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1.
Light, controls the “blueprint” for chloroplast development, but at high intensities is toxic to the chloroplast. Excessive light intensities inhibit primarily photosystem II electron transport. This results in generation of toxic singlet oxygen due to impairment of electron transport on the acceptor side between pheophytin and QB -the secondary electron acceptor. High light stress also impairs electron transport on the donor side of photosystem II generating highly oxidizing species Z+ and P680+. A conformationsl change in the photosystem II reaction centre protein Dl affecting its QB-binding site is involved in turning the damaged protein into a substrate for proteolysis. The evidence indicates that the degradation of D1 is an enzymatic process and the protease that degrades D1 protein has been shown to be a serine protease Although there is evidence to indicate that the chlorophyll a-protein complex CP43 acts as a serine-type protease degrading Dl, the observed degradation of Dl protein in photosystem II reaction centre particlesin vitro argues against the involvement of CP43 in Dl degradation. Besides the degradation during high light stress of Dl, and to a lesser extent D2-the other reaction centre protein, CP43 and CP29 have also been shown to undergo degradation. In an oxygenic environment, Dl is cleaved from its N-and C-termini and the disassembly of the photosystem II complex involves simultaneous release of manganese and three extrinsic proteins involved in oxygen evolution. It is known that protein with PEST sequences are subject to degradation; D1 protein contains a PEST sequence adjacent to the site of cleavage on the outer side of thylakoid membrane between helices IV and V. The molecular processes of “triggering” of Dl for proteolytic degradation are not clearly understood. The changes in structural organization of photosystem II due to generation of oxy-radicals and other highly oxidizing species have also not been resolved. Whether CP43 or a component of the photosystem II reaction centre itself (Dl. D2 or cy1 b559 subunits), which may be responsible for degradation of Dl, is also subject to light modification to become an active protease, is also not known. The identity of proteases degrading Dl, LHCII and CP43 and C29 remains to be established  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism of D1 protein degradation was investigated during photoinhibitory illumination of isolated photosystem II core preparations. The studies revealed that a proteolytic activity resides within the photosystem II core complex. A relationship between the inhibition of D1 protein degradation and the binding of the highly specific serine protease inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate to isolated complexes of photosystem II was observed, evidence that this protease is of the serine type. Using radiolabeled inhibitor, it was shown that the binding site, representing the active serine of the catalytic site, is located on a 43-kDa polypeptide, probably the chlorophyll a protein CP43. The protease is apparently active in darkness, with the initiation of breakdown being dependent on high light-induced substrate activation. The proteolysis, which has an optimum at pH 7.5, gives rise to primary degradation fragments of 23 and 16 kDa. In addition, D1 protein fragments of 14, 13, and 10 kDa were identified. Experiments with phosphate-labeled D1 protein and sequence-specific antisera showed that the 23- and 16-kDa fragments originate from the N- and C-termini, respectively, suggesting a primary cleavage of the D1 protein at the outer thylakoid surface in the region between transmembrane helices D and E.  相似文献   

3.
Light induces an irreversible modification of the photosystem II reaction center (RCII) affecting specifically one of its major components, the D1 protein (Ohad, I., Adir, N., Koike, H., Kyle, D. J., and Inoue, Y. I. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 1972-1979) which is degraded and replaced continuously (turnover). The turnover rate of D1 is related to light intensity. Evidence is presented showing that RCII translocates from the site of damage in the grana (appressed) domain of the chloroplast membranes to unappressed membrane domains where the D1 precursor protein (pD1) is translated and becomes integrated into RCII. Several forms of RCII (a, a*, and b) were identified on the basis of their electrophoretic mobility. pD1 was found only in the a and b forms in the unappressed membranes. Processing of pD1 occurs after its integration into RCII. Mature D1 appeared mostly in the a form of RCII and following its translocation to the appressed membrane domains also in the a* form. Thus the light intensity-dependent synthesis of D1 protein is related to the availability of modified RCII which serves as an acceptor for pD1. The shuttling of RCII between the two membrane domains may represent a control mechanism of thylakoid membrane protein synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
R Kettunen  E Tyystjrvi    E M Aro 《Plant physiology》1996,111(4):1183-1190
Photoinhibition-induced degradation of the D1 protein of the photosystem II reaction center was studied in intact pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) leaves. Photoinhibition was observed to cause the cleavage of the D1 protein at two distinct sites. The main cleavage generated an 18-kD N-terminal and a 20-kD C-terminal degradation fragment of the D1 protein. this cleavage site was mapped to be located clearly N terminally of the DE loop. The other, less-frequent cleavage occurred at the DE loop and produced the well-documented 23-kD, N-terminal D1 degradation product. Furthermore, the 23-kD, N-terminal D1 fragment appears to be phosphorylated and can be detected only under severe photoinhibition in vivo. Comparison of the D1 degradation pattern after in vivo photoinhibition to that after in vitro acceptor-side and donor-side photoinhibition, performed with isolated photosystem II core particles, gives indirect evidence in support of donor-side photoinhibition in intact leaves.  相似文献   

5.
Photoinactivation of photosystem II (PSII) and light-dependent degradation of the reaction center II (RCII) protein D1 have been investigated in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants D6, AC208, and B4 deficient in cytochrome b6/f, plastocyanin, and photosystem I (PSI) activity, respectively. These mutants possess active PSII and reduce plastoquinone (PQ) but cannot oxidize plastoquinol (PQH2) via light-dependent reduction of NADP. In light-exposed cells a high ratio PQH2/PQ and a low turnover of PQ/PQH2 at the RCII-QB site are maintained. In all mutants photoinactivation of RCII was slower as compared to the wild-type (wt) cells, and D1 degradation was drastically decreased. The degradation of D1 was also lower in the wt cells under anaerobic conditions and presence of ascorbate, while raising the concentration of dissolved oxygen increased the degradation of the D1 protein in the AC208 mutant. Photoinactivation and light-dependent degradation of the D1 protein were drastically increased in the Scenedesmus obliquus LF-1 mutant cells altered in its PSII manganese binding and thus unable to reduce PQ using water as an electron donor. Diuron inhibited the light-dependent degradation of D1 protein in both the LF-1 mutant and wt cells. Based on these results we propose that availability of PQ at the QB site is required for (i) the photoinactivation process of the RCII acceptor side followed by inactivation of the donor side leading to the generation of harmful cation radicals (Z+, P680+, chlz+) which damage the D1 protein, and (ii) the accessibility of the cleavage site of the damaged D1 protein to proteolytic degradation.  相似文献   

6.
Mizusawa N  Tomo T  Satoh K  Miyao M 《Biochemistry》2003,42(33):10034-10044
The D1 protein of the photosystem II reaction center turns over the most rapidly of all the proteins of the thylakoid membrane under illumination in vivo. In vitro, the D1 protein sustained cleavage in a surface-exposed loop (DE loop) or cross-linking with another reaction center protein, the D2 protein or cytochrome b(559), under illumination. We found that the D1 protein was damaged in essentially the same way in vivo, although the resultant fragments and cross-linked adducts barely accumulated due to digestion by proteases. In vitro studies detected a novel stromal protease(s) that digested the adducts but not the monomeric D1 protein. These observations suggest that, in addition to cleavage, the cross-linking reactions themselves are processes involved in complete degradation of the D1 protein in vivo. Peptide mapping experiments located the cross-linking sites with the D2 protein among residues 226-244, which includes the cross-linking site with cytochrome b(559) [Barbato, R., et al. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 24032-24037], in the N-terminal part of the DE loop, while N-terminal amino acid sequencing of the fragment located the cleavage site around residue 260 in the C-terminal part of the loop. We propose a model explaining the occurrence of simultaneous cleavage and cross-linking and discuss the mechanisms of complete degradation of the D1 protein in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
When photosystem (PS) II-enriched membranes are exposed to strong light, cross-linking of the intrinsic D1 protein with the surrounding polypeptides and degradation of the D1 protein take place. The cross-linking of the D1 protein with the alpha-subunit of cytochrome b(559) is suggested to be an early event of photoinduced damage to the D1 protein (Barbato et al., FEBS Lett. 309 (1992) 165-169). The relationship between the cross-linking and the degradation of the D1 protein, however, is not yet clear. In the present study, we show that the addition of stromal extract from chloroplasts degrades the 41 kDa cross-linked product of D1/cytochrome b(559) alpha-subunit and enhances the degradation of the D1 protein. Incubation of the preilluminated PS II-enriched membranes with the stromal extract at 25 degrees C causes the degradation of the cross-linked product by more than 70%. The activity of the stromal extract showed a pH optimum at 8.0, and was enhanced by the addition of ATP or GTP. Consistent with the nucleotide effect, this stromal activity was eliminated by the preincubation of the stromal extract with apyrase, which hydrolyzes nucleotides. Also, the stromal activity was nearly fully inhibited by a serine-type protease inhibitor, 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin, which suggests participation of a serine-type protease(s).  相似文献   

8.
Huesgen PF  Schuhmann H  Adamska I 《FEBS letters》2006,580(30):6929-6932
In plants exposed to high irradiances of visible light, the D1 protein in the reaction center of photosystem II is oxidatively damaged and rapidly degraded. Earlier work in our laboratory showed that the serine protease Deg2 performs the primary cleavage of photodamaged D1 protein in vitro. Here, we demonstrate that the rate of D1 protein degradation under light stress conditions in Arabidopsis mutants lacking the Deg2 protease is similar to those in wild-type plants. Therefore, we propose that several redundant D1 protein degradation pathways might exist in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
The beta 2 subunit of tryptophan synthase is composed of two independently folding domains connected by a hinge segment of the polypeptide that is particularly susceptible to limited proteolysis by trypsin [H?gberg-Raibaud, A., & Goldberg, M. (1977) Biochemistry 16, 4014-4019]. Since tryptic cleavage in the hinge region inactivates the beta 2 subunit, the spatial relationship between the two domains is important for enzyme activity. However, it was not previously known whether inactivation results from cleavage of the chain or from the loss of internal fragment(s) subsequent to cleavage at two or more sites. We now report comparative studies of limited proteolysis by three proteinases: trypsin and endoproteinases Lys-C and Arg-C. Our key finding that endoproteinase Arg-C inactivates the beta 2 subunit by cleavage at a single site (Arg-275) demonstrates the important role of the hinge peptide for enzymatic activity. We have also identified the sites of cleavage and the time course of proteolysis by trypsin at Arg-275, Lys-283, and Lys-272 and by endoproteinase Lys-C at Lys-283 and Lys-272. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, Edman degradation, and carboxypeptidases B and Y have been used to identify the several fragments and peptides produced. Our finding that the beta 2 subunit and F1 fragments have a heterogeneous amino terminus (Met-1 or Thr-2) indicates that the amino-terminal methionine is incompletely removed during posttranslational modification. Our results show that Edman degradation can be effectively used with a protein of known sequence to analyze proteolytic digests that have at least four different amino-terminal sequences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
Besides an essential role in optimizing water oxidation in photosystem II (PSII), it has been reported that the spinach PsbO protein binds GTP [C. Spetea, T. Hundal, B. Lundin, M. Heddad, I. Adamska, B. Andersson, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101 (2004) 1409-1414]. Here we predict four GTP-binding domains in the structure of spinach PsbO, all localized in the beta-barrel domain of the protein, as judged from comparison with the 3D-structure of the cyanobacterial counterpart. These domains are not conserved in the sequences of the cyanobacterial or green algae PsbO proteins. MgGTP induces specific changes in the structure of the PsbO protein in solution, as detected by circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy. Spinach PsbO has a low intrinsic GTPase activity, which is enhanced fifteen-fold when the protein is associated with the PSII complex in its dimeric form. GTP stimulates the dissociation of PsbO from PSII under light conditions known to also release Mn(2+) and Ca(2+) ions from the oxygen-evolving complex and to induce degradation of the PSII reaction centre D1 protein. We propose the occurrence in higher plants of a PsbO-mediated GTPase activity associated with PSII, which has consequences for the function of the oxygen-evolving complex and D1 protein turnover.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between state transitions and photoinhibition has been studied in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells. In State 2, photosystem II activity was more inhibited by light than in State 1. In State 2, however, the D1 subunit was not degraded, whereas a substantial degradation was observed in State 1. These results suggest that photoinhibition occurs via the generation of an intermediate state in which photosystem II is inactive but the D1 protein is still intact. The accumulation of this state is enhanced in State 2, because in this State only cyclic photosynthetic electron transport is active, whereas there is no electron flow between photosystem II and the cytochrome b(6)f complex (Finazzi, G., Furia, A., Barbagallo, R. P., and Forti, G. (1999) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1413, 117-129). The activity of photosystem I and of cytochrome b(6)f as well as the coupling of thylakoid membranes was not affected by illumination under the same conditions. This allows repairing the damages to photosystem II thanks to cell capacity to maintain a high rate of ATP synthesis (via photosystem I-driven cyclic electron flow). This capacity might represent an important physiological tool in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus from excess of light as well as from other a-biotic stress conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Besides an essential role in optimizing water oxidation in photosystem II (PSII), it has been reported that the spinach PsbO protein binds GTP [C. Spetea, T. Hundal, B. Lundin, M. Heddad, I. Adamska, B. Andersson, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101 (2004) 1409-1414]. Here we predict four GTP-binding domains in the structure of spinach PsbO, all localized in the β-barrel domain of the protein, as judged from comparison with the 3D-structure of the cyanobacterial counterpart. These domains are not conserved in the sequences of the cyanobacterial or green algae PsbO proteins. MgGTP induces specific changes in the structure of the PsbO protein in solution, as detected by circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy. Spinach PsbO has a low intrinsic GTPase activity, which is enhanced fifteen-fold when the protein is associated with the PSII complex in its dimeric form. GTP stimulates the dissociation of PsbO from PSII under light conditions known to also release Mn2+ and Ca2+ ions from the oxygen-evolving complex and to induce degradation of the PSII reaction centre D1 protein. We propose the occurrence in higher plants of a PsbO-mediated GTPase activity associated with PSII, which has consequences for the function of the oxygen-evolving complex and D1 protein turnover.  相似文献   

15.
Yang DH  Paulsen H  Andersson B 《FEBS letters》2000,466(2-3):385-388
Variations in the amount of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein complex (LHCII) is essential for regulation of the uptake of light into photosystem II. An endogenous proteolytic system was found to be involved in the degradation of LHCII in response to elevated light intensities and the proteolysis was shown to be under tight regulation [Yang, D.-H. et al. (1998) Plant Physiol. 118, 827-834]. In this study, the substrate specificity and recognition site towards the protease were examined using reconstituted wild-type and mutant recombinant LHCII. The results show that the LHCII apoprotein and the monomeric form of the holoprotein are targeted for proteolysis while the trimeric form is not. The N-terminal domain of LHCII was found to be essential for recognition by the regulatory protease and the involvement of the N-end rule pathway is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The photosystem II reaction center D1 protein is known to turn over frequently. This protein is prone to irreversible damage caused by reactive oxygen species that are formed in the light; the damaged, nonfunctional D1 protein is degraded and replaced by a new copy. However, the proteases responsible for D1 protein degradation remain unknown. In this study, we investigate the possible role of the FtsH protease, an ATP-dependent zinc metalloprotease, during this process. The primary light-induced cleavage product of the D1 protein, a 23-kD fragment, was found to be degraded in isolated thylakoids in the dark during a process dependent on ATP hydrolysis and divalent metal ions, suggesting the involvement of FtsH. Purified FtsH degraded the 23-kD D1 fragment present in isolated photosystem II core complexes, as well as that in thylakoid membranes depleted of endogenous FtsH. In this study, we definitively identify the chloroplast protease acting on the D1 protein during its light-induced turnover. Unlike previously identified membrane-bound substrates for FtsH in bacteria and mitochondria, the 23-kD D1 fragment represents a novel class of FtsH substrate-functionally assembled proteins that have undergone irreversible photooxidative damage and cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
Quality control of photosystem II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Photosystem II is particularly vulnerable to excess light. When illuminated with strong visible light, the reaction center D1 protein is damaged by reactive oxygen molecules or by endogenous cationic radicals generated by photochemical reactions, which is followed by proteolytic degradation of the damaged D1 protein. Homologs of prokaryotic proteases, such as ClpP, FtsH and DegP, have been identified in chloroplasts, and participation of the thylakoid-bound FtsH in the secondary degradation steps of the photodamaged D1 protein has been suggested. We found that cross-linking of the D1 protein with the D2 protein, the alpha-subunit of cytochrome b(559), and the antenna chlorophyll-binding protein CP43, occurs in parallel with the degradation of the D1 protein during the illumination of intact chloroplasts, thylakoids and photosystem II-enriched membranes. The cross-linked products are then digested by a stromal protease(s). These results indicate that the degradation of the photodamaged D1 protein proceeds through membrane-bound proteases and stromal proteases. Moreover, a 33-kDa subunit of oxygen-evolving complex (OEC), bound to the lumen side of photosystem II, regulates the formation of the cross-linked products of the D1 protein in donor-side photoinhibition of photosystem II. Thus, various proteases and protein components in different compartments in chloroplasts are implicated in the efficient turnover of the D1 protein, thus contributing to the control of the quality of photosystem II under light stress conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Given the unique problem of the extremely high potential of the oxidant P(+)(680) that is required to oxidize water to oxygen, the photoinactivation of photosystem II in vivo is inevitable, despite many photoprotective strategies. There is, however, a robustness of photosystem II, which depends partly on the highly dynamic compositional and structural heterogeneity of the cycle between functional and non-functional photosystem II complexes in response to light level. This coordinated regulation involves photon usage (energy utilization in photochemistry) and excess energy dissipation as heat, photoprotection by many molecular strategies, photoinactivation followed by photon damage and ultimately the D1 protein dynamics involved in the photosystem II repair cycle. Compelling, though indirect evidence suggests that the radical pair P(+)(680)Pheo(-) in functional PSII should be protected from oxygen. By analogy to the tentative oxygen channel of cytochrome c oxidase, oxygen may be liberated from the two water molecules bound to the catalytic site of the Mn cluster, via a specific pathway to the membrane surface. The function of the proposed oxygen pathway is to prevent O(2) from having direct access to P(+)(680)Pheo(-) and prevent the generation of singlet oxygen via the triplet-P(680) state in functional photosytem IIs. Only when the, as yet unidentified, potential trigger with a fateful first oxidative step destroys oxygen evolution, will the ensuing cascade of structural perturbations of photosystem II destroy the proposed oxygen, water and proton pathways. Then oxygen has direct access to P(+)(680)Pheo(-), singlet oxygen will be produced and may successively oxidize specific amino acids of the phosphorylated D1 protein of photosystem II dimers that are confined to appressed granal domains, thereby targeting D1 protein for eventual degradation and replacement in non-appressed thylakoid domains.  相似文献   

19.
The cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were subjected under photoinhibitory irradiation (600 micromolm(-2)s(-1)) at various temperatures (20-40 degrees C) to study in vivo quality control of photosystem II (PSII). The protease biogenesis and its consequences on photosynthetic efficiency (chlorophyll fluorescence ratio Fv/Fm) of the PSII, D1 degradation and repair were monitored during illumination and darkness. The loss in Fv/Fm value and degradation of D1 protein occurred not only under high light exposure, but also continued when the cells were subjected under dark restoration process after high light exposure. No loss in Fv/Fm value or D1 degradation occurred during recovery under growth/low light (30 micromol m(-2) s(-1)). Further, it helped the resynthesis of new D1 protein, essential to sustain quality control of PSII. In vivo triggering of D1 protein required high light exposure to switch-on the protease biosynthesis to maintain protease pool which induced temperature-dependent enzymatic proteolysis of photodamaged D1 protein during photoinhition and dark incubation. Our findings suggested the involvement and overexpression of a membrane-bound FtsH protease during high light exposure which caused degradation of D1 protein, strictly regulated by high temperature (30-40 degrees C). However, lower temperature (20 degrees C) prevented further loss of photoinhibited PSII efficiency in vivo and also retarded temperature-dependent proteolytic process of D1 degradation.  相似文献   

20.
We have recently shown that during in vivo photoinhibition the D1 protein is degraded via a modified form, designated D1*. Depending on light conditions, the amount of D1* varies in leaves between 0 and 50% of total D1 content. By isolating thylakoids from leaves acclimated to different light levels, and performing photoinhibition experiments on these thylakoids, the following results on D1 protein degradation were obtained: (i) the protease involved in D1 degradation requires activation by light; (ii) neither acceptor nor donor side photoinhibition of PSII induces formation of D1* in vitro; (iii) in isolated thylakoids, the transformation of D1 to D1* can be induced in low light in the presence of ATP, which suggests that D1* is a phosphorylated form of the D1 protein; (iv) D1*, induced either in vivo or in vitro, is much less susceptible to degradation during illumination of isolated thylakoids than the original D1 protein. We suggest that the modification to D1* is a means to prevent disassembly of photodamaged photosystem II complex in appressed membranes.  相似文献   

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