDH-1 complexes were represented by NDH-1L (large) and NDH-1M (medium size), located in the thylakoid membrane. The NDH-1L complex, missing from the DeltaNdhD1/D2 mutant, was a prerequisite for photoheterotrophic growth and thus apparently involved in cellular respiration. The amount of NDH-1M and the rate of P700+ rereduction in darkness in the DeltaNdhD1/D2 mutant grown at low CO2 were similar to those in the wild type, whereas in the M55 mutant (DeltaNdhB), lacking both NDH-1L and NDH-1M, the rate of P700+ rereduction was very slow. The NDH-1S (small) complex, localized to the thylakoid membrane and composed of only NdhD3, NdhF3, CupA, and Sll1735, was strongly induced at low CO2 in the wild type as well as in DeltaNdhD1/D2 and M55. In contrast with the wild type and DeltaNdhD1/D2, which show normal CO2 uptake, M55 is unable to take up CO2 even when the NDH-1S complex is present. Conversely, the DeltaNdhD3/D4 mutant, also unable to take up CO2, lacked NDH-1S but exhibited wild-type levels of NDH-1M at low CO2. These results demonstrate that both NDH-1S and NDH-1M are essential for CO2 uptake and that NDH-1M is a functional complex. We also show that the Na+/HCO3- transporter (SbtA complex) is located in the plasma membrane and is strongly induced in the wild type and mutants at low CO2.  相似文献   

17.
The NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (NDH-1 or Complex I) of Escherichia coli is a smaller version of the mitochondrial enzyme, being composed of 13 protein subunits in comparison to the 43 of bovine heart complex I. The bacterial NDH-1 from an NDH-2-deficient strain was purified using a combination of anion exchange chromatography and sucrose gradient centrifugation. All 13 different subunits were detected in the purified enzyme by either N-terminal sequencing or matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectral analysis. In addition, some minor contaminants were observed and identified. The activity of the enzyme was studied and the effects of phospholipid and dodecyl maltoside were characterized. Kinetic analyses were performed for the enzyme in the native membrane as well as for the purified NDH-1, using ubiquinone-1, ubiquinone-2 or decylubiquinone as the electron acceptors. The purified enzyme exhibited between 1.5- and 4-fold increase in the apparent Km for these acceptors. Both ubiquinone-2 and decylubiquinone are good acceptors for this enzyme, while affinity of NDH-1 for ubiquinone-1 is clearly lower than for the other two, particularly in the purified state.  相似文献   

18.
Cyanobacteria contain several genes, annotated ndh, whose products show sequence similarities to subunits found in complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) of eubacteria and mitochondria. However, it is still unclear whether the cyanobacterial ndh gene products actually form a single large protein complex or exist as smaller independent complexes. To address this, we have constructed a strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 in which the C terminus of the NdhJ subunit was fused to an His(6) tag to aid isolation. Three major NdhJ-containing complexes were resolved by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, with approximate apparent molecular masses of 460, 330, and 110 kDa. N-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometry revealed that the 460-kDa complex contained ten annotated ndh gene products. Detergent-induced fragmentation experiments indicated that the 460-kDa complex was composed of hydrophobic (150 kDa) and hydrophilic (110-130 kDa) modules similar to that found in the minimal form of complex I found in Escherichia coli, except that the electron input module was not conserved. The difference in size between the 460- and 330-kDa complexes is attributed to differences in the stoichiometry of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic modules in the complex, either 2:1 or 1:1, respectively. We have also detected the presence of two new Ndh subunits (slr1623 and sll1262) that are unrelated to subunits in the eubacterial complex I but which have homologues in the closely related chloroplast Ndh complex of maize (Funk, E., Sch?fer, E., and Steinmüller, K. (1999) J. Plant Physiol. 154, 16-23). The presence of these additional subunits might reflect the use by the NDH-1 and Ndh complexes of a different, so far unidentified, electron input module.  相似文献   

19.
The subunit compositions of two types of NAD(P)H dehydrogenase complexes of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, NDH-1L and NDH-1M, were studied by two-dimensional blue-native/SDS-PAGE followed by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. Fifteen proteins were observed in NDH-1L including hydrophilic subunits (NdhH, -K, -I, -J, -M, and -N) and hydrophobic subunits (NdhA, -B, -E, -G, -D1, and -F1). In addition, NdhL and a novel subunit, Ssl1690 (designated NdhO), were shown to be components of this complex. All subunits mentioned above were present in the NDH-1M complex except NdhD1 and NdhF1. NdhL and Ssl1690 (NdhO) were homologous to hypothetical proteins encoded by genomic DNA in higher plants, suggesting that chloroplast NDH-1 complexes contain related subunits. Diagnostic sequence motifs were found for both NdhL and NdhO homologous proteins. Analysis of ndhL deletion mutant (M9) revealed the presence of assembled NDH-1L and NDH-1M complexes, but these complexes appear to be functionally impaired in the absence of NdhL. Both NDH-1 complexes were absent in the ndhB deletion mutant (M55).  相似文献   

20.
The composition and dynamics of membrane protein complexes were studied in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by two-dimensional blue native/SDS-PAGE followed by matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. Approximately 20 distinct membrane protein complexes could be resolved from photoautotrophically grown wild-type cells. Besides the protein complexes involved in linear photosynthetic electron flow and ATP synthesis (photosystem [PS] I, PSII, cytochrome b6f, and ATP synthase), four distinct complexes containing type I NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH-1) subunits were identified, as well as several novel, still uncharacterized protein complexes. The dynamics of the protein complexes was studied by culturing the wild type and several mutant strains under various growth modes (photoautotrophic, mixotrophic, or photoheterotrophic) or in the presence of different concentrations of CO2, iron, or salt. The most distinct modulation observed in PSs occurred in iron-depleted conditions, which induced an accumulation of CP43' protein associated with PSI trimers. The NDH-1 complexes, on the other hand, responded readily to changes in the CO2 concentration and the growth mode of the cells and represented an extremely dynamic group of membrane protein complexes. Our results give the first direct evidence, to our knowledge, that the NdhF3, NdhD3, and CupA proteins assemble together to form a small low CO2-induced protein complex and further demonstrate the presence of a fourth subunit, Sll1735, in this complex. The two bigger NDH-1 complexes contained a different set of NDH-1 polypeptides and are likely to function in respiratory and cyclic electron transfer. Pulse labeling experiments demonstrated the requirement of PSII activity for de novo synthesis of the NDH-1 complexes.  相似文献   

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