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1.
Vello Oja 《BBA》2004,1658(3):225-234
We describe a method of reductive titration of photosystem I (PSI) density in leaves by generating a known amount of electrons (e) in photosystem II (PSII) and measuring the resulting change in optical signal as these electrons arrive at pre-oxidized PSI. The method complements a recently published method of oxidative titration of PSI donor side e carriers P700, plastocyanin (PC) and cytochrome f by illuminating a darkened leaf with far-red light (FRL) [V. Oja, H. Eichelmann, R.B. Peterson, B. Rasulov, A. Laisk, Decyphering the 820 nm signal: redox state of donor side and quantum yield of photosystem I in leaves, Photosynth. Res. 78 (2003) 1-15], presenting a nondestructive way for the determination of PSI density in intact leaves. Experiments were carried out on leaves of birch (Betula pendula Roth) and several other species grown outdoors. Single-turnover flashes of different quantum dose were applied to leaves illuminated with FRL, and the FRL was shuttered off immediately after the flash. The number of e generated in PSII by the flash was measured as four times O2 evolution following the flash. Reduction of the pre-oxidized P700 and PC was followed as a change in leaf transmittance using a dual-wavelength detector ED P700DW (810 minus 950 nm, H. Walz, Effeltrich, Germany). The ED P700DW signal was deconvoluted into P700+ and PC+ components using the abovementioned oxidative titration method. The P700+ component was related to the absolute number of e that reduced the P700+ to calculate the extinction coefficient. The effective differential extinction coefficient of P700+ at 810-950 nm was 0.40±0.06 (S.D.)% of transmittance change per μmol P700+ m−2 or 17.6±2.4 mM−1 cm−1. The result shows that the scattering medium of the leaf effectively increases the extinction coefficient by about two times and its variation (±14% S.D.) is mainly caused by light-scattering properties of the leaf.  相似文献   

2.
The ultrafast (< 100 fs) conversion of delocalized exciton into charge-separated state between the primary donor P700 (bleaching at 705 nm) and the primary acceptor A0 (bleaching at 690 nm) in photosystem I (PS I) complexes from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was observed. The data were obtained by application of pump-probe technique with 20-fs low-energy pump pulses centered at 720 nm. The earliest absorbance changes (close to zero delay) with a bleaching at 690 nm are similar to the product of the absorption spectrum of PS I complex and the laser pulse spectrum, which represents the efficiency spectrum of the light absorption by PS I upon femtosecond excitation centered at 720 nm. During the first ∼ 60 fs the energy transfer from the chlorophyll (Chl) species bleaching at 690 nm to the Chl bleaching at 705 nm occurs, resulting in almost equal bleaching of the two forms with the formation of delocalized exciton between 690-nm and 705-nm Chls. Within the next ∼ 40 fs the formation of a new broad band centered at ∼ 660 nm (attributed to the appearance of Chl anion radical) is observed. This band decays with time constant simultaneously with an electron transfer to A1 (phylloquinone). The subtraction of kinetic difference absorption spectra of the closed (state P700+A0A1) PS I reaction center (RC) from that of the open (state P700A0A1) RC reveals the pure spectrum of the P700+A0 ion-radical pair. The experimental data were analyzed using a simple kinetic scheme: An* [(PA0)*A1 P+A0A1] P+A0A1, and a global fitting procedure based on the singular value decomposition analysis. The calculated kinetics of transitions between intermediate states and their spectra were similar to the kinetics recorded at 694 and 705 nm and the experimental spectra obtained by subtraction of the spectra of closed RCs from the spectra of open RCs. As a result, we found that the main events in RCs of PS I under our experimental conditions include very fast (< 100 fs) charge separation with the formation of the P700+A0A1 state in approximately one half of the RCs, the ∼ 5-ps energy transfer from antenna Chl* to P700A0A1 in the remaining RCs, and ∼ 25-ps formation of the secondary radical pair P700+A0A1.  相似文献   

3.
The light-dependent control of photosynthetic electron transport from plastoquinol (PQH2) through the cytochrome b6f complex (Cyt b6f) to plastocyanin (PC) and P700 (the donor pigment of Photosystem I, PSI) was investigated in laboratory-grown Helianthus annuus L., Nicotiana tabaccum L., and naturally-grown Solidago virgaurea L., Betula pendula Roth, and Tilia cordata P. Mill. leaves. Steady-state illumination was interrupted (light-dark transient) or a high-intensity 10 ms light pulse was applied to reduce PQ and oxidise PC and P700 (pulse-dark transient) and the following re-reduction of P700+ and PC+ was recorded as leaf transmission measured differentially at 810-950 nm. The signal was deconvoluted into PC+ and P700+ components by oxidative (far-red) titration (V. Oja et al., Photosynth. Res. 78 (2003) 1-15) and the PSI density was determined by reductive titration using single-turnover flashes (V. Oja et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1658 (2004) 225-234). These innovations allowed the definition of the full light response curves of electron transport rate through Cyt b6f to the PSI donors. A significant down-regulation of Cyt b6f maximum turnover rate was discovered at low light intensities, which relaxed at medium light intensities, and strengthened again at saturating irradiances. We explain the low-light regulation of Cyt b6f in terms of inactivation of carbon reduction cycle enzymes which increases flux resistance. Cyclic electron transport around PSI was measured as the difference between PSI electron transport (determined from the light-dark transient) and PSII electron transport determined from chlorophyll fluorescence. Cyclic e transport was not detected at limiting light intensities. At saturating light the cyclic electron transport was present in some, but not all, leaves. We explain variations in the magnitude of cyclic electron flow around PSI as resulting from the variable rate of non-photosynthetic ATP-consuming processes in the chloroplast, not as a principle process that corrects imbalances in ATP/NADPH stoichiometry during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Time-resolved fluorescence studies with a 3-ps temporal resolution were performed in order to: (1) test the recent model of the reversible primary charge separation in Photosystem I (Müller et al., 2003; Holwzwarth et al., 2005, 2006), and (2) to reconcile this model with a mechanism of excitation energy quenching by closed Photosystem I (with P700 pre-oxidized to P700+). For these purposes, we performed experiments using Photosystem I core samples isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wild type, and two mutants in which the methionine axial ligand to primary electron acceptor, A0, has been change to either histidine or serine. The temporal evolution of fluorescence spectra was recorded for each preparation under conditions where the “primary electron donor,” P700, was either neutral or chemically pre-oxidized to P700+. For all the preparations under study, and under neutral and oxidizing conditions, we observed multiexponential fluorescence decay with the major phases of ∼ 7 ps and ∼ 25 ps. The relative amplitudes and, to a minor extent the lifetimes, of these two phases were modulated by the redox state of P700 and by the mutations near A0: both pre-oxidation of P700 and mutations caused slight deceleration of the excited state decay. These results are consistent with a model in which P700 is not the primary electron donor, but rather a secondary electron donor, with the primary charge separation event occurring between the accessory chlorophyll, A, and A0. We assign the faster phase to the equilibration process between the excited state of the antenna/reaction center ensemble and the primary radical pair, and the slower phase to the secondary electron transfer reaction. The pre-oxidation of P700 shifts the equilibrium between the excited state and the primary radical pair towards the excited state. This shift is proposed to be induced by the presence of the positive charge on P700+. The same charge is proposed to be responsible for the fast A+A0 → AA0 charge recombination to the ground state and, in consequence, excitation quenching in closed reaction centers. Mutations of the A0 axial ligand shift the equilibrium in the same direction as pre-oxidation of P700 due to the up-shift of the free energy level of the state A+A0.  相似文献   

5.
V.M. Ramesh  Su Lin  Andrew N. Webber 《BBA》2007,1767(2):151-160
The recent crystal structure of photosystem I (PSI) from Thermosynechococcus elongatus shows two nearly symmetric branches of electron transfer cofactors including the primary electron donor, P700, and a sequence of electron acceptors, A, A0 and A1, bound to the PsaA and PsaB heterodimer. The central magnesium atoms of each of the putative primary electron acceptor chlorophylls, A0, are unusually coordinated by the sulfur atom of methionine 688 of PsaA and 668 of PsaB, respectively. We [Ramesh et al. (2004a) Biochemistry 43:1369-1375] have shown that the replacement of either methionine with histidine in the PSI of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii resulted in accumulation of A0 (in 300-ps time scale), suggesting that both the PsaA and PsaB branches are active. This is in contrast to cyanobacterial PSI where studies with methionine-to-leucine mutants show that electron transfer occurs predominantly along the PsaA branch. In this contribution we report that the change of methionine to either leucine or serine leads to a similar accumulation of A0 on both the PsaA and the PsaB branch of PSI from C. reinhardtii, as we reported earlier for histidine mutants. More importantly, we further demonstrate that for all the mutants under study, accumulation of A0 is transient, and that reoxidation of A0 occurs within 1-2 ns, two orders of magnitude slower than in wild type PSI, most likely via slow electron transfer to A1. This illustrates an indispensable role of methionine as an axial ligand to the primary acceptor A0 in optimizing the rate of charge stabilization in PSI. A simple energetic model for this reaction is proposed. Our findings support the model of equivalent electron transfer along both cofactor branches in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

6.
Short-and long-duration light curves were applied to four macroalgae (Ulva sp., Codium fragile, Ecklonia radiata and Lessonia variegata), and two microalgal species (Chlorella emersonii and Chaetoceros muellerii). With increasing light curve duration, the maximal relative electron transport rate increased by a factor of three in E. radiata, and by factors of 1.25 and 1.23 in C. emersonii and L. variegata, respectively, but did not change in C. fragile and Ch. muellerii. The light saturation point Ek increased by 26 μmol photons m−2 s−1 in C. emersonii and 20 μmol photons m−2 s−1 in Ch. muellerii and E. radiata with elevated light curve exposure times. Oscillatory patterns of the continuous fluorescence readings reflect accumulation of QA. Continuous fluorescence values increased, or decreased, by approximately 10% within light curve increments. However, oscillations of 25% were not uncommon, which shows that cells are changing their photo-physiological response state during steady light conditions. Increasing dark acclimation times prior to light curve application lowered maximal relative electron transport rates in the C. emersonii (from 28 ± 1.7 to 25 ± 1.2 for 15 and 95 min dark acclimation in short-duration light curves respectively). This effect was counterbalanced by longer light curve application. It can therefore be concluded that manipulation of light exposure and dark incubation prior to the experiment affects the photosynthetic response, presumably due to different activation states of photosynthetic and photoprotective mechanisms. The highly species-specific photo-response patterns imply that a common rapid light curve protocol will generate artefacts in some species.  相似文献   

7.
Hugo Pettai  Arvi Freiberg  Agu Laisk 《BBA》2005,1708(3):311-321
We have found that long-wavelength quanta up to 780 nm support oxygen evolution from the leaves of sunflower and bean. The far-red light excitations are supporting the photochemical activity of photosystem II, as is indicated by the increased chlorophyll fluorescence in response to the reduction of the photosystem II primary electron acceptor, QA. The results also demonstrate that the far-red photosystem II excitations are susceptible to non-photochemical quenching, although less than the red excitations. Uphill activation energies of 9.8 ± 0.5 kJ mol−1 and 12.5 ± 0.7 kJ mol−1 have been revealed in sunflower leaves for the 716 and 740 nm illumination, respectively, from the temperature dependencies of quantum yields, comparable to the corresponding energy gaps of 8.8 and 14.3 kJ mol−1 between the 716 and 680 nm, and the 740 and 680 nm light quanta. Similarly, the non-photochemical quenching of far-red excitations is facilitated by temperature confirming thermal activation of the far-red quanta to the photosystem II core. The observations are discussed in terms of as yet undisclosed far-red forms of chlorophyll in the photosystem II antenna, reversed (uphill) spill-over of excitation from photosystem I antenna to the photosystem II antenna, as well as absorption from thermally populated vibrational sub-levels of photosystem II chlorophylls in the ground electronic state. From these three interpretations, our analysis favours the first one, i.e., the presence in intact plant leaves of a small number of far-red chlorophylls of photosystem II. Based on analogy with the well-known far-red spectral forms in photosystem I, it is likely that some kind of strongly coupled chlorophyll dimers/aggregates are involved. The similarity of the result for sunflower and bean proves that both the extreme long-wavelength oxygen evolution and the local quantum yield maximum are general properties of the plants.  相似文献   

8.
Absorbance difference spectroscopy and redox titrations have been applied to investigate the properties of photosystem I from the chlorophyll d containing cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina. At room temperature, the (P740+ − P740) and (FA/B − FA/B) absorbance difference spectra were recorded in the range between 300 and 1000 nm while at cryogenic temperatures, (P740+A1 − P740A1) and (3P740 − P740) absorbance difference spectra have been measured. Spectroscopic and kinetic evidence is presented that the cofactors involved in the electron transfer from the reduced secondary electron acceptor, phylloquinone (A1), to the terminal electron acceptor and their structural arrangement are virtually identical to those of chlorophyll a containing photosystem I. The oxidation potential of the primary electron donor P740 of photosystem I has been reinvestigated. We find a midpoint potential of 450 ± 10 mV in photosystem I-enriched membrane fractions as well as in thylakoids which is very similar to that found for P700 in chlorophyll a dominated organisms. In addition, the extinction difference coefficient for the oxidation of the primary donor has been determined and a value of 45,000 ± 4000 M− 1 cm− 1 at 740 nm was obtained. Based on this value the ratio of P740 to chlorophyll is calculated to be 1:~ 200 chlorophyll d in thylakoid membranes. The consequences of our findings for the energetics in photosystem I of A. marina are discussed as well as the pigment stoichiometry and spectral characteristics of P740.  相似文献   

9.
Tobacco rbcL deletion mutant, which lacks the key enzyme Rubisco for photosynthetic carbon assimilation, was characterized with respect to thylakoid functional properties and protein composition. The ΔrbcL plants showed an enhanced capacity for dissipation of light energy by non-photochemical quenching which was accompanied by low photochemical quenching and low overall photosynthetic electron transport rate. Flash-induced fluorescence relaxation and thermoluminescence measurements revealed a slow electron transfer and decreased redox gap between QA and QB, whereas the donor side function of the Photosystem II (PSII) complex was not affected. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum of ΔrbcL plant thylakoids implied a presence of free light harvesting complexes. Mutant plants also had a low amount of photooxidisible P700 and an increased ratio of PSII to Photosystem I (PSI). On the other hand, an elevated level of plastid terminal oxidase and the lack of F0 ‘dark rise’ in fluorescence measurements suggest an enhanced plastid terminal oxidase-mediated electron flow to O2 in ΔrbcL thylakoids. Modified electron transfer routes together with flexible dissipation of excitation energy through PSII probably have a crucial role in protection of PSI from irreversible protein damage in the ΔrbcL mutant under growth conditions. This protective capacity was rapidly exceeded in ΔrbcL mutant when the light level was elevated resulting in severe degradation of PSI complexes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Changes in the redox states of photosystem I (PSI) and PSII in irradiated wheat leaves were studied after growing seedlings on a nitrogen-free medium or media containing either nitrate or ammonium. The content of P700, the primary electron donor of PSI was quantified using the maximum magnitude of absorbance changes at 830 nm induced by saturating white light. The highest content of P700 in leaves was found for seedlings grown on the ammonium-containing medium, whereas its lowest content was observed on seedlings grown in the presence of nitrate. At all irradiances of actinic light, the smallest accumulation of reduced QA was observed in leaves of ammonium-grown plants. Despite variations in light-response curves of P700 photooxidation and QA photoreduction, the leaves of all plants exposed to different treatments demonstrated similar relationships between steady-state levels of P700+ and QA . The accumulation of oxidized P700 up to 40% of total P700 content was not accompanied by significant QA photoreduction. At higher extents of P700 photooxidation, a linear relationship was found between the steady-state levels of P700+ and QA . The leaves of all treatments demonstrated biphasic patterns of the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction after irradiation by far-red light exciting specifically PSI. The halftimes of corresponding kinetic components were found to be 2.6–4 s (fast component) and 17–22 s (slow component). The two components of P700+ dark reduction were related to the existence of two PSI populations with different rates of electron input from stromal reductants. The magnitudes of these components differed for plants grown in the presence of nitrate, on the one hand, and plants grown either in the presence of ammonium or in the absence of nitrogen, on the other hand. This indicates the possible influence of nitrogen nutrition on synthesis of different populations of PSI in wheat leaves. The decrease in far-red light irradiance reduced the relative contribution of the fast component to P700+ reduction. The fast component completely disappeared at low irradiances. This finding indicates that the saturating far-red light must be applied to determine correctly the relative content of each PSI population in wheat leaves.Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 2, 2005, pp. 165–171.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Dzhibladze, Polesskaya, Alekhina, Egorova, Bukhov.This revised version was published online in April 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

12.
Under physiological conditions (278 K) femtosecond pump-probe laser spectroscopy with 20-fs time resolution was applied to study primary charge separation in spinach photosystem II (PSII) core complexes excited at 710 nm. It was shown that initial formation of anion radical band of pheophytin molecule (Pheo) at 460 nm is observed with rise time of ~ 11 ps. The kinetics of the observed rise was ascribed to charge separation between Chl (chlorophyll a) dimer, primary electron donor in PSII (P680*) and Pheo located in D1 protein subunit (PheoD1) absorbing at 420 nm, 545 nm and 680 nm with formation of the ion-radical pair P680+PheoDI. The subsequent electron transfer from PheoD1 to primary plastoquinone electron acceptor (QA) was accompanied by relaxation of the 460-nm band and occurred within ~ 250 ps in good agreement with previous measurements in Photosystem II-enriched particles and bacterial reaction centers. The subtraction of the P680+ spectrum measured at 455 ps delay from the spectra at 23 ps or 44 ps delay reveals the spectrum of PheoDI, which is very similar to that measured earlier by accumulation method. The spectrum of PheoDI formation includes a bleaching (or red shift) of the 670 nm band indicating that Chl-670 is close to PheoD1. According to previous measurements in the femtosecond–picosecond time range this Chl-670 was ascribed to ChlD1 [Shelaev, Gostev, Vishnev, Shkuropatov, Ptushenko, Mamedov, Sarkisov, Nadtochenko, Semenov and Shuvalov, J. Photochemistry and Photobiology, B: Biology 104 (2011) 45–50]. Stimulated emission at 685 nm was found to have two decaying components with time constants of ~ 1 ps and ~ 14 ps. These components appear to reflect formation of P680+ChlD1 and P680+PheoD1, respectively, as found earlier. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: Keys to Produce Clean Energy.  相似文献   

13.
Ivanov B  Asada K  Kramer DM  Edwards G 《Planta》2005,220(4):572-581
Redox changes of the reaction-center chlorophyll of photosystem I (P700) and chlorophyll fluorescence yield were measured in bundle sheath strands (BSS) isolated from maize (Zea mays L.) leaves. Oxidation of P700 in BSS by actinic light was suppressed by nigericin, indicating the generation of a proton gradient across the thylakoid membranes of BSS chloroplasts. Methyl viologen, which transfers electrons from photosystem I (PSI) to O2, caused a considerable decrease in the reduction rate of P700+ in BSS after turning off actinic light, showing that electron flow from the acceptor side of PSI to stromal components is critical for this reduction. Ascorbate (Asc), and to a lesser extent malate (Mal), caused a lower level of P700+ in BSS under aerobic conditions in far-red light, implying electron donation from these substances to the intersystem carriers. When Asc or Mal was added to BSS during pre-illumination under anaerobic conditions in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea (DCMU), the far-red-induced level of P700+ was lowered. The results suggest Asc and Mal can cause reduction of stromal donors, which in turn establishes conditions for rapid PSI-driven P700+ reduction. Addition of these metabolites also strongly stimulated the development of a proton gradient in thylakoids under aerobic conditions in the absence of DCMU, i.e. under conditions analogous to those in vivo. Ascorbate was a much more effective electron donor than Mal, suggesting it has a physiological role in activation of cyclic electron flow around PSI.  相似文献   

14.
This study provides evidence for enhanced electron flow from the stromal compartment of the photosynthetic membranes to P700+ via the cytochrome b6/f complex (Cyt b6/f) in leaves of Cucumis sativus L. submitted to chilling-induced photoinhibition. The above is deduced from the P700 oxidation–reduction kinetics studied in the absence of linear electron transport from water to NADP+, cyclic electron transfer mediated through the Q-cycle of Cyt b6/f and charge recombination in photosystem I (PSI). The segregation of these pathways for P700+ rereduction were achieved by the use of a 50-ms multiple turnover white flash or a strong pulse of white or far-red illumination together with inhibitors. In cucumber leaves, chilling-induced photoinhibition resulted in ∼20% loss of photo-oxidizible P700. The measurement of P700+ was greatly limited by the turnover of cyclic processes in the absence of the linear mode of electron transport as electrons were rapidly transferred to the smaller pool of P700+. The above is explained by integrating the recent model of the cyclic electron flow in C3 plants based on the Cyt b6/f structural data [Joliot and Joliot (2006) Biochim Biophys Acta 1757:362–368] and a photoprotective function elicited by a low NADP+/NAD(P)H ratio [Rajagopal et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42:11839–11845]. Over-reduction of the photosynthetic apparatus results in the accumulation of NAD(P)H in vivo to prevent NADP+-induced reversible conformational changes in PSI and its extensive damage. As the ferredoxin:NADP reductase is fully reduced under these conditions, even in the absence of PSII electron transport, the reduced ferredoxin generated during illumination binds at the stromal openings in the Cyt b6/f complex and activates cyclic electron flow. On the other hand, the excess electrons from the NAD(P)H pool are routed via the Ndh complex in a slow process to maintain moderate reduction of the plastoquinone pool and redox poise required for the operation of ferredoxin:plastoquinone reductase mediated cyclic flow.  相似文献   

15.
The binding affinity of the two substrate–water molecules to the water-oxidizing Mn4CaO5 catalyst in photosystem II core complexes of the extremophilic red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae was studied in the S2 and S3 states by the exchange of bound 16O-substrate against 18O-labeled water. The rate of this exchange was detected via the membrane-inlet mass spectrometric analysis of flash-induced oxygen evolution. For both redox states a fast and slow phase of water-exchange was resolved at the mixed labeled m/z 34 mass peak: kf = 52 ± 8 s− 1 and ks = 1.9 ± 0.3 s− 1 in the S2 state, and kf = 42 ± 2 s− 1 and kslow = 1.2 ± 0.3 s− 1 in S3, respectively. Overall these exchange rates are similar to those observed previously with preparations of other organisms. The most remarkable finding is a significantly slower exchange at the fast substrate–water site in the S2 state, which confirms beyond doubt that both substrate–water molecules are already bound in the S2 state. This leads to a very small change of the affinity for both the fast and the slowly exchanging substrates during the S2 → S3 transition. Implications for recent models for water-oxidation are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves were irradiated with far-red (FR) light of various intensities after different periods of dark adaptation in order to investigate activities of alternative electron transport pathways related to photosystem I (PSI). Photooxidation of P700, the primary electron donor of PSI, was saturated at FR light intensity of 0.15 μmol quanta/(m2 s). As the photon flux density was raised in this range, the slow and middle components in the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction increased, whereas the fast component remained indiscernible. The amplitudes of the slow and middle components diminished upon further increase of FR photon flux density in the range 0.15–0.35 μmol quanta/(m2 s) and remained constant at higher intensities. The fast component of P700+ reduction was only detected after FR irradiation with intensities above 0.15 μmol quanta/(m2 s); the light-response curve for this component was clearly sigmoid. In dark-adapted barley leaves, three stages were distinguished in the kinetics of P700 photooxidation, with the steady state for P700+ achieved within about 3 min. In leaves predarkened for a short time, the onset of FR irradiation produced a very rapid photooxidation of P700. As the duration of dark exposure was prolonged, the amplitude of the first peak in the kinetic curve of photoinduced P700 photooxidation was diminished and the time for attaining the steady-state oxidation level was shortened. After a brief dark adaptation of leaves, ferredoxin-dependent electron flow did not appreciably contributed to the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction, whereas the components related to electron donation from stromal reductants were strongly retarded. It is concluded that FR light irradiation, selectively exciting PSI, suffices to modulate activities of alternative electron transport routes; this modulation reflects the depletion of stromal reductants due to continuous efflux of electrons from PSI to oxygen under the action of FR light. __________ Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 6, 2005, pp. 805–813. Original Russian Text Copyright ? 2005 by Egorova, Drozdova, Bukhov.  相似文献   

17.
It is well known that efficient functioning of photosynthetic (PET) and respiratory electron transport (RET) in cyanobacteria requires the presence of either cytochrome c6 (Cytc6) or plastocyanin (PC). By contrast, the interaction of an additional redox carrier, cytochrome cM (CytcM), with either PET or RET is still under discussion. Here, we focus on the (putative) role of CytcM in cyanobacterial respiration. It is demonstrated that genes encoding the main terminal oxidase (cytochrome c oxidase, COX) and cytochrome cM are found in all 44 totally or partially sequenced cyanobacteria (except one strain). In order to check whether CytcM can act as electron donor to COX, we investigated the intermolecular electron transfer kinetics between CytcM and the soluble CuA domain (i.e. the donor binding and electron entry site) of subunit II of COX. Both proteins from Synechocystis PCC6803 were expressed heterologously in E. coli. The forward and the reverse electron transfer reactions were studied yielding apparent bimolecular rate constants of (2.4 ± 0.1) × 105 M− 1 s− 1 and (9.6 ± 0.4) × 103 M− 1 s− 1 (5 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7, 50 mM KCl). A comparative analysis with Cytc6 and PC demonstrates that CytcM functions as electron donor to CuA as efficiently as Cytc6 but more efficient than PC. Furthermore, we demonstrate the association of CytcM with the cytoplasmic and thylakoid membrane fractions by immunobloting and discuss the potential role of CytcM as electron donor for COX under stress conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Bundle sheath chloroplasts of NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) type C4 species have a high demand for ATP, while being deficient in linear electron flow and oxidation of water by photosystem II (PSII). To evaluate electron donors to photosystem I (PSI) and possible pathways of cyclic electron flow (CEF1) in isolated bundle sheath strands of maize (Zea mays L.), an NADP-ME species, light-induced redox kinetics of the reaction center chlorophyll of PSI (P700) were followed under aerobic conditions. Donors of electrons to CEF1 are needed to compensate for electrons lost from the cycle. When stromal electron donors to CEF1 are generated during pre-illumination with actinic light (AL), they retard the subsequent rate of oxidation of P700 by far-red light. Ascorbate was more effective than malate in generating stromal electron donors by AL. The generation of stromal donors by ascorbate was inhibited by DCMU, showing ascorbate donates electrons to the oxidizing side of PSII. The inhibitors of NADPH dehydrogenase (NDH), amytal and rotenone, accelerated the oxidation rate of P700 by far-red light after AL, indicating donation of electrons to the intersystem from stromal donors via NDH. These inhibitors, however, did not affect the steady-state level of P700+ under AL, which represents a balance of input and output of electrons in P700. In contrast, antimycin A, the inhibitor of the ferredoxin-plastoquinone reductase-dependent CEF1, substantially lowered the level of P700+ under AL. Thus, the primary pathway of ATP generation by CEF1 may be through ferredoxin-plastoquinone, while function of CEF1 via NDH may be restricted by low levels of ferredoxin-NADP reductase. NDH may contribute to redox poising of CEF1, or function to generate ATP in linear electron flow to O2 via PSI, utilizing NADPH generated from malate by chloroplastic NADP-ME.  相似文献   

19.
An unusual dip (compared to higher plant behaviour under comparable light conditions) in chlorophyll fluorescence induction (FI) at about 0.2-2 s was observed for thalli of several lichen species having Trebouxia species (the most common symbiotic green algae) as their native photobionts and for Trebouxia species cultured separately in nutrient solution. This dip appears after the usual O(J)IP transient at a wide range of excitation light intensities (100-1800 μmol photons m−2 s−1). Simultaneous measurements of FI and 820-nm transmission kinetics (I820) with lichen thalli showed that the decreasing part of the fluorescence dip (0.2-0.4 s) is accompanied by a decrease of I820, i.e., by a reoxidation of electron carriers at photosystem I (PSI), while the subsequent increasing part (0.4-2 s) of the dip is not paralleled by the change in I820. These results were compared with that measured with pea leaves—representatives of higher plants. In pea, PSI started to reoxidize after 2-s excitation. The simultaneous measurements performed with thalli treated with methylviologen (MV), an efficient electron acceptor from PSI, revealed that the narrow P peak in FI of Trebouxia-possessing lichens (i.e., the I-P-dip phase) gradually disappeared with prolonged MV treatment. Thus, the P peak behaves in a similar way as in higher plants where it reflects a traffic jam of electrons induced by a transient block at the acceptor side of PSI. The increasing part of the dip in FI remained unaffected by the addition of MV. We have found that the fluorescence dip is insensitive to antimycin A, rotenone (inhibitors of cyclic electron flow around PSI), and propyl gallate (an inhibitor of plastid terminal oxidase). The 2-h treatment with 5 μM nigericin, an ionophore effectively dissipating the pH-gradient across the thylakoid membrane, did not lead to significant changes either in FI nor I820 kinetics. On the basis of the presented results, we suggest that the decreasing part of the fluorescence dip in FI of Trebouxia-lichens reflects the activation of ferredoxin-NADP+-oxidoreductase or Mehler-peroxidase reaction leading to the fast reoxidation of electron carriers in thylakoid membranes. The increasing part of the dip probably reflects a transient reduction of plastoquinone (PQ) pool that is not associated with cyclic electron flow around PSI. Possible causes of this MV-insensitive PQ reduction are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are unique bifunctional heme peroxidases that exhibit peroxidase and substantial catalase activities. Nevertheless, the reaction pathway of hydrogen peroxide dismutation, including the electronic structure of the redox intermediate that actually oxidizes H2O2, is not clearly defined. Several mutant proteins with diminished overall catalase but wild-type-like peroxidase activity have been described in the last years. However, understanding of decrease in overall catalatic activity needs discrimination between reduction and oxidation reactions of hydrogen peroxide. Here, by using sequential-mixing stopped-flow spectroscopy, we have investigated the kinetics of the transition of KatG compound I (produced by peroxoacetic acid) to its ferric state by trapping the latter as cyanide complex. Apparent bimolecular rate constants (pH 6.5, 20 °C) for wild-type KatG and the variants Trp122Phe (lacks KatG-typical distal adduct), Asp152Ser (controls substrate access to the heme cavity) and Glu253Gln (channel entrance) are reported to be 1.2 × 104 M− 1 s− 1, 30 M− 1 s− 1, 3.4 × 103 M− 1 s− 1, and 8.6 × 103 M− 1 s− 1, respectively. These findings are discussed with respect to steady-state kinetic data and proposed reaction mechanism(s) for KatG. Assets and drawbacks of the presented method are discussed.  相似文献   

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