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1.
Oxygenic photosynthesis in cyanobacteria, algae, and plants requires photosystem II (PSII) to extract electrons from H(2)O and depends on photosystem I (PSI) to reduce NADP(+). Here we demonstrate that mixotrophically-grown mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 that lack PSI (ΔPSI) are capable of net light-induced O(2) evolution in vivo. The net light-induced O(2) evolution requires glucose and can be sustained for more than 30min. Utilizing electron transport inhibitors and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, we show that in these mutants PSII is the source of the light-induced O(2) evolution, and that the plastoquinone pool is reduced by PSII and subsequently oxidized by an unidentified electron acceptor that does not involve the plastoquinol oxidase site of the cytochrome b(6)f complex. Moreover, both O(2) evolution and chlorophyll a fluorescence kinetics of the ΔPSI mutants are highly sensitive to KCN, indicating the involvement of a KCN-sensitive enzyme(s). Experiments using (14)C-labeled bicarbonate show that the ΔPSI mutants assimilate more CO(2) in the light compared to the dark. However, the rate of the light-minus-dark CO(2) assimilation accounts for just over half of the net light-induced O(2) evolution rate, indicating the involvement of unidentified terminal electron acceptors. Based on these results we suggest that O(2) evolution in ΔPSI cells can be sustained by an alternative electron transport pathway that results in CO(2) assimilation and that includes PSII, the platoquinone pool, and a KCN-sensitive enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Brecht M  Radics V  Nieder JB  Studier H  Bittl R 《Biochemistry》2008,47(20):5536-5543
Single-molecule spectroscopy at low temperatures was used to elucidate spectral properties, heterogeneities, and dynamics of the red-shifted chlorophyll a (Chl a) molecules responsible for the fluorescence from photosystem I (PSI). Emission spectra of single PSI complexes from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 show zero-phonon lines (ZPLs) as well as broad intensity distributions without ZPLs. ZPLs are found most frequently on the blue side of the broad intensity distributions. The abundance of ZPLs decreases almost linearly at longer wavelengths. The distribution of ZPLs indicates the existence of at least two pools with maxima at 699 and 710 nm. The pool with the maximum at 710 nm is assigned to chlorophylls absorbing around 706 nm (C706), whereas the pool with the maximum at 699 nm (F699) can be assigned to chlorophylls absorbing at 692, 695, or 699 nm. The broad distributions dominating the red side of the spectra are made up of a low number of emitters assigned to the red-most pool C714. The properties of F699 show close relation to those of F698 in Synechococcus PCC 7002 and C708 in Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Furthermore, a high similarity is found between the C714 pool in Synechocystis PCC 6803 and C708 in Synechococcus PCC 7002 as well as C719 in T. elongatus.  相似文献   

3.
We present here a simple and rapid method which allows relatively large quantities of oxygen-evolving photosystem II- (PS-II-) enriched particles to be obtained from wild-type and mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. This method is based on that of Burnap et al. [Burnap, R., Koike, H., Sotiropoulou, G., Sherman, L. A., & Inoue, Y. (1989) Photosynth. Res. 22, 123-130] but is modified so that the whole preparation, from cells to PS-II particles, is achieved in 10 h and involves only one purification step. The purified preparation exhibits a 5-6-fold increase of O2-evolution activity on a chlorophyll basis over the thylakoids. The ratio of PS-I to PS-II is about 0.14:1 in the preparation. The secondary quinone electron acceptor, QB, is present in this preparation as demonstrated by thermoluminescence studies. These PS-II particles are well-suited to spectroscopic studies as demonstrated by the range of EPR signals arising from components of PS-II that are easily detectable. Among the EPR signals presented are those from a formal S3-state, attributed to an oxidized amino acid interacting magnetically with the Mn complex in Ca(2+)-deficient PS-II particles, and from S2 modified by the replacement of Ca2+ by Sr2+. Neither of these signals has been previously reported in cyanobacteria. Their detection under these conditions indicates a similar lesion caused by Ca2+ depletion in both plants and cyanobacteria. The protocol has also been applied to mutants which have site-specific changes in PS-II. Data are presented on mutants having changes on the electron donor (Y160F) and electron acceptor (G215W) side of the D2 polypeptide.  相似文献   

4.
G Shen  S Boussiba    W F Vermaas 《The Plant cell》1993,5(12):1853-1863
To design an in vivo system allowing detailed analysis of photosystem II (PSII) complexes without significant interference from other pigment complexes, part of the psaAB operon coding for the core proteins of photosystem I (PSI) and part of the apcE gene coding for the anchor protein linking the phycobilisome to the thylakoid membrane were deleted from the genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp strain PCC 6803. Upon transformation and segregation at low light intensity (5 microE m-2 sec-1), a PSI deletion strain was obtained that is light tolerant and grows reasonably well under photoheterotrophic conditions at 5 microE m-2 sec-1 (doubling time approximately 28 hr). Subsequent inactivation of apcE by an erythromycin resistance marker led to reduction of the phycobilin-to-chlorophyll ratio and to a further decrease in light sensitivity. The resulting PSI-less/apcE- strain grew photoheterotrophically at normal light intensity (50 microE m-2 sec-1) with a doubling time of 18 hr. Deletion of apcE in the wild type resulted in slow photoautotrophic growth. The remaining phycobilins in apcE- strains were inactive in transferring light energy to PSII. Cells of both the PSI-less and PSI-less/apcE- strains had an approximately sixfold enrichment of PSII on a chlorophyll basis and were as active in oxygen evolution (on a per PSII basis) as the wild type at saturating light intensity. Both PSI-less strains described here are highly appropriate both for detailed PSII studies and as background strains to analyze site- and region-directed PSII mutants in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
ycf33 encodes a small protein with a molecular mass of 7.5 kDa and is found from cyanobacteria to higher plants. A ycf33 deletion mutant was constructed in Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and characterized. The mutant showed a higher phycobilisome/chlorophyll ratio than the wild type and a higher photosystem II/photosystem I fluorescence ratio measured at 77 K. Under photoautotrophic conditions, the growth rates were not much different from those of the wild type. Cyclic electron transport activities around photosystem I were not much different between the wild type and the mutant. However, the effects of diphenyleneiodonium, an inhibitor of flavoprotein, on cyclic electron transport in the mutant were different from those in the wild type; it was severely inhibited in the wild type but not much in the mutant. Together with the effects of nitrite, which accepts electrons from ferredoxin via nitrite reductase and those of HgCl2, it was suggested that the pathway of cyclic electron transport is altered in the mutant.  相似文献   

6.
We cloned and sequenced the psbK gene, coding for a small photosystem II component (PSII-K), from the transformable cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and determined the N-terminal sequence of mature PSII-K. The psbK gene product is processed by cleaving off eight amino acid residues from the N terminus. A mutant lacking psbK was constructed; this mutant grew photoautotrophically, but its growth rate was reduced. The number of photosystem II reaction centers on a chlorophyll basis was decreased by less than a factor of 2 in the psbK-deletion mutant. In Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, the psbK gene is transcribed as a single gene and is not part of an operon. Single-site mutations were introduced into psbK leading to early termination or deletion of the presequence. The phenotype of these mutants strongly resembles that of the psbK deletion mutant, indicating that indeed the change in phenotype in the deletion mutant is directly correlated with PSII-K. PSII-K is not essential for photosystem II assembly or activity but is needed for optimal photosystem II function.  相似文献   

7.
Mossbauer spectra of the psaAB mutant of Synechocystis sp. PPC 6803 devoid of photosystem I grown in a 57Fe-containing medium were measured. The spectrum is a broadened doublet whose size (about 20%) and parameters (isomeric shift delta = 0.3 mm/s and quadrupole splitting delta = 0.8 mm/s) suggest the presence of abundant nanoclusters of Fe3+ oxides in a superparamagnetic state tightly bound to the membrane. Treatment of cells with EDTA was accompanied by a substantial (tenfold) decrease in the amount of iron nonspecifically bound to the membrane and the appearance of Fe2+ localized, probably, inside cells and/or cell membranes. In addition, the spectrum of washed cells exhibited superfine magnetic splitting due to iron oxide clusters greater in size than nanoclusters present in the membrane prior to EDTA treatment.  相似文献   

8.

Cyclic electron transport (CET) is an attractive hypothesis for regulating photosynthetic electron transport and producing the additional ATP in oxygenic phototrophs. The concept of CET has been established in the last decades, and it is proposed to function in the progenitor of oxygenic photosynthesis, cyanobacteria. The in vivo activity of CET is frequently evaluated either from the redox state of the reaction center chlorophyll in photosystem (PS) I, P700, in the absence of PSII activity or by comparing PSI and PSII activities through the P700 redox state and chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively. The evaluation of CET activity, however, is complicated especially in cyanobacteria, where CET shares the intersystem chain, including plastoquinone, cytochrome b6/f complex, plastocyanin, and cytochrome c6, with photosynthetic linear electron transport (LET) and respiratory electron transport (RET). Here we sought to distinguish the in vivo electron transport rates in RET and CET in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The reduction rate of oxidized P700 (P700+) decreased to less than 10% when PSII was inhibited, indicating that PSII is the dominant electron source to PSI but P700+ is also reduced by electrons derived from other sources. The oxidative pentose phosphate (OPP) pathway functions as the dominant electron source for RET, which was found to be inhibited by glycolaldehyde (GA). In the condition where the OPP pathway and respiratory terminal oxidases were inhibited by GA and KCN, the P700+ reduction rate was less than 1% of that without any inhibitors. This study indicate that the electron transport to PSI when PSII is inhibited is dominantly derived from the OPP pathway in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.

  相似文献   

9.
Highly photoactive Photosystem I (PS I) and Photosystem II (PS II) core complexes have been isolated from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis Pasteur Culture Collection (PCC) 6803 and a phycocyanin-deficient mutant, enriched in PS II. Cell breakage using glass beads was followed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and two high-performance liquid chromatography steps involving anion-exchange and hydroxyapatite. The PS I core complex has an apparent molecular mass of 300 +/- 20 kDa (including a detergent shell of about 50 kDa) and contains subunits of approximately 60, approximately 60, 18.5, 18.5, 16, 15, 10.5, 9.5, and 6.5 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblots; its antenna size is 75 +/- 5 chlorophyll/P-700. The PS II core complex has an apparent molecular mass of 310 +/- 20 kDa (including the detergent shell); subunits of 43, 37, 33, 29, and 10-11 kDa were identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. The antenna size of the average PS II complex is 45 +/- 5 chlorophyll/primary quinone electron acceptor (QA). This preparation procedure also yields, as a byproduct, a highly purified cytochrome b6f complex. This complex contains four subunits of 38, 24, 19, and 15 kDa and b- and c-type cytochromes in a ratio of 2:1. Its apparent molecular mass of 180 +/- 20 kDa (including the detergent shell) is consistent with a monomeric complex.  相似文献   

10.
F Rousseau  B Lagoutte 《FEBS letters》1990,260(2):245-248
We describe here the complete amino acid sequence of photosystem I subunit IV from Synechocystis 6803. The molecular mass of 8.0 kDa is lower than in higher plants and Chlamydomonas, due to the lack of a characteristic, proline-rich, N-terminal sequence. The remaining sequence exhibits a good conservation, with a hydrophilic and strongly basic N-tenninal head followed by two hydrophobic domains. There is no possibility of classical membrane-spanning alpha helices. This component is likely to be one of the most stroma accessible subunits of photosystem I.  相似文献   

11.
Ultrafast primary processes in the trimeric photosystem I core antenna-reaction center complex of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been examined in pump-probe experiments with approximately 100 fs resolution. A global analysis of two-color profiles, excited at 660 nm and probed at 5 nm intervals from 650 to 730 nm, reveals 430 fs kinetics for spectral equilibration among bulk antenna chlorophylls. At least two lifetime components (2.0 and 6.5 ps in our analysis) are required to describe equilibration of bulk chlorophylls with far red-absorbing chlorophylls (>700 nm). Trapping at P700 occurs with 24-ps kinetics. The multiphasic bulk left arrow over right arrow red equilibration kinetics are intriguing, because prior steady-state spectral studies have suggested that the core antenna in Synechocystis sp. contains only one red-absorbing chlorophyll species (C708). The disperse kinetics may arise from inhomogeneous broadening in C708. The one-color optical anisotropy at 680 nm (near the red edge of the bulk antenna) decays with 590 fs kinetics; the corresponding anisotropy at 710 nm shows approximately 3.1 ps kinetics. The latter may signal equilibration among symmetry-equivalent red chlorophylls, bound to different monomers within trimeric photosystem I.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Recently, construction of strains of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 having a His(6) extension (His-tag) of the carboxyl terminus of the CP47 protein has been reported (T.M. Bricker et al, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1409 (1998) 50; M.J. Reifler et al., in: Garab, Pusztai (Eds.) Proc. XIth International Congress on Photosynthesis, 1998). While these initial reports suggest a minimal impact of the His-tag upon Photosystem (PS) II function, a more thorough analysis of the kinetic properties of the modified complex is essential. This communication reports on a more detailed kinetic analysis to assess possible perturbations of PS II due to the genetic addition of the His-tag on the CP47 protein. It was found that: (1) Patterns of flash O(2) yield exhibited normal period four oscillations and the associated fits of the Kok-Joliot S-state cycling parameters were virtually identical to the wild type; (2) O(2) release kinetics during the S(3)-S(0) transition were experimentally indistinguishable from the wild type; (3) S-state decay measurements indicate slightly faster decays of the S(2) and S(3) states compared to the wild type; (4) fluorescence measurements indicate that the kinetics of the forward reaction of electron transfer from Q(A)(-) to Q(B) and back-reactions of Q(A)(-) with PS II electron donors are similar in the His-tag and wild-type strains. It is therefore concluded that the addition of the His-tag results in a minimal perturbation of PS II function.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 lacking photosystem I (PSI-less) and containing only photosystem II (PSII) or lacking both photosystems I and II (PSI/PSII-less) were compared to wild type (WT) cells to investigate the role of the photosystems in the architecture, structure, and number of thylakoid membranes. All cells were grown at 0.5μmol photons m(-2)s(-1). The lumen of the thylakoid membranes of the WT cells grown at this low light intensity were inflated compared to cells grown at higher light intensity. Tubular as well as sheet-like thylakoid membranes were found in the PSI-less strain at all stages of development with organized regular arrays of phycobilisomes on the surface of the thylakoid membranes. Tubular structures were also found in the PSI/PSII-less strain, but these were smaller in diameter to those found in the PSI-less strain with what appeared to be a different internal structure and were less common. There were fewer and smaller thylakoid membrane sheets in the double mutant and the phycobilisomes were found on the surface in more disordered arrays. These differences in thylakoid membrane structure most likely reflect the altered composition of photosynthetic particles and distribution of other integral membrane proteins and their interaction with the lipid bilayer. These results suggest an important role for the presence of PSII in the formation of the highly ordered tubular structures.  相似文献   

16.
Yao DC  Brune DC  Vermaas WF 《FEBS letters》2012,586(2):169-173
The half-life times of photosystem I and II proteins were determined using (15)N-labeling and mass spectrometry. The half-life times (30-75h for photosystem I components and <1-11h for the large photosystem II proteins) were similar when proteins were isolated from monomeric vs. oligomeric complexes on Blue-Native gels, suggesting that the two forms of both photosystems can interchange on a timescale of <1h or that only one form of each photosystem exists in thylakoids in vivo. The half-life times of proteins associated with either photosystem generally were unaffected by the absence of Small Cab-like proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Among a wide range of potential selective agents examined, sodium p-hydroxymercuribenzoate successfully enriched for mutants of Synechocystis sp. strains PCC 6714 and 6803 defective in photosynthesis. When both photosystems I and II were operating, viability of wild-type cells decreased to between 5 X 10(-5) and 1 X 10(-6) after 5 h of incubation with 500 microM p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (strain 6714), and after 8 h with 200 microM (strain 6803). Between 0.1 and 0.5% of the survivors were stable mutants defective in different steps of photosynthesis. The compound was not mutagenic. It was less toxic to cells grown chemoheterotrophically in the dark or photoheterotrophically in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. p-Hydroxymercuribenzoate therefore killed only cells which were performing photosynthesis at high rates, thereby specifically selecting for mutants deficient in this process.  相似文献   

18.
Breton J  Chitnis PR  Pantelidou M 《Biochemistry》2005,44(14):5402-5408
P700, the primary electron donor of photosystem I, is an asymmetric dimer made of one molecule of chlorophyll a' (P(A)) and one of chlorophyll a (P(B)) that are bound to the homologous PsaA and PsaB polypeptides. While the carbonyl groups of P(A) are involved in hydrogen-bonding interactions with several surrounding amino acid side chains and a water molecule, P(B) does not engage hydrogen bonds with the protein. Notably, the residue Thr A739 is donating a strong hydrogen bond to the 9-keto C=O group of P(A) and the homologous residue Tyr B718 is free from interaction with P(B). Light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy of the photooxidation of P700 has been combined with a site-directed mutagenesis attempt to introduce hydrogen bonds to the carbonyl groups of P(B) in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The FTIR study of the Y(B718)T mutant provides evidence that the 9-keto C=O group of P(B) and P(B)(+) engages a relatively strong hydrogen-bonding interaction with the surroundings in a significant fraction (40 +/-10%) of the reaction centers. Additional mutations on the two PsaB residues homologous to those involved in the main interactions between the PsaA polypeptide and the 10a-carbomethoxy groups of P(A) affect only marginally the vibrational frequency of the 10a-ester C=O group of P(B). The FTIR data on single, double, and triple mutants at these PsaB sites indicate a plasticity of the interactions of the carbonyl groups of P(B) with the surrounding protein. However, these mutations do not perturb the hydrogen-bonding interactions assumed by the 9-keto and 10a-ester C=O groups of P(A) and P(A)(+) with the protein and have only a limited effect on the relative charge distribution between P(A)(+) and P(B)(+).  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》2020,1861(8):148208
Photosynthetic microorganisms such as the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Synechocystis) can be exploited for the light-driven synthesis of valuable compounds. Thermodynamically, it is most beneficial to branch-off photosynthetic electrons at ferredoxin (Fd), which provides electrons for a variety of fundamental metabolic pathways in the cell, with the ferredoxin-NADP+ Oxido-Reductase (FNR, PetH) being the main target. In order to re-direct electrons from Fd to another consumer, the high electron transport rate between Fd and FNR has to be reduced. Based on our previous in vitro experiments, corresponding FNR-mutants at position FNR_K190 (Wiegand, K., et al.: “Rational redesign of the ferredoxin-NADP-oxido-reductase/ferredoxin-interaction for photosynthesis-dependent H2-production”. Biochim Biophys Acta, 2018) have been generated in Synechocystis cells to study their impact on the cellular metabolism and their potential for a future hydrogen-producing design cell. Out of two promising candidates, mutation FNR_K190D proved to be lethal due to oxidative stress, while FNR_K190A was successfully generated and characterized: The light induced NADPH formation is clearly impaired in this mutant and it shows also major metabolic adaptations like a higher glucose metabolism as evidenced by quantitative mass spectrometric analysis. These results indicate a high potential for the future use of photosynthetic electrons in engineered design cells – for instance for hydrogen production. They also show substantial differences of interacting proteins in an in vitro environment vs. physiological conditions in whole cells.  相似文献   

20.
Satoh S  Tanaka A 《FEBS letters》2002,528(1-3):235-240
Chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO) catalyzes two-step oxygenation reactions and converts chlorophyllide a to chlorophyllide b. When CAO was introduced into the Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 genome, chlorophyll b was synthesized and incorporated into P700-chlorophyll a-protein complexes. Curve analysis of photosystem I particles showed that Ca687 was decreased with a concomitant increase in Cb652 suggesting that chlorophyll b was incorporated into Ca687-binding sites. When the level of chlorophyll b was high, Ca704, which is known as red chlorophyll and photosystem I trimers were decreased. Formation of photosystem I trimers is discussed in relation to red chlorophyll and chlorophyll b accumulation.  相似文献   

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