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1.
The ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in chloroplasts of higher plants is shown to be inhibited when the mobility of the protein complexes into the thylakoid membranes is reduced. Its occurrence also requires the presence of LHC complexes and the ability of the membranes to unstack.These observations, in addition to a slight increase of charge density of the surface-as indicated by 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and high salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence studies-and partial unstacking of the membranes-as monitored by digitonin method and 540 nm light scattering changes-after phosphorylation, suggest that the ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence could reflect some lateral redistribution of membrane proteins in the lipid matrix of the thylakoids.Abbreviations ATP adenosine triphosphate - 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - Chl chlorophyll - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetate - GDA glutaraldehyde - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethane-sulphonic acid - LHC light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex PS photosystem  相似文献   

2.
Experiments are presented to show that the phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein complex (LHC) induces structural reorganisation within the thylakoid membrane in response to the introduction of additional negative surface charges. The effect of cations of different valency on chlorophyll fluorescence measurements indicates that LHC-phosphorylation-induced reorganisation involves a change in the electrostatic screening capability of the added cation. At intermediate levels of cations (e.g., 1 or 2 mM Mg2+), which substantially stack non-phosphorylated membranes, it was found that membrane phosphorylation caused considerable unstacking as monitored by light scattering and electron microscopy. Concomitant with this was a large decrease in chlorophyll fluorescence indicative of randomisation of chlorophyll protein complexes which would result in an increase in energy transfer between the photosystems as well as an absorption cross-section change. At higher concentrations (e.g., above 5 mM Mg2+) a persistent ATP-induced decrease in chlorophyll fluorescence has been attributed to the displacement of charged phosphorylated LHC from the appressed granal to the non-appressed stromal lamellae, thus decreasing the absorption cross-section of Photosystem II. Under these circumstances only a small degree of unstacking was detected by light scattering and measurements of the percentage of thylakoid length which is stacked to form grana. However, when considered on a surface area basis, the structural changes observed can qualitatively account for the magnitude of the chlorophyll fluorescence quenching due to the lateral diffusion of LHC.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
U. Schreiber 《BBA》1984,767(1):80-86
A comparative study of the ATP-induced and the DCMU-induced increases of dark chlorophyll fluorescence after activation of the latent ATPase gave the following results: (1) The ATP-induced fluorescence rise exceeds the DCMU-induced rise by an amount equivalent to the rapid component of the biphasic ATP-induced change. There is complementarity between the slow component and any preceding DCMU-induced fluorescence rise. (2) Up to 10?4 M DCMU (3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea)), with the slow component being completely suppressed, the rapid ATP-induced phase is unaffected. It becomes eliminated, though, with an I50 of about 3 · 10?4 M. (3) No binary oscillations in dependence of the number of preilluminating flashes are observed for the rapid ATP-induced fluorescence increase. Under identical conditions such oscillations are found upon DCMU-addition. (4) The amplitude of the rapid ATP-induced fluorescence rise is unaffected by closure of Photosystem II reaction centers in presence of DCMU and NH2OH by a single saturating flash (removal of about 50% of total quenching). With further flashes and gradual complete removal of quenching, the rapid ATP-induced change is eliminated with a two-step dependency. It is concluded that the rapid phase of the ATP-induced increase in fluorescence reflects reverse electron flow at non-B-type reaction centers, while the slow phase is linked to reverse electron flow at B type centers. On the basis of these results a model is proposed for heterogeneous interactions between the ATPase and B-type and non-B-type electron-transport chains. ‘Direct coupling’ appears to be possible between CF0-CF1 and those electron-transport chains which are located in the stroma-exposed margin region of the grana stacks (PS IIβ units with non-B-type properties).  相似文献   

5.
Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence is the process by which excess light energy is harmlessly dissipated within the photosynthetic membrane. The fastest component of NPQ, known as energy-dependent quenching (qE), occurs within minutes, but the site and mechanism of qE remain of great debate. Here, the chlorophyll fluorescence of Arabidopsis thaliana wild type (WT) plants was compared to mutants lacking all minor antenna complexes (NoM). Upon illumination, NoM exhibits altered chlorophyll fluorescence quenching induction (i.e. from the dark-adapted state) characterised by three different stages: (i) a fast quenching component, (ii) transient fluorescence recovery and (iii) a second quenching component. The initial fast quenching component originates in light harvesting complex II (LHCII) trimers and is dependent upon PsbS and the formation of a proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane (ΔpH). Transient fluorescence recovery is likely to occur in both WT and NoM plants, but it cannot be overcome in NoM due to impaired ΔpH formation and a reduced zeaxanthin synthesis rate. Moreover, an enhanced fluorescence emission peak at ~679?nm in NoM plants indicates detachment of LHCII trimers from the bulk antenna system, which could also contribute to the transient fluorescence recovery. Finally, the second quenching component is triggered by both ΔpH and PsbS and enhanced by zeaxanthin synthesis. This study indicates that minor antenna complexes are not essential for qE, but reveals their importance in electron stransport, ΔpH formation and zeaxanthin synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in plants occurs in the light harvesting antenna of photosystem II and is regulated by the xanthophyll cycle. A new in vitro model for this process has been developed. Purified light harvesting complexes above the detergent critical micelle concentration have a stable high fluorescence yield but a rapidly inducible fluorescence quenching occurs upon addition of zeaxanthin. Violaxanthin was without effect, lutein and antheraxanthin induced a marginal response, whereas the violaxanthin analogue, auroxanthin, induced strong quenching. Quenching was not caused by aggregation of the complexes but was accompanied by a spectral broadening and red shift, indicating a zeaxanthin-dependent alteration in the chlorophyll environment.  相似文献   

7.
The main chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex of photosystem II, LHCIIb, has earlier been shown to be capable of undergoing light-induced reversible structural changes and chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching in a way resembling those observed in granal thylakoids when exposed to excess light [Barzda, V., et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 8981-8985]. The nature and mechanism of this unexpected structural flexibility has not been elucidated. In this work, by using density gradient centrifugation and nondenaturing green gel electrophoresis, as well as absorbance and circular dichroic spectroscopy, we show that light induces a significant degree of monomerization, which is in contrast with the preferentially trimeric organization of the isolated complexes in the dark. Monomerization is accompanied by a reversible release of Mg ions, most likely from the outer loop of the complexes. These data, as well as the built-in thermal and light instability of the trimeric organization, are explained in terms of a simple theoretical model of thermo-optic mechanism, effect of fast thermal transients (local T-jumps) due to dissipated photon energies in the vicinity of the cation binding sites, which lead to thermally assisted elementary structural transitions. Disruption of trimers to monomers by excess light is not confined to isolated trimers and lamellar aggregates of LHCII but occurs in photosystem II-enriched grana membranes, intact thylakoid membranes, and whole plants. As indicated by differences in the quenching capability of trimers and monomers, the appearance of monomers could facilitate the nonphotochemical quenching of the singlet excited state of chlorophyll a. The light-induced formation of monomers may also be important in regulated proteolytic degradation of the complexes. Structural changes driven by thermo-optic mechanisms may therefore provide plants with a novel mechanism for regulation of light harvesting in excess light.  相似文献   

8.
We characterized a set of Arabidopsis mutants deficient in specific light-harvesting proteins, using freeze-fracture electron microscopy to probe the organization of complexes in the membrane and confocal fluorescence recovery after photobleaching to probe the dynamics of thylakoid membranes within intact chloroplasts. The same methods were used to characterize mutants lacking or over-expressing PsbS, a protein related to light-harvesting complexes that appears to play a role in regulation of photosynthetic light harvesting. We found that changes in the complement of light-harvesting complexes and PsbS have striking effects on the photosystem II macrostructure, and that these effects correlate with changes in the mobility of chlorophyll proteins within the thylakoid membrane. The mobility of chlorophyll proteins was found to correlate with the extent of photoprotective non-photochemical quenching, consistent with the idea that non-photochemical quenching involves extensive re-organization of complexes in the membrane. We suggest that a key feature of the physiological function of PsbS is to decrease the formation of ordered semi-crystalline arrays of photosystem II in the low-light state. Thus the presence of PsbS leads to an increase in the fluidity of the membrane, accelerating the re-organization of the photosystem II macrostructure that is necessary for induction of non-photochemical quenching.  相似文献   

9.
Aging of cell-free chloroplasts at pH 7.0 and 9.0 causes a decline in the level of photosynthetic pigments, quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence and enhancement in fluorescence polarization. These changes are correlated with photoinduced enhancement of thylakoid lipid peroxidation. The alkaline earth metal cations, namely magnesium and calcium, show opposite actions on lipid peroxidation and modulate thylakoid disorganisation differently. Magnesium ion may stabilise thylakoid membrane by retarding lipid peroxidation. It lowers aging-induced quenching of fluorescence intensity and enhancement of fluorescence polarization. Calcium ion, on the other hand, stimulates disorganisation of thylakoid membranes. It enhances membrane lipid peroxidation, quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence intensity and fluorescence polarization.  相似文献   

10.
Simultaneous measurements of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and absorbance changes in the 400- to 560-nm region have been made following illumination of dark-adapted leaves of the epiphytic bromeliad Guzmania monostachia. During the first illumination, an absorbance change at 505 nm occurred with a half-time of 45 s as the leaf zeaxanthin content rose to 14% of total leaf carotenoid. Selective light scattering at 535 nm occurred with a half-time of 30 s. During a second illumination, following a 5-min dark period, quenching and the 535-nm absorbance change occurred more rapidly, reaching a maximum extent within 30 s. Nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence was found to be linearly correlated to the 535-nm absorbance change throughout. Examination of the spectra of chlorophyll fluorescence emission at 77 K for leaves sampled at intervals during this regime showed selective quenching in the light-harvesting complexes of photosystem II (LHCII). The quenching spectrum of the reversible component of quenching had a maximum at 700 nm, indicating quenching in aggregated LHCII, whereas the irreversible component represented a quenching of 680-nm fluorescence from unaggregated LHCII. It is suggested that this latter process, which is associated with the 505-nm absorbance change and zeaxanthin formation, is indicating a change in state of the LHCII complexes that is necessary to amplify or activate reversible pH-dependent energy dissipation, which is monitored by the 535-nm absorbance change. Both of the major forms of nonphotochemical energy dissipation in vivo are therefore part of the same physiological photoprotective process and both result from alterations in the LHCII system.  相似文献   

11.
Chlorophyll fluorescence quenching can be stimulated in vitro in purified photosystem II antenna complexes. It has been shown to resemble nonphotochemical quenching observed in isolated chloroplasts and leaves in several important respects, providing a model system for study of the mechanism of photoprotective energy dissipation. The effect of temperature on the rate of quenching in trimeric and monomeric antenna complexes revealed the presence of two temperature-dependent processes with different activation energies, one between approximately 15 and 35 degrees C and another between approximately 40 and 60 degrees C. The temperature of the transition between the two phases was higher for trimers than for monomers. Throughout this temperature range, the quenching was almost completely reversible, the protein CD was unchanged, and pigment binding was maintained. The activation energy for the low temperature phase was consistent with local rearrangements of pigments within some of the protein domains, whereas the higher temperature phase seemed to arise from large scale conformational transitions. For both phases, there was a strong linear correlation between the quenching rate and the appearance of an absorption band at 685 nm. In addition, quenching was correlated with a loss of CD at approximately 495 nm from Lutein 1 and at 680 nm from chlorophylls a1 and a2, the terminal emitters. The results obtained indicate that quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in antenna complexes is brought about by perturbation of the lutein 1/chlorophyll a1/chlorophyll a2 locus, forming a poorly fluorescing chlorophyll associate, either a dimer or an excimer.  相似文献   

12.
The steady state absorption and fluorescence spectroscopic properties of the xanthophylls, violaxanthin, zeaxanthin, and lutein, and the efficiencies of singlet energy transfer from the individual xanthophylls to chlorophyll have been investigated in recombinant CP26 protein overexpressed in Escherichia coli and then refolded in vitro with purified pigments. Also, the effect of the different xanthophylls on the extents of static and dynamic quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence has been investigated. Absorption, fluorescence, and fluorescence excitation demonstrate that the efficiency of light harvesting from the xanthophylls to chlorophyll a is relatively high and insensitive to the particular xanthophyll that is present. A small effect of the different xanthophylls is observed on the extent of quenching of Chl fluorescence. The data provide the precise wavelengths of the absorption and fluorescence features of the bound pigments in the highly congested spectral profiles from these light-harvesting complexes. This information is important in assessing the mechanisms by which higher plants dissipate excess energy in light-harvesting proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Intact isolated spinach chloroplasts were subjected to photoinhibitory conditions (high light and lack of CO2). Photoinhibition of the electron transport system was considerably diminished when the chloroplasts were in a low-fluorescent state related to a high proton gradient across the thylakoid membranes, as compared to a high-fluorescent state in which ΔpH-dependent fluorescence quenching was abolished by addition of uncouplers. The hypothesis is discussed that in chloroplasts exposed to excess light, photoinhibition is partly prevented by increased thermal dissipation of excitation energy, as expressed by ΔpH-dependent (‘energy-dependent’) chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching.  相似文献   

14.
W.S. Chow  J. Barber 《BBA》1980,593(1):149-157
Salt-induced changes in thylakoid stacking and chlorophyll fluorescence do not occur with granal membranes obtained by treatment of stacked thylakoids with digitonin. In contrast to normal untreated thylakoids, digitonin prepared granal membranes remain stacked under all ionic conditions and exhibit a constant high level of chlorophyll fluorescence. However, unstacking of these granal membranes is possible if they are pretreated with either acetic anhydride or linolenic acid.Trypsin treatment of the thylakoids inhibits the salt induced chlorophyll fluorescence and stacking changes but stacking of these treated membranes does occur when the pH is lowered, with the optimum being at about pH 4.5. This type of stacking is due to charge neutralization and does not require the presence of the 2000 dalton fragment of the polypeptide associated with the chlorophyll achlorophyll b light harvesting complex and known to be lost during treatment with trypsin (Mullet, J.E. and Arntzen, C.J. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 589, 100–117).Using the method of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching it is argued that the surface charge density, on a chlorophyll basis, of unstacked thylakoid membranes is intermediate between digitonin derived granal and stromal membranes, with granal having the lowest value.The results are discussed in terms of the importance of surface negative charges in controlling salt induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thylakoid stacking changes. In particular, emphasis is placed on a model involving lateral diffusion of different types of chlorophyll protein complex within the thylakoid lipid matrix.  相似文献   

15.
Modulated fluorometry (PAM) was applied for probing the photosynthesis in cells of C. reinhardtii during sulfur deprivation. A significant (up to a fourfold) increase in chlorophyll fluorescence yield (parameters F(o) and F(m)) normalized to chlorophyll concentration was shown for deprived cells. An analysis of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence indicated a considerable modification of the energy deactivation pathways in PS II of sulfur-deprived cells. Thus, starved cells exhibited a lower deltapH-dependent quenching of excited states and a higher thermal dissipation of excess light energy in reaction centers of PS II, as well as the transition of the photosynthetic apparatus primarily to state 2. However, these changes cannot cause the elevation of chlorophyll fluorescence in the cells under sulfur limitation. The phenomenon observed may be due to a partial dissociation of light-harvesting complexes from reaction centers of PS II and/or dysfunction of the dissipative cycle in PS II with cytochrome b559 as an intermediate.  相似文献   

16.
Modulated chlorophyll fluorescence was used to compare dissipation of light energy as heat in photosystem II of homoiohydric and poikilohydric photosynthetic organisms which were either hydrated or dehydrated. In hydrated chlorolichens with an alga as the photobiont, fluorescence quenching revealed a dominant mechanism of energy dissipation which was based on a protonation reaction when zeaxanthin was present. CO2 was effective as a weak protonating agent and actinic light was not necessary. In a hydrated cyanobacterial lichen, protonation by CO2 was ineffective to initiate energy dissipation. This was also true for leaves of higher plants. Thus, regulation of zeaxanthin-dependent energy dissipation by protonation was different in leaves and in chlorolichens. A mechanism of energy dissipation different from that based on zeaxanthin became apparent on dehydration of both lichens and leaves. Quenching of maximum or Fm fluorescence increased strongly during dehydration. In lichens, this was also true for so-called basal or Fo fluorescence. In contrast to zeaxanthin-dependent quenching, dehydration-induced quenching could not be inhibited by dithiothreitol. Both zeaxanthin-dependent and dehydration-induced quenching cooperated in chlorolichens to increase thermal dissipation of light energy if desiccation occurred in the light. In cyanolichens, which do not possess a zeaxanthin cycle, only desiccation-induced thermal energy dissipation was active in the dry state. Fluorescence emission spectra of chlorolichens revealed stronger desiccation-induced suppression of 685-nm fluorescence than of 720-nm fluorescence. In agreement with earlier reports of , fluorescence excitation data showed that desiccation reduced flow of excitation energy from chlorophyll b of the light harvesting complex II to emitting centres more than flow from chlorophyll a of core pigments. The data are discussed in relation to regulation and localization of thermal energy dissipation mechanisms. It is concluded that desiccation-induced fluorescence quenching of lichens results from the reversible conversion of energy-conserving to energy-dissipating photosystem II core complexes.  相似文献   

17.
Wentworth M  Ruban AV  Horton P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(33):9902-9908
The chlorophyll fluorescence yield of purified photosystem II light-harvesting complexes can be lowered by manipulation of experimental conditions. In several important respects, this quenching resembles the nonphotochemical quenching observed in isolated chloroplasts and leaves, therefore providing a model system for investigating the underlying mechanism. A methodology based on the principles of enzyme kinetic analysis has already been applied to isolated chloroplasts, and this same experimental approach was used here with purified LHCIIb, CP26, and CP29. It was found that the kinetics of the decrease in fluorescence yield robustly fitted a second-order kinetic model with respect to time after induction of quenching. The second-order rate constant was dependent upon the complex that was analyzed, the detergent concentration, the solution pH, and the presence of exogenous xanthophyll cycle carotenoids. In contrast, the formation of an absorbance change at 683 nm that accompanies quenching displayed first-order kinetics. The reversal of quenching also displayed second-order kinetics. These data show that quenching results from a binary reaction, possibly arising between two chlorophyll molecules. On the basis of these data, a model for the regulation of nonphotochemical quenching based upon the allosteric control of the conformation of light-harvesting complexes by protonation and xanthophyll binding is presented.  相似文献   

18.
We analyzed the kinetics of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qN) in spinach (Spinacia oleracea) leaves, chloroplasts, and purified light-harvesting complexes. The characteristic biphasic pattern of fluorescence quenching in dark-adapted leaves, which was removed by preillumination, was evidence of light activation of qN, a process correlated with the de-epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle carotenoids. Chloroplasts isolated from dark-adapted and light-activated leaves confirmed the nature of light activation: faster and greater quenching at a subsaturating transthylakoid pH gradient. The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding complexes of photosystem II were isolated from dark-adapted and light-activated leaves. When isolated from light-activated leaves, these complexes showed an increase in the rate of quenching in vitro compared with samples prepared from dark-adapted leaves. In all cases, the quenching kinetics were fitted to a single component hyperbolic function. For leaves, chloroplasts, and light-harvesting complexes, the presence of zeaxanthin was associated with an increased rate constant for the induction of quenching. We discuss the significance of these observations in terms of the mechanism and control of qN.  相似文献   

19.
1. The reverse reactions induced by coupled ATP hydrolysis were studied in spinach chloroplasts by measurements of the ATP-induced increase in chlorophyll fluorescence reflecting reverse electron flow, and of the ATP-induced decrease in 9-aminoacridine fluorescence, representing formation of the transthylakoidal proton gradient (deltapH). ATP-induced reverse electron flow was kinetically analysed into three phases, of which only the second and third one were paralleled by corresponding phases in deltapH formation. The rapid first phase and formation of a deltapH occur also in the absence of the electron transfer mediator phenazine methosulfate. 2. The rate and extent of the reverse reactions were measured at temperatures in the range from 0 to 30 degrees C. The rate of formation of delta pH and of reverse electron flow were faster at high temperatures, but the maximal extent of delta pH and chlorophyll fluorescence increase were observed at the lowest temperature. Considering rate and extent of the ATP-stimulated reactions, a temperature optimum around 15 degrees C was found. Light activation of the ATPase occurred throughout the range studied. At 0 degrees C and in the presence of inorganic phosphate the activated state for ATPase was maintained for more than 10 min. 3. The ATP-induced rise in chlorophyll fluorescence yield was found to be of similar magnitude as the rise induced by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl-urea (DCMU), when both were measured with an extremely weak measuring beam. It is concluded, that both effects, although derived via distinctly different pathways, are limited by the same electron donating or electron accepting pool.  相似文献   

20.
M D Bazzi  G L Nelsestuen 《Biochemistry》1992,31(42):10406-10413
Association of annexin VI with membranes induced extensive clustering of acidic phospholipids as detected by self-quenching of fluorescent-labeled acidic phospholipids [Bazzi, M.D., & Nelsestuen, G.L. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 7961]. The present study examined the rates of protein-induced clustering of acidic phospholipids in membranes containing 10-15% fluorescent-labeled phosphatidic acid dispersed in phosphatidylcholine (PC) or phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). Both membranes supported similar levels of protein-induced fluorescence quenching. With membranes containing PC, protein-membrane association and fluorescence quenching were rapid, and were virtually complete within seconds after the reagents were mixed. Membranes containing PE exhibited rapid protein-membrane association, but showed a fluorescence quenching that was several orders of magnitude slower than membranes containing PC. Calcium chelation resulted in rapid dissociation of protein-membrane complexes. Subsequent recovery of the fluorescence signal of both membranes was virtually complete, but the rate of fluorescence recovery was very different. The recovery was rapid in membranes containing PC, while PE-containing membranes showed slow recovery that approached the rate at which the fluorescent-labeled phosphatidic acid exchanged between vesicles. Thus, the presence of PE appeared to severely restrict dissipation of clustered phospholipids in membranes. Membranes containing PE, N-methyl-PE, N,N-dimethyl-PE, and PC showed successive increases in the rates of fluorescence quenching and recovery, suggesting that hydrogen bonding between head groups was the basis for this property. If the restricted dissipation of phosphatidic acid in PE membranes is a general property, the relative mobility of membrane components and even diffusion on interior cell membranes may be greatly influenced by this phenomenon.  相似文献   

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