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1.
The photosynthetic machinery and, in particular, the photosystem II (PSII) complex are susceptible to strong light, and the effects of strong light are referred to as photodamage or photoinhibition. In living organisms, photodamaged PSII is rapidly repaired and, as a result, the extent of photoinhibition represents a balance between rates of photodamage and the repair of PSII. In this study, we examined the roles of electron transport and ATP synthesis in these two processes by monitoring them separately and systematically in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. We found that the rate of photodamage, which was proportional to light intensity, was unaffected by inhibition of the electron transport in PSII, by acceleration of electron transport in PSI, and by inhibition of ATP synthesis. By contrast, the rate of repair was reduced upon inhibition of the synthesis of ATP either via PSI or PSII. Northern blotting and radiolabeling analysis with [(35)S]Met revealed that synthesis of the D1 protein was enhanced by the synthesis of ATP. Our observations suggest that ATP synthesis might regulate the repair of PSII, in particular, at the level of translation of the psbA genes for the precursor to the D1 protein, whereas neither electron transport nor the synthesis of ATP affects the extent of photodamage.  相似文献   

2.
Photoprotection in plants: a new light on photosystem II damage   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Sunlight damages photosynthetic machinery, primarily photosystem II (PSII), and causes photoinhibition that can limit plant photosynthetic activity, growth and productivity. The extent of photoinhibition is associated with a balance between the rate of photodamage and its repair. Recent studies have shown that light absorption by the manganese cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex of PSII causes primary photodamage, whereas excess light absorbed by light-harvesting complexes acts to cause inhibition of the PSII repair process chiefly through the generation of reactive oxygen species. As we review here, PSII photodamage and the inhibition of repair are therefore alleviated by photoprotection mechanisms associated with avoiding light absorption by the manganese cluster and successfully consuming or dissipating the light energy absorbed by photosynthetic pigments, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
Photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) occurs when the rate of photodamage to PSII exceeds the rate of the repair of photodamaged PSII. Recent examination of photoinhibition by separate determinations of photodamage and repair has revealed that the rate of photodamage to PSII is directly proportional to the intensity of incident light and that the repair of PSII is particularly sensitive to the inactivation by reactive oxygen species (ROS). The ROS-induced inactivation of repair is attributable to the suppression of the synthesis de novo of proteins, such as the D1 protein, that are required for the repair of PSII at the level of translational elongation. Furthermore, molecular analysis has revealed that the ROS-induced suppression of protein synthesis is associated with the specific inactivation of elongation factor G via the formation of an intramolecular disulfide bond. Impairment of various mechanisms that protect PSII against photoinhibition, including photorespiration, thermal dissipation of excitation energy, and the cyclic transport of electrons, decreases the rate of repair of PSII via the suppression of protein synthesis. In this review, we present a newly established model of the mechanism and the physiological significance of repair in the regulation of the photoinhibition of PSII.  相似文献   

4.
Irreversible photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) occurred when Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cells were exposed to very strong light for a prolonged period. When wild-type cells were illuminated at 20 degrees C for 2 h with light at an intensity of 2,500 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1), the oxygen-evolving activity of PSII was almost entirely and irreversibly lost, whereas the photochemical reaction center in PSII was inactivated only reversibly. The extent of irreversible photoinhibition was enhanced at lower temperatures and by the genetically engineered rigidification of membrane lipids. Western and Northern blotting demonstrated that, after cells had undergone irreversible photoinhibition, the precursor to D1 protein in PSII was synthesized but not processed properly. These observations may suggest that exposure of Synechocystis cells to strong light results in the irreversible photoinhibition of the oxygen-evolving activity of PSII via impairment of the processing of pre-D1 and that this effect of strong light is enhanced by the rigidification of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

5.
Inhibition of the activity of photosystem II (PSII) under strong light is referred to as photoinhibition. This phenomenon is due to the imbalance between the rate of photodamage to PSII and the rate of the repair of damaged PSII. Photodamage is initiated by the direct effects of light on the oxygen-evolving complex and, thus, photodamage to PSII is unavoidable. Studies of the effects of oxidative stress on photodamage and subsequent repair have revealed that reactive oxygen species (ROS) act primarily by inhibiting the repair of photodamaged PSII and not by damaging PSII directly. Thus, strong light has two distinct effects on PSII; it damages PSII directly and it inhibits the repair of PSII via production of ROS. Investigations of the ROS-induced inhibition of repair have demonstrated that ROS suppress the synthesis de novo of proteins and, in particular, of the D1 protein, that are required for the repair of PSII. Moreover, a primary target for inhibition by ROS appears to be the elongation step of translation. Inhibition of the repair of PSII by ROS is accelerated by the deceleration of the Calvin cycle that occurs when the availability of CO2 is limited. In this review, we present a new paradigm for the action of ROS in photoinhibition.  相似文献   

6.
Photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) occurs when the rate of light-induced inactivation (photodamage) of PSII exceeds the rate of repair of the photodamaged PSII. For the quantitative analysis of the mechanism of photoinhibition of PSII, it is essential to monitor the rate of photodamage and the rate of repair separately and, also, to examine the respective effects of various perturbations on the two processes. This strategy has allowed the re-evaluation of the results of previous studies of photoinhibition and has provided insight into the roles of factors and mechanisms that protect PSII from photoinhibition, such as catalases and peroxidases, which are efficient scavengers of H(2)O(2); α-tocopherol, which is an efficient scavenger of singlet oxygen; non-photochemical quenching, which dissipates excess light energy that has been absorbed by PSII; and the cyclic and non-cyclic transport of electrons. Early studies of photoinhibition suggested that all of these factors and mechanisms protect PSII against photodamage. However, re-evaluation by the strategy mentioned above has indicated that, rather than protecting PSII from photodamage, they stimulate protein synthesis, with resultant repair of PSII and mitigation of photoinhibition. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

7.
Inhibition of the activity of photosystem II (PSII) under strong light is referred to as photoinhibition. This phenomenon is due to the imbalance between the rate of photodamage to PSII and the rate of the repair of damaged PSII. Photodamage is initiated by the direct effects of light on the oxygen-evolving complex and, thus, photodamage to PSII is unavoidable. Studies of the effects of oxidative stress on photodamage and subsequent repair have revealed that reactive oxygen species (ROS) act primarily by inhibiting the repair of photodamaged PSII and not by damaging PSII directly. Thus, strong light has two distinct effects on PSII; it damages PSII directly and it inhibits the repair of PSII via production of ROS. Investigations of the ROS-induced inhibition of repair have demonstrated that ROS suppress the synthesis de novo of proteins and, in particular, of the D1 protein, that are required for the repair of PSII. Moreover, a primary target for inhibition by ROS appears to be the elongation step of translation. Inhibition of the repair of PSII by ROS is accelerated by the deceleration of the Calvin cycle that occurs when the availability of CO(2) is limited. In this review, we present a new paradigm for the action of ROS in photoinhibition.  相似文献   

8.
α-Tocopherol is a lipophilic antioxidant that is an efficient scavenger of singlet oxygen. We investigated the role of α-tocopherol in the protection of photosystem II (PSII) from photoinhibition using a mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 that is deficient in the biosynthesis of α-tocopherol. The activity of PSII in mutant cells was more sensitive to inactivation by strong light than that in wild-type cells, indicating that lack of α-tocopherol enhances the extent of photoinhibition. However, the rate of photodamage to PSII, as measured in the presence of chloramphenicol, which blocks the repair of PSII, did not differ between the two lines of cells. By contrast, the repair of PSII from photodamage was suppressed in mutant cells. Addition of α-tocopherol to cultures of mutant cells returned the extent of photoinhibition to that in wild-type cells, without any effect on photodamage. The synthesis de novo of various proteins, including the D1 protein that plays a central role in the repair of PSII, was suppressed in mutant cells under strong light. These observations suggest that α-tocopherol promotes the repair of photodamaged PSII by protecting the synthesis de novo of the proteins that are required for recovery from inhibition by singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

9.
When plants, algae, and cyanobacteria are exposed to excessive light, especially in combination with other environmental stress conditions such as extreme temperatures, their photosynthetic performance declines. A major cause of this photoinhibition is the light-induced irreversible photodamage to the photosystem II (PSII) complex responsible for photosynthetic oxygen evolution. A repair cycle operates to selectively replace a damaged D1 subunit within PSII with a newly synthesized copy followed by the light-driven reactivation of the complex. Net loss of PSII activity occurs (photoinhibition) when the rate of damage exceeds the rate of repair. The identities of the chaperones and proteases involved in the replacement of D1 in vivo remain uncertain. Here, we show that one of the four members of the FtsH family of proteases (cyanobase designation slr0228) found in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 is important for the repair of PSII and is vital for preventing chronic photoinhibition. Therefore, the ftsH gene family is not functionally redundant with respect to the repair of PSII in this organism. Our data also indicate that FtsH binds directly to PSII, is involved in the early steps of D1 degradation, and is not restricted to the removal of D1 fragments. These results, together with the recent analysis of ftsH mutants of Arabidopsis, highlight the critical role played by FtsH proteases in the removal of damaged D1 from the membrane and the maintenance of PSII activity in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
The repair of photosystem II (PSII) after photodamage is particularly sensitive to reactive oxygen species—such as H2O2, which is abundantly produced during the photoinhibition of PSII. In the present study, we generated a transformant of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 that expressed a highly active catalase, VktA, which is derived from a facultatively psychrophilic bacterium Vibrio rumoiensis, and examined the effect of expression of VktA on the photoinhibition of PSII. The activity of PSII in transformed cells declined much more slowly than in wild-type cells when cells were exposed to strong light in the presence of H2O2. However, the rate of photodamage to PSII, as monitored in the presence of chloramphenicol, was the same in the two lines of cells, suggesting that the repair of PSII was protected by the expression of VktA. The de novo synthesis of the D1 protein, which is required for the repair of PSII, was activated in transformed cells under the same stress conditions. Similar protection of the repair of PSII in transformed cells was also observed under strong light at a relatively low temperature. Thus, the expression of the highly active catalase mitigates photoinhibition of PSII by protecting protein synthesis against damage by H2O2 with subsequent enhancement of the repair of PSII.  相似文献   

11.
How do environmental stresses accelerate photoinhibition?   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Environmental stress enhances the extent of photoinhibition, a process that is determined by the balance between the rate of photodamage to photosystem II (PSII) and the rate of its repair. Recent investigations suggest that exposure to environmental stresses, such as salt, cold, moderate heat and oxidative stress, do not affect photodamage but inhibit the repair of PSII through suppression of the synthesis of PSII proteins. In particular, production of D1 protein is downregulated at the translation step by the direct inactivation of the translation machinery and/or by primarily interrupting the fixation of CO2. The latter results in the creation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which in turn block the synthesis of PSII proteins in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

12.
When photosynthetic organisms are exposed to abiotic stress, their photosynthetic activity is significantly depressed. In particular, photosystem II (PSII) in the photosynthetic machinery is readily inactivated under strong light and this phenomenon is referred to as photoinhibition of PSII. Other types of abiotic stress act synergistically with light stress to accelerate photoinhibition. Recent studies of photoinhibition have revealed that light stress damages PSII directly, whereas other abiotic stresses act exclusively to inhibit the repair of PSII after light-induced damage (photodamage). Such inhibition of repair is associated with suppression, by reactive oxygen species (ROS), of the synthesis of proteins de novo and, in particular, of the D1 protein, and also with the reduced efficiency of repair under stress conditions. Gene-technological improvements in the tolerance of photosynthetic organisms to various abiotic stresses have been achieved via protection of the repair system from ROS and, also, by enhancing the efficiency of repair via facilitation of the turnover of the D1 protein in PSII. In this review, we summarize the current status of research on photoinhibition as it relates to the effects of abiotic stress and we discuss successful strategies that enhance the activity of the repair machinery. In addition, we propose several potential methods for activating the repair system by gene-technological methods.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between the susceptibility of photosystem II (PSII) to photoinhibition in vivo and the rate of degradation of the D1 protein of the PSII reaction center heterodimer was investigated in leaves from pea plants (Pisum sativum L. cv Greenfeast) grown under widely contrasting irradiances. There was an inverse linear relationship between the extent of photoinhibition and chlorophyll (Chl) a/b ratios, with low-light leaves being more susceptible to high light. In the presence of the chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis inhibitor lincomycin, the differential sensitivity of the various light-acclimated pea leaves to photoinhibition was largely removed, demonstrating the importance of D1 protein turnover as the most crucial mechanism to protect against photoinhibition. In the differently light-acclimated pea leaves, the rate of D1 protein degradation (measured from [35S]methionine pulse-chase experiments) increased with increasing incident light intensities only if the light was not high enough to cause photoinhibition in vivo. Under moderate illumination, the rate constant for D1 protein degradation corresponded to the rate constant for photoinhibition in the presence of lincomycin, demonstrating a balance between photodamage to D1 protein and subsequent recovery, via D1 protein degradation, de novo synthesis of precursor D1 protein, and reassembly of functional PSII. In marked contrast, in light sufficiently high to cause photoinhibition in vivo, the rate of D1 protein degradation no longer increased concomitantly with increasing photoinhibition, suggesting that the rate of D1 protein degradation is playing a regulatory role. The extent of thylakoid stacking, indicated by the Chl a/b ratios of the differently light-acclimated pea leaves, was linearly related to the half-life of the D1 protein in strong light. We conclude that photoinhibition in vivo occurs under conditions in which the rate of D1 protein degradation can no longer be enhanced to rapidly remove irreversibly damaged D1 protein. We suggest that low-light pea leaves, with more stacked membranes and less stroma-exposed thylakoids, are more susceptible to photoinhibition in vivo mainly due to their slower rate of D1 protein degradation under sustained high light and their slower repair cycle of the photodamaged PSII centers.  相似文献   

14.
E Kanervo  Y Tasaka  N Murata    E M Aro 《Plant physiology》1997,114(3):841-849
The role of membrane lipid unsaturation in the restoration of photosystem II (PSII) function and in the synthesis of the D1 protein at different temperatures after photoinhibition was studied in wild-type cells and a mutant of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with genetically inactivated desaturase genes. We show that posttranslational carboxyl-terminal processing of the precursor form of the D1 protein is an extremely sensitive reaction in the PSII repair cycle and is readily affected by low temperatures. Furthermore, the threshold temperature at which perturbations in D1-protein processing start to emerge is specifically dependent on the extent of thylakoid membrane lipid unsaturation, as indicated by comparison of wild-type cells with the mutant defective in desaturation of 18:1 fatty acids of thylakoid membranes. When the temperature was decreased from 33 degrees C (growth temperature) to 18 degrees C, the inability of the fatty acid mutant to recover from photoinhibition was accompanied by a failure to process the newly synthesized D1 protein, which accumulated in considerable amounts as an unprocessed precursor D1 protein. Precursor D1 integrated into PSII monomer and dimer complexes even at low temperatures, but no activation of oxygen evolution occurred in these complexes in mutant cells defective in fatty acid unsaturation.  相似文献   

15.
Irreversible photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) occurred when Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cells were exposed to very strong light for a prolonged period. When wild-type cells were illuminated at 20 °C for 2 h with light at an intensity of 2,500 μmol photons m−2 s−1, the oxygen-evolving activity of PSII was almost entirely and irreversibly lost, whereas the photochemical reaction center in PSII was inactivated only reversibly. The extent of irreversible photoinhibition was enhanced at lower temperatures and by the genetically engineered rigidification of membrane lipids. Western and Northern blotting demonstrated that, after cells had undergone irreversible photoinhibition, the precursor to D1 protein in PSII was synthesized but not processed properly. These observations may suggest that exposure of Synechocystis cells to strong light results in the irreversible photoinhibition of the oxygen-evolving activity of PSII via impairment of the processing of pre-D1 and that this effect of strong light is enhanced by the rigidification of membrane lipids.  相似文献   

16.
The Photosystem II complex (PSII) is susceptible to inactivation by strong light, and the inactivation caused by strong light is referred to as photoinactivation or photoinhibition. In photosynthetic organisms, photoinactivated PSII is rapidly repaired and the extent of photoinactivation reflects the balance between the light-induced damage (photodamage) to PSII and the repair of PSII. In this study, we examined these two processes separately and quantitatively under stress conditions in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The rate of photodamage was proportional to light intensity over a range of light intensities from 0 to 2000 microE m(-2) s(-1), and this relationship was not affected by environmental factors, such as salt stress, oxidative stress due to H2O2, and low temperature. The rate of repair also depended on light intensity. It was high under weak light and reached a maximum of 0.1 min(-1) at 300 microE m(-2) s(-1). By contrast to the rate of photodamage, the rate of repair was significantly reduced by the above-mentioned environmental factors. Pulse-labeling experiments with radiolabeled methionine revealed that these environmental factors inhibited the synthesis de novo of proteins. Such proteins included the D1 protein which plays an important role in the photodamage-repair cycle. These observations suggest that the repair of PSII under environmental stress might be the critical step that determines the outcome of the photodamage-repair cycle.  相似文献   

17.
When visible light is excess, the photosynthetic machinery is photoinhibited. The extent of net photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) is determined by a balance between the rate of photodamage to D1 and some other PSII proteins and the rate of the turnover cycle of these proteins. It is widely believed that the protein turnover requires much energy cost. The aims of this study are to (1) evaluate the energy cost of PSII repair, (2) measure the benefit in terms of photosynthetic gain realized by the repairing of the photodamaged PSII, and (3) know whether acclimation of photosynthesis to growth light affects the rates of the photodamage and repair. We grew spinach in high-light (HL) and low-light (LL) and measured the rates of D1 photodamage and repair in these leaves. We determined the rate constants of photodamage (k (pi)) and repair (k (rec)) by the PAM fluorometry in the presence or in the absence of lincomycin, an inhibitor of 70S protein synthesis. HL leaves showed smaller k (pi) and greater k (rec) than LL leaves. The energy cost of the repairing of the photodamaged D1 protein was <0.5?% of ATP produced by photophosphorylation at PPFDs ranging from 400 to 1600?μmol?m(-2)?s(-1) and was greater in HL leaves than in LL leaves. The benefits brought about by the repair were more than from 35 to 270 times the cost at PPFDs ranging from 400 to 1600?μmol?m(-2)?s(-1). The benefits of HL leaves were greater than those of LL leaves because of the higher photosynthesis rates in HL leaves. Running a simple simulation of daily photosynthesis using the parameters obtained in this study, we discuss why the plants need to pay the cost of D1 protein turnover to repair the photodamaged PSII.  相似文献   

18.
The FtsH2 protease, encoded by the slr0228 gene, plays a key role in the selective degradation of photodamaged D1 protein during the repair of Photosystem II (PSII) in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. To test whether additional proteases might be involved in D1 degradation during high rates of photodamage, we have studied the synthesis and degradation of the D1 protein in ΔPsbO and ΔPsbV mutants, in which the CaMn4 cluster catalyzing oxygen evolution is less stable, and in the D1 processing mutants, D1-S345P and ΔCtpA, which are unable to assemble a functional cluster. All four mutants exhibited a dramatically increased rate of D1 degradation in high light compared to the wild-type. Additional inactivation of the ftsH2 gene slowed the rate of D1 degradation dramatically and increased the level of PSII complexes. We conclude that FtsH2 plays a major role in the degradation of both precursor and mature forms of D1 following donor-side photoinhibition. However, this conclusion concerned only D1 assembled into larger complexes containing at least D2 and CP47. In the ΔpsbEFLJ deletion mutant blocked at an early stage in PSII assembly, unassembled D1 protein was efficiently degraded in the absence of FtsH2 pointing to the involvement of other protease(s). Significantly, the ΔPsbO mutant displayed unusually low levels of cellular chlorophyll at extremely low-light intensities. The possibilities that PSII repair may limit the availability of chlorophyll for the biogenesis of other chlorophyll-binding proteins and that PsbO might have a regulatory role in PSII repair are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Photoinhibition of photosystem II under environmental stress   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Inhibition of the activity of photosystem II (PSII) under strong light is referred to as photoinhibition. This phenomenon is due to an imbalance between the rate of photodamage to PSII and the rate of the repair of damaged PSII. In the "classical" scheme for the mechanism of photoinhibition, strong light induces the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which directly inactivate the photochemical reaction center of PSII. By contrast, in a new scheme, we propose that photodamage is initiated by the direct effect of light on the oxygen-evolving complex and that ROS inhibit the repair of photodamaged PSII by suppressing primarily the synthesis of proteins de novo. The activity of PSII is restricted by a variety of environmental stresses. The effects of environmental stress on damage to and repair of PSII can be examined separately and it appears that environmental stresses, with the exception of strong light, act primarily by inhibiting the repair of PSII. Studies have demonstrated that repair-inhibitory stresses include CO(2) limitation, moderate heat, high concentrations of NaCl, and low temperature, each of which suppresses the synthesis of proteins de novo, which is required for the repair of PSII. We postulate that most types of environmental stress inhibit the fixation of CO(2) with the resultant generation of ROS, which, in turn, inhibit protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Under strong light, photosystem II (PSII) of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms is inactivated, and this phenomenon is called photoinhibition. In a widely accepted model, photoinhibition is induced by excess light energy, which is absorbed by chlorophyll but not utilized in photosynthesis. Using monochromatic light from the Okazaki Large Spectrograph and thylakoid membranes from Thermosynechococcus elongatus, we observed that UV and blue light inactivated the oxygen-evolving complex much faster than the photochemical reaction center of PSII. These observations suggested that the light-induced damage was associated with a UV- and blue light-absorbing center in the oxygen-evolving complex of PSII. The action spectrum of the primary event in photodamage to PSII revealed the strong effects of UV and blue light and differed considerably from the absorption spectra of chlorophyll and thylakoid membranes. By contrast to the photoinduced inactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex in untreated thylakoid membranes, red light efficiently induced inactivation of the PSII reaction center in Tris-treated thylakoid membranes, and the action spectrum resembled the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll. Our observations suggest that photodamage to PSII occurs in two steps. Step 1 is the light-induced inactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex. Step 2, occurring after step 1 is complete, is the inactivation of the PSII reaction center by light absorbed by chlorophyll. We confirmed our model by illumination of untreated thylakoid membranes with blue and UV light, which inactivated the oxygen-evolving complex, and then with red light, which inactivated the photochemical reaction center.  相似文献   

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