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1.
O. Machold  A. Meister 《BBA》1979,546(3):472-480
Thylakoids of Vicia faba chloroplasts disaggregated by sodium dodecyl sulfate were separated by means of different electrophoretic systems. Under the conditions of a high resolving gel system the chlorophyll containing zone previously termed chlorophyll-protein complex II or light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein was found to be inhomogeneous. It represents a mixture of two distinct chlorophyll-proteins characterized by different spectral properties and different apoproteins. One chlorophyll-protein exhibits a chlorophyll ab ratio of 0.9 and is associated with polypeptides of 24 000 and 23 000 daltons. The 24 000 dalton band is proved to bind chlorophyll and has a light-harvesting function. The function of the 23 000 dalton band is unknown. The second chlorophyll-protein has a chlorophyll ab ratio of 2.1 and an additional absorption maximum in the position of 637 nm. It is associated with only one polypeptide which has an apparent molecular weight of 23 000. The two 23 000 dalton polypeptides occurring in both complexes are not identical.  相似文献   

2.
Large two-dimensional crystals of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHC-II) from the photosynthetic membrane of pea chloroplasts were grown by a new method from detergent solution. The structure of these crystals was examined by electron crystallography, using three different media to preserve high-resolution detail: vitrified water, glucose and tannin. The crystals diffracted electrons to at least 3.2 A resolution in all three media. R-factors between the three data sets of electron diffraction amplitudes ranged from 6.4% to 14.3%. Fourier difference maps were generated and compared to a projection map of the complex at 3.4 A resolution. No significant differences were found, proving that all three media preserved the native structure of LHC-II at high resolution. The probability of recording high-quality electron diffraction patterns with tannin was 90%. With glucose and water this probability was lower by a factor of 10 to 20, suggesting that tannin may be preferable as a preserving medium for sensitive biological specimens.  相似文献   

3.
A procedure for purifying both light-harvesting chlorophylla/b-protein and photosystem I chlorophyll -protein from digitoninextracts of spinach chloroplasts is described. This procedureuses isoelectrofocusing on Ampholine at the last step and permitsisolating all of the chlorophyll-proteins from the same extractin a better yield and a highly pure state. The purified light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein whichhas an isoelectric point (pi) of 4.35 (?0.1) and a single polypeptideof 24 kilodaltons (kD), shows slightly higher chlorophyll a/Aratio of 1.35 than the values reported for the preparationsobtained by anionic detergents. This chlorophyll-protein exhibitsa markedly high and sharp fluorescence band at 681 nm at 77?Kwhich is not found on the chloroplast emission spectrum. Photosystem I chlorophyll a-protein focuses on Ampholine intotwo bands with pi values of 4.75 (?0.1) and 4.80 (?0.1). Thesetwo fractions show the same absorption spectra (maximum at 678nm at room temperature) and emission spectra (maximum at 734nm at 77?K) and have the same constituent polypeptides: onelarge band at 55–64 kD and six minor bands (21.5, 20,19, 18, 16 and 15 kD). The polypeptide composition and the P-700to chlorophyll a ratio (1 to ca. 80) of this preparation arevery similar to those of the photosystem I reaction center preparationobtained from Swiss chard chloroplasts by Bengis and Nelson(8). (Received October 31, 1978; )  相似文献   

4.
By analyzing the steady state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, the internal motions of chlorophyll a of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHCII) were characterized in a dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) liposome. Corresponding to the thermotropic phase of the membrane, chlorophyll a showed an unique internal motion in LHCII. At the gel phase, two motional components, one fast and the other slow, were observed, which would originate in the heterogeneity of the mutual orientation and the binding site of the chlorophyll a in LHCII. Interestingly, the faster motion was suppressed and only the slower segmental rotation with the larger motional amplitude was allowed on the phase transition to a liquid crystalline phase.  相似文献   

5.
The light-induced decline of chlorophyll a fluorescence from a peak (P) to a low stationary level (S) in intact, physiologically active isolated chloroplasts and in intact Chlorella cells is shown to be predominantly composed of two components: (1) fluorescence quenching by partial reoxidation of the quencher Q, the primary acceptor of Photosystem II and (2) energy-dependent fluorescence quenching related to the photoinduced acidification of the intrathylakoid space. These two mechanisms of fluorescence quenching can be distinguished by the different kinetics of the relaxation of quenching observed upon addition of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). The relaxation of quenching by addition of DCMU is biphasic. The fast phase with a half-time of about 1 s is attributed to the reversal of Q-dependent quenching. The slow phase with a half-time of about 15 s in chloroplasts and 5 s in Chlorella cells is ascribed to relaxation of energy-dependent quenching. As shown by fluorescence spectroscopy at 77 K, the energy-dependent fluorescence quenching essentially is not caused by increased transfer of excitation energy to Photosystem I. By analyzing the energy- and Q-dependent components of quenching, information on the energy state of the thylakoid membranes and on the redox state of Q under various physiological conditions is obtained.  相似文献   

6.
Three forms of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complexes of photosystem II (LHC II) were isolated from the thylakoid membranes of Dunaliella salina grown under different irradiance conditions. Cells grown under a low intensity light condition (80 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1)) contained one form of LHC II, LHC-L. Two other forms of LHC II, LHC-H1 and LHC-H2, were separated from the cells grown under a high intensity light condition (1,500 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1)). LHC-L and LHC-H1 showed an apparent particle size of 310 kDa and contained four polypeptides of 31, 30, 29 and 28 kDa. LHC-H2, with a particle size of 110 kDa, consisted of 30 and 28 kDa polypeptides. LHC-L contained 7.5 molecules of Chl a, 3.2 of Chl b and 2.1 of lutein per polypeptide, analogous to the content in higher plants. LHC-H1, with 5.6 molecules of Chl a, 2.5 of Chl b and 1.8 of lutein per polypeptide was similar to that in the green alga Bryopsis maxima. LHC-L and LHC-H1 maintained high efficiency energy transfer from Chl b and lutein to Chl a molecules. LHC-H2 showed a high Chl a/b ratio of 7.5 and contained 3.4 molecules of Chl a, 0.5 of Chl b and 1.4 of lutein per polypeptide. Chl b and lutein could not completely transfer the excitation energy to Chl a in LHC-H2.  相似文献   

7.
Two forms of three-dimensional crystals of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex from pea have been obtained. Crystals of one form grew as hexagonal plates measuring up to 150 micron across and 2 to 3 micron in thickness. Electron diffraction patterns of thin hexagonal plates showed sharp reflections to a resolution of 3.7 A on a hexagonal reciprocal lattice. The unit cell in projection (a = 127.0 A) and the symmetry of the diffraction pattern (6 mm) suggested that the hexagonal plates were highly ordered stacks of two-dimensional crystals suitable for structure analysis by electron microscopy and image processing. Crystals of a second form grew as dark green octahedra measuring roughly 0.5 mm across. Low-resolution X-ray diffraction patterns suggested a large cubic unit cell (a = 390 A). SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of single octahedral crystals showed the same polypeptide composition as the starting solution, one major band at 24,000 apparent molecular weight and two satellite bands of 23,000 and 23,500 apparent molecular weight.  相似文献   

8.
The major light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b complexes of photosystem II (LHCIIb) play important roles in energy balance of thylakoid membrane. They harvest solar energy, transfer the energy to the reaction center under normal light condition and dissipate excess excitation energy under strong light condition. Many bamboo species could grow very fast even under extremely changing light conditions. In order to explain whether LHCIIb in bamboo contributes to this specific characteristic, the spectroscopic features, the capacity of forming homotrimers and structural stabilities of different isoforms (Lhcb1-3) were investigated. The apoproteins of the three isoforms of LHCIIb in bamboo are overexpressed in vitro and successfully refolded with thylakoid pigments. The sequences of Lhcb1 and Lhcb2 are similar and they are capable of forming homotrimer, while Lhcb3 lacks 10 residues in the N terminus and can not form the homotrimeric structure. The pigment stoichiometries, spectroscopic characteristics, thermo- and photostabilities of different reconstituted Lhcbs reveal that Lhcb3 differs strongly from Lhcb1 and Lhcb2. Lhcb3 possesses the lowest Qy transition energy and the highest thermostability. Lhcb2 is the most stable monomer under strong illumination among all the isoforms. These results suggest that in spite of small differences, different Lhcb isoforms in bamboo possess similar characteristics as those in other higher plants.  相似文献   

9.
The major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (Lhcb1,2) of photosystem II is inserted into the thylakoid via the signal recognition particle dependent pathway. However, the mechanism by which the protein enters the membrane is at this time unknown. In order to define some topographical restrictions for this process, we constructed several recombinant derivatives of Lhcb1 carrying hexahistidine tags at either protein terminus or in the stromal loop domain. Additionally, green fluorescent protein (GFP) was fused to either terminus. None of the modifications significantly impair the pigment-binding properties of the protein in the in vitro reconstitution of LHCII. With the exception of the C-terminal GFP fusion, all mutants stably insert into isolated thylakoids in the absence of Ni2+ ions. The addition of low concentrations of Ni2+ ions abolishes the thylakoid insertion of C-terminally His-tagged mutants whereas the other His-tagged proteins fail to insert only at higher Ni2+ concentrations. The C-terminus of Lhcb1 must cross the membrane during protein insertion whereas the other sites of Lhcb1 modification are positioned on the stromal side of LHCII. We conclude that a Ni2+-complexed His tag and fusion to GFP inhibit translocation of the protein C-terminus across the thylakoid. Our observations indicate that the N-terminal and stromal domain of Lhcb1 need not traverse the thylakoid during protein insertion and are consistent with a loop mechanism in which only the C-terminus and the lumenal loop of Lhcb1 are translocated across the thylakoid.  相似文献   

10.
《FEBS letters》1985,188(1):21-26
Monoclonal antibodies have been raised against the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHC) of pea and characterised using the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (with purified LHC or intact thylokoids) or immunoblotting using chloroplast proteins transferred from SDS-PAGE gels. Several clones showed strong binding to the two major polypeptides of pea LHC, even after trypsin or proteinase K treatment. The two antibodies with the most efficient binding to pea LHC were shown to cross-react with polypeptides from green algae and higher plants; indicating sequential similarities and the presence of several closely related polypeptides between phylogenetically distant species.  相似文献   

11.
The major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein (LHCP) of higher plant chloroplasts is a nuclearencoded, integral thylakoid membrane protein that binds photosynthetic pigments and occurs in situ in an oligomeric form. We have previously examined structural and functional domains of the mature apoprotein by use of mutant LHCPs and in vitro assays for uptake and insertion. Results presented here demonstrate the effects of several mutations in the amino terminal domain of the mature apoprotein. Deletion of amino acid residues 12–58 greatly affected import into chloroplasts, while deletion or alteration of the hydrophobic region E65VIHARWAM73 led to rapid degradation of the mutant LHCP. We suggest that this amino-proximal region is essential for the stability of the LHCP and its ability to integrate into the thylakoid membranes. A structural/functional relationship of this region to a previously examined hydrophobic carboxy-proximal domain [Kohorn and Tobin (1989), The Plant Cell 1, 159–166] is proposed.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin faction V - ELIPs early light-inducible proteins - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein - LHC IIb light-harvesting complex associated with Photosystem II - pLHCP precursor to LHCP - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-biphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-poly-acrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

12.
Isolated chloroplasts of Acetabularia incorporate radioactive amino acids into more than 30 polypeptides in the light, including the apoprotein of the P700-chlorophyll a protein complex, the reaction centre core of photosystem I [Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 609. 107-120 (1980)]. In this paper it is shown that the apoproteins of the two minor chlorophyll a complexes, thought to be part of photosystem II reaction centre core, are also synthesized by isolated chloroplasts. Furthermore, they are integrated correctly into the thylakoid membrane in the absence of any cytoplasmic contribution, such that they can be isolated as chlorophyll-protein complexes indistinguishable from those already in the membrane. In contrast, the minor chlorophyll a + b complex 'CP 29' [Camm, E. L. and Green, B. R. (1980) Plant Physiol. 66, 428-432] and its dimers are not synthesized by isolated chloroplasts. In this they resemble the other chlorophyll a + b complex, the light-harvesting complex (LHC). It may be significant that the LHC, which is not essential for photosynthetic activity, is under nuclear control, while the reaction centre polypeptides, cytochrome b559, and cytochrome f, are synthesized on chloroplast ribosomes.  相似文献   

13.
In order to study the coordinate accumulation of chlorophyll (Chl) and apoproteins of Chl-protein complexes (CPs) during chloroplast development, we examined changes in the accumulation of the apoproteins in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves when the rate of Chl synthesis was altered by feeding 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), a precursor of Chl biosynthesis. Pretreatment with ALA increased the accumulation of Chl a and Chl b 1.5- and 2.3-fold, respectively, after 12 cycles of intermittent light (2 min light followed by 28 min darkness). Apoproteins of the light-harvesting Chl a/b-protein complex of photosystem II (LHCII) were increased 2.4-fold with ALA treatment. However, apoproteins of the P700-Chl a-protein complex (CP1) and the 43-kDa apoprotein of a Chl a-protein complex of photosystem II (CPa) were not increased by ALA application. With respect to CPs themselves, LHCII was increased when Chl synthesis was raised by ALA feeding, whereas CP1 exhibited no remarkable increase. These results indicate that LHCII serves a role in maintaining the stoichiometry of Chl to apoproteins by acting as a temporary pool for Chl molecules.Abbreviations ALA 5-aminolevulinic acid - Chl chlorophyll - CP chlorophyll-protein complex - CPa chlorophyll a-protein complex of PSII - CP1 P700-chlorophyll a-protein complex - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - LHCII light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex of PSII This work was supported by the Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (04304004) from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Japan.  相似文献   

14.
The multiple roles of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complexes in the structure and function of Arabidopsis chloroplasts were investigated using two chlorophyll b-less mutants grown under metal halide lamps with a significant far-red component. In ch1-3, all six light-harvesting proteins of photosystem (PS) II were greatly decreased; in ch1-3lhcb5, Lhcb5 was completely absent while the other five proteins were further decreased. The thylakoids of ch1-3 were less negatively-charged than the wild type, and those of ch1-3lhcb5 were even less so. Despite the expected weaker electrostatic repulsion, however, thylakoids in leaves of the mutants were not well stacked, an effect we attribute to lower van der Waals attraction, lower electrostatic attraction between opposite charges, and the absence or instability of PSII supercomplexes and peripheral light-harvesting trimers. The quantum yield of oxygen evolution in leaves decreased from 0.109 (wild type) to 0.087 (ch1-3) and 0.081 (ch1-3lhcb5) O2 (photon absorbed)− 1; we attribute this decrease to an excessive spillover from PSII to PSI, a limited PSII antenna, and increased light-independent thermal dissipation in PSII in the mutants. Destabilization of the donor side of PSII, indicated by slower electron donation to the redox-active tyrosine YZ in ch1-3, probably enhanced PSII susceptibility to photoinactivation, increased the non-functional PSII complexes in vivo, and further inactivated PSII complexes in vitro. The evolution of chlorophyll b-containing chloroplasts seems to fine-tune oxygenic photosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Displacement of particles from the purified light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein aggregate (LHC) was studied in magnetic fields of various strengths (0 to 1.6 T) by polarized fluorescence measurements. Macromolecular aggregates of LHC have a considerable magnetic susceptibility which enables the particles to rotate and align with their nematic axes parallel with H. As LHC is embedded in a transmembrane direction thylakoids should align perpendicular to H, the mode of alignment experimentally observed in thylakoids. The value of the magnetic susceptibility could be estimated by relating it to the integral susceptibility of the chlorophyll molecules in LHC. The fitting of this value with the field strength dependency of the fluorescence polarization ratio (FP) revealed a relationship between the LHC content of various photosynthetic membranes and their capacity for alignment, which suggested that LHC might be the torque ordering chloroplasts in a magnetic field.Abbreviations LHC light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein - FP fluorescence polarization ratio, Iz/Iy  相似文献   

16.
A barley mutant lacking chlorophyll b and the pigmented light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein of photo-system 2 is shown by several criteria to contain functional apoproteins of the light-harvesting complex. 1. Electrophoretic comparison of thylakoid polypeptide patterns, and the effects of trypsin treatment on these, suggests that the mutant contains several polypeptides equivalent in mobility to those of the wild-type complex. 2. An antibody monospecific for the light-harvesting complex agglutinated both wild-type and mutant thylakoids. 3. 'Western blot' immunoelectrophoretic analysis indicated that of four distinct subunits of the light-harvesting complex in the wild-type thylakoids, three are detectable in the mutant. 4. As in wild-type lamellae at least one of the light-harvesting complex polypeptides is phosphorylated by the endogenous protein kinase. The results are considered in terms of a general role for the light-harvesting complex polypeptides in membrane appression and the regulation of excitation energy distribution within thylakoids.  相似文献   

17.
The divalent-cation-specific ionophore A23187 is used to define two components of the slow fluorescence quenching of type a spinach chloroplasts: ionophore-reversible and ionophore-resistant quenching. Ionophore-reversible quenching predominates at relatively low light intensities and approaches saturation as light levels are increased. It is sensitive to uncouplers and to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and is dark reversible. At high light intensities the bulk (greater than 80%) of slow fluorescence quenching is ionophore-resistant. Ionophore-resistant quenching is stimulated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) at pH 7.6 and by both CCCP and methylamine at pH 9.0. It is insensitive to DCMU and is not reversed in subsequent darkness. Taken together, the two components account for all quenching observed in Type A chloroplasts. Ionophore-reversible quenching is identified with the Mg2+-mediated fluorescence quenching described by Krause (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1974) 333, 301-313) and by Barber and Telfer (in Membrane Transport in Plants (Dainty, J., AND Zimmermann, U., eds.), pp. 281-288, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1974). Ionophore-resistant quenching, a first-order process requiring high light, resembles the quenching reported by Jennings et al. (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1976) 423, 264-274). The resolution of the fluorescence quenching phenomenon into two distinct components reconciles the apparently contradictory observations of these earlier investigations.  相似文献   

18.
The divalent-cation-specific ionophore A23187 is used to define two components of the slow fluorescence quenching of type a spinach chloroplasts: ionophore-reversible and ionophore-resistant quenching. Ionophore-reversible quenching predominates at relatively low light intensities and approaches saturation as light levels are increased. It is sensitive to uncouplers and to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and is dark reversible. At high light intensities the bulk (> 80%) of slow fluorescence quenching is ionophore-resistant. Ionophore-resistant quenching is stimulated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) at pH 7.6 and by both CCCP and methylamine at pH 9.0. It is insensitive to DCMU and is not reversed in subsequent darkness. Taken together, the two components account for all quenching observed in Type A chloroplasts.Ionophore-reversible quenching is identified with the Mg2+-mediated fluorescence quenching described by Krause (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1974) 333, 301–313) and by Barber and Telfer (in Membrane Transport in Plants (Dainty, J., and Zimmermann, U., eds.), pp. 281–288, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1974). Ionophore-resistant quenching, a first-order process requiring high light, resembles the quenching reported by Jennings et al. (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1976) 423, 264–274).The resolution of the fluorescence quenching phenomenon into two distinct components reconciles the apparently contradictory observations of these earlier investigations.  相似文献   

19.
《FEBS letters》1987,224(2):343-347
Isolated LHCII from spinach has been solubilized and fractionated by non-denaturing isoelectric focusing to yield two subpopulations with different polypeptide but equal chlorophyll composition. One LHCII subpopulation contains only a 27 kDa polypeptide while the other contains the 27 and 25 kDa polypeptides in about equal amounts. The polypeptide patterns of the two subpopulations closely correspond to those suggested previously for the inner LHCII and peripheral LHCII, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
LHC II isolated from carnation leaves has been solubilized and resolved by a newly developed, vertical-bed non-denaturing isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide slab gels to yield three trimeric subcomplexes focusing at pH 4.52, 4.42 and 4.37 (designated a, b and c, respectively), comprising approximately 38%, 24% and 38% of the chlorophyll. The spectroscopic data demonstrated a close similarity among LHC II subcomplexes concerning their chlorophyll content and organization. The most alkaline and the most acidic subcomplex contained the 27 kDa polypeptide of LHC II while the intermediate pI fraction contained both LHC II polypeptides, i.e. 27 kDa and 26 kDa ones associated at 2:1 stoichiometry. The 27 kDa polypeptide could be resolved by denaturing isoelectrofocusing into 10 pI molecular isoforms covering 5.90–4.20 pH range. Three of the isoforms were found in the subcomplexes a and b and eight in the subcomplex c. The 26 kDa polypeptide comprised the unique pI molecular isoform focusing at pH 5.61.Abbreviations CBB G-250 Coomassie Brilliant Blue G-250 - chl chlorophyll - DM n-dodecyl--d-maltoside - EDTA ethylendiaminotetraacetic acid - IEF isoelectric focusing - LHC II the main light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex of Photosystem II - LHCP II apoprotein of the main light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex of Photosystem II - NP-40 polyethyleneglycol-p-isooctylphenyl ether - pI isoelectric point - OG octyl--d-glucopyranoside - PS II Photosystem II - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecylsulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TCA trichlorooacetic acid  相似文献   

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