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1.
We report a time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy characterization of photosystem I (PSI) particles prepared from Arabidopsis lines with knock-out mutations against the peripheral antenna proteins of Lhca1 or Lhca4. The first mutant retains Lhca2 and Lhca3 while the second retains one other light-harvesting protein of photosystem I (Lhca) protein, probably Lhca5. The results indicate that Lhca2/3 and Lhca1/4 each provides about equally effective energy transfer routes to the PSI core complex, and that Lhca5 provides a less effective energy transfer route. We suggest that the specific location of each Lhca protein within the PSI-LHCI supercomplex is more important than the presence of so-called red chlorophylls in the Lhca proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Time-resolved fluorescence measurements were performed on isolated core and intact Photosystem I (PS I) particles and stroma membranes from Arabidopsis thaliana to characterize the type of energy-trapping kinetics in higher plant PS I. Target analysis confirms the previously proposed “charge recombination” model. No bottleneck in the energy flow from the bulk antenna compartments to the reaction center has been found. For both particles a trap-limited kinetics is realized, with an apparent charge separation lifetime of ∼6 ps. No red chlorophylls (Chls) are found in the PS I-core complex from A. thaliana. Rather, the observed red-shifted fluorescence (700-710 nm range) originates from the reaction center. In contrast, two red Chl compartments, located in the peripheral light-harvesting complexes, are resolved in the intact PS I particles (decay lifetimes 33 and 95 ps, respectively). These two red states have been attributed to the two red states found in Lhca 3 and Lhca 4, respectively. The influence of the red Chls on the slowing of the overall trapping kinetics in the intact PS I complex is estimated to be approximately four times larger than the effect of the bulk antenna enlargement.  相似文献   

3.
It has been shown that anti-PAH mAb can bind a particular cross-reactant by adopting two distinct “red” and “blue” conformations of its binding sites [N.M. Grubor et al. PNAS 102, 2005, 7453-7458]. In the case of red conformation of pyrene (Py)/anti-PAH mAb (with a broad fluorescence (0,0)-band with fwhm ~ 140 cm−1), the central role in complex formation was played by π-π interactions. The nature of the blue-shifted conformation with very narrow fluorescence (0,0)-band (fwhm ~ 75 cm−1) was left unclear due to the lack of suitable data for comparison. In this work, we suggest spectroscopic and modeling results obtained for the blue conformation of Py in several mAb (including 4D5 mAb) are consistent with π-cation interactions, underscoring the importance of π-cation interaction in ligand binding and stabilization in agreement with earlier modeling studies [J-L. Pellequer, et al. J. Mol. Biol. 302, 2000, 691-699]. We propose considerable narrowing of the fluorescence origin band of ligand in the protein environment could be regarded as a simple indicator of π-cation interactions. Since 4D5 mAb forms only the blue-shifted conformation, while anti-PAH and 8E11 mAbs form both blue- and red-shifted conformations, we suggest mAb interactions, with Py molecules lacking H-bonding functionality, may induce distinct conformations of mAb binding sites that allow binding by π-π and/or π-cation interactions.  相似文献   

4.
In this work, we have investigated the role of the individual antenna complexes and of the low-energy forms in excitation energy transfer and trapping in Photosystem I of higher plants. To this aim, a series of Photosystem I (sub)complexes with different antenna size/composition/absorption have been studied by picosecond fluorescence spectroscopy. The data show that Lhca3 and Lhca4, which harbor the most red forms, have similar emission spectra (λmax = 715–720 nm) and transfer excitation energy to the core with a relative slow rate of ∼25/ns. Differently, the energy transfer from Lhca1 and Lhca2, the “blue” antenna complexes, occurs about four times faster. In contrast to what is often assumed, it is shown that energy transfer from the Lhca1/4 and the Lhca2/3 dimer to the core occurs on a faster timescale than energy equilibration within these dimers. Furthermore, it is shown that all four monomers contribute almost equally to the transfer to the core and that the red forms slow down the overall trapping rate by about two times. Combining all the data allows the construction of a comprehensive picture of the excitation-energy transfer routes and rates in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

5.
The outer antenna system of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Photosystem I is composed of nine gene products, but due to difficulty in purification their individual properties are not known. In this work, the functional properties of the nine Lhca antennas of Chlamydomonas, have been investigated upon expression of the apoproteins in bacteria and refolding in vitro of the pigment-protein complexes. It is shown that all Lhca complexes have a red-shifted fluorescence emission as compared to the antenna complexes of Photosystem II, similar to Lhca from higher plants, but less red-shifted. Three complexes, namely Lhca2, Lhca4 and Lhca9, exhibit emission maxima above 707 nm and all carry an asparagine as ligand for Chl 603. The comparison of the protein sequences and the biochemical/spectroscopic properties of the refolded Chlamydomonas complexes with those of the well-characterized Arabidopsis thaliana Lhcas shows that all the Chlamydomonas complexes have a chromophore organization similar to that of A. thaliana antennas, particularly to Lhca2, despite low sequence identity. All the major biochemical and spectroscopic properties of the Lhca complexes have been conserved through the evolution, including those involved in “red forms” absorption. It has been proposed that in Chlamydomonas PSI antenna size and polypeptide composition can be modulated in vivo depending on growth conditions, at variance as compared to higher plants. Thus, the different properties of the individual Lhca complexes can be functional to adapt the architecture of the PSI-LHCI supercomplex to different environmental conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The bioenergetics of light-harvesting by photosynthetic antenna proteins in higher plants is well understood. However, investigation into the regulatory non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) mechanism, which dissipates excess energy in high light, has led to several conflicting models. It is generally accepted that the major photosystem II antenna protein, LHCII, is the site of NPQ, although the minor antenna complexes (CP24/26/29) are also proposed as alternative/additional NPQ sites. LHCII crystals were shown to exhibit the short excitation lifetime and several spectral signatures of the quenched state. Subsequent structure-based models showed that this quenching could be explained by slow energy trapping by the carotenoids, in line with one of the proposed models. Using Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy (FLIM) we show that the crystal structure of CP29 corresponds to a strongly quenched conformation. Using a structure-based theoretical model we show that this quenching may be explained by the same slow, carotenoid-mediated quenching mechanism present in LHCII crystals.  相似文献   

7.
The selectively red excited emission spectrum, at room temperature, of the in vitro reconstituted Lhca4, has a pronounced non-equilibrium distribution, leading to enhanced emission from the directly excited low-energy pigments. Two different emitting forms (or states), with maximal emission at 713 and 735nm (F713 and F735) and unusual spectral properties, have been identified. Both high-energy states are populated when selective excitation is into the F735 state and the fluorescence anisotropy spectrum attains the value of 0.3 in the wavelength region where both emission states are present. This indicates that the two states are on the same Lhca4 complex and have transition dipoles with similar orientation.  相似文献   

8.
Moya I  Silvestri M  Vallon O  Cinque G  Bassi R 《Biochemistry》2001,40(42):12552-12561
We have studied the time-resolved fluorescence properties of the light-harvesting complexes (Lhc) of photosystem II (Lhcb) in order to obtain information on the mechanism of energy dissipation (non-photochemical quenching) which is correlated to the conversion of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin in excess light conditions. The chlorophyll fluorescence decay of Lhcb proteins LHCII, CP29, CP26, and CP24 in detergent solution is mostly determined by two lifetime components of 1.2-1.5 and 3.6-4 ns while the contribution of the faster component is higher in CP29, CP26, and CP24 with respect to LHCII. The xanthophyll composition of Lhc proteins affects the ratio of the lifetime components: when zeaxanthin is bound into the site L2 of LHCII, the relative amplitude of the faster component is increased and, consequently, the chlorophyll fluorescence quenching is enhanced. Analysis of quenching in mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana, which incorporate either violaxanthin or zeaxanthin in their Lhc proteins, shows that the extent of quenching is enhanced in the presence of zeaxanthin. The origin of the two fluorescence lifetimes was analyzed by their temperature dependence: since lifetime heterogeneity was not affected by cooling to 77 K, it is concluded that each lifetime component corresponds to a distinct conformation of the Lhc proteins. Upon incorporation of Lhc proteins into liposomes, a quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence was observed due to shortening of all their lifetime components: this indicates that the equilibrium between the two conformations of Lhcb proteins is displaced toward the quenched conformation in lipid membranes or thylakoids with respect to detergent solution. By increasing the protein density in the liposomes, and therefore the probability of protein-protein interactions, a further decrease of fluorescence lifetimes takes place down to values typical of quenched leaves. We conclude that at least two major factors determine the quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in Lhcb proteins, i.e., intrasubunit conformational change and intersubunit interactions within the lipid membranes, and that these processes are both important in the photoprotection mechanism of nonphotochemical quenching in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Lhc proteins constitute a family of transmembrane proteins which share homology in sequence and similarity in the general organisation although members can be strongly differentiated such as in the case of PsbS and ELIPs. In this work, we report on the structure of Lhca3, a pigment-protein subunit component of the antenna system of higher plants Photosystem I, through the effect of point mutations in critical sites. Based on the structure of PSI-LHCI (Ben Shem et al., PDB file 1QZV remark 999) it has been suggested that Lhca3 may have different folding as compared to other members of the Lhc family. In particular, it was proposed that the two central helices may be swapped and chlorophylls in sites 1013 and 1023 are not present. This different folding would imply that the chlorophylls coordinated to the two central helices have different ligands in Lhca3 with respect to the other Lhc complexes. The structural model was tested by substituting the putative binding residues with residues unable to coordinate chlorophyll and the spectroscopic properties of the individual pigments were used as structural probes. The results indicate that Lhca3 folds in the same way as the other antenna proteins. Moreover, the low-energy absorption form originates from interaction between chlorophylls in site 1015 and 1025, like for the other PSI antenna subunits. Evidence is also shown for the presence in Lhca3 of chlorophylls in sites 1013 and 1023.  相似文献   

10.
Photosystem I of higher plants is characterized by a typically long wavelength fluorescence emission associated to its light-harvesting complex I moiety. The origin of these low energy chlorophyll spectral forms was investigated by using site-directed mutagenesis of Lhca1-4 genes and in vitro reconstitution into recombinant pigment-protein complexes. We showed that the red-shifted absorption originates from chlorophyll-chlorophyll (Chl) excitonic interactions involving Chl A5 in each of the four Lhca antenna complexes. An essential requirement for the presence of the red-shifted absorption/fluorescence spectral forms was the presence of asparagine as a ligand for the Chl a chromophore in the binding site A5 of Lhca complexes. In Lhca3 and Lhca4, which exhibit the most red-shifted red forms, its substitution by histidine maintains the pigment binding and, yet, the red spectral forms are abolished. Conversely, in Lhca1, having very low amplitude of red forms, the substitution of Asn for His produces a red shift of the fluorescence emission, thus confirming that the nature of the Chl A5 ligand determines the correct organization of chromophores leading to the excitonic interaction responsible for the red-most forms. The red-shifted fluorescence emission at 730 nm is here proposed to originate from an absorption band at approximately 700 nm, which represents the low energy contribution of an excitonic interaction having the high energy band at 683 nm. Because the mutation does not affect Chl A5 orientation, we suggest that coordination by Asn of Chl A5 holds it at the correct distance with Chl B5.  相似文献   

11.
Abasic sites are highly mutagenic lesions in DNA that arise as intermediates in the excision repair of modified bases. These sites are generated by the action of damage-specific DNA glycosylases and are converted into downstream intermediates by the specific activity of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases. Enzymes in both families have been observed in crystal structures to impose deformations on the abasic-site DNA, including DNA kinking and base flipping. On the basis of these apparent protein-induced deformations, we propose that altered conformation and dynamics of abasic sites may contribute to the specificity of these repair enzymes. Previously, measurements of the steady-state fluorescence of the adenine analogue 2-aminopurine (2AP) opposite an abasic site demonstrated that binding of divalent cations could induce a conformational change that increased the accessibility of 2AP to solute quenching [Stivers, J. T. (1998) Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 3837-44]. We have performed time-resolved fluorescence experiments to characterize the states involved in this conformational change. Interpretation of these studies is based on a recently developed model attributing the static and dynamic fluorescence quenching of 2AP in DNA to aromatic stacking and collisional interactions with neighboring bases, respectively (see the preceding paper in this issue). The time-resolved fluorescence results indicate that divalent cation binding shifts the equilibrium of the abasic site between two conformations: a "closed" state, characterized by short average fluorescence lifetime and complex decay kinetics, and an "open" state, characterized by monoexponential decay with lifetime approximately that of the free nucleoside. Because the lifetime and intensity decay kinetics of 2AP incorporated into DNA are sensitive primarily to collisional interactions with the neighboring bases, the absence of dynamic quenching in the open state strongly suggests that the fluorescent base is extrahelical in this conformation. Consistent with this interpretation, time-resolved quenching studies reveal that the open state is accessible to solute quenching by potassium iodide, but the closed state is not. Greater static quenching is observed in the abasic site when the fluorescent base is flanked by 5'- and 3'-thymines than in the context of 5'- and 3'-adenines, indicating that 2AP is more stacked with the neighboring bases in the former sequence. These results imply that the conformation of the abasic site varies in a sequence-dependent manner. Undamaged sequences in which the abasic site is replaced by thymine do not exhibit an open state and have different levels of both static and dynamic quenching than their damaged homologues. These differences in structure and dynamics may be significant determinants of the high specific affinity of repair enzymes for the abasic site.  相似文献   

12.
Prasinophyceae are a broad class of early-branching eukaryotic green algae. These picophytoplankton are found ubiquitously throughout the ocean and contribute considerably to global carbon-fixation. Ostreococcus tauri, as the first sequenced prasinophyte, is a model species for studying the functional evolution of light-harvesting systems in photosynthetic eukaryotes. In this study we isolated and characterized O. tauri pigment-protein complexes. Two photosystem I (PSI) fractions were obtained by sucrose density gradient centrifugation in addition to free light-harvesting complex (LHC) fraction and photosystem II (PSII) core fractions. The smaller PSI fraction contains the PSI core proteins, LHCI, which are conserved in all green plants, Lhcp1, a prasinophyte-specific LHC protein, and the minor, monomeric LHCII proteins CP26 and CP29. The larger PSI fraction contained the same antenna proteins as the smaller, with the addition of Lhca6 and Lhcp2, and a 30% larger absorption cross-section. When O. tauri was grown under high-light conditions, only the smaller PSI fraction was present. The two PSI preparations were also found to be devoid of the far-red chlorophyll fluorescence (715-730 nm), a signature of PSI in oxygenic phototrophs. These unique features of O. tauri PSI may reflect primitive light-harvesting systems in green plants and their adaptation to marine ecosystems. Possible implications for the evolution of the LHC-superfamily in photosynthetic eukaryotes are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We report studies on the interaction of α-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-MSH) and a synthetic analogue (MSH-I) with reverse micelles prepared from the amphiphilic sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate in isooctane. The tripeptide lysyl-tryptophyl- lysine and the isolated amino acid tryptophan were also investigated as simpler compounds interacting with the micelles. Tryptophan fluorescence parameters (spectral position of emission band, anisotropy, and lifetime decay) demonstrated that in the presence of reverse micelles the environment around the fluorophore is less polar and more rigid than bulk water. Those parameters are sensitive to the changes induced in the micelles by the presence of water. In large micelles having a water/amphiphile molar ratio above 10, the modifications detected by fluorescence are small and the location of the fluorophore is not affected by a further increase in the concentration of the bulk water. The results, with additional support from quenching experiments, indicated that the different compounds occupy different positions in the large reverse micelles, but in any case they are in the interface region, without dispersing into the bulk water. From decay associated spectra, conformations were identified showing different degrees of tryptophan exposition to polar and nonpolar local environments. The conformation related to the long lifetime has its tryptophan more exposed to water while that associated to the intermediate lifetime has that residue stabilized in nonpolar media. The native hormone α-MSH and the analogue MSH-I present similar conformations in dry micelles. However, in buffer and in the large hydrated micelles, differences in conformations are evident, and could be related to the different physiological activity of the peptides. Received: 4 August 1999 / Revised version: 17 December 1999 / Accepted: 4 January 2000  相似文献   

14.
EET in reconstituted Lhca4, a peripheral light-harvesting complex from Photosystem I of Arabidopsis thaliana, containing 10 chlorophylls and 2 carotenoids, was studied at room temperature by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Two spectral forms of Lut were observed in the sites L1 and L2, characterized by significantly different interactions with nearby chlorophyll a molecules. A favorable interpretation of these differences is that the efficiency of EET to Chls is about two times lower from the "blue" Lut in the site L1 than from the "red" Lut in the site L2 due to fast IC in the former case. A major part of the energy absorbed by the "red" Lut, approximately 60%-70%, is transferred to Chls on a sub-100-fs timescale from the state S(2) but, in addition, minor EET from the hot S(1) state within 400-500 fs is also observed. EET from the S(1) state to chlorophylls occurs also within 2-3 ps and is ascribed to Vio and/or "blue" Lut. EET from Chl b to Chl a is biphasic and characterized by time constants of approximately 300 fs and 3.0 ps. These rates are ascribed to EET from Chl b spectral forms absorbing at approximately 644 nm and approximately 650 nm, respectively. About 25% of the excited Chls a decays very fast-within approximately 15 ps. This decay is proposed to be related to the presence of the interacting Chls A5 and B5 located next to the carotenoid in the site L2 and may imply some photoprotective role for Lhca4 in the photosystem I super-complex.  相似文献   

15.
The Lhca antenna complexes of photosystem I (PSI) have been characterized by comparison of native and recombinant preparations. Eight Lhca polypeptides have been found to be all organized as dimers in the PSI-LHCI complex. The red emission fluorescence is associated not only with Lhca1-4 heterodimer, but also with dimers containing Lhca2 and/or Lhca3 complexes. Reconstitution of Lhca1 and Lhca4 monomers as well as of the Lhca1-4 dimer in vitro was obtained. The biochemical and spectroscopic features of these three complexes are reported. The monomers Lhca1 and Lhca4 bind 10 Chls each, while the Chl a/b ratio is lower in Lhca4 as compared to Lhca1. Three carotenoid binding sites have been found in Lhca1, while only two are present in Lhca4. Both complexes contain lutein and violaxanthin while β-carotene is selectively bound to the Lhca1-4 dimer in substoichiometric amounts upon dimerization. Spectral analysis revealed the presence of low energy absorption forms in Lhca1 previously thought to be exclusively associated with Lhca4. It is shown that the process of dimerization changes the spectroscopic properties of some chromophores and increases the amplitude of the red absorption tail of the complexes. The origin of these spectroscopic features is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
We have monitored the membrane-bound channel and nonchannel conformations of gramicidin utilizing red-edge excitation shift (REES), and related fluorescence parameters. In particular, we have used fluorescence lifetime, polarization, quenching, chemical modification, and membrane penetration depth analysis in addition to REES measurements to distinguish these two conformations. Our results show that REES of gramicidin tryptophans can be effectively used to distinguish conformations of membrane-bound gramicidin. The interfacially localized tryptophans in the channel conformation display REES of 7 nm whereas the tryptophans in the nonchannel conformation exhibit REES of 2 nm which highlights the difference in their average environments in terms of localization in the membrane. This is supported by tryptophan penetration depth measurements using the parallax method and fluorescence lifetime and polarization measurements. Further differences in the average tryptophan microenvironments in the two conformations are brought out by fluorescence quenching experiments using acrylamide and chemical modification of the tryptophans by N-bromosuccinimide. In summary, we report novel fluorescence-based approaches to monitor conformations of this important ion channel peptide. Our results offer vital information on the organization and dynamics of the functionally important tryptophan residues in gramicidin.  相似文献   

17.
The Lhca antenna complexes of photosystem I (PSI) have been characterized by comparison of native and recombinant preparations. Eight Lhca polypeptides have been found to be all organized as dimers in the PSI-LHCI complex. The red emission fluorescence is associated not only with Lhca1-4 heterodimer, but also with dimers containing Lhca2 and/or Lhca3 complexes. Reconstitution of Lhca1 and Lhca4 monomers as well as of the Lhca1-4 dimer in vitro was obtained. The biochemical and spectroscopic features of these three complexes are reported. The monomers Lhca1 and Lhca4 bind 10 Chls each, while the Chl a/b ratio is lower in Lhca4 as compared to Lhca1. Three carotenoid binding sites have been found in Lhca1, while only two are present in Lhca4. Both complexes contain lutein and violaxanthin while beta-carotene is selectively bound to the Lhca1-4 dimer in substoichiometric amounts upon dimerization. Spectral analysis revealed the presence of low energy absorption forms in Lhca1 previously thought to be exclusively associated with Lhca4. It is shown that the process of dimerization changes the spectroscopic properties of some chromophores and increases the amplitude of the red absorption tail of the complexes. The origin of these spectroscopic features is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of proline and X-Pro peptide bond conformations on the fluorescence properties of tyrosine in peptides corresponding to parts of a proposed chain-folding initiation site in bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A are examined by time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence spectroscopy. In peptides with Tyr-Pro sequences, the conformational constraints of proline on a preceding residue result in significant fluorescence quenching for both trans and cis peptide bond conformations. Small peptides containing Pro-Tyr sequences, on the other hand, do not exhibit fluorescence quenching compared to Ac-Tyr-NHMe. Studies of fluorescence decay in the tryptic fragment of performic acid oxidized ribonuclease corresponding to residues 105-124 (i.e., O-T-16) demonstrate the presence of at least two environments of the single tyrosine chromophore (in the sequence Asn113-Pro114-Tyr115). In these two (ensemble-averaged) environments, tyrosine has shorter and longer lifetimes, respectively, than in Ac-Tyr-NHMe. The fluorescence heterogeneity in O-T-16 does not correlate with X-Pro cis/trans conformational heterogeneity that can be detected by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Instead, the fluorescence heterogeneity in O-T-16 arises from the presence of multiple conformations with the same X-Pro peptide bond conformations which interconvert rapidly on the 1H NMR time scale (tau much less than 1 ms) but are distinguishable on the fluorescence lifetime time scale (tau greater than or equal to 1 ns). From comparisons with the tyrosine fluorescence decay of smaller synthetic peptides, it is concluded that the long-lifetime tyrosine fluorescence component of O-T-16 arises from interactions involving residues outside the Asn113-Pro114-Tyr115-Val116-Pro117 sequence, which either stabilize particular local conformations in the vicinity of Tyr115 or act directly to protect Tyr115 from efficient fluorescence quenching. The short-lifetime component of O-T-16 is also observed for the pentapeptide Ac-Asn-Pro-Tyr-Val-Pro-NHMe. The data provide evidence for a nonrandom polypeptide conformation of O-T-16 under conditions of solvent pH and temperature at which the complete disulfide-intact ribonuclease molecule is fully folded. Implications of this work for the interpretation of fluorescence-detected unfolding experiments are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) prepared from isolated thylakoids of either broken or intact chloroplasts by three independent methods, exhibits proteolytic activity against LHCII. This activity is readily detectable upon incubation of these preparations at 37 °C (without addition of any chemicals or prior pre-treatment), and can be monitored either by the LHCII immunostain reduction on Western blots or by the Coomassie blue stain reduction in substrate-containing “activity gels”. Upon SDS-sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation of SDS-solubilized thylakoids, a method which succeeds in the separation of the pigment-protein complexes in their trimeric and monomeric forms, the protease activity copurifies with the LHCII trimer, its monomer exhibiting no activity. This LHCII trimer, apart from being “self-digested”, also degrades the Photosystem II (PSII) core proteins (D1, D2) when added to an isolated PSII core protein preparation containing the D1/D2 heterodimer. Under our experimental conditions, 50% of LHCII or the D1, D2 proteins are degraded by the LHCII-protease complex within 30 min at 37 °C and specific degradation products are observed. The protease is light-inducible during chloroplast biogenesis, stable in low concentrations of SDS, activated by Mg2+, and inhibited by Zn2+, Cd2+, EDTA and p-hydroxy-mercury benzoate (pOHMB), suggesting that it may belong to the cysteine family of proteases. Upon electrophoresis of the LHCII trimer on substrate-containing “activity gels” or normal Laemmli gels, the protease is released from the complex and runs in the upper part of the gel, above the LHCII trimer. A polypeptide of 140 kDa that exhibits proteolytic activity against LHCII, D1 and D2 has been identified as the protease. We believe that this membrane-bound protease is closely associated to the LHCII complex in vivo, as an LHCII-protease complex, its function being the regulation of the PSII unit assembly and/or adaptation.  相似文献   

20.
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