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

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

3.
The cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 carries out oxygenic photosynthesis analogous to higher plants. Its photosystem I contains seven different polypeptide subunits. The cartridge mutagenesis technique was used to inactivate the psaD gene which encodes subunit II of photosystem I. A mutant strain lacking subunit II was generated by transforming wild type cells with cloned DNA in which psaD gene was interrupted by a gene conferring kanamycin resistance. The photoautotrophic growth of mutant strain is much slower than that of wild type cells. The membranes prepared from mutant cells lack subunit II of photosystem I. Studies on the purified photosystem I reaction center revealed that the complex lacking subunit II is assembled and is functional in P700 photooxidation but at much reduced rate. Therefore, subunit II of photosystem I is required for efficient function of photosystem I.  相似文献   

4.
We present here a simple and rapid method which allows relatively large quantities of oxygen-evolving photosystem II- (PS-II-) enriched particles to be obtained from wild-type and mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. This method is based on that of Burnap et al. [Burnap, R., Koike, H., Sotiropoulou, G., Sherman, L. A., & Inoue, Y. (1989) Photosynth. Res. 22, 123-130] but is modified so that the whole preparation, from cells to PS-II particles, is achieved in 10 h and involves only one purification step. The purified preparation exhibits a 5-6-fold increase of O2-evolution activity on a chlorophyll basis over the thylakoids. The ratio of PS-I to PS-II is about 0.14:1 in the preparation. The secondary quinone electron acceptor, QB, is present in this preparation as demonstrated by thermoluminescence studies. These PS-II particles are well-suited to spectroscopic studies as demonstrated by the range of EPR signals arising from components of PS-II that are easily detectable. Among the EPR signals presented are those from a formal S3-state, attributed to an oxidized amino acid interacting magnetically with the Mn complex in Ca(2+)-deficient PS-II particles, and from S2 modified by the replacement of Ca2+ by Sr2+. Neither of these signals has been previously reported in cyanobacteria. Their detection under these conditions indicates a similar lesion caused by Ca2+ depletion in both plants and cyanobacteria. The protocol has also been applied to mutants which have site-specific changes in PS-II. Data are presented on mutants having changes on the electron donor (Y160F) and electron acceptor (G215W) side of the D2 polypeptide.  相似文献   

5.
The PsbL protein is one of three low-molecular-weight subunits identified at the monomer-monomer interface of photosystem II (PSII) [Ferreira et al. (2004) Science 303:1831-1838; Loll et al. (2005) Nature 438:1040-1044]. We have employed site-directed mutagenesis to investigate the role of PsbL in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cells. Truncation of the C-terminus by deleting the last four residues (Tyr-Phe-Phe-Asn) prevented association of PsbL with the CP43-less monomeric sub-complex and therefore blocked PSII assembly resulting in an obligate photoheterotrophic strain. Replacement of these residues with Ala created four photoautotrophic mutants. Compared to wild type, the F37A, F38A, and N39A strains had reduced levels of assembled PSII centers and F37A and F38A cells were readily photodamaged. In contrast, Y36A and Y36F mutants were similar to wild type. However, each of these strains had elevated levels of the CP43-less inactive monomeric complex. Mutations targeting a putative hydrogen bond between Arg-16 and sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol resulted in mutants that were also highly susceptible to photodamage. Similarly mutations targeting a conserved Tyr residue (Tyr-20) also destabilized PSII under high light and suggest that Tyr-20-lipid interactions or interactions of Tyr-20 with PsbT influence the ability of PSII to recover from photodamage.  相似文献   

6.
G H Noren  R J Boerner  B A Barry 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):3943-3950
The transformable cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 has a photosynthetic apparatus that is similar to that of plants. Because of the ease with which this organism can be genetically manipulated and isotopically labeled, Synechocystis has been used extensively in recent studies of electron transfer in the water-splitting complex, photosystem II. Here, we present the first EPR characterization of a highly active oxygen-evolving preparation from this organism. This preparation shows oxygen-evolution activities in the range from 2400-2600 mumol of O2/(mg of chlorophyll.h). We show that this preparation is stable enough for room temperature EPR studies. We then use this assay to show that the lineshapes of the D+ and Z+ tyrosine radicals are identical in this preparation, as has been observed in photosystem II complexes from a wide variety of photosynthetic species. We also present the first multiline EPR spectrum that has been observed from the Synechocystis manganese cluster.  相似文献   

7.
Brecht M  Radics V  Nieder JB  Studier H  Bittl R 《Biochemistry》2008,47(20):5536-5543
Single-molecule spectroscopy at low temperatures was used to elucidate spectral properties, heterogeneities, and dynamics of the red-shifted chlorophyll a (Chl a) molecules responsible for the fluorescence from photosystem I (PSI). Emission spectra of single PSI complexes from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 show zero-phonon lines (ZPLs) as well as broad intensity distributions without ZPLs. ZPLs are found most frequently on the blue side of the broad intensity distributions. The abundance of ZPLs decreases almost linearly at longer wavelengths. The distribution of ZPLs indicates the existence of at least two pools with maxima at 699 and 710 nm. The pool with the maximum at 710 nm is assigned to chlorophylls absorbing around 706 nm (C706), whereas the pool with the maximum at 699 nm (F699) can be assigned to chlorophylls absorbing at 692, 695, or 699 nm. The broad distributions dominating the red side of the spectra are made up of a low number of emitters assigned to the red-most pool C714. The properties of F699 show close relation to those of F698 in Synechococcus PCC 7002 and C708 in Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Furthermore, a high similarity is found between the C714 pool in Synechocystis PCC 6803 and C708 in Synechococcus PCC 7002 as well as C719 in T. elongatus.  相似文献   

8.
Photosystem I reaction center was isolated from the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, in a form which contains seven different polypeptide subunits. One of the subunits, with a molecular mass of about 16 kDa, was isolated, and protein sequence information was obtained for the amino terminus and several tryptic peptides. Oligonucleotide probes, corresponding to these sequences, were used to probe a genomic library, and the gene, designated psaD, encoding subunit II was cloned and sequenced. The gene encodes a polypeptide with a mass 15,644 Da, which exhibits a high degree of similarity to subunit II from tomato, as well as amino acid sequences reported from barley photosystem I. In addition to this gene, three large open reading frames were identified. Two remain unidentified, and the third is highly homologous to anthranilate synthase, component 1 from Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

9.
The PsbU subunit of photosystem II (PSII) is one of three extrinsic polypeptides associated with stabilizing the oxygen evolving machinery of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria. We investigated the influence of PsbU on excitation energy transfer and primary photochemistry by spectroscopic analysis of a PsbU-less (or deltaPsbU) mutant. The absence of PsbU was found to have multiple effects on the excited state dynamics of the phycobilisome and PSII. DeltaPsbU cells exhibited decreased variable fluorescence when excited with light absorbed primarily by allophycocyanin but not when excited with light absorbed primarily by chlorophyll a. Fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K showed evidence for impaired energy transfer from the allophycocyanin terminal phycobilisome emitters to PSII. Picosecond fluorescence decay kinetics revealed changes in both allophycocyanin and PSII associated decay components. These changes were consistent with a decrease in the coupling of phycobilisomes to PSII and an increase in the number of closed PSII reaction centers in the dark-adapted deltaPsbU mutant. Our results are consistent with the assumption that PsbU stabilizes both energy transfer and electron transport in the PBS/PSII assembly.  相似文献   

10.
PsaE is a small peripheral subunit of photosystem I (PSI) that is very accessible to the surrounding medium. It plays an essential role in optimizing the interactions with the soluble electron acceptors of PSI, ferredoxin and flavodoxin. The solution structure of PsaE from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been investigated by NMR with a special emphasis on its protein dynamic properties. PsaE is characterized by a well-defined central core that consists of a five-stranded beta-sheet (+1, +1, +1, -4x). Four loops (designated the A-B, B-C, C-D, and D-E loops) connect these beta-strands, the overall resulting structure being that of an SH3-like domain. As compared to previously determined PsaE structures, conformational differences are observed in the first three loops. The flexibility of the loops was investigated using (15)N relaxation experiments. This flexibility is small in amplitude for the A-B and B-C loops, but is large for the C-D loop, particularly in the region corresponding to the missing sequence of Nostoc sp. PCC 8009. The plasticity of the connecting loops in the free subunit is compared to that when bound to the PSI and discussed in relation to the insertion process and the function(s) of PsaE.  相似文献   

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

12.
Ammonia has long been known to be toxic for many photosynthetic organisms; however, the target for its toxicity remains elusive. Here, we show that in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, ammonia triggers a rapid photodamage of photosystem II (PSII). Whereas wild-type cells can cope with this damage by turning on the FtsH2-dependent PSII repair cycle, the FtsH2-deficient mutant is highly sensitive and loses PSII activity at millimolar concentration of ammonia. Ammonia-triggered PSII destruction is light dependent and occurs already at low photon fluence rates. Experiments with monochromatic light showed that ammonia-promoted PSII photoinhibition is executed by wavebands known to directly destroy the manganese cluster in the PSII oxygen-evolving complex, suggesting that the oxygen-evolving complex may be a direct target for ammonia toxicity.  相似文献   

13.
Mutant strains of the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystissp. PCC 6803, in which the psaK gene was insertionally inactivatedby targeted mutagenesis, were constructed. The gene is one ofthe two potential PsaK-coding genes which have been found asa result of the genome project with this cyanobacterium. Oneof the mutants was characterized in detail. A monocistronic,480-nucleotide mRNA of psaK was absent in total RNA from themutant cells. Inactivation of psaK had little effect on theaccumulation of polypeptides in the isolated PSI complexes exceptfor a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 4.6 kDawhich was absent in the mutant. The amino-terminal amino acidsequence of the 4.6-kDa polypeptide confirmed that it was thetranslation product of psaK and further revealed a presequenceof PsaK. Characteristics of photoautotrophic growth at differenttemperatures, the amount of chlorophyll per cell, photosyntheticelectron transport rates with various electron acceptors, thekinetics of charge recombination between P700+ and reduced FA/FB,and the molar ratio of chlorophyll to P700, of the mutant werenot significantly different from those of the wild type. Furthermore,the trimer to monomer ratio of the PSI complexes isolated fromthe mutant was similar to that isolated from the wild type. (Received July 27, 1998; Accepted October 13, 1998)  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome (cyt) b559 has been proposed to play an important role in the cyclic electron flow processes that protect photosystem II (PSII) from light-induced damage during photoinhibitory conditions. However, the exact role(s) of cyt b559 in the cyclic electron transfer pathway(s) in PSII remains unclear. To study the exact role(s) of cyt b559, we have constructed a series of site-directed mutants, each carrying a single amino acid substitution of one of the heme axial-ligands, in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. In these mutants, His-22 of the alpha or the beta subunit of cyt b559 was replaced with either Met, Glu, Tyr, Lys, Arg, Cys or Gln. On the basis of oxygen-evolution and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, we found that, among all mutants that were constructed, only the H22Kalpha mutant grew photoautotrophically, and accumulated stable PSII reaction centers ( approximately 81% compared to wild-type cells). In addition, we isolated one pseudorevertant of the H22Ybeta mutant that regained the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers ( approximately 79% compared to wild-type cells). On the basis of 77 K fluorescence emission measurements, we found that energy transfer from the phycobilisomes to PSII reaction centers was uncoupled in those cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no stable PSII. Furthermore, on the basis of immunoblot analyses, we found that in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no PSII, the amounts of the D1, D2, cyt b559alpha and beta polypeptides were very low or undetectable but their CP47 and PsaC polypeptides were accumulated to the wild-type level. We also found that the amounts of cyt b559beta polypeptide were significantly increased (larger than two folds) in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 H22YbetaPS+ mutant cells. We suspected that the increase in the amounts of cyt b559 H22YbetaPS+ mutant polypeptides in thylakoid membranes might facilitate the assembly of functional PSII in cyt b559 H22YbetaPS+ mutant cells. Moreover, we found that isolated His-tagged PSII particles from H22Kalpha mutant cells gave rise to redox-induced optical absorption difference spectra of cyt b559. Therefore, our results concluded that significant fractions of H22Kalpha mutant PSII particles retained the heme of cyt b559. Finally, this work is the first report of cyt b559 mutants having substitutions of an axial heme-ligands that retain the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers. These two cyt b559 mutants (H22Kalpha and H22YbetaPS+) and their PSII reaction centers will be very suitable for further biophysical and biochemical studies of the functional role(s) of cyt b559 in PSII.  相似文献   

15.
Carotene isomerase mutant (crtH mutant) cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 can accumulate beta-carotene under light conditions. However, the mutant cells grown under a light-activated heterotrophic growth condition contained detectable levels of neither beta-carotene nor D1 protein of the photosystem (PS) II reaction center, and no oxygen-evolving activity of PSII was detected. beta-Carotene and D1 protein appeared and a high level of PSII activity was detected after the cells were transferred to a continuous light condition. The PSI activities of thylakoid membranes from mutant cells were almost the same as those of thylakoid membranes from wild-type cells, both before and after transfer to the continuous light condition. These results suggest that beta-carotene is required for the assembly of PSII but not for that of PSI.  相似文献   

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

17.
18.
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   

19.
《BBA》2022,1863(1):148507
Photosynthetic electron transfer comprises a series of light-induced redox reactions catalysed by multiprotein machinery in the thylakoid. These protein complexes possess cofactors susceptible to redox modifications by reactive small molecules. The gaseous radical nitric oxide (NO), a key signalling molecule in green algae and plants, has earlier been shown to bind to Photosystem (PS) II and obstruct electron transfer in plants. The effects of NO on cyanobacterial bioenergetics however, have long remained obscure. In this study, we exposed the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to NO under anoxic conditions and followed changes in whole-cell fluorescence and oxidoreduction of P700 in vivo. Our results demonstrate that NO blocks photosynthetic electron transfer in cells by repressing PSII, PSI, and likely the NDH dehydrogenase-like complex 1 (NDH-1). We propose that iron?sulfur clusters of NDH-1 complex may be affected by NO to such an extent that ferredoxin-derived electron injection to the plastoquinone pool, and thus cyclic electron transfer, may be inhibited. These findings reveal the profound effects of NO on Synechocystis cells and demonstrate the importance of controlled NO homeostasis in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

20.
Cyanobacterial NAD(P)(+)-reducing reversible hydrogenases comprise five subunits. Four of them (HoxF, HoxU, HoxY, and HoxH) are also found in the well-described related enzyme from Ralstonia eutropha. The fifth one (HoxE) is not encoded in the R. eutropha genome, but shares homology with the N-terminal part of R. eutropha HoxF. However, in cyanobacteria, HoxE contains a 2Fe-2S cluster-binding motif that is not found in the related R. eutropha sequence. In order to obtain some insights into the role of HoxE in cyanobacteria, we deleted this subunit in Synechocystis PCC6803. Three types of interaction of the cyanobacterial hydrogenase with pyridine nucleotides were tested: (a) reductive activation of the NiFe site, for which NADPH was found to be more efficient than NADH; (b) H(2) production, for which NADH appeared to be a more efficient electron donor than NADPH; and (c) H(2) oxidation, for which NAD(+) was a much better electron acceptor than NADP(+). Upon hoxE deletion, the Synechocystis hydrogenase active site remained functional with artificial electron donors or acceptors, but the enzyme became unable to catalyze H(2) production or uptake with NADH/NAD(+). However, activation of the electron transfer-independent H/D exchange reaction by NADPH was still observed in the absence of HoxE, whereas activation of this reaction by NADH was lost. These data suggest different mechanisms for diaphorase-mediated electron donation and catalytic site activation in cyanobacterial hydrogenase.  相似文献   

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