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1.
Freeze-fracture electron microscopy has revealed that different size classes of intramembrane particles of chloroplast membranes are nonrandomly distributed between appressed grana and nonappressed stroma membrane regions. It is now generally assumed that thylakoid membranes contain five major functional complexes, each of which can give rise to an intramembrane particle of a defined size. These are the photosystem II complex, the photosystem I complex, the cytochrome f/b6 complex, the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex, and the CF0 -CF1 ATP synthetase complex. By mapping the distribution of the different categories of intramembrane particles, information on the lateral organization of functional membrane units of thylakoid membranes can be determined. In this review, we present a brief summary of the evidence supporting the correlation of specific categories of intramembrane particles with known biochemical entities. In addition, we discuss studies showing that ions and phosphorylation of the membrane adhesion factor, the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex, can affect the lateral organization of chloroplast membrane components and thereby regulate membrane function.  相似文献   

2.
Bertil Andersson  Jan M. Anderson   《BBA》1980,593(2):427-440
The lateral distribution of the main chlorophyll-protein complexes between appressed and non-appressed thylakoid membranes has been studied. The reaction centre complexes of Photosystems I and II and the light-harvesting complex have been resolved by an SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic method which permits most of the chlorophyll to remain protein-bound.

The analyses were applied to subchloroplast fractions shown to be derived from different thylakoid regions. Stroma thylakoids were separated from grana stacks by centrifugation following chloroplast disruption by press treatment or digitonin. Vesicles derived from the grana partitions were isolated by aqueous polymer two-phase partition. A substantial depletion in the amount of Photosystem I chlorophyll-protein complex and an enrichment in the Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex occurred in the appressed grana partition region. The high enrichment in this fraction compared to grana stack fractions derived from press or digitonin treatments, suggests that the grana Photosystem I is restricted mainly to the non-appressed grana end membranes and margins, and that the grana partitions possess mainly Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex.

In contrast, stroma thylakoids are highly enriched in the Photosystem I reaction centre complex. They possess also some 10–20% of the total Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex.

The ratio of light-harvesting complex to Photosystem II reaction centre complex is rather constant in all subchloroplast fractions suggesting a close association between these complexes. This was not so for the ratio of light-harvesting complex and the Photosystem I reaction centre complex.

The lateral heterogeneity in the distribution of the photosystems between appressed and non-appressed membranes must have a profound impact on current understanding of both the distribution of excitation energy and photosynthetic electron transport between the photosystems.  相似文献   


3.
The distribution of photosystems I and II (PSI and PSII) in cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard was studied by immunogold electron microscopy using cultures grown autotrophically at moderate irradiance and harvested in the middle of the light period. Sections of Lowicryl-embedded cells were labeled with monospecific heterologous antisera raised against the reaction center proteins of PSI (CP1-e) or the core antenna proteins of PSII (CP40 and CP47). All three antisera labeled both the appressed and the nonappressed thylakoid membranes at essentially similar densities. Labeling with both PSI and PSII antisera was slightly more concentrated over the outer nonappressed membranes of the thylakoid bands (1.7- to 2.4-fold with anti-CP1- e and 1.5- to 1.8-fold with anti-CP47 and anti-CP40). However, since appressed membranes comprised 73% of the total thylakoid membranes, 50%–62% of the PSI and 58%–65% of the PSII labeling were localized on appressed membranes. We conclude that photosystem distribution in C. reinhardtii is similar to that reported for other algae and different from the lateral heterogeneity observed in higher plants.  相似文献   

4.
Redox dependent protein phosphorylation in chloroplast thylakoids regulates distribution of excitation energy between the two photosystems of photosynthesis, PS I and PS II. Several thylakoid phosphoproteins are known to be phosphorylated on N-terminal threonine residues exposed to the chloroplast stroma. Phosphorylation of light harvesting complex II (LHC II) on Thr-6 is thought to account for redistribution of light energy from PS II to PS I during the transition to light state 2. Here, we present evidence that a protein tyrosine kinase activity is required for the transition to light state 2. With an immunological approach using antibodies directed specifically towards either phospho-tyrosine or phospho-threonine, we observed that LHC II became phosphorylated on both tyrosine and threonine residues. The specific protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein, at concentrations causing no direct effect on threonine kinase activity, was found to prevent tyrosine phosphorylation of LHC II, the transition to light state 2, and associated threonine phosphorylation of LHC II. Possible reasons for an involvement of tyrosine phosphorylation in light state transitions are proposed and discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
Thylakoid membrane remodeling during state transitions in Arabidopsis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Adaptability of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms to fluctuations in light spectral composition and intensity is conferred by state transitions, short-term regulatory processes that enable the photosynthetic apparatus to rapidly adjust to variations in light quality. In green algae and higher plants, these processes are accompanied by reversible structural rearrangements in the thylakoid membranes. We studied these structural changes in the thylakoid membranes of Arabidopsis thaliana chloroplasts using atomic force microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and confocal imaging. Based on our results and on the recently determined three-dimensional structure of higher-plant thylakoids trapped in one of the two major light-adapted states, we propose a model for the transitions in membrane architecture. The model suggests that reorganization of the membranes involves fission and fusion events that occur at the interface between the appressed (granal) and nonappressed (stroma lamellar) domains of the thylakoid membranes. Vertical and lateral displacements of the grana layers presumably follow these localized events, eventually leading to macroscopic rearrangements of the entire membrane network.  相似文献   

6.
Mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana deficient in plastid glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase activity have altered chloroplast membrane lipid composition. This caused an increase in the number of regions of appressed membrane per chloroplast and a decrease in the average number of thylakoid membranes in the appressed regions. The net effect was a significant decrease in the ratio of appressed to nonappressed membranes. A comparison of 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of thylakoid membranes from the mutant and wild type indicated that the ultrastructural changes were associated with an altered distribution of excitation energy transfer from antenna chlorophyll to photosystem II and photosystem I in the mutant. The changes in leaf lipid composition did not significantly affect growth or development of the mutant under standard conditions. However, at temperatures above 28°C the mutant grew slightly more rapidly than the wild type, and measurements of temperature-induced fluorescence yield enhancement suggested an increased thermal stability of the photosynthetic apparatus of the mutant. These effects are consistent with other evidence suggesting that membrane lipid composition is an important determinant of chloroplast structure but has relatively minor direct effects on the function of the membrane proteins associated with photosynthetic electron transport.  相似文献   

7.
Redox-controlled, reversible phosphorylation of the thylakoid light harvesting complex II (LHCII) regulates its association with photosystems (PS) I or II and thus, energy distribution between the two photosystems (state transition). Illumination of solubilized LHCII enhances exposure of the phosphorylation site at its N-terminal domain to protein kinase(s) and tryptic cleavage in vitro [Zer et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 8277-8282]. Here we report that short illumination (5-10 min, 15-30 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) enhances the accessibility of LHCII phosphorylation site to kinase(s) activity also in isolated thylakoids. However, prolonged illumination or higher light intensities (30 min, 80-800 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) prevent phosphorylation of LHCII in the isolated membranes as well as in vivo, although redox-dependent protein kinase activity persists in the illuminated thylakoids toward exogenous solubilized LHCII. This phenomenon, ascribed to light-induced inaccessibility of the phosphorylation site to the protein kinase(s), affects in a similar way the accessibility of thylakoid LHCII N-terminal domain to tryptic cleavage. The illumination effect is not redox related, decreases linearly with temperature from 25 to 5 degrees C and may be ascribed to light-induced conformational changes in the complex causing lateral aggregation of dephosphorylated LHCII bound to and/or dissociated from PSII. The later state occurs under conditions allowing turnover of the phospho-LHCII phosphate. The light-induced inaccessibility of LHCII to the membrane-bound protein kinase reverses readily in darkness only if induced under LHCII-phosphate turnover conditions. Thus, phosphorylation prevents irreversible light-induced conformational changes in LHCII allowing lateral migration of the complex and the related state transition process.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The lateral distribution of plastocyanin in the thylakoid lumen of spinach and pea chloroplasts was studied by combining immunocytochemical localization and kinetic measurements of P700+ reduction at high time resolution. In dark-adapted chloroplasts, the concentration of plastocyanin in the photosystem I containing stroma membranes exceeds that in photosystem II containing grana membranes by a factor of about two. Under these conditions, the reduction of P700+ with a halftime of 12 microseconds after a laser flash of saturating intensity indicates that to greater than 95% of total photosystem I a plastocyanin molecule is bound. An analysis of the labeling densities, the length of the different lumenal regions, and the total amounts of plastocyanin and P700 shows that most of the remaining presumable mobile plastocyanin is found in the granal lumen. This distribution of plastocyanin is consistent with a more negative surface charge density in the stromal than in the granal lumen. During illumination the concentration of plastocyanin in grana increases at the expense of that in stroma lamellae, indicating a light-driven diffusion from stroma to grana regions. Our observations provide evidence that a high concentration of plastocyanin in grana in the light favors the lateral electron transport from cytochrome b6/f complexes in appressed grana across the long distance to photosystem I in nonappressed stroma membranes.  相似文献   

10.
Chloroplast ultrastructural and photochemical features were examined in 6-d-old barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Sundance) plants which had developed in the presence of 4-chloro-5-(dimethylamino)-2-phenyl-3(2H)-pyridazinone (San 9785). In spite of a substantial modification of the fatty-acid composition of thylakoid lipids there were no gross abnormalities in chloroplast morphology, and normal amounts of membrane and chlorophyll were present. Fluorescence kinetics at 77K demonstrated considerable energetic interaction of photosystem (PS)I and PSII chlorophylls within the altered lipid environment. An interference with electron transport was indicated from altered room-temperature fluorescence kinetics at 20°C. Subtle changes in the arrangements of chloroplast membranes were consistently evident and the overall effects of these changes was to increase the proportion of appressed to nonappressed membranes. This correlated with a lower chlorophyll a/b ratio, an increase in the amount of light-harvesting chlorophylls as determined by gel electrophoresis and fluorescence emission spectra, and an increase in excitation-energy transfer from PSII to PSI, as predicted from current ideas on the organisation of photosystems in appressed and non-appressed thylakoid membranes.Abbreviations CP1 P700-chlorophyll a protein - Fo, Fm, Fv minimal, maximal and variable fluorescence yield - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II - San 9785 4-chloro-5(dimethylamino)-2-phenyl-3(2H)-pyridazinone  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The ultrastructural organization and the photosynthesis reactions of chloroplast membranes were studied in three lethal mutants of Pisum sativum, Chl-1, Chl-19 and Chl-5, all lacking the capacity to evolve oxygen. The rates of 2,6-dichloroindophenol reduction, delayed fluorescence and electron-spin-resonance signal 1 indicate that Chl-1 and Chl-19 have an impaired activity in photosystem II (PS II), while in Chl-5 the electron transport is blocked between PS I and the reactions of CO2 fixation. Ultrathin sectioning demonstrates the presence of giant grana in the chloroplasts of Chl-1 and Chl-19, while the chloroplast structure of the Chl-5 is very similar to that of the wild-type. The grana of the Chl-19 mutant contain large multilamellar regions of tightly packed membranes. When the chloroplast membranes were studied by freeze-fracture, the exoplasmic and protoplasmic fracture faces (EF and PF, respectively) in both stacked and unstacked membranes were found to show large differences in particle concentrations and relative population area (per m2), and also in particle size distribution, between all mutant chloroplast membranes and the wild-type. A close correlation between increasing kmt (ratio of particle concentrations on PF/EF) and PS II activity was observed. The differences in particle concentrations on both fracture faces in different regions of the intact chloroplast membranes of the wild-type are the consequence of a rearrangement of existing membrane components by lateral particle movements since quantitative measurements demonstrate almost complete conservation of intramembrane particles in number and size during the stacking of stroma thylakoid membranes. The results indicating particle movements strongly support the concept that the chloroplast membranes have a highly dynamic structure.Abbreviations DPIP 2,6-dichloroindophenol - EF and PF exoplasmic and protoplasmic fracture faces, respectively - PS I and PS II photosystems I and II, respectively  相似文献   

13.
Inside-out thylakoid membrane vesicles can be isolated by aqueous polymer two-phase partition of Yeda press-fragmented spinach chloroplasts (Andersson, B. and Åkerlund, H.-E. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 503, 462–472). The mechanism for their formation has been investigated by studying the yield of inside-out vesicles after various treatments of the chloroplasts prior to fragmentation. No inside-out vesicles were isolated during phase partitioning if the chloroplasts had been destacked in a low-salt medium prior to the fragmentation. Only in those cases where the chloroplast lamellae had been stacked by cations or membrane-paired by acidic treatment did we get any yield of inside-out vesicles. Thus, the intrinsic properties of chloroplast thylakoids seem to be such that they seal into right-side out vesicles after disruption unless they are in an appressed state. This favours the following mechanism for the formation of inside-out thylakoids. After press treatment, a ruptured membrane still remains appressed with an adjacent membrane. Resealing of such an appressed membrane pair would result in an inside-out vesicle.If the compartmentation of chloroplast lamellae into appressed grana and unappressed stroma lamellae is preserved by cations before fragmentation, the inside-out vesicles are highly enriched in photosystem II. This indicates a granal origin which is consistent with the proposed model outlined. Inside-out vesicles possessing photosystem I and II properties in approximately equal proportions could be obtained by acid-induced membrane-pairing of chloroplasts which had been destacked and randomized prior to fragmentation. Since this new preparation of inside-out thylakoid vesicles also exposes components derived from the stroma lamellae it complements the previous preparation.It is suggested that fragmentation of paired membranes followed by phase partitioning should be a general method of obtaining inside-out vesicles from membranes of various biological sources.  相似文献   

14.
The grana margins of plant thylakoid membranes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Plant thylakoid membranes contain three structurally distinct domains: the planar appressed membranes of the grana; the planar non-appressed stroma thylakoids; and the highly curved, non-appressed margins of the grana. Evidence is presented to suggest that the grana margins form a significant structural domain, which has hitherto been neglected. If indeed the grana margins contain some of the cytochrome b/f complex, photosystem (PS) I complex and ATP synthase, they form a third functional domain of the laterally heterogeneous continuous thylakoid membrane network. The consequences of grana margins containing complexes are explored with respect to linear electron transport under light-saturating and light-limiting conditions, non-cyclic vs cyclic photophorylation, and the regulation of light energy distribution to both PS I and PS II.  相似文献   

15.
Small particles derived from the digitonin treatment of chloroplast thylakoid membranes in either the stacked (grana-containing) or unstacked condition, as determined by cation concentration, have been used to study the aggregation of thylakoid membranes. At pH values above 5, the small particles from stacked chloroplasts do not aggregate in the presence of Mg2+ or other screening cations at concentrations sufficient to cause the restacking of thylakoids from low-salt chloroplasts. However, the small particles from stacked chloroplasts are aggregated either by lowering the pH to 4.6 or adding the binding cation La3+. In contrast, the small particles obtained on digitonin treatment of unstacked chloroplasts were aggregated by cations at neutral pH. Large particles (mainly grana) derived from digitonin treatment of stacked chloroplasts could not be unstacked by transfer to media of low cation concentration. It is concluded that the nonappressed regions of the chloroplast thylakoid membranes under stacking conditions carry higher than average negative surface charge densities under physiological pH conditions. Transfer of chloroplasts to media of low cation concentration causes a time-dependent lateral redistribution of charge between the appressed and nonappressed regions, but this redistribution is prevented by prior digitonin treatment of stacked chloroplasts.  相似文献   

16.
A rapid procedure to fractionate the thylakoid membrane into two well-separated vesicle populations, one originating from the grana and the other from the stroma-membrane region, has been developed. This was achieved by sonication of thylakoids present in an aqueous two-phase system followed by partitioning either by countercurrent distribution or by a batch procedure in three steps. The membrane populations were analysed according to their composition and photochemical activities. The grana membranes comprise, on chlorophyll basis, about 60% of the thylakoid material and are enriched in PS II, but also contain some PS I, while the stroma membranes comprise about 40% and are enriched in PS I, but also contain some PS II. Cytochrome f was slightly enriched in the grana-derived vesicle fraction. The properties of both PS I and PS II differ between the two populations. The PS I of the grana fraction (PS I) reached half-saturation at about half the light intensity of the PS I in the stroma-membrane fraction (PS Iβ). The rate of P-700 photooxidation under low light illumination was higher for PS I than for PS Iβ (30% larger rate constant), showing that PS I has a larger antenna. The PS II of the grana fraction (PS II) reached half-saturation at half the light intensity compared to the PS II of the stroma-membrane fraction (PS IIβ). The results show that the grana-derived membranes contain PS I and PS II which have larger functional antenna sizes than the corresponding PS Iβ and PS IIβ of the stroma membranes. The results suggest that the photosystems of the grana are designed to allow effective electron transport both at low and high light intensities, while the stroma-membrane photosystems mainly work at high light intensities as a supplement to the grana systems.  相似文献   

17.
A mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, deficient in activity of the chloroplast n-6 desaturase, accumulated high levels of C16:1 and C18:1 lipids and had correspondingly reduced levels of polyunsaturated lipids. The altered lipid composition of the mutant had pronounced effects on chloroplast ultrastructure, thylakoid membrane protein and chlorophyll content, electron transport rates, and the thermal stability of the photosynthetic membranes. The change in chloroplast ultrastructure was due to a 48% decrease in the amount of appressed membranes that was not compensated for by an increased amount of nonappressed membrane. This resulted in a net loss of 36% of the thylakoid membrane per chloroplast and a corresponding reduction in chlorophyll and protein content. Electrophoretic analysis of the chlorophyll-protein complexes further revealed a small decrease in the amount of light-harvesting complex. Relative levels of whole chain and protosystem II electron transport rates were also reduced in the mutant. In addition, the mutation resulted in enhanced thermal stability of photosynthetic electron transport. These observations suggest a central role of polyunsaturated lipids in determining chloroplast structure and maintaining normal photosynthetic function and demonstrate that lipid unsaturation directly affects the thermal stability of photosynthetic membranes.  相似文献   

18.
Light-dependent reduction of the plastoquinone pool regulates the activity of the thylakoid-bound protein kinase which phosphorylates the light harvesting chlorophyll a,b-protein complex (LHC II) and regulates energy distribution between photosystems II (PS II) and I (Staehelin, L. A., and C. J. Arntzen, 1983, J. Cell Biol., 97:1327-1337). Since reduction of plastoquinone by PS II is abolished in photoinhibited thylakoids due to loss of the secondary electron acceptor QB protein (Kyle, D. J., I. Ohad, and C. J. Arntzen, 1984, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 81:4070-4074), it was of interest to examine the activity of the LHC II protein kinase system during photoinhibition and recovery of PS II activity. The kinase activity was assessed both in vivo and in vitro in Chlamydomonas cells exposed to high light intensity (photoinhibition) and recovery at low light intensity. The kinase activity was progressively reduced during photoinhibition and became undetectable after 90 min. The inactive LHC II-kinase system could not be reactivated in vitro either by light or by reduction of the plastoquinone pool following addition of reduced duroquinone (TMQH2). The LHC II polypeptides were dephosphorylated in vivo when cells, prelabeled with [32P]orthophosphate before exposure to high light intensity, were transferred to photoinhibiting light in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate. In vivo recovery of the LHC II-kinase activity, elicited by the addition of TMQH2 to the assay system, did not require restoration of QB-dependent electron flow or de novo protein synthesis, either in the cytoplasm or in the chloroplast. Mild sonication of thylakoids isolated from photoinhibited cells restored the ability of the LHC II protein kinase system to be activated in vitro by addition to TMQH2. Restoration of the light-activated LHC-II kinase required recovery of QB-dependent electron flow. At the structural level, photoinhibition did not affect the ratio of grana/stroma thylakoids. A reduction of approximately 20% of the 11-17-nm intramembrane particles and an equivalent increase in the number of 6-10.5-nm particles was observed on the E-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes. Similar but smaller changes were observed also on the E-fracture faces of unstacked thylakoid membranes (more 10-14-nm and less 6-9-nm particles) and P-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes (more 6-8- and less 9.5-13-nm particles). All these structural changes were reversed to normal values during recovery of PS II activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Yeda press disruption of thylakoids in the presence of magnesium followed by aqueous polymer two-phase partitioning fractionated the total thylakoid membrane material into two distinctly different fractions. One fraction comprised approx. 60% of the material on a chlorophyll basis and contained inside-out vesicles while the other fraction (40%) contained right-side-out vesicles. The sidedness of the vesicles was determined from the direction of their light-induced proton translocation. The inside-out vesicles showed a pronounced Photosystem (PS) II enrichment as judged by their high PS II and low PS I activities. Moreover, they showed a high ratio between the PS II reaction centre chlorophyll-protein complex and the PS I reaction centre chlorophyll-protein complex (CP I). The chlorophyll ab ratio was as low as 2.3 compared to 3.2 for the starting material. In contrast, the right-side-out vesicles showed a pronounced PS I enrichment. Their chlorophyll ab ratio was 4.3–4.9. The tight stacking induced by Mg2+ allows a quantitative formation of inside-out vesicles from the appressed thylakoid regions while mainly non-appressed thylakoids turn right-side-out. The possibility of fractionating all of the thylakoid material into two sub-populations with markedly different composition with respect to PS I and PS II argues against a close physical association between the two photosystems and in favour of their spatial separation in the plane of the membrane. This fractionation procedure, which can be completed within 1 h and gives high yields of both PS II inside-out thylakoids and PS I right-side-out thylakoids, should be very useful for facilitating and improving studies on both the transverse and lateral organization of the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The chlorophyll b-containing alga Mantoniella squamata was analyzed with respect to its capacity to balance the energy distribution from the light-harvesting antenna to photosystem I or photosystem II. It was shown, that this alga is unable to alter the absorption cross section of the two photosystems in terms of short-time regulations (state transitions). The energy absorbed by the LHC, which contains 60% of total photosynthetic pigments, is transferred to both photosystems without any preference. The stoichiometry of the two photosystems is found to be extremely unequal and variable during light adaptation. In high light, the molar ratio of P-680 per P-700 is found to be two, whereas under low light conditions this ratio accounts to nearly four. This very unbalanced stoichiometry of the reaction centers gives some new insights into the concept of the photosynthetic unit as well as in the importance of the regulation of the energy distribution. It is assumed that the high concentration of photosystem II can be understood as a mechanism to prevent the overexcitation of photosystem I. In addition, the changes im membrane protein pattern are not accompanied by variations in the ratio of appressed to nonappressed membranes as probed by ultrastructural analysis. It is suggested that the thylakoids are organized like a homogenous pigment bed. The lack of state transitions can be interpreted as a consequence of this unusual membrane morphology.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CPa chlorophyll a-protein of PSII - CPl P-700 chlorophyll a-protein - CPD Chlorophyll packing density index - cyt f cytochrome f - FP free pigments - LHC light-harvesting complex - Pmax light saturated photosynthetic rates per chlorophyll - n number of experiments - PQ plastoquinone - PS photosystem - PSU photosynthetic unit - QE non-photochemical quenching - QQ photochemical quenching  相似文献   

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