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1.
Recent work on the domain organization of the thylakoid is reviewed and a model for the thylakoid of higher plants is presented. According to this model the thylakoid membrane is divided into three main domains: the stroma lamellae, the grana margins and the grana core (partitions). These have different biochemical compositions and have specialized functions. Linear electron transport occurs in the grana while cyclic electron transport is restricted to the stroma lamellae. This model is based on the following results and considerations. (1) There is no good candidate for a long-range mobile redox carrier between PS II in the grana and PS I in the stroma lamellae. The lateral diffusion of plastoquinone and plastocyanin is severely restricted by macromolecular crowding in the membrane and the lumen respectively. (2) There is an excess of 14±18% chlorophyll associated with PS I over that of PS II. This excess is assumed to be localized in the stroma lamellae where PS I drives cyclic electron transport. (3) For several plant species, the stroma lamellae account for 20±3% of the thylakoid membrane and the grana (including the appressed regions, margins and end membranes) for the remaining 80%. The amount of stroma lamellae (20%) corresponds to the excess (14–18%) of chlorophyll associated with PS I. (4) The model predicts a quantum requirement of about 10 quanta per oxygen molecule evolved, which is in good agreement with experimentally observed values. (5) There are at least two pools of each of the following components: PS I, PS II, cytochrome bf complex, plastocyanin, ATP synthase and plastoquinone. One pool is in the grana and the other in the stroma compartments. So far, it has been demonstrated that the PS I, PS II and cytochrome bf complexes each differ in their respective pools.Abbreviations PS I and PS II Photosystem I and II - P 700 reaction center of PS I - LHC II light-harvesting complex II  相似文献   

2.
The cytochrome b 6 f complex occupies a central position in photosynthetic electron transport and proton translocation by linking PS II to PS I in linear electron flow from water to NADP+, and around PS I for cyclic electron flow. Cytochrome b 6 f complexes are uniquely located in three membrane domains: the appressed granal membranes, the non-appressed stroma thylakoids and end grana membranes, and also the non-appressed grana margins, in contrast to the marked lateral heterogeneity of the localization of all other thylakoid multiprotein complexes. In addition to its vital role in vectorial electron transfer and proton translocation across the membrane, cytochrome b 6 f complex is also involved in the regulation of balanced light excitation energy distribution between the photosystems, since its redox state governs the activation of LHC II kinase (the kinase that phosphorylates the mobile peripheral fraction of the chlorophyll a/b-proteins of LHC II of PS II). Hence, cytochrome b 6 f complex is the molecular link in the interactive co-regulation of light-harvesting and electron transfer.The importance of a highly dynamic, yet flexible organization of the thylakoid membranes of plants and green algae has been highlighted by the exciting discovery that a lateral reorganization of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes occurs in the state transition mechanism both in vivo and in vitro (Vallon et al. 1991). The lateral redistribution of phosphorylated LHC II from stacked granal membrane regions is accompanied by a concomitant movement of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes from the granal membranes out to the PS I-containing stroma thylakoids. Thus, the dynamic movement of cytochrome b 6 f complex as a multiprotein complex is a molecular mechanism for short-term adaptation to changing light conditions. With the concept of different membrane domains for linear and cyclic electron flow gaining credence, it is thought that linear electron flow occurs in the granal compartments and cyclic electron flow is localised in the stroma thylakoids at non-limiting irradiances. It is postulated that dynamic lateral reversible redistribution of some cytochrome b 6 f complexes are part of the molecular mechanism involved in the regulation of linear electron transfer (ATP and NADPH) and cyclic electron flow (ATP only). Finally, the molecular significance of the marked regulation of cytochrome b 6 f complexes for long-term regulation and optimization of photosynthetic function under varying environmental conditions, particularly light acclimation, is discussed.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - PS Photosystem  相似文献   

3.
Formation of thermoluminescence signals is characteristics of energy- and charge storage in Photosystem II. In isolated D1/D2/cytochrome b-559 Photosystem II reaction centre preparation four thermoluminescence components were found. These appear at -180 (Z band), between -80 and -50 (Zv band), at -30 and at +35°C. The Z band arises from pigment molecules but not correlated with photosynthetic activity. The Zv and -30°C bands arise from the recombination of charge pairs stabilized in the Photosystem II reaction centre complex. The +35°C band probably corresponds to the artefact glow peak resulting from a pigment-protein-detergent interaction in subchloroplast preparations (Rózsa Zs, Droppa M and Horváth G (1989) Biochim Biophys Acta 973, 350–353).Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - Cyt cytochrome - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - D1 psbA gene product - D2 psbD gene product - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - Pheo pheophytin - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - RC reaction centre of PS II - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylation in vitro of the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab protein complex associated with Photosystem II (LHCII) resulted in the lateral migration of a subpopulation of LHCII from the grana to the stroma lamellae. This movement was characterized by a decrease in the chlorophyll ab ratio and an increase in the 77 K fluorescence emission at 681 nm in the stroma lamellae following phosphorylation. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the principal phosphoproteins under these conditions were polypeptides of 26–27 kDa. These polypeptides increased in relative amount in the stroma lamellae and decreased in the grana during phosphorylation. Pulse/chase experiments confirmed that the polypeptides were labelled in the grana and moved to the stroma lamellae in the subsequent chase period. A fraction at the phospho-LHCII, however, was unable to move and remained associated with the grana fraction. LHCII which moved out into the stroma lamellae effectively sensitized Photosystem I (PS I), since the ability to excite fluorescence emission at 735 nm (at 77 K) by chlorophyll b was increased following phosphorylation. These data support the ‘mobile antenna’ hypothesis proposed by Kyle, Staehelin and Arntzen (Arch. Biochem. Biophys. (1983) 222, 527–541) which states that the alterations in the excitation-energy distribution induced by LHCII phosphorylation are, in part, due to the change in absorptive cross-section of PS II and PS I, resulting specifically from the movement of LHCII antennae chlorophylls from the PS-II-enriched grana to the PS-I-enriched stroma lamellae.  相似文献   

5.
Ravi Danielsson 《BBA》2004,1608(1):53-61
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was used to quantify Photosystem I (PSI) and PSII in vesicles originating from a series of well-defined but different domains of the thylakoid membrane in spinach prepared by non-detergent techniques. Thylakoids from spinach were fragmented by sonication and separated by aqueous polymer two-phase partitioning into vesicles originating from grana and stroma lamellae. The grana vesicles were further sonicated and separated into two vesicle preparations originating from the grana margins and the appressed domains of grana (the grana core), respectively. PSI and PSII were determined in the same samples from the maximal size of the EPR signal from P700+ and YD, respectively. The following PSI/PSII ratios were found: thylakoids, 1.13; grana vesicles, 0.43; grana core, 0.25; grana margins, 1.28; stroma lamellae 3.10. In a sub-fraction of the stroma lamellae, denoted Y-100, PSI was highly enriched and the PSI/PSII ratio was 13. The antenna size of the respective photosystems was calculated from the experimental data and the assumption that a PSII center in the stroma lamellae (PSIIβ) has an antenna size of 100 Chl. This gave the following results: PSI in grana margins (PSIα) 300, PSI (PSIβ) in stroma lamellae 214, PSII in grana core (PSIIα) 280. The results suggest that PSI in grana margins have two additional light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) trimers per reaction center compared to PSI in stroma lamellae, and that PSII in grana has four LHCII trimers per monomer compared to PSII in stroma lamellae. Calculation of the total chlorophyll associated with PSI and PSII, respectively, suggests that more chlorophyll (about 10%) is associated with PSI than with PSII.  相似文献   

6.
Effects of three inhibitors of quinol oxidation in the chloroplast cytochrome bf complex (stigmatellin, tridecylstigmatellin and dibromothymoquinone) were studied in an isolated system comprising Photosystem I (PS I) particles, plastocyanin (PC) and cytochrome bf complex, in the absence of quinol or quinone. Addition of these inhibitors increased the extent of cytochrome f oxidation after a laser flash created oxidised PS I reaction centre (P700) and PC, and decreased somewhat the extent of PC oxidation. The re-reduction of oxidised P700 was more complete than when inhibitor was absent. The data were simulated with reactions which included the putative reduction of cytochrome f by the Rieske centre (FeS) and different rate-coefficients according as to whether inhibitor was bound to the bf complex or not. It was concluded that under the conditions studied the Rieske centre donated electrons to oxidised cytochrome f and plastocyanin with an average rate coefficient of 35 s–1. This electron transfer was prevented by any of the three inhibitors, which also increased the equilibrium coefficient for the cytochrome f/PC reaction by a maximum factor of two. This increase corresponded to a decrease in the back reaction coefficient and an increase in the forward rate. The equilibrium coefficient for the reduction of oxidised P700 by PC was about 2 in the absence of inhibitor but increased to about 20 in their presence, but only if cytochrome bf complex was additionally present. This was attributed to the transient formation of complexes between P700 with bound plastocyanin, and bf complex. The operative mid-point potential of FeS, if that of cytochrome f is 370 mV, was 390 mV. Deviations in midpoint potentials (P700/plastocyanin) from solution values were attributed to the bound state of the reactants. Estimates were made of the binding coefficient of each of the three inhibitors to p-sites in the cytochrome bf complex in the absence of competing quinol. A stoichiometry of two inhibitors per bf dimer was necessary to cause the above changes in reduction potential of cyt f and PC. A result of one inhibitor per dimer was statistically unlikely, particularly in the case of tridecylstigmatellin.Abbreviations Cyt- cytochrome - DBMIB(H2)- 2,5-dibromo-3--ethyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (reduced) - E m- midpoint reduction potential of a couple relative to the standard hydrogen electrode - e-t- electron transfer - FeS (or R)- Rieske iron-sulphur centre - HEPES- N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulphonic acid - Mega-9- nonoyl-N-methylglucamide - n-site (Qr-site)- quinone reduction site in cytochrome bf complex - PC- plastocyanin - p-site (Qo-site)- quinol oxidation site in cytochrome bf complex - PQ- plastoquinone - PSI- Photosystem I - P700- reaction centre in Photosystem I - TDS- tridecyl stigmatellin  相似文献   

7.
The effect of a 30 h high light treatment on the amount and the localization of thylakoid proteins was analysed in low light grown photoautotrophic cells of Marchantia polymorpha and Chenopodium rubrum. High light treatment resulted in a net loss of D1 protein which was accompanied by comparable losses of other proteins of the PS II core (reaction center with inner antenna). LHC II proteins were not reduced correspondingly, indicating that these complexes are less affected by prolonged high light. High light influenced the distribution of PS II components between the grana and the stroma region of the thylakoid membrane, probably by translocation of the respective PS II proteins. Additionally, modifications of several thylakoid proteins were detected in high light treated cells of C. rubrum. These effects are discussed in relation to photoinhibitory damage and repair processes.Abbreviations BCA bioinchonic acid - chl chlorophyll - CF1 coupling factor - CYC cycloheximide - GT grana thylakoids - HL high light - LL low light - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PFD photon flux density - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC reaction center - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate - ST stroma thylakoids - Thyl unfractionated thylakoids  相似文献   

8.
A biochemical and structural analysis is presented of fractions that were obtained by a quick and mild solubilization of thylakoid membranes from spinach with the non-ionic detergent n-dodecyl-α,D-maltoside, followed by a partial purification using gel filtration chromatography. The largest fractions consisted of paired, appressed membrane fragments with an average diameter of about 360 nm and contain Photosystem II (PS II) and its associated light-harvesting antenna (LHC II), but virtually no Photosystem I, ATP synthase and cytochrome b 6 f complex. Some of the membranes show a semi-regular ordering of PS II in rows at an average distance of about 26.3 nm, and from a partially disrupted grana membrane fragment we show that the supercomplexes of PS II and LHC II represent the basic structural unit of PS II in the grana membranes. The numbers of free LHC II and PS II core complexes were very high and very low, respectively. The other macromolecular complexes of the thylakoid membrane occurred almost exclusively in dispersed forms. Photosystem I was observed in monomeric or multimeric PS I-200 complexes and there are no indications for free LHC I complexes. An extensive analysis by electron microscopy and image analysis of the CF0F1 ATP synthase complex suggests locations of the δ (on top of the F1 headpiece) and ∈ subunits (in the central stalk) and reveals that in a substantial part of the complexes the F1 headpiece is bended considerably from the central stalk. This kinking is very likely not an artefact of the isolation procedure and may represent the complex in its inactive, oxidized form. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
We have measured the rate constant for the formation of the oxidized chlorophyll a electron donor (P680+) and the reduced electron acceptor pheophytin a (Pheo a ) following excitation of isolated Photosystem II reaction centers (PS II RC) at 15 K. This PS II RC complex consists of D1, D2, and cytochrome b-559 proteins and was prepared by a procedure which stabilizes the protein complex. Transient absorption difference spectra were measured from 450–840 nm as a function of time with 500fs resolution following 610 nm laser excitation. The formation of P680+-Pheo a is indicated by the appearance of a band due to P680+ at 820 nm and corresponding absorbance changes at 490, 515 and 546 nm due to the formation of Pheo a . The appearance of the 490 nm and 820 nm bands is monoexponenital with =1.4±0.2 ps. Treatment of the PS II RC with sodium dithionite and methyl viologen followed by exposure to laser excitation results in accumulation of Pheo a . Laser excitation of these prereduced RCs at 15 K results in formation of a transient absorption spectrum assigned to 1*P680. We observe wavelength-dependent kinetics for the recovery of the transient bleach of the Qy absorption bands of the pigments in both untreated and pre-reduced PS II RCs at 15K. This result is attributed to an energy transfer process within the PS II RC at low temperature that is not connected with charge separation.Abbreviations PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC reaction center - P680 primary electron donor in Photosystem II - Chl a chlorophyll a - Pheo a pheophytin a  相似文献   

10.
Eric Lam  Richard Malkin   《BBA》1982,682(3):378-386
Photoreactions of cytochrome b6 have been studied using resolved chloroplast electron-transfer complexes. In the presence of Photosystem (PS) II and the cytochrome b6-f complex, photoreduction of the cytochrome can be observed. No soluble components are required for this reaction. Cytochrome b6 photoreduction was found to be inhibited by quinone analogs, which inhibit at the Rieske iron-sulfur center of the cytochrome complex, by the addition of ascorbate and by depletion of the Rieske center and bound plastoquinone from the cytochrome complex. Photoreduction of cytochrome b6 can also be demonstrated in the presence of the cytochrome complex and PS I. This photoreduction requires plastocyanin and a low-potential electron donor, such as durohydroquinone. Cytochrome b6 photoreduction in the presence of PS I is inhibited by quinone analogs which interact with the Rieske iron-sulfur center. These results are discussed in terms of a Q-cycle mechanism in which plastosemiquinone serves as the reductant for cytochrome b6 via an oxidant-induced reductive pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Flash-induced primary charge separation, detected as electrochromic absorbance change, the operation of the cytochrome b/f complex and the redox state of the plastoquinone pool were measured in leaves, protoplasts and open-cell preparations of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), and in isolated intact chloroplasts of peas (Pisum sativum L.). Addition of 0.5–5 mM KCN to these samples resulted in a large increase in the slow electrochromic rise originating from the electrogenic activity of the cytochrome b/f complex. The enhancement was also demonstrated by monitoring the absorbance transients of cytochrome f and b 6 between 540 and 572 nm. In isolated, intact chloroplasts with an inhibited photosystem (PS) II, low concentrations of dithionite or ascorbate rendered turnover of only 60% of the PSI reaction centers, KCN being required to reactivate the remainder. Silent PSI reaction centers which could be reactivated by KCN were shown to occur in protoplasts both in the absence and presence of a PSII inhibitor. Contrasting spectroscopic data obtained for chloroplasts before and after isolation indicated the existence of a continuous supply of reducing equivalents from the cytosol.Our data indicate that: (i) A respiratory electron-transport pathway involving a cyanide-sensitive component is located in chloroplasts and competes with photosynthetic electron transport for reducing equivalents from the plastoquinone pool. This chlororespiratory pathway appears to be similar to that found in photosynthetic prokaryotes and green algae. (ii) There is an influx of reducing equivalents from the cytosol to the plastoquinone pool. These may be indicative of a complex respiratory control of photosynthetic electron transport in higher-plant cells.Abbreviations and symbols A515 flash-induced electrochromic absorbance change at 515 nm - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - PS photosystem - SHAM salicylhydroxamic acid  相似文献   

12.
The oxygen flash yield (YO2) and photochemical yield of PS II (PS II) were simultaneously detected in intact Chlorella cells on a bare platinum oxygen rate electrode. The two yields were measured as a function of background irradiance in the steady-state and following a transition from light to darkness. During steady-state illumination at moderate irradiance levels, YO2 and PS II followed each other, suggesting a close coupling between the oxidation of water and QA reduction (Falkowski et al. (1988) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 933: 432–443). Following a light-to-dark transition, however, the relationship between QA reduction and the fraction of PS II reaction centers capable of evolving O2 became temporarily uncoupled. PS II recovered to the preillumination levels within 5–10 s, while the YO2 required up to 60 s to recover under aerobic conditions. The recovery of YO2 was independent of the redox state of QA, but was accompanied by a 30% increase in the functional absorption cross-section of PS II (PS II). The hysteresis between YO2 and the reduction of QA during the light-to-dark transition was dependent upon the reduction level of the plastoquinone pool and does not appear to be due to a direct radiative charge back-reaction, but rather is a consequence of a transient cyclic electron flow around PS II. The cycle is engaged in vivo only when the plastoquinone pool is reduced. Hence, the plastoquinone pool can act as a clutch that disconnects the oxygen evolution from photochemical charge separation in PS II.Abbreviations ADRY acceleration of the deactivation reactions of the water-splitting enzyme (agents) - Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - FO minimum fluorescence yield in the dark-adapted state - FI minimum fluorescence yield under ambient irradiance or during transition from the light-adapted state - FM maximum fluorescence yield in the dark-adapted state - FM maximum fluorescence yield under ambient irradiance or during transition from light-adapted state - FV, FV variable fluorescence (FV=FM–FO ; FV=FM–FI) - FRR fast repetition rate (fluorometer) - PS II quantum yield of QA reduction (PS II=(FM – FO)/FM or PS II)=(FM= – FI=)/FM=) - LHCII Chl a/b light harvesting complexes of Photosystem II - OEC oxygen evolving complex of PS II - P680 reaction center chlorophyll of PS II - PQ plastoquinone - POH2 plastoquinol - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC II reaction centers of Photosystem II - PS II the effective absorption cross-section of PHotosystem II - TL thermoluminescence - YO2 oxygen flash yield The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

13.
Lars F. Olsen 《BBA》1982,682(3):482-490
The kinetics of redox changes of P-700, plastocyanin and cytochrome f in chloroplasts suspended in a fluid medium at sub-zero temperatures have been studied following excitation of the chloroplasts with either a single-turnover flash, a series of flashes or continuous light. The results show that: (1) The kinetics of reduction of P-700+ and those of oxidation of plastocyanin are consistent with a bimolecular reaction between these two components as previously suggested (Olsen, L.F., Cox, R.P. and Barber, J. (1980) FEBS Lett. 122, 13–16). (2) Cytochrome f shows heterogeneity with respect to its kinetics of oxidation by Photosystem I. (3) In contrast to the situation when plastoquinol is the electron donor, reduction of cytochrome f by electrons derived from diaminodurene occurs with sigmoidal kinetics that shows a good fit to an apparent equilibrium constant of 12 between the cytochrome and P-700. (4) The rate of electron transfer from plastoquinol to Photosystem I depends on the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. (5) In relation to current ideas about the lateral heterogeneity of Photosystem I and Photosystem II in the thylakoid membrane, the results are consistent with the function of plastocyanin as a mobile carrier of electrons in the intrathylakoid space.  相似文献   

14.
The kinetics of oxidation and reduction of P700, plastocyanin, cytochrome f and cytochrome b-563 were studied in a reconstituted system consisting of Photosystem I particles, cytochrome bf complex and plastocyanin, all derived from pea leaf chloroplasts. Decyl plastoquinol was the reductant of the bf complex. Turnovers of the system were initiated by laser flashes. The reaction between oxidised P700 and plastocyanin was non-homogeneous in that a second-order rate coefficient of c. 5×10–7 M–1 s–1 applied to 80% of the P700+ and c. 0.7×107 M–1 s–1 to the remainder. In the presence of bf complex, but without quinol, the electron transfer between cytochrome f and oxidised plastocyanin could be described by a second-order rate coefficient of c. 4×107 M–1 s–1 (forward), and c. 1.6×107 M–1 s–1 (reverse). The equilibrium coefficient was thus 2.5. Unexpectedly, there was little reduction of cytochrome f + or plastocyanin+ by electrons from the Rieske centre. With added quinol, reduction of cytochrome b-563 occurred. Concomitantly, electrons appeared in the oxidised species. It was inferred that either the Rieske centre was not involved in the high-potential chain of electron transfer events, or that, only in the presence of quinol, electrons were quickly passed from the Rieske centre to cytochrome f +. Additionally, the presence of quinol altered the equilibrium coefficient for the cyt f/PC interaction from 2.5 to c. 5. The reaction between quinol and the bf complex was describable by a second-order rate coefficient of about 3×106 M–1 s–1. The pattern of the redox reactions around the bf complex could be simulated in detail with a Q-cycle model as previously found for chloroplasts.Abbreviations AQS anthraquinone sulphonate - cyt cytochrome - cyt b-563(H) high-potential cyt b-563 - cyt b-563(L) low potential cyt b-563 - FeS(R) the Rieske protein of the cyt bf complex, containing an Fe2S2 centre - PC plastocyanin - PS photosystem - P700 reaction centre in PS I  相似文献   

15.
Chimaeric mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been generated carrying part or all of the spinach psbB gene, encoding CP47 (one of the chlorophyll-binding core antenna proteins in Photosystem II). The mutant in which the entire psbB gene had been replaced by the homologous gene from spinach was an obligate photoheterotroph and lacked Photosystem II complexes in its thylakoid membranes. However, this strain could be transformed with plasmids carrying selected regions of Synechocystis psbB to give rise to photoautotrophs with a chimaeric spinach/cyanobacterial CP47 protein. This process involved heterologous recombination in the cyanobacterium between psbB sequences from spinach and Synechocystis 6803; which was found to be reasonably effective in Synechocystis. Also other approaches were used that can produce a broad spectrum of chimaeric mutants in a single experiment. Functional characterization of the chimaeric photoautotrophic mutants indicated that if a decrease in the photoautotrophic growth rates was observed, this was correlated with a decrease in the number of Photosystem II reaction centers (on a chlorophyll basis) in the thylakoid membrane and with a decrease in oxygen evolution rates. Remaining Photosystem II reaction centers in these chimaeric mutants appeared to function rather normally, but thermoluminescence and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements provided evidence for a destabilization of QB . This illustrates the sensitivity of the functional properties of the PS II reaction center to mild perturbations in a neighboring protein.Abbreviations diuron 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fv variable chlorophyll a fluorescence - HEPES N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N-(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - (k)bp (kilo)base pairs - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - QB secondary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

16.
The protonophoric uncouplers carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), 2,3,4,5,6-pentachlorophenol (PCP) and 4,5,6,7-tetrachloro-2-trifluoromethylbenzimidazole (TTFB) inhibited the Hill reaction with K3[Fe(CN)6] (but not with SiMo) in chloroplast and cyanobacterial membranes (the I50 values were approx. 1–2, 4–6 and 0.04–0.10 M, respectively). The inhibition is due to oxidation of the uncouplers on the Photosystem II donor side (ADRY effect) and their subsequent reduction on the acceptor side, ie. to the formation of a cyclic electron transfer chain around Photosystem II involving the uncouplers as redox carriers. The relative amplitude of nanosecond chlorophyll fluorescence in chloroplasts was increased by DCMU or HQNO and did not change upon addition of uncouplers, DBMIB or DNP-INT; the HQNO effect was not removed by the uncouplers. The uncouplers did not inhibit the electron transfer from reduced TMPD or duroquinol to methylviologen which is driven by Photosystem I. These data show that CCCP, PCP and TTFB oxidized on the Photosystem II donor side are reduced by the membrane pool of plastoquinone (Qp) which is also the electron donor for K3 [Fe(CN)6] in the Hill reaction as deduced from the data obtained in the presence of inhibitors. Inhibition of the Hill reaction by the uncouplers was maximum at the pH values corresponding to the pK of these compounds. It is suggested that the tested uncouplers serve as proton donors, and not merely as electron donors on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II.Abbreviations ADRY- acceleration of the deactivation reactions of the water-splitting enzyme system Y - ANT2p- 2-(3-chloro-4-trifluoromethyl) anilino-3,5-dinitrothiophene - CCCP- carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DBMIB- 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl 6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU- 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DNP-INT- 2-iodo-6-isopropyl-3-methyl 2,4,4-trinitrodiphenyl ether - DPC- 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - DPIP- 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - FCCP- carbonyl cyanide p-trifuoromethoxyphenylhydrazone - FeCy- potassium ferricyanide - HQNO- 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide - (MN)4- the tetranuclear Mn cluster of water oxidizing complex - P680- photoactive Chl of the reaction center of Photosystem II - PCP- 2,3,4,5,6-pentachlorophenol - PS- photosystem - QA and QB- primary and secondary plastoquinones of PS II - QC and QZ- plastoquinone binding sites in the cytochrome blf complex - Qp- membrane pool of plastoquinone - SiMo- sodium silicomolybdate - TMPD- N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine - TTFB- 4,5,6,7-tetrachloro-2-trifluoromethylbenzimidazole - WOC- water oxidixing complex - YZ- tyrosine-161 of the Photosystem II D1 polypeptide  相似文献   

17.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was used to quantify Photosystem I (PSI) and PSII in vesicles originating from a series of well-defined but different domains of the thylakoid membrane in spinach prepared by non-detergent techniques. Thylakoids from spinach were fragmented by sonication and separated by aqueous polymer two-phase partitioning into vesicles originating from grana and stroma lamellae. The grana vesicles were further sonicated and separated into two vesicle preparations originating from the grana margins and the appressed domains of grana (the grana core), respectively. PSI and PSII were determined in the same samples from the maximal size of the EPR signal from P700(+) and Y(D)( .-), respectively. The following PSI/PSII ratios were found: thylakoids, 1.13; grana vesicles, 0.43; grana core, 0.25; grana margins, 1.28; stroma lamellae 3.10. In a sub-fraction of the stroma lamellae, denoted Y-100, PSI was highly enriched and the PSI/PSII ratio was 13. The antenna size of the respective photosystems was calculated from the experimental data and the assumption that a PSII center in the stroma lamellae (PSIIbeta) has an antenna size of 100 Chl. This gave the following results: PSI in grana margins (PSIalpha) 300, PSI (PSIbeta) in stroma lamellae 214, PSII in grana core (PSIIalpha) 280. The results suggest that PSI in grana margins have two additional light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) trimers per reaction center compared to PSI in stroma lamellae, and that PSII in grana has four LHCII trimers per monomer compared to PSII in stroma lamellae. Calculation of the total chlorophyll associated with PSI and PSII, respectively, suggests that more chlorophyll (about 10%) is associated with PSI than with PSII.  相似文献   

18.
Fifteen ancestral genotypes of United States soybean cultivars were screened for differences in photosynthetic electron transport capacity using isolated thylakoid membranes. Plants were grown in controlled environment chambers under high or low irradiance conditions. Thylakoid membranes were isolated from mature leaves. Photosynthetic electron transport was assayed as uncoupled Hill activity using 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP). Soybean electron transport activity was dependent on genotype and growth irradiance and ranged from 6 to 91 mmol DCIP reduced [mol chlorophyll]–1 s–1. Soybean plastocyanin pool size ranged from 0.1 to 1.3 mol plastocyanin [mol Photosystem I]–1. In contrast, barley and spinach electron transport activities were 140 and 170 mmol DCIP reduced [mol chlorophyll]–1 s–1, respectively, with plastocyanin pool sizes of 3 to 4 mol plastocyanin [mol Photosystem I]–1. No significant differences in the concentrations of Photosystem II, plastoquinone, cytochrome b6f complexes, or Photosystem I were observed. Thus, genetic differences in electron transport activity were correlated with plastocyanin pool size. The results suggested that plastocyanin pool size can vary significantly and may limit photosynthetic electron transport capacity in certain species such as soybean. Soybean plastocyanin consisted of two isoforms with apparent molecular masses of 14 and 11 kDa, whereas barley and spinach plastocyanins each consisted of single polypeptides of 8 and 12 kDa, respectively.Abbreviations DAP days after planting - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - LiDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density (mol photons m–2 s–1) - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - P700 reaction center of Photosystem I The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

19.
Reduction kinetics of cytochrome f, plastocyanin (PC) and P700 (‘high-potential chain’) in thylakoids from spinach were followed after pre-oxidation by a saturating light pulse. We describe a novel approach to follow PC redox kinetics from deconvolution of 810-860 nm absorption changes. The equilibration between the redox-components was analyzed by plotting the redox state of cytochrome f and PC against that of P700. In thylakoids with (1) diminished electron transport rate (adjusted with a cytochrome bf inhibitor) or (2) de-stacked grana, cytochrome f and PC relaxed close to their thermodynamic equilibriums with P700. In stacked thylakoids with non-inhibited electron transport, the equilibration plots were complex and non-hyperbolic, suggesting that during fast electron flux, the ‘high-potential chain’ does not homogeneously equilibrate throughout the membrane. Apparent equilibrium constants <5 were calculated, which are below the thermodynamic equilibrium known for the ‘high potential chain’. The disequilibrium found in stacked thylakoids with high electron fluxes is explained by restricted long-range PC diffusion. We develop a model assuming that about 30% of Photosystem I mainly located in grana end-membranes and margins rapidly equilibrate with cytochrome f via short-distance transluminal PC diffusion, while long-range lateral PC migration between grana cores and distant stroma lamellae is restricted. Implications for the electron flux control are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Short-term responses of Photosystem I to heat stress   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
When 23°C-grown potato leaves (Solanum tuberosum L.) were exposed for 15 min to elevated temperatures in weak light, a dramatic and preferential inactivation of Photosystem (PS) II was observed at temperatures higher than about 38°C. In vivo photoacoustic measurements indicated that, concomitantly with the loss of PS II activity, heat stress induced a marked gas-uptake activity both in far-red light (>715 nm) exciting only PS I and in broadband light (350–600 nm) exciting PS I and PS II. In view of its suppression by nitrogen gas and oxygen and its stimulation by high carbon-dioxide concentrations, the bulk of the photoacoustically measured gas uptake by heat-stressed leaves was ascribed to rapid carbon-dioxide solubilization in response to light-modulated stroma alkalization coupled to PS I-driven electron transport. Heat-induced gas uptake was observed to be insensitive to the PS II inhibitor diuron, sensitive to the plastocyanin inhibitor HgCl2 and saturated at a rather high photon flux density of around 1200 E m–2 s–1. Upon transition from far-red light to darkness, the oxidized reaction center P700+ of PS I was re-reduced very slowly in control leaves (with a half time t1/2 higher than 500 ms), as measured by leaf absorbance changes at around 820 nm. Heat stress caused a spectacular acceleration of the postillumination P700+ reduction, with t1/2 falling to a value lower than 50 ms (after leaf exposure to 48°C). The decreased t1/2 was sensitive to HgCl2 and insensitive to diuron, methyl viologen (an electron acceptor of PS I competing with the endogenous acceptor ferredoxin) and anaerobiosis. This acceleration of the P700+ reduction was very rapidly induced by heat treatment (within less than 5 min) and persisted even after prolonged irradiation of the leaves with far-red light. After heat stress, the plastoquinone pool exhibited reduction in darkness as indicated by the increase in the apparent Fo level of chlorophyll fluorescence which could be quenched by far-red light. Application (for 1 min) of far-red light to heat-pretreated leaves also induced a reversible quenching of the maximal fluorescence level Fm, suggesting formation of a pH gradient in far-red light. Taken together, the presented data indicate that PS I responded to the heat-induced loss of PS II photochemical activity by catalyzing an electron flow from stromal reductants. Heat-stress-induced PS I electron transport independent of PS II seems to constitute a protective mechanism since block of this electron pathway in anaerobiosis was observed to result in a dramatic photoinactivation of PS I.Abbreviations PFD photon flux density - PS Photosystem - Apt and Aox amplitude of the photothermal and photobaric components of the photoacoustic signal, respectively - P700 reaction center pigment of PS I - Fo and Fm initial and maximal levels of chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively - Fv=Fm Fo-variable chlorophyll fluorescence - QA primary (stable) electron acceptor of PS II - DCMU (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Cyt cytochrome  相似文献   

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