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1.
Light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complexes were isolated from the higher plant Sinapis alba, the green alga Chlorella fusca, and the prasinophycean alga Mantoniella squamata by mild gel electrophoresis. The energy transfer from chlorophyll b and the accessory xanthophyll was measured by means of fluoresence spectroscopy at 77 K. The pigment composition of the isolated antenna complexes was determined by high performance liquid chromatography in order to calculate the number of light absorbing molecules per chlorophyll a in the different light-harvesting complexes. These results were complemented by the quantitation of the pigments in total thylakoids as well as in the different electrophoretic fractions. On the basis of these data the in vivo ratios of xanthophylls per chlorophyll a could be estimated. The results show that the light-harvesting complexes from Chlorella and from Sinapis exhibit identical ratios of total xanthophylls per chlorophyll a. By contrast, in the prasinophycean alga Mantoniella, the light-harvesting complex markedly differs from the other chlorophyll b containing proteins. It contains, in addition to neoxanthin and violaxanthin, high amounts of prasinoxanthin and its epoxide, which contribute significantly to light absorption. The concentration of chlorophyll b in the complex is very much higher in the antenna of Mantoniella than in those of Chlorella and Sinapis. Furthermore, it must be emphasized that in addition to chlorophyll b, a third chlorophyll species acts in the energy transfer to chlorophyll a. This chlorophyll c-like pigment is found to be present in a concentration which improves very efficiently the absorption in blue light. In light of these results it can be concluded that the absorption cross section in Mantoniella is higher not only because of an enhanced number of light-harvesting particles in the membrane, but also because of a higher ratio of accessory pigments to chlorophyll a.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - FP Free Pigments - HPLC High Performance Liquid Chromatography - LHC Light-harvesting Chlorophyll protein complex - PAGE Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis - PS Photosystem  相似文献   

2.
The assembly of the photosynthetic apparatus was studied during the first six days of development of Fucus serratus L. embryos. HPLC analysis revealed that oospheres and zygotes contain the same photosynthetic pigments (i.e., chlorophyll a, chlorophyll c, fucoxanthin, violaxanthin, and β-carotene) as fully developed thalli. Total pigment amount increased after fertilization, mainly due to an active synthesis of Chl a and fucoxanthin. Spectral modifications revealing the progressive integration of Chl a and Chl c in the photosynthetic units are described. In particular, a distinct emission at 705 nm, reflecting the accumulation of LHC I, was clearly detected. The emission bands at 705 nm and 725 nm were characterized by 77 K excitation fluorescence measurements. Their spectra differed by the presence of a large band at approximately 550 nm due to fucoxanthin in the excitation spectrum of F705 nm. Room temperature variable fluorescence was first observed 30 h after fertilization indicating a functional Photosystem II electron transfer at this developmental stage. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
C. Wilhelm  I. Wiedemann  M. May 《Planta》1990,180(3):456-457
The major light-harvesting complexes from Mantoniella squamata (Prasinophyceae) and from Chlorella fusca (Chlorophyceae) were analyzed with respect to polypeptide composition and pigmentation. It was found that the polypeptides of Mantoniella are smaller than those of Chlorella and bind twice the amount of pigment. We assume that the amount of pigment per polypeptide is of ecological as well as of taxonomical importance.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - LHC light-harvesting complex - Xan xanthophyll We thank the support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.  相似文献   

4.
The Porphyridium cruentum light harvesting complex (LHC) binds Chl a, zeaxanthin and -carotene and comprises at least 6 polypeptides of a multigene family. We describe the first in vitro reconstitution of a red algal light-harvesting protein (LHCaR1) with Chl a/carotenoid extracts from P. cruentum. The reconstituted pigment complex (rLHCaR1) is spectrally similar to the native LHC I, with an absorption maximum at 670 nm, a 77 K fluorescence emission peak at 677 nm (ex. 440 nm), and similar circular dichroism spectra. Molar ratios of 4.0 zeaxanthin, 0.3 -carotene and 8.2 Chl a per polypeptide for rLHCaR1 are similar to those of the native LHC I complex (3.1 zeaxanthin, 0.5 -carotene, 8.5 Chl a). The binding of 8 Chl a molecules per apoprotein is consistent with 8 putative Chl-binding sites in the predicted transmembrane helices of LHCaR1. Two of the putative Chl a binding sites (helix 2) in LHCaR1 were assigned to Chl b in Chl a/b-binding (CAB) LHC II [Kühlbrandt et al. (1994) Nature 367: 614–21]. This suggests either that discrimination for binding of Chl a or Chl b is not very specific at these sites or that specificity of binding sites evolved separately in CAB proteins. LHCaR1 can be reconstituted with varying ratios of carotenoids, consistent with our previous observation that the carotenoid to Chl ratio is substantially higher in P. cruentum grown under high irradiance. Also notable is that zeaxanthin does not act as an accessory light-harvesting pigment, even though it is highly likely that it occupies the position assigned to lutein in the CAB LHCs.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
Phytoplankton pigment signatures from a cruise in 2005 are herein presented and used as a chemotaxonomic tool for phytoplankton diversity in the Svalbard marine archipelago. Studies from these waters have until recently reported only a few groups of phytoplankton, and while this paper is the first to show that the diversity around Svalbard includes all major phytoplankton pigment groups, the results are seen in relation to other similar studies from the Arctic. We present two potentially important marker pigments: prasinoxanthin, originating from prasinophytes, and gyroxanthin-diester, possibly originating from the temperate- and bloom-forming coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi. Pigment identification by HPLC revealed a significant amount of Chlorophyll b-containing chlorophyceae, euglenophyceae and prasinophyceae. Prasinoxanthin was present at 50% of the examined stations, typically at Chl a maximum (15–25 m depth), in both Atlantic and Arctic water masses. Gyroxanthin-diester, in contrast to prasinoxanthin, was found only in Atlantic water masses and at low concentrations. Our data may be important for the identification and verification of remotely sensed images of different pigment groups of phytoplankton and their corresponding biomass, typically estimated from Chl a. Remotely sensed presence of coccoliths, indicating E. huxleyi at sea surface, is discussed in relation to water masses and pigment signatures at sea surface and Chl a maximum depths.  相似文献   

6.
The recent high-resolution crystal structure of LHC II [Liu et al. (2004) Nature 428: 287–292] makes possible an unprecedented insight into the stereochemical features of how chlorophylls (Chl)s are bound. The diastereotopic ligation generates four structurally different pigment types, two Chl a and two Chl b, which are distinguished not only by the groups in the 7-position (methyl in Chl a and formyl in Chl b) but also by the face of the tetrapyrrole to which the fifth magnesium ligand is bound. Within a LHC II monomer, out of the eight Chl a six have a ‚normal’ α-coordination and two are β-coordinated while out of the six Chl b only one has the ‚special’ β-coordination. In Photosystem I where a more meaningful statistical analysis could be made, out of 96 Chl a only 14 are β-coordinated, again indicating a preference for the ‚normal’ α-coordination [Balaban et al. (2002) Biochim Biophys Acta Bioenerget 1556: 197–207; Oba and Tamiaki (2002a) Photosynth Res 74: 1–10]. Astonishingly, all the special β-Chls are part of the stromal ring of Chls within the LHC II trimers and occupy key positions for the excitation energy transfer. Sequential energy traps are engineered with one hetero- and three homo-dimers. A careful pairing of carotenoids with the special β-Chls, which could quench their triplet states efficiently, implies a functional relevance of this diastereotopic ligation.  相似文献   

7.
The new genus Pycnococcus Guillard is based on several clones from the western North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico. The type and only described species, Pycnococcus provasolii Guillard, sp. nov., is typified by clone Ω48-23 from the North Atlantic. Cells of Pycnococcus provasolii are solitary, spherical, 1.5–4.0 μm in diameter, have a resistant cell wall lacking sporopollenin, and have the ultrastructural characteristics of green algae. With the light microscope they are scarcely distinguishable from cells of other coccoid planktonic organisms. In pigmentation P. provasolii resembles Micromonas pusilla, Mantoniella squamata, and Mamiella gilva in having chl a, much chl b, Mg 2,4-divinylphaeoporphyrin a5 monomethyl ester (presumably), and prasinoxanthin as a major xanthophyll. The pyrenoid of P. provasolii has a cytoplasmic channel, which is unique among species closely related to it. Flagellates, occurring rarely in culture, are similar to but distinguishable from known Pedinomonas species by size and shape. Pycnococcus provasolii is referred to the new family Pycnococcaceae Guillard, in the order Mamiellales of the class Micromonadophyceae (Chlorophyta). Clones of Pycnococcus provasolii are oceanic in nutritional characteristics, require only vitamin B12 in culture, and are well adapted to growth under blue or blue-violet light of low intensity.  相似文献   

8.
Choudhury  N.K.  Behera  R.K. 《Photosynthetica》2001,39(4):481-488
Exposure of plants to irradiation, in excess to saturate photosynthesis, leads to reduction in photosynthetic capacity without any change in bulk pigment content. This effect is known as photoinhibition. Photoinhibition is followed by destruction of carotenoids (Cars), bleaching of chlorophylls (Chls), and increased lipid peroxidation due to formation of reactive oxygen species if the excess irradiance exposure continues. Photoinhibition of photosystem 2 (PS2) in vivo is often a photoprotective strategy rather than a damaging process. For sustainable maintenance of chloroplast function under high irradiance, the plants develop various photoprotective strategies. Cars perform essential photoprotective roles in chloroplasts by quenching the triplet Chl and scavenging singlet oxygen and other reactive oxygen species. Recently photoprotective role of xanthophylls (zeaxanthin) for dissipation of excess excitation energy under irradiance stress has been emphasised. The inter-conversion of violaxanthin (Vx) into zeaxanthin (Zx) in the light-harvesting complexes (LHC) serves to regulate photon harvesting and subsequent energy dissipation. De-epoxidation of Vx to Zx leads to changes in structure and properties of these xanthophylls which brings about significant structural changes in the LHC complex. This ultimately results in (1) direct quenching of Chl fluorescence by singlet-singlet energy transfer from Chl to Zx, (2) trans-thylakoid membrane mediated, pH-dependent indirect quenching of Chl fluorescence. Apart from these, other processes such as early light-inducible proteins, D1 turnover, and several enzymatic defence mechanisms, operate in the chloroplasts, either for tolerance or to neutralise the harmful effect of high irradiance.  相似文献   

9.
Long-term (30 d) effects of 100, 200, 300, and 400 mM NaCl on photosystem 2 (PS 2)-mediated electron transport activity and content of D1 protein in the thylakoid membranes of chrysanthemum (Dendranthema grandiflorum) cultured in vitro at low irradiance 20 μmol(photon) m−2 s−1 were investigated. 100 mM NaCl increased contents of chlorophylls (Chl) a and b, carotenoids (Car; xanthophylls + carotenes), and the ratio of Chl a/b, and Car/Chl a+b. However, further increase in NaCl concentration led to the significant reduction in the contents of Chl a, and Chl b, and increase in the ratio of Chl a/b and Car/Chl a+b. NaCl treatment decreased the PS 2-mediated electron transport activity and contents of various thylakoid membrane polypeptides including D1 protein.  相似文献   

10.

Background  

Light harvesting complex (LHC) proteins function in photosynthesis by binding chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoid molecules that absorb light and transfer the energy to the reaction center Chl of the photosystem. Most research has focused on LHCs of plants and chlorophytes that bind Chl a and b and extensive work on these proteins has uncovered a diversity of biochemical functions, expression patterns and amino acid sequences. We focus here on a less-studied family of LHCs that typically bind Chl a and c, and that are widely distributed in Chl c-containing and other algae. Previous phylogenetic analyses of these proteins suggested that individual algal lineages possess proteins from one or two subfamilies, and that most subfamilies are characteristic of a particular algal lineage, but genome-scale datasets had revealed that some species have multiple different forms of the gene. Such observations also suggested that there might have been an important influence of endosymbiosis in the evolution of LHCs.  相似文献   

11.
Spectrophotometric and paper chromatographic analyses of the pigments in the phytoplankton were made from early spring till the end of summer in two small Dutch freshwater lakes. It was found that pigment diversity cannot be adequately estimated by MARGALEF'S pigment ratio nor by polychromatic spectrophotometric methods. The pigments detected with the paper chromatographic method were: chlorophyll-a, chlorophyll-b, chlorophyll-c, phaeophytin-a (traces), phaeophorbide-a, Mg-containing chlorophyll-derivatives, carotene, lutein, violaxanthin, neoxanthin (traces), fucoxanthin, diadinoxanthin, diatoxanthin (traces), peridinin and keto-carotenoids (traces). It is suggested to distinguish between a richness-component and an evenness-component of pigment diversity.  相似文献   

12.
Pigments were isolated from Mesostigma viride Lauterborn by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography and compared to standards from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang. and Bryopsis plumose (Huds.) Ag. M. viride possesses chlorophylls a and b, α and β-carotenes, and the xanthophylls siphonaxanthis, siphonein, neoxanthin, violaxanthin and echinenone. In addition, three unidentified xanthophylla were detected. Neither lutein nor zeaxanthin were detected. The pigment composition of M. viride was similar to that of B. plumosa which had chlorophylls a and b, ?- and α-carotenes, siphonaxanthin, siphonein, neoxanthin, violaxanthin, and two of the unidentified xanthophylls found in M. viride. The similarities in the pigments of Mesostigma and Bryopsis and other characters suggest that Mesostigma may be related to a flagellate ancestor of the Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

13.
The absorption (640–710 nm) and fluorescence emission (670–710 nm) spectra (77 K) of wild-type and Chl b-less, mutant, barley chloroplasts grown under either day or intermittent light were analysed by a RESOL curve-fitting program. The usual four major forms of Chl a at 662, 670, 678 and 684 nm were evident in all of the absorption spectra and three major components at 686, 693 and 704 nm in the emission spectra. A broad Chl a component band at 651 nm most likely exists in all chlorophyll spectra in vivo. The results show that the mutant lacks not only Chl b, but also the Chl a molecules which are bound to the light-harvesting, Chl a/b, protein complex of normal plants. It also appears that the absorption spectrum of this antenna complex is not modified appreciably by its isolation from thylakoid membranes.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DL daylight - ImL intermittent light - WT wildtype - LHC light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complex - S.E. standard error of the mean DBP-CIW No. 763.  相似文献   

14.

DMSO (dimethyl sulphoxide, (CH3)2SO) is an alternative solvent for spectroscopic assay of chlorophylls (Chls) but has mainly been used on Chl a & b organisms. Here, we develop algorithms for the estimation of Chl a, b & c1c2, and d in DMSO solvent. The common unicellular green alga Chlorella sp. (Chl a & b) is used as an example of an oxygenic photo-organism with Chl a as the primary photosynthetic pigment and Chl b as the accessory Chl. The cyanobacterium Synechococcus is used as an example of organisms containing only Chl a. The diatom Chaetoceros sp. is used as the representative Chl a & c1c2 organism. The unusual chlorobacterium Acaryochloris marina has Chl d & a. Algorithms for use on mixed phytoplankton and algal mats (Chl a, b & c) were also developed. The algorithms for DMSO solvent are compared to those developed for 90% acetone as the benchmark solvent. DMSO solvent offers the advantages of low volatility, low toxicity, low flammability, biodegradability, and ease of transport and is an effective extractant of chlorophylls. However, there appear to be significant storage problems with DMSO extracts of chlorophylls because of its high freezing point (+18.4°C) and probable breakdown in chlorophylls in DMSO over several days.

  相似文献   

15.
Light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-proteins of photosystem II(LHC II) were purified from thylakoid membranes of the greenalga, Bryopsis maxima. Extraction with digitonin did not solubilizechlorophylls (Chl) and carotenoids to any significant extent.Two forms of purified LHC II, P4 and P5, with respective apparentparticle sizes of 280 and 295 kDa, were obtained by sucrosedensity gradient centrifugation and column chromatography onDEAE-Toyopearl. P4 and P5 had similar spectral absorption at77 K with Chl a maxima at 674, 658 and 438 nm and Chl b maximaat 649 and 476 nm. Carotene was not present in P4 or P5. Fluorescenceexcitation spectra demonstrated that Chl b, siphonaxanthin andsiphonein can efficiently transfer absorbed light energy toChl a. P4 and P5 each contained two apoproteins of 28 and 32kDa, with similar but not identical amino acid compositions.P5 contained 6 molecules of Chl a, 8 of Chl b and 5 of xanthophyll(three molecules of siphonaxanthin and one each of siphoneinand neoxanthin) per polypeptide. (Received September 11, 1989; Accepted December 11, 1989)  相似文献   

16.
Electric field-induced absorption changes (electrochromism or Stark effect) of the light-harvesting PSII pigment-protein complexes LHCIIb, CP29, CP26 and CP24 were investigated. The results indicate the lack of strong intermolecular interactions in the chlorophyll a (Chl a) pools of all complexes. Characteristic features occur in the electronic spectrum of Chl b, which reflect the increased values of dipole moment and polarizability differences between the ground and excited states of interacting pigment systems. The strong Stark signal recorded for LHCIIb at 650-655 nm is much weaker in CP29, where it is replaced by a unique Stark band at 639 nm. Electrochromism of Chl b in CP26 and CP24 is significantly weaker but increased electrochromic parameters were also noticed for the Chl b transition at 650 nm. The spectra in the blue region are dominated by xanthophylls. The differences in Stark spectra of Chl b are linked to differences in pigment content and organization in individual complexes and point to the possibility of electron exchange interactions between energetically similar and closely spaced Chl b molecules.  相似文献   

17.
The coding regions for the N-domain, and full length peridinin–chlorophyll a apoprotein (full length PCP), were expressed in Escherichia coli. The apoproteins formed inclusion bodies from which the peptides could be released by hot buffer. Both the above constructs were reconstituted by addition of a total pigment extract from native PCP. After purification by ion exchange chromatography, the absorbance, fluorescence excitation and CD spectra resembled those of the native PCP. Energy transfer from peridinin to Chl a was restored and a specific fluorescence activity calculated which was ~86% of that of native PCP. Size exclusion analysis and CD spectra showed that the N-domain PCP dimerized on reconstitution. Chl a could be replaced by Chl b, 3-acetyl Chl a, Chl d and Bchl using the N-domain apo protein. The specific fluorescence activity was the same for constructs with Chl a, 3-acetyl Chl a, and Chl d but significantly reduced for those made with Chl b. Reconstitutions with mixtures of chlorophylls were also made with eg Chl b and Chl d and energy transfer from the higher energy Qy band to the lower was demonstrated.  相似文献   

18.
The light-harvesting complex (LHC) of higher plants isolated using Triton X-100 has been studied during its transformation into a monomeric form known as CPII. The change was accomplished by gradually increasing the concentration of the detergent, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Changes in the red spectral region of the absorption, circular dichroism (CD), and linear dichroism spectra occurring during this treatment have been observed at room temperature. According to a current hypothesis the main features of the visible region absorption and CD spectra of CPII can be explained reasonably successfully in terms of an exciton coupling among its chlorophyll (Chl) b molecules. We suggest that the spectral differences between the isolated LHC and the CPII may be understood basically in terms of an exciton coupling between the Chl b core of a given CPII unit and at least one of the Chla's of either the same or the adjacent CPII. We propose that this Chl a-Chl b coupling existing in LHC disappears upon segregation into CPII, probably as a result of a detergent-related overall rotation of the strongly coupled Chl b core which changes the relative orientations of the two types of pigments and thus the nature of their coupling.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - CD Circular dichroism - LD Linear dichroism - LHC Light-harvesting complex - SDS Sodium dodecyl sulfate - CPII A solubilized form of LHC obtained with SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis Dedicated to Prof. L.N.M. Duysens on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

19.
In addition to chlorophylls a and b, β-carotene, lutein, violaxanthin and neoxanthin, leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Virginia Gold) contain antheraxanthin in some harvests. In lower leaves, chlorophylls decreased more rapidly than carotenoids during senescence, but both types of pigment decreased at equal rates in upper leaves. The chlorophyll a:b ratio decreased only in post-mature leaves. Total carotenoid decreased with age, with the relative proportion of β-carotene increasing in lower leaves. Seasonal influences rather than age of leaf determines whether antheraxanthin is present. No esterified xanthophylls were found in senescent leaves.  相似文献   

20.

Background  

Assembly of stable light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) in the chloroplast of green algae and plants requires synthesis of chlorophyll (Chl) b, a reaction that involves oxygenation of the 7-methyl group of Chl a to a formyl group. This reaction uses molecular oxygen and is catalyzed by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO). The amino acid sequence of CAO predicts mononuclear iron and Rieske iron-sulfur centers in the protein. The mechanism of synthesis of Chl b and localization of this reaction in the chloroplast are essential steps toward understanding LHC assembly.  相似文献   

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