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1.
Maximum photosynthetic capacity indicates that the Antarctic psychrophile Chlamydomonas raudensis H. Ettl UWO 241 is photosynthetically adapted to low temperature. Despite this finding, C. raudensis UWO 241 exhibited greater sensitivity to low‐temperature photoinhibition of PSII than the mesophile Chlamydomonas reinhardtii P. A. Dang. However, in contrast with results for C. reinhardtii, the quantum requirement to induce 50% photoinhibition of PSII in C. raudensis UWO 241 (50 μmol photons) was comparable at either 8°C or 29°C. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a photoautotroph whose susceptibility to photoinhibition is temperature independent. In contrast, the capacity of the psychrophile to recover from photoinhibition of PSII was sensitive to temperature and inhibited at 29°C. The maximum rate of recovery from photoinhibition of the psychrophile at 8°C was comparable to the maximum rate of recovery of the mesophile at 29°C. We provide evidence that photoinhibition in C. raudensis UWO 241 is chronic rather than dynamic. The photoinhibition‐induced decrease in the D1 content in C. raudensis recovered within 30 min at 8°C. Both the recovery of the D1 content as well as the initial fast phase of the recovery of Fv/Fm at 8°C were inhibited by lincomycin, a chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitor. We conclude that the susceptibility of C. raudensis UWO 241 to low‐temperature photoinhibition reflects its adaptation to low growth irradiance, whereas the unusually rapid rate of recovery at low temperature exhibited by this psychrophile is due to a novel D1 repair cycle that is adapted to and is maximally operative at low temperature.  相似文献   

2.
The psychrophilic Antarctic alga, Chlamydomonas raudensis Ettl (UWO241), grows under an extreme environment of low temperature and low irradiance of a limited spectral quality (blue‐green). We investigated the ability of C. raudensis to acclimate to long‐term imbalances in excitation caused by light quality through adjustments in photosystem stoichiometry. Log‐phase cultures of C. raudensis and C. reinhardtii grown under white light were shifted to either blue or red light for 12 h. Previously, we reported that C. raudensis lacks the ability to redistribute light energy via the short‐term mechanism of state transitions. However, similar to the model of mesophilic alga, C. reinhardtii, the psychrophile retained the capacity for long‐term adjustment in energy distribution between PSI and PSII by modulating the levels of PSI reaction center polypeptides, PsaA/PsaB, with minimal changes in the content of the PSII polypeptide, D1, in response to changes in light quality. The functional consequences of the modulation in PSI/PSII stoichiometry in the psychrophile were distinct from those observed in C. reinhardtii. Exposure of C. raudensis to red light caused 1) an inhibition of growth and photosynthetic rates, 2) an increased reduction state of the intersystem plastoquinone pool with concomitant increases in nonphotochemical quenching, 3) an uncoupling of the major light‐harvesting complex from the PSII core, and 4) differential thylakoid protein phosphorylation profiles compared with C. reinhardtii. We conclude that the characteristic low levels of PSI relative to PSII set the limit in the capacity of C. raudensis to photoacclimate to an environment enriched in red light.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome b 6 f complexes, prepared from spinach and Chlamydomonas thylakoids, have been examined for their content of low molecular weight subunits. The spinach complex contains two prominent low molecular weight subunits of 3.7 and 4.1 kD while a single prominent component of 4.5 kD was present in the Chlamydomonas complex. An estimation of the relative stoichiometry of these subunits suggests several are present at levels approximating one copy per cytochrome complex. The low molecular weight subunits were purified by reversed phase HPLC and N-terminal sequences obtained. Both the spinach and Chlamydomonas cytochrome complexes contain a subunit that is identified as the previously characterized petG gene product (4.8 kD in spinach and 4.1 kD in Chlamydomonas). A second subunit (3.8 kD in spinach and 3.7 kD in Chlamydomonas) appears to be homologous in the two complexes and is likely to be a nuclear gene product. The possible presence of other low molecular weight subunits in these complexes is also considered.  相似文献   

4.
The sequences of the nuclear genes of the 33 kDa (OEE1) and the 16 kDa (OEE3) polypeptides of the oxygen evolving complex of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been established. Comparison between the OEE1 protein sequences of C. reinhardtii and higher plants and cyanobacteria reveals 67 and 47% homology. In contrast, C. reinhardtii and higher plants have only 28% overall homology for OEE3 which is mostly limited to the central portion of the protein. The transit peptides of the C. reinhardtii proteins consist of 52 (OEE1) and, most likely, 51 (OEE1) amino acids. They have a basic amino terminal region and, at least in the case of OEE1, a hydrophobic segment at their carboxy terminal end typical of thylakoid lumen proteins. Comparison of the genomic and cDNA clones indicates that the OEE1 and OEE3 genes contain five and four introns, respectively, some of which are located within the coding sequences of the transit peptides.  相似文献   

5.
Summary We report that the mitochondrial genome of Chlamydomonas moewusii has a 22 kb circular map and thus contrasts with the mitochondrial genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which is linear and about 6 kb shorter. Overlapping restriction fragments spanning over 90% of the C. moewusii mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) were identified in a clone bank constructed using a Sau3AI partial digest of a C. moewusii DNA fraction enriched for mtDNA by preparative CsCI density gradient centrifugation. Overlapping Sau3AI clones were identified by a chromosome walk initiated with a clone of C. moewusii mtDNA. The mtDNA map was completed by Southern blot analysis of the C. moewusii mtDNA fraction using isolated mtDNA clones. Regions that hybridized to C. reinhardtii or wheat mitochondrial gene probes for subunit I of cytochrome oxidase (cox1), apocytochrome b (cob), three subunits of NADH dehydrogenase (nadl, nad2 and nad5) and the small and the large ribosomal RNAs (rrnS and rrnL, respectively) were localized on the C. moewusii mtDNA map by Southern blot analysis. The results show that the order of genes in the mitochondrial genome of C. moewusii is completely rearranged relative to that of C. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

6.
cDNA clones encoding two Photosystem I subunits of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with apparent molecular masses of 18 and 11 kDa (thylakoid polypeptides 21 and 30; P21 and P30 respectively) were isolated using oligonucleotides, the sequences of which were deduced from the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the proteins. The cDNAs were sequenced and used to probe Southern and Northern blots. The Southern blot analysis indicates that both proteins are encoded by single-copy genes. The mRNA sizes of the two components are 1400 and 740 nucleotides, respectively. Comparison between the open reading frames of the cDNAs and the N-terminal amino acid sequences of the proteins indicates that the molecular masses of the mature proteins are 17.9 (P21) and 8.1 kDa (P30). Analysis of the deduced protein sequences predicts that both subunits are extrinsic membrane proteins with net positive charges. The amino acid sequences of the transit peptides suggest that P21 and P30 are routed towards the lumenal and stromal sides of the thylakoid membranes, respectively.Abbreviations OEE1, 2 and 3 oxygen evolution enhancer proteins 1, 2 and 3 - Rubisco ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - PS photosystem - P21 and P30 C. reinhardtii thylakoid polypeptides 21 and 30  相似文献   

7.
The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii possesses a [FeFe]-hydrogenase HydA1 (EC 1.12.7.2), which is coupled to the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Large amounts of H2 are produced in a light-dependent reaction for several days when C. reinhardtii cells are deprived of sulfur. Under these conditions, the cells drastically change their physiology from aerobic photosynthetic growth to an anaerobic resting state. The understanding of the underlying physiological processes is not only important for getting further insights into the adaptability of photosynthesis, but will help to optimize the biotechnological application of algae as H2 producers. Two of the still most disputed questions regarding H2 generation by C. reinhardtii concern the electron source for H2 evolution and the competition of the hydrogenase with alternative electron sinks. We analyzed the H2 metabolism of S-depleted C. reinhardtii cultures utilizing a special mass spectrometer setup and investigated the influence of photosystem II (PSII)- or ribulosebisphosphate-carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco)-deficiency. We show that electrons for H2-production are provided both by PSII activity and by a non-photochemical plastoquinone reduction pathway, which is dependent on previous PSII activity. In a Rubisco-deficient strain, which produces H2 also in the presence of sulfur, H2 generation seems to be the only significant electron sink for PSII activity and rescues this strain at least partially from a light-sensitive phenotype. The latter indicates that the down-regulation of assimilatory pathways in S-deprived C. reinhardtii cells is one of the important prerequisites for a sustained H2 evolution.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Experiments were undertaken to characterize the cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins (r-proteins) in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and to compare immunologically several cytoplasmic r-proteins with those of chloroplast ribosomes of this alga, Escherichia coli, and yeast. The large and small subunits of the C. reinhardtii cytoplasmic ribosomes were shown to contain, respectively, 48 and 45 r-proteins, with apparent molecular weights of 12,000–59,000. No cross-reactivity was seen between antisera made against cytoplasmic r-proteins of Chlamydomonas and chloroplast r-proteins, except in one case where an antiserum made against a large subunit r-protein cross-reacted with an r-protein of the small subunit of the chloroplast ribosome. Antisera made against one out of five small subunit r-proteins and three large subunit r-proteins recognized r-proteins from the yeast large subunit. Each of the yeast r-proteins has been previously identified as an rRNA binding protein. The antiserum to one large subunit r-protein cross-reacted with specific large subunit r-proteins from yeast and E. coli.  相似文献   

9.
Summary A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (C. reinhardtii) chloroplast expression vector, papc-B, containing the apc-B gene that encodes the beta subunit of the light-harvesting antenna protein allophycocyanin (APC) of cyanobacteria, was constructed and transferred to the chloroplast genome of C. reinhardtii by the biolistic method. The transformants were identified by Southern blot, Western blot and ELISA assays after selection on resistant medium. The recombinant APC beta subunit was expressed in the C. reinhardtii chloroplast and accounted for up to 2–3% (w/w) of the total soluble protein (TSP), suggesting a promising prospect of using C. reinhardtii chloroplasts to produce functional plant-derived proteins.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Using particle gun-mediated chloroplast transformation we have disrupted the psbK gene of Chlamydomonas reihardtii with an aadA expression cassette that confers resistance to spectinomycin. The transformants are unable to grow photoautotrophically, but they grow normally in acetate-containing medium. They are deficient in photosystem II activity as measured by fluorescence transients and O2 evolution and they accumulate less than 10% of wild-type levels of photosystem II as measured by immunochemical means. Pulse-labeling experiments indicate that the photosystem II complex is synthesized normally in the transformants. These results differ from those obtained previously with similar cyanobacterial psbK mutants that were still capable of photoautotrophic growth (Ikeuchi et al., J. Biol. Chem. 266 (1991) 1111–1115). In C. reinhardtii the psbK product is required for the stable assembly and/or stability of the photosystem II complex and essential for photoautotrophic growth. The data also suggest that the stability requirements of the photosynthetic complexes differ considerably between C. reinhardtii and cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

12.
Hu Z  Zhao Z  Wu Z  Fan Z  Chen J  Wu J  Li J 《Mitochondrion》2011,11(5):716-721
The efficient expression of exogenous gene in mitochondria of photosynthetic organism has been an insurmountable problem. In this study, the pBsLPNCG was constructed by inserting the egfp gene into a site between TERMINVREP-Left repeats and the cob gene in a fragment of mitochondrial DNA of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii CC-124 and introduced into the mitochondria of respiratory deficient dum-1 mutation of C. reinhardtii CC-2654. Sequencing and DNA Southern analyses revealed that egfp gene had been integrated into the mitochondrial genome of transgenic algae as expected and no other copy of egfp existed in their nucleic genome. Both the fluorescence detection and Western blot analysis confirmed the presence of eGFP protein in the transgenic algae; it indicated that the egfp gene was successfully expressed in the mitochondria of C. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

13.
Enzymatically prepared alginate oligomer (AO) promoted the growth of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in a concentration-dependent manner. AO at 2.5 mg/mL induced increase in expression levels of cyclin A, cyclin B, and cyclin D in C. reinhardtii. CuSO4 at 100 μM suppressed the growth of C. reinhardtiin, and AO at 2.5 mg/mL significantly alleviated the toxicity of CuSO4. Increased intracellular reactive oxygen species level in C. reinhardtii induced by CuSO4 was reduced by AO. After cultivation with CuSO4 at 100 μM, expression levels of ascorbate peroxidase and superoxide dismutase in C. reinhardtii were increased, and AO reduced the increased levels of these enzymes. These results suggest that AO exhibits beneficial effects on C. reinhardtii through influencing the expression of various genes not only at normal growth condition but also under CuSO4 stress.  相似文献   

14.
It has previously been shown that presequences of nuclear-encoded chloroplast proteins from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contain a region that may form an amphiphilic -helix, a structure characteristic of mitochondrial presequences. We have tested two precursors of chloroplast proteins (the PsaF and PsaK photosystem I subunits) from C. reinhardtii for the ability to be imported into spinach leaf mitochondria in vitro. Both precursors bound to spinach mitochondria. The PsaF protein was converted into a protease-protected form with high efficiency in a membrane potential-dependent manner, indicating that the protein had been imported, whereas the PsaK protein was not protease protected. The protease protection of PsaF was not inhibited by a synthetic peptide derived from the presequence of the N. plumbaginifolia mitochondrial F1 subunit. Furthermore, if the presequence of PsaF was truncated or deleted by in vitro mutagenesis, the protein was still protease-protected with approximately the same efficiency as the full-length precursor. These results indicate that PsaF can be imported by spinach mitochondria in a presequence-independent manner. However, even in the absence of the presequence, this process was membrane potential-dependent. Interestingly, the presequence-truncated PsaF proteins were also protease-protected upon incubation with C. reinhardtii chloroplasts. Our results indicate that the C. reinhardtii chloroplast PsaF protein has peculiar properties and may be imported not only into chloroplasts but also into higher-plant mitochondria. This finding indicates that additional control mechanisms in the cytosol that are independent of the presequence are required to achieve sorting between chloroplasts and mitochondria in vivo.Abbreviations cTP chloroplast transit peptide - mTP mitochondrial targeting peptide - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - pF1(1,25) a synthetic peptide derived from the first 25 residues of the Nicotiana plumbaginifolia mitochondrial ATP synthase F1 subunit - PsaF(2–30) and PsaF(2–61) mutant proteins lacking regions corresponding to residues 2–30 and 2–61 in the PsaF precursor protein, respectively  相似文献   

15.
Li B  Mao D  Liu Y  Li L  Kuang T 《Photosynthesis research》2005,83(3):297-305
A pure, active cytochrome b 6 f was isolated from the chloroplasts of the marine green alga, Bryopsis corticulans. To investigate and characterize this cytochrome b 6 f complex, sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS–PAGE), absorption spectra measurement and HPLC were employed. It was shown that this purified complex contained four large subunits with apparent molecular masses of 34.8, 24, 18.7 and 16.7 kD. The ratio of Cyt b 6 to Cytf was 2.01 : 1. The cytochromeb 6 f was shown to catalyze the transfer of 73 electrons from decylplastoquinol to plastocyanin–ferricyanide per Cyt f per second. α-Carotene, one kind of carotenoid that has not been found to present in cytochrome b 6 f complex, was discovered in this preparation by reversed phase HPLC. It was different from β-carotene usually found in cytochrome b 6 f complex. The configuration of the major α-carotene component was assigned to be 9-cis by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Different from the previous reports, the configuration of this α-carotene in dissociated state was determined to be all-trans. Besides this carotene, chlorophyll a was also found in this complex. It was shown that the molecular ratios of chlorophylla, cis and all-trans-α-carotene to Cyt f in this complex were 1.2, 0.7 and 0.2, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Ladygin  V. G. 《Microbiology》2003,72(5):585-591
The cell wall–lacking mutant CW-15 of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was transformed by electroporation using plasmid pCTVHyg, which was constructed with the hygromycin phosphotransferase genehpt as the selective marker and the Tn5 transposon of Escherichia coli under the control of the virus SV40 early gene promoter. Under optimal conditions (106 mid-exponential cells/ml; electric field strength 1 kV/cm; and pulse length 2 ms), the transformation yielded 103 HygR transformants per 106 recipient cells. The exogenous DNA integrated into the nuclear genome of Ch. reinhardtii was persistently inherited through more than 350 cell generations. The advantages of this system for the transformation ofCh. reinhardtii with heterologous genes are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Summary We have isolated complementary DNA (cDNA) clones for apocytochrome c from the green algaChlamydomonas reinhardtii and shown that they are encoded by a single nuclear gene termedcyc.Cyc mRNA levels are found to depend primarily on the presence of acetate as a reduced carbon source in the culture medium. The deduced amino acid sequence shows that, apart from the probable removal of the initiating methionine,C. reinhardtii apocytochrome c is syntheszed in its mature form. Its structure is generally similar to that of cytochromes c from higher plants. Several punctual deviations from the general pattern of cytochrome c sequences that is found in other organisms have interesting structural and functional implications. These include, in particular, valines 19 and 39, asparagine 78, and alanine 83. A phylogenetic tree was constructed by the matrix method from cytochrome c data for a representative range of species. The results suggest thatC. reinhardtii diverged from higher plants approximately 700–750 million years ago; they also are not easy to reconcile with the current attribution ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii andEnteromorpha intestinalis to a unique phylum, because these two species probably diverged from one another at about the same time as they diverged from the line leading to higher plants.  相似文献   

18.
An unusual psychrophilic green alga was isolated from the deepest portion of the photic zone (<0.1% of incident PAR) at a depth of 17 m in the permanently ice‐covered lake, Lake Bonney, Antarctica. Here we identify and report the first detailed morphological and molecular examination of this Antarctic green alga, which we refer to as strain UWO 241. To determine the taxonomic identity, UWO 241 was examined using LM and TEM and partial sequences of the small subunit (SSU), internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1 and ITS2 regions (including the 5.8S) of the ribosomal operon. These data were compared with those of previously described taxa. We identified UWO 241 as a strain of Chlamydomonas raudensis Ettl (SAG 49.72). Chlamydomonas raudensis is closely related to C. noctigama Korshikov (UTEX 2289) as well as foraminifer symbionts such as C. hedleyi Lee, Crockett, Hagen et Stone (ATCC 50216). In addition, its morphology, pigment complement, and phototactic response to temperature are reported. Chlamydomonas raudensis (UWO 241) contains relatively high levels of lutein and low chl a/b ratios (1.6±0.15), and the phototactic response was temperature dependent. The Antarctic isolate (UWO 241) included the typical photosynthetic pigments found in all chl a/b containing green algae. It possesses a small eyespot and, interestingly, was positively phototactic only at higher nonpermissive growth temperatures. Comparison of SSU and ITS rDNA sequences confirms the identification of the strain UWO 241 as C. raudensis Ettl and contradicts the previous designation as C. subcaudata Wille.  相似文献   

19.
Chlamydomonas sp. UWO 241 (UWO 241) is a psychrophilic green alga isolated from Antarctica. A unique characteristic of this algal strain is its inability to undergo state transitions coupled with the absence of photosystem II (PSII) light-harvesting complex protein phosphorylation. We show that UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates specific polypeptides associated with an approximately 1,000-kD pigment-protein supercomplex that contains components of both photosystem I (PSI) and the cytochrome b6/f (Cyt b6/f) complex. Liquid chromatography nano-tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify three major phosphorylated proteins associated with this PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex, two 17-kD PSII subunit P-like proteins and a 70-kD ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease, FtsH. The PSII subunit P-like protein sequence exhibited 70.6% similarity to the authentic PSII subunit P protein associated with the oxygen-evolving complex of PSII in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Tyrosine-146 was identified as a unique phosphorylation site on the UWO 241 PSII subunit P-like polypeptide. Assessment of PSI cyclic electron transport by in vivo P700 photooxidation and the dark relaxation kinetics of P700+ indicated that UWO 241 exhibited PSI cyclic electron transport rates that were 3 times faster and more sensitive to antimycin A than the mesophile control, Chlamydomonas raudensis SAG 49.72. The stability of the PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex was dependent upon the phosphorylation status of the PsbP-like protein and the zinc metalloprotease FtsH as well as the presence of high salt. We suggest that adaptation of UWO 241 to its unique low-temperature and high-salt environment favors the phosphorylation of a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex to regulate PSI cyclic electron transport rather than the regulation of state transitions through the phosphorylation of PSII light-harvesting complex proteins.The Antarctic psychrophilic green alga Chlamydomonas sp. UWO 241 (UWO 241) originates from the lowest trophic zone of Lake Bonney, which is characterized by an extremely stable environment of low temperatures (4°C–6°C), low irradiance (less than 50 µmol photons m−2 s−1), high salt concentrations (700 mm), and a narrow spectral distribution enriched in the blue-green region (Lizotte and Priscu, 1992; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006). Adaptation of UWO 241 to this unique natural aquatic environment has resulted in the evolution of a structurally and functionally distinct photosynthetic apparatus relative to the mesophilic strains Chlamydomonas raudensis SAG 49.72 (SAG 49.72; Pocock et al., 2004) and the model green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Morgan et al., 1998; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006). UWO 241 is a halotolerant psychrophile (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006; Takizawa et al., 2009) that dies at temperatures of 20°C or higher (Possmayer et al., 2011). This is consistent with the fact that temperature-response curves for light-saturated rates of CO2-saturated oxygen evolution indicate that UWO 241 photosynthesizes maximally at 8°C at rates that are comparable to rates of the mesophile, C. reinhardtii, grown and measured at 29°C (Pocock et al., 2007). Although UWO 241 exhibits a low quantum requirement for photoinhibition and the degradation of the PSII reaction center polypeptide D1 (PsbA), this is complemented by a rapid, light-dependent recovery of PSII photochemistry associated with the de novo biosynthesis of D1 at low temperature (Pocock et al., 2007). Thus, this psychrophile appears to be photosynthetically adapted to growth at low temperature (Pocock et al., 2007).UWO 241 exhibits significantly enhanced fatty acid unsaturation associated with all of the major thylakoid lipid classes (monogalactosyldiacylglyceride, digalactosyldiacylglyceride, sulfoquinovosyldiacylglyceride, and phosphatidyldiacylglyceride) as well as a 2- to 10-fold increase in the unique, unsaturated fatty acid 16:4, depending on the specific thylakoid lipid species (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002a). Consequently, the biophysical determination of the critical temperature for thylakoid membrane destabilization for UWO 241 (40°C) was significantly lower than that for C. reinhardtii (50°C), which is consistent with the adaptation of UWO 241 to low temperature (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002a).Biochemical analyses of the chlorophyll-protein complexes coupled with immunoblots of their constituent polypeptides indicate that UWO 241 exhibits abundant PSII light-harvesting complex (LHCII) associated with a low chlorophyll a/b (Chl a/b) ratio (1.8–2) relative to the mesophiles, SAG 49.72 and C. reinhardtii (Chl a/b ratio = 3). In addition, UWO 241 exhibits an unusually low level of PSI such that the stoichiometry of PSI/PSII was estimated to be about 0.5 in UWO 241, whereas the mesophiles, SAG 49.72 and C. reinhardtii, grown under optimal growth conditions, exhibited a PSI/PSII of about 1. These biochemical data were confirmed by measurements of P700 photooxidation (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007), which indicated that UWO 241 exhibits high rates of PSI cyclic electron flow (CEF; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b).Recently, we reported that acclimation of UWO 241 to low temperature and low growth irradiance results in alterations in the partitioning of excess excitation energy to maintain cellular energy balance compared with the mesophile, SAG 49.72 (Szyszka et al., 2007). While SAG 49.72 favors energy partitioning for photoprotection through the induction of the xanthophyll cycle, the psychrophilic strain, UWO 241, favors energy partitioning for photoprotection through constitutive quenching processes involved in energy dissipation, even though UWO 241 exhibits an active xanthophyll cycle (Pocock et al., 2007; Szyszka et al., 2007). Although the molecular basis of the constitutive quenching process for photoprotection has not been elucidated unequivocally, this may reflect the differences in the predisposition for energy dissipation through either the Q2 or the Q1 site in PSII-LHCII supercomplexes (Jahns and Holzwarth 2012; Derks et al., 2015) or, alternatively, it may indicate quenching through PSII reaction centers, as suggested previously (Hüner et al., 2006; Sane et al., 2012). Regardless of the mechanism, one consequence of this enhanced energy-quenching capacity of UWO 241 is that the psychrophile does not exhibit any pigment change in response to photoacclimation (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006), typically observed for other mesophilic green algae such as C. reinhardtii, Dunaliella tertiolecta (Escoubas et al., 1995), Dunaliella salina (Smith et al., 1990; Maxwell et al., 1995), and Chlorella vulgaris (Maxwell et al., 1995; Wilson et al., 2003). In addition, maximum growth rates of UWO 241 are sensitive to light quality, since rates of growth and photosynthesis are inhibited under red light, which results in increased excitation pressure in the psychrophile (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2005).However, the most unusual feature of UWO 241 is that it represents a natural variant that is deficient in state transitions (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Takizawa et al., 2009). State transitions have been well documented as a short-term mechanism for photoacclimation employed by algae and plants to balance light excitation between PSII and PSI (Allen et al., 1981; Allen, 2003; Eberhard et al., 2008; Rochaix, 2011, 2014). Overexcitation of PSII relative to PSI results in the phosphorylation of several peripheral Chl a/b-binding LHCII proteins, which causes their dissociation from the PSII core and subsequent association with PSI (Eberhard et al., 2008; Rochaix, 2011). As a result, excitation energy is redistributed in favor of PSI at the expense of PSII. Phosphorylation of LHCII polypeptides is essential in the regulation of state transitions and energy distribution between the two photosystems (Allen, 2003; Eberhard et al., 2008; Kargul and Barber, 2008; Rochaix, 2011, 2014). LHCII phosphorylation is initiated by modulation of the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, which is sensed through the preferential binding of plastoquinol to the quinone-binding site of the cytochrome b6/f (Cyt b6/f) complex. As a consequence, the thylakoid protein kinases STT7 in C. reinhardtii and its ortholog, STN7, in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) are activated and LHCII is phosphorylated (Rochaix, 2011, 2014; Wunder et al., 2013). Similar to all other photosynthetic organisms, the LHCII polypeptides represent the major phosphorylated polypeptides detected in thylakoids of the mesophile, SAG 49.72 (Szyszka et al., 2007). Consistent with a deficiency in state transitions, UWO 241 does not phosphorylate the major LHCII polypeptides in response to changes in either growth irradiance or growth temperature (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007; Takizawa et al., 2009). In fact, UWO 241 exhibits a unique thylakoid membrane phosphorylation profile compared with either SAG 49.72 or C. reinhardtii (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2005; Szyszka et al., 2007; Takizawa et al., 2009). Rather than phosphorylation of LHCII polypeptides, UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates several novel high-molecular-mass polypeptides (greater than 70 kD; Morgan-Kiss et al., 2002b; Szyszka et al., 2007).The Cyt b6/f complex of the photosynthetic intersystem electron transport chain is essential in the regulation of state transitions and the activation of the STT7 kinase (Rochaix, 2011, 2014). The Cyt b6/f complex of UWO 241 exhibits a unique cytochrome f (Cyt f) that is 7 kD smaller than the expected molecular mass of 41 kD exhibited by C. reinhardtii based on SDS-PAGE (Morgan-Kiss et al., 2006; Gudynaite-Savitch et al., 2006, 2007). No other differences in the structure and composition of the Cyt b6/f complex are apparent. Sequencing of the entire Cytochrome f gene (petA) from UWO 241 indicated that the amino acid sequence of Cyt f from UWO 241 exhibited 79% identity to that of C. reinhardtii. Through domain swapping between petA of UWO 241 and that of C. reinhardtii and subsequent transformation of a ΔpetA mutant of C. reinhardtii with the chimeric gene constructs, we reported that the apparent differences in molecular masses observed for petA in UWO 241 are due to differences in the amino acid sequences of the small domain of Cyt f. However, complementation of the ΔpetA mutant of C. reinhardtii with the entire petA from either UWO 241 or C. reinhardtii completely restored the capacity for state transitions in the ΔpetA mutant. Thus, we concluded that the changes in the amino acid sequence of the small domain of Cyt f of UWO 241 cannot account for the inability of UWO 241 to undergo state transitions (Gudynaite-Savitch et al., 2006, 2007).Since state transitions are inhibited in UWO 241, we hypothesized that the unique protein phosphorylation pattern observed in UWO 241 reflects an alternative mechanism to regulate energy flow within the photosynthetic apparatus of this Antarctic psychrophile. Thus, the objective of this research was to identify and characterize the high-molecular-mass polypeptides phosphorylated in the psychrophile, UWO 241. We report that UWO 241 preferentially phosphorylates specific polypeptides associated with a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex. The role of the PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex and its phosphorylation status in the regulation of PSI cyclic electron transport in UWO 241 are discussed. We suggest that adaptation of UWO 241 to its unique low-temperature and low-light environment favors the phosphorylation of a PSI-Cyt b6/f supercomplex to regulate PSI cyclic electron transport rather than the regulation of state transitions through the phosphorylation of LHCII proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Photoinhibition of Photosystem II in unicellular algae in vivo is accompanied by thylakoid membrane energization and generation of a relatively high pH as demonstrated by 14C-methylamine uptake in intact cells. Presence of ammonium ions in the medium causes extensive swelling of the thylakoid membranes in photoinhibited Chlamydomonas reinhardtii but not in Scenedesmus obliquus wild type and LF-1 mutant cells. The rise in pH and the related thylakoid swelling do not occur at light intensities which do not induce photoinhibition. The rise in pH and membrane energization are not induced by photoinhibitory light in C. reinhardtii mutant cells possessing an active Photosystem II but lacking cytochrome b6/f, plastocyanin or Photosystem I activity and thus being unable to perform cyclic electron flow around Photosystem I. In these mutants the light-induced turnover of the D1 protein of Reaction Center II is considerably reduced. The high light-dependent rise in pH is induced in the LF-1 mutant of Scenedesmus which can not oxidize water but otherwise possesses an active Reaction Center II indicating that PS II-linear electron flow activity and reduction of plastoquinone are not required for this process. Based on these results we conclude that photoinhibition of Photosystem II activates cyclic electron flow around Photosystem I which is responsible for the high membrane energization and pH rise in cells exposed to excessive light intensities.Abbreviations cyt b6/f cytochrome b6/f - Diuron 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1 dimethyl urea - QB the secondary quinone acceptor of reaction center II - DNP 2,4,Dinitrophenol - FCCP carbonyl cyanide trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

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