首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The multisubunit membrane protein complex Photosystem II (PSII) catalyzes one of the key reactions in photosynthesis: the light-driven oxidation of water. Here, we focus on the role of the Psb27 assembly factor, which is involved in biogenesis and repair after light-induced damage of the complex. We show that Psb27 is essential for the survival of cyanobacterial cells grown under stress conditions. The combination of cold stress (30 °C) and high light stress (1000 μmol of photons × m(-2) × s(-1)) led to complete inhibition of growth in a Δpsb27 mutant strain of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus, whereas wild-type cells continued to grow. Moreover, Psb27-containing PSII complexes became the predominant PSII species in preparations from wild-type cells grown under cold stress. Two different PSII-Psb27 complexes were isolated and characterized in this study. The first complex represents the known monomeric PSII-Psb27 species, which is involved in the assembly of PSII. Additionally, a novel dimeric PSII-Psb27 complex could be allocated in the repair cycle, i.e. in processes after inactivation of PSII, by (15)N pulse-label experiments followed by mass spectrometry analysis. Comparison with the corresponding PSII species from Δpsb27 mutant cells showed that Psb27 prevented the release of manganese from the previously inactivated complex. These results indicate a more complex role of the Psb27 protein within the life cycle of PSII, especially under stress conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The involvement of the PsbI protein in the assembly and repair of the photosystem II (PSII) complex has been studied in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Analysis of PSII complexes in the wild-type strain showed that the PsbI protein was present in dimeric and monomeric core complexes, core complexes lacking CP43, and in reaction center complexes containing D1, D2, and cytochrome b-559. In addition, immunoprecipitation experiments and the use of a histidine-tagged derivative of PsbI have revealed the presence in the thylakoid membrane of assembly complexes containing PsbI and either the precursor or mature forms of D1. Analysis of PSII assembly in the psbI deletion mutant and in strains lacking PsbI together with other PSII subunits showed that PsbI was not required for formation of PSII reaction center complexes or core complexes, although levels of unassembled D1 were reduced in its absence. However, loss of PsbI led to a dramatic destabilization of CP43 binding within monomeric and dimeric PSII core complexes. Despite the close structural relationship between D1 and PsbI in the PSII complex, PsbI turned over much slower than D1, whereas high light-induced turnover of D1 was accelerated in the absence of PsbI. Overall, our results suggest that PsbI is an early assembly partner for D1 and that it plays a functional role in stabilizing the binding of CP43 in the PSII holoenzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Photosystem II (PSII) is a large membrane bound molecular machine that catalyzes light-driven oxygen evolution from water. PSII constantly undergoes assembly and disassembly because of the unavoidable damage that results from its normal photochemistry. Thus, under physiological conditions, in addition to the active PSII complexes, there are always PSII subpopulations incompetent of oxygen evolution, but are in the process of undergoing elaborate biogenesis and repair. These transient complexes are difficult to characterize because of their low abundance, structural heterogeneity, and thermodynamic instability. In this study, we show that a genetically tagged Psb27 protein allows for the biochemical purification of two monomeric PSII assembly intermediates, one with an unprocessed form of D1 (His27ΔctpAPSII) and a second one with a mature form of D1 (His27PSII). Both forms were capable of light-induced charge separation, but unable to photooxidize water, largely because of the absence of a functional tetramanganese cluster. Unexpectedly, there was a significant amount of the extrinsic lumenal PsbO protein in the His27PSII, but not in the His27ΔctpAPSII complex. In contrast, two other lumenal proteins, PsbU and PsbV, were absent in both of these PSII intermediate complexes. Additionally, the only cytoplasmic extrinsic protein, Psb28 was detected in His27PSII complex. Based on these data, we have presented a refined model of PSII biogenesis, illustrating an important role of Psb27 as a gate-keeper during the complex assembly process of the oxygen-evolving centers in PSII.  相似文献   

4.
Proper biogenesis and maintenance of photosynthetic thylakoid membrane complexes are essential for the photosynthetic light reactions. A thylakoid lumenal protein, Psb27, plays a vital role in assembly or/and maintenance of photosystem II (PSII). In cyanobacteria, it is a small lipoprotein docked to the lumenal side of PSII, and functions in the assembly of the Mn4Ca cluster and in the PSII repair cycle. However, Psb27 from Arabidopsis thaliana is not a lipoprotein, and it is involved in PSII repair and acclimation to fluctuating light stress, suggesting a functional divergence between Arabidopsis Psb27 and cyanobacterial Psb27s. To gain a better understanding of Psb27 from higher plants, we determined the crystal structure of Arabidopsis Psb27 by X-ray crystallography at a resolution of 1.85 Å. The structure of Arabidopsis Psb27 is a four-helix bundle, similar to its orthologues from cyanobacteria. However, there are several structural differences between Arabidopsis Psb27 and cyanobacterial Psb27s concerning the overall molecular shape, the N- and C-terminal structures, and the surface charge. These differences suggest that Psb27 from higher plants and cyanobacteria may function differently.  相似文献   

5.
Chen H  Zhang D  Guo J  Wu H  Jin M  Lu Q  Lu C  Zhang L 《Plant molecular biology》2006,61(4-5):567-575
Psb27 has been identified as a lumenal protein associated with photosystem II (PSII). To gain insight into the function of Psb27, we isolated a mutant Arabidopsis plant with a loss of psb27 function. The quantity of PSII complexes and electron transfer within PSII remained largely unaffected in the psb27 mutant. Our results also showed that under high-light-illumination, PSII activity and the content of the PSII reaction center protein D1 decreased more significantly in the psb27 mutant than in wild-type (WT) plant. Treatment of leaves with a chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitor resulted in similar light-induced PSII inactivation levels and D1 protein degradation rates in the WT and psb27 mutant plants. Recovery of PSII activity after photoinhibition was delayed in the psb27 mutant, suggesting that Psb27 is required for efficient recovery of the photodamaged PSII complex. Overall, these results demonstrated that Psb27 in Arabidopsis is not essential for oxygenic photosynthesis and PSII formation. Instead, our results provide evidence for the involvement of this lumenal protein in the recovery process of PSII. Hua Chen and Dongyuan Zhang contribute equally to this work.  相似文献   

6.
The role of the slr2034 (ycf48) gene product in the assembly and repair of photosystem II (PSII) has been studied in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. YCF48 (HCF136) is involved in the assembly of Arabidopsis thaliana PSII reaction center (RC) complexes but its mode of action is unclear. We show here that YCF48 is a component of two cyanobacterial PSII RC-like complexes in vivo and is absent in larger PSII core complexes. Interruption of ycf48 slowed the formation of PSII complexes in wild type, as judged from pulse-labeling experiments, and caused a decrease in the final level of PSII core complexes in wild type and a marked reduction in the levels of PSII assembly complexes in strains lacking either CP43 or CP47. Absence of YCF48 also led to a dramatic decrease in the levels of the COOH-terminal precursor (pD1) and the partially processed form, iD1, in a variety of PSII mutants and only low levels of unassembled mature D1 were observed. Yeast two-hybrid analyses using the split ubiquitin system showed an interaction of YCF48 with unassembled pD1 and, to a lesser extent, unassembled iD1, but not with unassembled mature D1 or D2. Overall our results indicate a role for YCF48 in the stabilization of newly synthesized pD1 and in its subsequent binding to a D2-cytochrome b559 pre-complex, also identified in this study. Besides a role in assembly, we show for the first time that YCF48 also functions in the selective replacement of photodamaged D1 during PSII repair.  相似文献   

7.
The role of the Psb28 protein in the structure and function of the photosystem II (PSII) complex has been studied in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The protein was localized in the membrane fraction and, whereas most of the protein was detected as an unassembled protein, a small portion was found in the PSII core complex lacking the CP43 antenna (RC47). The association of Psb28 with RC47 was further confirmed by preferential isolation of RC47 from the strain containing a histidine-tagged derivative of Psb28 using nickel-affinity chromatography. However, the affinity-purified fraction also contained a small amount of the unassembled PSII inner antenna CP47 bound to Psb28-histidine, indicating a structural relationship between Psb28 and CP47. A psb28 deletion mutant exhibited slower autotrophic growth than wild type, although the absence of Psb28 did not affect the functional properties of PSII. The mutant showed accelerated turnover of the D1 protein, faster PSII repair, and a decrease in the cellular content of PSI. Radioactive labeling revealed a limitation in the synthesis of both CP47 and the PSI subunits PsaA/PsaB in the absence of Psb28. The mutant cells contained a high level of magnesium protoporphyrin IX methylester, a decreased level of protochlorophyllide, and released large quantities of protoporphyrin IX into the medium, indicating inhibition of chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis at the cyclization step yielding the isocyclic ring E. Overall, our results show the importance of Psb28 for synthesis of Chls and/or apoproteins of Chl-binding proteins CP47 and PsaA/PsaB.PSII is a multisubunit pigment-protein complex of plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, which is responsible for oxidation of water and reduction of plastoquinone during oxygenic photosynthesis (Barber, 2006). In the heart of the complex, there are two similar membrane-spanning proteins, D1 and D2, that bind the cofactors involved in primary charge separation (Nanba and Satoh, 1987) and subsequent electron transfer within PSII (for review, see Barber, 2006). Peripherally to the D1-D2 heterodimer, there are two chlorophyll (Chl)-binding inner antenna proteins, CP47 and CP43, that deliver energy to the reaction center (RC), driving electron transfer. In addition, CP43 also provides important ligands to the Mn4Ca cluster, the site of water oxidation (Ferreira et al., 2004; Loll et al., 2005). These four large proteins are surrounded by a number of smaller membrane polypeptides (for review, see Shi and Schröder, 2004). One of them, the so-called PsbW, was originally detected in the isolated RC complex from spinach (Spinacia oleracea; Irrgang et al., 1995; Lorković et al., 1995). The mature protein with a predicted one-transmembrane α-helix in the central hydrophobic region seems to have (unlike most of PSII membrane proteins) the N terminus oriented into the lumen in close vicinity to the extrinsic, nuclear-encoded 33-kD PsbO protein. Cross-linking experiments also indicated a close association of PsbW with D1, D2, and the α-subunit of cytochrome (cyt) b-559 in the isolated RC complex (Irrgang et al., 1995; Lorković et al., 1995). At variance with these results, Rokka et al. (2005) located PsbW predominantly in PSII-light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) supercomplexes and only minor amounts were found in PSII core dimers and monomers. In transgenic plants of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) lacking the PsbW protein, the stability of the dimeric PSII was diminished and the PSII-LHCII supercomplexes could not be detected. It has been suggested that PsbW functions as a linker for LHCII binding to the PSII complex (Shi et al., 2000). Because LHCII is absent in cyanobacteria, it was intelligible that the PsbW was not detected in these oxygenic autotrophs. Nevertheless, N-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometric analyses of protein subunits in the purified His-tagged PSII from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Synechocystis 6803) revealed the presence of an unknown protein with 16% sequence identity to PsbW from Arabidopsis (Kashino et al., 2002). This protein was designated as Psb28 (also Psb13 or ycf79). Its amino acid sequence suggests that it is a rather hydrophilic protein without a transmembrane helix and is larger than PsbW (about 13 kD). In the recent crystal structures of the cyanobacterial PSII (Ferreira et al., 2004; Loll et al., 2005), this protein was not identified and it remains an issue of contention whether the protein is a true PSII subunit, a transiently associated assembly factor, or just an impurity of the preparation. The relatively low content of this protein in the isolated preparation suggested that the two latter possibilities are more probable. Very recently, the protein has been detected as a component of PSII complexes in Synechocystis depleted of phosphatidylglycerol (Sakurai et al., 2007). It has been proposed that the protein may play a regulatory role during the assembly of PSII. A gene encoding a similar soluble protein has also been found in the genome of Arabidopsis and the protein was designated PsbW-like.Here, we present a detailed analysis of the role of Psb28 in the structure and function of PSII in Synechocystis 6803. The results showed that Psb28 is not a component of the fully assembled dimeric PSII core complex, but it is preferentially bound to PSII assembly intermediates containing the inner antenna CP47. The results support the role of the protein in biogenesis of certain Chl-binding proteins via regulating synthesis of their apoproteins or Chls.  相似文献   

8.
Biochemical characterization of intermediates involved in the assembly of the oxygen-evolving Photosystem II (PSII) complex is hampered by their low abundance in the membrane. Using the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, we describe here the isolation of the CP47 and CP43 subunits, which, during biogenesis, attach to a reaction center assembly complex containing D1, D2, and cytochrome b(559), with CP47 binding first. Our experimental approach involved a combination of His tagging, the use of a D1 deletion mutant that blocks PSII assembly at an early stage, and, in the case of CP47, the additional inactivation of the FtsH2 protease involved in degrading unassembled PSII proteins. Absorption spectroscopy and pigment analyses revealed that both CP47-His and CP43-His bind chlorophyll a and β-carotene. A comparison of the low temperature absorption and fluorescence spectra in the Q(Y) region for CP47-His and CP43-His with those for CP47 and CP43 isolated by fragmentation of spinach PSII core complexes confirmed that the spectroscopic properties are similar but not identical. The measured fluorescence quantum yield was generally lower for the proteins isolated from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and a 1-3-nm blue shift and a 2-nm red shift of the 77 K emission maximum could be observed for CP47-His and CP43-His, respectively. Immunoblotting and mass spectrometry revealed the co-purification of PsbH, PsbL, and PsbT with CP47-His and of PsbK and Psb30/Ycf12 with CP43-His. Overall, our data support the view that CP47 and CP43 form preassembled pigment-protein complexes in vivo before their incorporation into the PSII complex.  相似文献   

9.
Photosystem II (PSII) mutants are useful experimental tools to trap potential intermediates involved in the assembly of the oxygen-evolving PSII complex. Here, we focus on the subunit composition of the RC47 assembly complex that accumulates in a psbC null mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 unable to make the CP43 apopolypeptide. By using native gel electrophoresis, we showed that RC47 is heterogeneous and mainly found as a monomer of 220 kDa. RC47 complexes co-purify with small Cab-like proteins (ScpC and/or ScpD) and with Psb28 and its homologue Psb28-2. Analysis of isolated His-tagged RC47 indicated the presence of D1, D2, the CP47 apopolypeptide, plus nine of the 13 low-molecular-mass (LMM) subunits found in the PSII holoenzyme, including PsbL, PsbM and PsbT, which lie at the interface between the two momomers in the dimeric holoenzyme. Not detected were the LMM subunits (PsbK, PsbZ, Psb30 and PsbJ) located in the vicinity of CP43 in the holoenzyme. The photochemical activity of isolated RC47-His complexes, including the rate of reduction of P680+, was similar to that of PSII complexes lacking the Mn4CaO5 cluster. The implications of our results for the assembly and repair of PSII in vivo are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Photosystem II (PSII) is a large membrane protein complex that uses light energy to convert water to molecular oxygen. This enzyme undergoes an intricate assembly process to ensure accurate and efficient positioning of its many components. It has been proposed that the Psb27 protein, a lumenal extrinsic subunit, serves as a PSII assembly factor. Using a psb27 genetic deletion strain (Deltapsb27) of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, we have defined the role of the Psb27 protein in PSII biogenesis. While the Psb27 protein was not essential for photosynthetic activity, various PSII assembly assays revealed that the Deltapsb27 mutant was defective in integration of the Mn(4)Ca(1)Cl(x) cluster, the catalytic core of the oxygen-evolving machinery within the PSII complex. The other lumenal extrinsic proteins (PsbO, PsbU, PsbV, and PsbQ) are key components of the fully assembled PSII complex and are important for the water oxidation reaction, but we propose that the Psb27 protein has a distinct function separate from these subunits. We show that the Psb27 protein facilitates Mn(4)Ca(1)Cl(x) cluster assembly in PSII at least in part by preventing the premature association of the other extrinsic proteins. Thus, we propose an exchange of lumenal subunits and cofactors during PSII assembly, in that the Psb27 protein is replaced by the other extrinsic proteins upon assembly of the Mn(4)Ca(1)Cl(x) cluster. Furthermore, we show that the Psb27 protein provides a selective advantage for cyanobacterial cells under conditions such as nutrient deprivation where Mn(4)Ca(1)Cl(x) cluster assembly efficiency is critical for survival.  相似文献   

11.
The life cycle of Photosystem II (PSII) is embedded in a network of proteins that guides the complex through biogenesis, damage and repair. Some of these proteins, such as Psb27 and Psb28, are involved in cofactor assembly for which they are only transiently bound to the preassembled complex. In this work we isolated and analyzed PSII from a ΔpsbJ mutant of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. From the four different PSII complexes that could be separated the most prominent one revealed a monomeric Psb27-Psb28 PSII complex with greatly diminished oxygen-evolving activity. The MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry analysis of intact low molecular weight subunits (<10kDa) depicted wild type PSII with the absence of PsbJ. Relative quantification of the PsbA1/PsbA3 ratio by LC-ESI mass spectrometry using (15)N labeled PsbA3-specific peptides indicated the complete replacement of PsbA1 by the stress copy PsbA3 in the mutant, even under standard growth conditions (50μmol photons m(-2) s(-1)). This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

12.
The Photosystem II (PS II) assembly factors Psb27 and Ycf48 are transiently associated with PS II during its biogenesis and repair pathways. We investigated the function of these proteins by constructing knockout mutants in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In ΔYcf48 cells, PS II electron transfer and stable oxygen evolution were perturbed. Additionally, Psb27 was required for photoautotrophic growth of cells lacking Ycf48 and assembly beyond the RC47 assembly complex in ΔYcf48:ΔPsb27 cells was impeded. Our results suggest the RC47 complex formed in ΔYcf48 cells is defective and that this deficiency is exacerbated if CP43 binds in the absence of Psb27.  相似文献   

13.
Cyanobacteria contain several genes coding for small one-helix proteins called SCPs or HLIPs with significant sequence similarity to chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins. To localize one of these proteins, ScpD, in the cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, we constructed several mutants in which ScpD was expressed as a His-tagged protein (ScpDHis). Using two-dimensional native-SDS electrophoresis of thylakoid membranes or isolated Photosystem II (PSII), we determined that after high-light treatment most of the ScpDHis protein in a cell is associated with PSII. The ScpDHis protein was present in both monomeric and dimeric PSII core complexes and also in the core subcomplex lacking CP43. However, the association with PSII was abolished in the mutant lacking the PSII subunit PsbH. In a PSII mutant lacking cytochrome b(559), which does not accumulate PSII, ScpDHis is associated with CP47. The interaction of ScpDHis with PsbH and CP47 was further confirmed by electron microscopy of PSII labeled with Ni-NTA Nanogold. Single particle image analysis identified the location of the labeled ScpDHis at the periphery of the PSII core complex in the vicinity of the PsbH and CP47. Because of the fact that ScpDHis did not form any large structures bound to PSII and because of its accumulation in PSII subcomplexes containing CP47 and PsbH we suggest that ScpD is involved in a process of PSII assembly/repair during the turnover of pigment-binding proteins, particularly CP47.  相似文献   

14.
Psb27 associates with the CP43 subunit of photosystem II during biogenesis of the photosystem. Several models have been proposed for the interaction between Psb27 and CP43. The utility of predictions and hypotheses arising from these models depends on the accuracy of the Psb27 structure used in the model. Two of the Psb27 structures used to model the Psb27–CP43 interaction place residue E98 on the surface of Psb27 and D14 in a position to form hydrogen bonds that stabilise the fold of the protein; however, a third structure questions the surface exposure of E98 and does not identify significant interactions of D14. Here we present evidence that D14 contributes to the thermal stability of Psb27 and that E98 is located on the surface. A D14A mutation was shown to reduce the apparent midpoint of unfolding of Psb27 by 16 °C. Four highly conserved surface residues and E98 were subject to charge-reversal mutations (R54E, R94E, E98R, E103R, R108E). The stabilities of the charge-reversal variants and the unmodified control were similar, suggesting E98 is a surface residue. Placing E98 in the correct, surface position will support more reliable models of the interaction of Psb27 with CP43.  相似文献   

15.
Bentley FK  Luo H  Dilbeck P  Burnap RL  Eaton-Rye JJ 《Biochemistry》2008,47(44):11637-11646
PsbM and PsbT have been assigned to electron densities on both photosystem II (PSII) monomers at the PSII dimer interface in X-ray crystallographic structures from Thermosynechoccocus elongatus and T. vulcanus. Our results show that removal of either or both proteins from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 resulted in photoautotrophic strains but the DeltaPsbM:DeltaPsbT mutant did not form stable dimers. A CP43-less PSII monomer accumulated in both single mutants, although absence of PsbT destabilized PSII to a greater extent than removing PsbM. Additionally, DeltaPsbT cells exhibited slowed electron transfer between the plastoquinone electron acceptors, Q(A) and Q(B); however, S-state cycling in both mutants was similar to wild type. Oxygen evolution in these mutants rapidly inactivated following exposure to high light where recovery required protein synthesis and could proceed in the dark in DeltaPsbM cells but required light in DeltaPsbT cells. Interestingly, the extent of recovery of oxygen-evolving activity was greatest in the DeltaPsbM:DeltaPsbT strain. We also found recovery required Psb27 in DeltaPsbT cells although, under our conditions, the DeltaPsb27 strain remained similar to wild type. In contrast, the DeltaPsbM:DeltaPsb27 mutant could not assemble PSII beyond a CP43-minus intermediate. Our results suggest essential roles for Psb27 in biogenesis in the DeltaPsbM strain and for repair from photodamage in cells lacking PsbT.  相似文献   

16.
Photosystem II (PSII), the enzyme responsible for photosynthetic oxygen evolution, is a rapidly turned over membrane protein complex. However, the factors that regulate biogenesis of PSII are poorly defined. Previous proteomic analysis of the PSII preparations from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 detected a novel protein, Psb29 (Sll1414), homologs of which are found in all cyanobacteria and vascular plants with sequenced genomes. Deletion of psb29 in Synechocystis 6803 results in slower growth rates under high light intensities, increased light sensitivity, and lower PSII efficiency, without affecting the PSII core electron transfer activities. A T-DNA insertion line in the PSB29 gene in Arabidopsis thaliana displays a phenotype similar to that of the Synechocystis mutant. This plant mutant grows slowly and exhibits variegated leaves, and its PSII activity is light sensitive. Low temperature fluorescence emission spectroscopy of both cyanobacterial and plant mutants shows an increase in the proportion of uncoupled proximal antennae in PSII as a function of increasing growth light intensities. The similar phenotypes observed in both plant and cyanobacterial mutants demonstrate that the function of Psb29 has been conserved throughout the evolution of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms and suggest a role for the Psb29 protein in the biogenesis of PSII.  相似文献   

17.
The induction of the isiA (CP43') protein in iron-stressed cyanobacteria is accompanied by the formation of a ring of 18 CP43' proteins around the photosystem I (PSI) trimer and is thought to increase the absorption cross section of PSI within the CP43'-PSI supercomplex. In contrast to these in vitro studies, our in vivo measurements failed to demonstrate any increase of the PSI absorption cross section in two strains (Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803) of iron-stressed cells. We report that iron-stressed cells exhibited a reduced capacity for state transitions and limited dark reduction of the plastoquinone pool, which accounts for the increase in PSII-related 685 nm chlorophyll fluorescence under iron deficiency. This was accompanied by lower abundance of the NADP-dehydrogenase complex and the PSI-associated subunit PsaL, as well as a reduced amount of phosphatidylglycerol. Nondenaturating polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separation of the chlorophyll-protein complexes indicated that the monomeric form of PSI is favored over the trimeric form of PSI under iron stress. Thus, we demonstrate that the induction of CP43' does not increase the PSI functional absorption cross section of whole cells in vivo, but rather, induces monomerization of PSI trimers and reduces the capacity for state transitions. We discuss the role of CP43' as an effective energy quencher to photoprotect PSII and PSI under unfavorable environmental conditions in cyanobacteria in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Photosystem II (PSII) is a large membrane protein complex that catalyzes oxidation of water to molecular oxygen. During its normal function, PSII is damaged and frequently turned over. The maturation of the D1 protein, a key component in PSII, is a critical step in PSII biogenesis. The precursor form of D1 (pD1) contains a C-terminal extension, which is removed by the protease CtpA to yield PSII complexes with oxygen evolution activity. To determine the temporal position of D1 processing in the PSII assembly pathway, PSII complexes containing only pD1 were isolated from a CtpA-deficient strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. Although membranes from the mutant cell had nearly 50% manganese, no manganese was detected in isolated DeltactpAHT3 PSII, indicating a severely decreased manganese affinity. However, chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics after a single saturating flash suggested that the donor Y(Z) was accessible to exogenous Mn(2+) ions. Furthermore, the extrinsic proteins PsbO, PsbU, and PsbV were not present in PSII isolated from this mutant. However, PsbO and PsbV were present in mutant membranes, but the amount of PsbV protein was consistently less in the mutant membranes compared with the control membranes. We conclude that D1 processing precedes manganese binding and assembly of the extrinsic proteins into PSII. Interestingly, the Psb27 protein was found to be more abundant in DeltactpAHT3 PSII than in HT3 PSII, suggesting a possible role of Psb27 as an assembly factor during PSII biogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
The D1 protein, a key protein subunit of Photosystem II complex (PSII), is synthesised as a precursor (pD1) with a carboxyl-terminal extension. In the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, this extension consists of 16 amino acid residues and it is cleaved by a specific protease in two putative steps with the final cleavage after the residue Ala344. In order to define the importance of the extension for the functioning of PSII, we constructed and characterized several site-directed mutants of Synechocystis that differ in the length and amino acid sequence of this extension. The mutant lacking the entire C-terminal extension exhibited slightly increased sensitivity to photoinhibition. Analysis of the PSII assembly in the mutant by the blue-native electrophoresis in combination with radioactive labelling revealed an increased level of the unassembled D1 protein in this strain. Replacement of the amino acid residue Asn359 by His or Asp also led to the higher vulnerability to photoinhibition of both mutants. In the Asn359His mutant, this vulnerability was accompanied by an increased level of the PSII core lacking CP43 indicating limitation of the repair cycle in the CP43 reassembly step.  相似文献   

20.
The life cycle of Photosystem II (PSII) is embedded in a network of proteins that guides the complex through biogenesis, damage and repair. Some of these proteins, such as Psb27 and Psb28, are involved in cofactor assembly for which they are only transiently bound to the preassembled complex. In this work we isolated and analyzed PSII from a ΔpsbJ mutant of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. From the four different PSII complexes that could be separated the most prominent one revealed a monomeric Psb27–Psb28 PSII complex with greatly diminished oxygen-evolving activity. The MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry analysis of intact low molecular weight subunits (< 10 kDa) depicted wild type PSII with the absence of PsbJ. Relative quantification of the PsbA1/PsbA3 ratio by LC-ESI mass spectrometry using 15N labeled PsbA3-specific peptides indicated the complete replacement of PsbA1 by the stress copy PsbA3 in the mutant, even under standard growth conditions (50 μmol photons m? 2 s? 1). This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号