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1.
Stoichiometry of membrane components associated with Photosystem II was determined in a highly active O2-evolving Photosystem II preparation isolated from spinach chloroplasts by the treatment with digitonin and Triton X-100. From the analysis with sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Triton X-114 phase partitioning, the preparation was shown to contain the reaction center protein (43 kDa), the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex (the main band, 27 kDa), the herbicide-binding protein (32 kDa) and cytochrome b-559 (10 kDa) as hydrophobic proteins, and three proteins (33, 24 and 18 kDa) which probably constitute the O2-evolution enzyme complex as hydrophilic proteins. These proteins were associated stoichiometrically with the Photosystem II reaction center: one Photosystem II reaction center, approx. 200 chlorophyll, one high-potential form of cytochrome b-559, one low-potential form of cytochrome b-559, one 33 kDa protein, one (to two) 24 kDa protein and one (to two) 18 kDa protein. Measurement of fluorescence induction showed the presence of three electron equivalents in the electron acceptor pool on the reducing side of Photosystem II in our preparation. Three molecules of plastoquinone A were detected per 200 chlorophyll molecules with high-performance liquid chromatography. The Photosystem II preparation contained four managanese atoms per 200 chlorophyll molecules.  相似文献   

2.
A.W. Rutherford  A.R. Crofts  Y. Inoue 《BBA》1982,682(3):457-465
A single flash given at − 15°C to chloroplasts results in charge separation in Photosystem II to form a stable state which, upon warming, recombines giving rise to luminescence. This recombination occurs at 25°C in untreated chloroplasts but is shifted to 0°C in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea or weak concentrations of a reducing agent. The luminescence at 0°C is attributed to recombination of the S2QA state while that at 25°C is attributed to recombination of S2QAQB (and S3QAQB upon further flash illumination). The identification of the thermoluminescence at 25°C is based upon the following experimental evidence: (1) illumination of chloroplasts in the presence of methyl viologen with 710 nm light before and after flash illumination has no effect on the extent or temperature of the thermoluminescence. This is taken as evidence that the plastoquinone pool is not involved in the recombination reaction. (2) Calculations of the extent of thermoluminescence expected after a number of flashes, assuming that S2QAQB and S3QAQB are the thermoluminescent reactants, give a good fit to the experimental results. (3) The effect of continuous illumination at 77 K (i.e., donation from cytochrome b-559 to QA and thence to QB or QB) results in predictable changes in the extent of flash-induced thermoluminescence.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of flash-induced electron transport were investigated in oxygen-evolving Photosystem II preparations, depleted of the 23 and 17 kDa polypeptides by washing with 2 M NaCl. After dark-adaptation and addition of the electron acceptor 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone, in such preparations approx. 75% of the reaction centers still exhibited a period 4 oscillation in the absorbance changes of the oxygen-evolving complex at 350 nm. In comparison to the control preparations, three main effects of NaCl-washing could be observed: the half-time of the oxygen-evolving reaction was slowed down to about 5 ms, the misses and double hits parameters of the period 4 oscillation had changed, and the two-electron gating mechanism of the acceptor side could not be detected anymore. EPR-measurements on the oxidized secondary donor Z+ confirmed the slower kinetics of the oxygen-releasing reaction. These phenomena could not be restored by readdition of the released polypeptides nor by the addition of CaCl2, and are ascribed to deleterious action of the highly concentrated NaCl. Otherwise, the functional coupling of Photosystem II and the oxygen-evolving complex was intact in the majority of the reaction centers. Repetitive flash measurements, however, revealed P+Q recombination and a slow Z+ decay in a considerable fraction of the centers. The flash-number dependency of the recombination indicated that this reaction only appeared after prolonged illumination, and disappeared again after the addition of 20 mM CaCl2. These results are interpreted as a light-induced release of strongly bound Ca2+ in the salt-washed preparations, resulting in uncoupling of the oxygen-evolving system and the Photosystem II reaction center, which can be reversed by the addition of a relatively high concentration of Ca2+.  相似文献   

4.
Photosystem II activity of oxygen-evolving membranes can be quantified by their capacity to do charge separation or their capacity to transport electrons. In this study using flash excitation of saturating intensity, charge separation is measured by absorption changes in the ultraviolet region of the spectra associated with primary-quinone reduction, and electron transport is measured by oxygen flash yield. These methods are applied to thylakoids and three different types of Photosystem II particles. In thylakoids electron-transport activity is 75–85% of charge separation activity. In Photosystem II particles this percentage is 60–70%, except for the BBY type (Berthold, D.A., Babcock, G.T. and Yocum, C.F. (1981) FEBS Lett. 135, 231–234), in which it is only 29%. These estimates of non-functional oxygen-evolving centers agree within experimental error, except for the BBY particle, with the quantum requirement for oxygen evolution measured under light-limited conditions. These reaction centers that are non-functional in oxygen evolution occur during sample preparation and are not a result of inhibition by ferricyanide or quinone acceptor systems. In thylakoids on the first flash, absorption changes at 325 nm do not show significant contributions from oxygen evolution S-state transitions. In the presence of ferricyanide the absorption change at 325 nm does have a significant contribution from Q400 in thylakoids, but considerably less in Photosystem II particles.  相似文献   

5.
H. Koike  Y. Inoue 《BBA》1987,894(3):573-577
The temperature dependence of S-state transitions in Photosystem II was measured by means of thermoluminescence using two different protocols for low-temperature flash excitation: protocol A, “last flash at low temperature”, and protocol B, “all flashes at low temperature”. Comparison of the temperature-dependence curves obtained by these two protocols revealed a marked difference particular for the three-flash experiments. The difference was attributed to the formation of a low-temperature sensitive precursor state between S2 and S3. The state is formed by two flash illumination given at −5 to −50°C, spontaneously transforms to normal S3 on dark warming, and is not converted to S0 by the 3rd flash. The precursor state was tentatively assigned to an S3 in which H+ release is not completed.  相似文献   

6.
Thomas Graan  Donald R. Ort 《BBA》1986,852(2-3):320-330
Quite different estimates of the number of Photosystem II centers present in thylakoid membranes are obtained depending on the technique used in making the determination. By using brief saturating light flashes and measuring the electron transport per flash, we have obtained two values for the number of functional centers. When the electrons produced reduce the intersystem plastoquinone pool, there are about 1.7 mmol of active Photosystem II centers per mol chlorophyll, whereas there are at least 3 mmol of active centers per mol chlorophyll when certain halogenated benzoquinones are being reduced. There are also at least 3 mmol of terbutryn binding sites per mol of chlorophyll when this tightly binding herbicide is employed as a specific inhibitor of Photosystem II. Thus only about 60% of the membrane's total complement of Photosystem II centers are able to transfer electrons to Photosystem I at appreciable rates. Many functional assays requiring significant rates of turnover sample only this more active pool, whereas herbicide-binding studies and measurements of changes in the Photosystem II electron donor Z and electron acceptor QA performed by other investigators reveal, in addition, a large population of Photosystem II reaction centers that normally have negligible turnover numbers. However, these normally inactive centers readily transfer electrons to the halogenated benzoquinones and are then counted among the active centers. Therefore, it can be concluded that all of herbicide-binding sites represent centers with operative water-oxidizing reactions. It can also be concluded that there are few, if any, centers capable of binding more than a single herbicide molecule.  相似文献   

7.
Azido-triazinone (3-dimethylamino-4-methyl-6-(3′-azidophenyl)-1,2,4-triazin-5-one) was found to be an efficient inhibitor of Photosystem II electron transport. This compound has an I50 value of 69 nM (extrapolated to zero chlorophyll concentration), a high-affinity binding constant of 12.6 nM, and a number of binding sites of 1.9 nmol/mg chlorophyll. This corresponds to 550–580 molecules of chlorophyll per bound inhibitor; i.e., one molecule inhibitor per electron transport chain. In isolated spinach thylakoids, [14C]azido-triazinone upon ultraviolet illumination covalently binds almost exclusively to a 34 kDa protein. Covalent binding is prevented in the presence of other Photosystem II inhibitors. The protein labeled by azido-triazinone is identical to the 34 kDa herbicide-binding protein which is tagged by another photoaffinity label azido-atrazine (2-azido-4-(ethylamino)-6-(isopropylamino)-s-triazine).  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of deactivation of the S3 state in Chlorella have been observed under a variety of conditions. The S3 state appears to decline in a dark period coming after a sequence of 30 saturating flashes in a second-order reaction, the rate constant of which is 0.132/[S*3] s−1 and which involves an electron donor, D1, of concentration 1.25[S*3] where [S*3] is the concentration of the S3 state when the oxygen yield of the light flashes is constant. If a 1 min period of 650 nm illumination is employed after the sequence of flashes, the subsequent S3 state deactivation kinetics are more complex. There is an initial phase of S3 state deactivation, accounting for about 35% of the original S3 state, which is complete in less than 100 ms. The remaining 65% of the S3 state appears to deactivate in a second-order reaction, the rate constant of which is 1.36/[S*3] s−1 and which involves an electron donor of initial concentration 0.58[S*3]. If a 1 min period of 710 nm illumination comes after the 30 flashes, at least 98% of the S3 state deactivates according to first-order kinetics. It is shown that this can be explained using a second-order model if there is an electron donor present of which the concentration is large compared with [S*3]. However, S3 state deactivation observed after 5 min of dark and two saturating flashes can be described neither by a first-order model nor a second-order model. Deactivation of the S2 state after a 5 min dark period and one saturating flash follows second-order kinetics with a rate constant of 0.2/[S*3] s−1 and appears to involve an electron donor of initial concentration 1.3[S*3]. Arguments are presented which tend to rule out the primary electron acceptor to Photosystem II as being any of the electron donors but it appears quite possible that the large plastoquinone pool is involved.  相似文献   

9.
John Sinclair 《BBA》1984,764(2):247-252
A study has been made of the onset of chloride deprivation on the oxygen-evolving characteristics of isolated spinach chloroplasts. Using a modulated oxygen electrode it is found that the type of inhibition depends on the anion replacing chloride in the bathing medium. With nitrate a large increase in phase lag accompanies a relatively small inhibition which can be shown to be consistent with a decrease in the rate constant of the reaction which limits the rate of electron transport between water and Photosystem II. With sulphate there is a very small phase change but a larger inhibition which suggests that replacing chloride with sulphate in an electron-transport chain shuts off that chain. With acetate there is a moderate increase in phase lag and the largest inhibitory effect. The phase-lag increase suggests that acetate is affecting the same chloride-sensitive site as nitrate. However, the inhibition cannot be explained by this effect alone and points to the existence of a second chloride-sensitive site. Of the four forward reactions associated with the Kok model of oxygen evolution (Kok, B., Forbush, B. and McGloin, M. (1970) Photochem. Photobiol. 11, 457–475) only S13 → S0 is slowed down when chloride is replaced by nitrate. This reaction is not slowed down by replacing chloride with sulphate.  相似文献   

10.
Neil V. Blough  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1984,767(2):377-381
The ability of salts to inhibit the O2-evolution activity of PS II preparations is shown to parallel closely the Hofmeister series, suggesting that inhibition is related to the solubility of the 16, 24 and 33 kDa proteins in these salt solutions. An examination of the effect of salt inactivation on the low temperature multiline EPR signal indicates that the release of either the 16 and 24 kDa proteins, or additionally the 33 kDa protein blocks or greatly reduces the efficiency of the advancement of the water-splitting complex to the S2-state; under some conditions, this inhibition is reversible.  相似文献   

11.
H.Y. Nakatani  A.W. Rutherford  Y. Inoue 《BBA》1984,766(2):416-423
In this paper, we present the first measurements on thermoluminescence from isolated thylakoids to probe the recombination reactions of S2 (or possibly S3) with Q?B or Q?A, after bicarbonate depletion and its readdition. The effects of bicarbonate depletion on the S2Q?B (or S3O?B) thermoluminescence band was (1) a 6–10°C shift to a higher temperature; (2) a reduction in its intensity upon prolonged depletion; and (3) elimination after the first few flashes of the characteristic period four oscillations in its intensity as a function of the flash number. On the other hand, addition of diuron (3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea), which blocks electron flow from Q?A to QB, produced the same thermoluminescence band, at about + 20°C, assigned to S2Q?A recombination, in both depleted and reconstituted samples. These results suggest (1) the initial effect of bicarbonate depletion is to increase the activation energy for S2(S3)Q?B recombination; (2) with further depletion, the incidence of this recombination decreases and the cycling of the S2Q?B and S3Q?B recombination is inhibited through effects at the QB apoprotein; and (3) the depletion effects are fully reversible. It is suggested that a conformational change of the PS II complex in the region of the QB apoprotein is responsible for these effects.  相似文献   

12.
X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the Mn K-edge has been utilized to study the origin of the g = 4.1 EPR signal associated with the Mn-containing photosynthetic O2-evolving complex. Formation of the g = 4.1 signal by illumination of Photosystem II preparations at 140 K is associated with a shift of the Mn edge inflection point to higher energy. This shift is similar to that observed upon formation of the S2 multiline EPR signal by 190 K illumination. The g = 4.1 signal is assigned to the Mn complex in the S2 state.  相似文献   

13.
The mode of action of chemically different herbicides (ureas, pyridazinones, phenylcarbamates, triazines, hydroxyquinolines, hydroxybenzonitriles and dinitrophenols) on photosynthetic electron transport was investigated by measurements of oxygen evolution and thermoluminescence. Depending on the particular herbicide used the thermoluminescence band related to Q (the primary acceptor of Photosystem II) appears at +5, 0 or −14°C. It was shown that these three different peak positions can be ascribed to various redox states of Q, the shifts being due to the binding of herbicides to the chloroplast membrane. Both displacement experiments and additive inhibition of herbicide pairs measured by thermoluminescence and oxygen evolution suggested that the sites of action of these herbicides are on the same protein. However, herbicide treatment of trypsinized chloroplasts showed that there were three different binding sites on the same protein, in agreement with the classification of herbicides into three groups based on thermoluminescence measurements. Our results suggest that the primary and secondary acceptors of Photosystem II (Q and B, respectively) are in close proximity and form a common complex with the herbicide-binding protein within the chloroplast membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Sándor Demeter  Imre Vass 《BBA》1984,764(1):24-32
In the glow curves of chloroplasts excited by a series of flashes at +1°C the intensity of the main thermoluminescence band appearing at +30°C (B band; B, secondary acceptor of Photosystem II) exhibits a period-4 oscillation with maxima on the 2nd and 6th flashes indicating the participation of the S3 state of the water-splitting system in the radiative charge recombination reaction. After long-term dark adaptation of chloroplasts (6 h), when the major part of the secondary acceptor pool (B pool) is oxidized, a period-2 contribution with maxima occurring at uneven flash numbers appears in the oscillation pattern. The B band can even be excited at ?160°C as well as by a single flash in which case the water-splitting system undergoes only one transition (S1 → S2). The experimental observations and computer simulation of the oscillatory patterns suggest that the B band originates from charge recombination of the S2B? and S3B? redox states. The half-time of charge recombination responsible for the B band is 48 s. When a major part of the plastoquinone pool is reduced due to prolonged excitation of the chloroplasts by continuous light, a second band (Q band; Q, primary acceptor of Photosystem II) appears in the glow curve at +10°C which overlaps with the B band. In chloroplasts excited by flashes prior to DCMU addition only the Q band can be observed showing maxima in the oscillation pattern at flash numbers 2, 6 and 10. The Q band can also be induced by flashes after DCMU addition which allows only one transition of the water-splitting system (S1 → S2). In the presence of DCMU, electrons accumulate on the primary acceptor Q, thus the Q band can be ascribed to the charge recombination of either the S2Q? or S3Q? states depending on whether the water-splitting system is in the S2 or the S3 state. The half-time of the back reaction of Q? with the donor side of PS II (S2 or S3 states) is 3 s. It was also observed that in a sequence of flashes the peak positions of the Q and B bands do not depend on the advancement of the water-splitting system from the S2 state to the S3 state. This result implies that the midpoint potential of the water-splitting system remains unmodified during the S2 → S3 transition.  相似文献   

15.
Jérôme Lavergne 《BBA》1982,679(1):12-18
Chloroplasts were submitted to a sequence of saturating short flashes and then rapidly mixed with dichlorophenyldimethylurea (DCMU). The amount of singly reduced secondary acceptor (B?) present was estimated from the DCMU-induced increase in fluorescence in the dark caused by the reaction: QB?
Q?B. By varying the time interval between the preillumination and the mixing, the time course of B? reoxidation by externally added benzoquinone was investigated. It was found that benzoquinone oxidizes B? in a bimolecular reaction, and does not interact directly with Q?. When a sufficient delay after the preillumination was allowed in order to let benzoquinone reoxidize B? before the injection of DCMU, the fluorescence increase caused by one subsequent flash fired in the presence of DCMU was followed by a fast decay phase (t12 ? 100 μs). The amplitude of this phase was proportional to the amount of B? produced by the preillumination. This fast decay was observed only after the first flash in the presence of DCMU. These results are interpreted by assuming a binding of the singly reduced benzoquinone to Photosystem II where it acts as an efficient, DCMU-insensitive, secondary (exogenous) acceptor.  相似文献   

16.
Wim F.J. Vermaas  Charles J. Arntzen   《BBA》1983,725(3):483-491
We have analyzed the binding of synthetic quinones and herbicides which inhibit electron transport at the acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) of the photosynthetic electron-transport chain in thylakoid membranes. These data show that quinones and PS II-directed herbicides compete for binding to a common binding environment within a PS II region which functions as the Q / PQ oxidoreductase. We observed that (1) synthetic quinones cause a parallel inhibition of electron transport and [14C]herbicide displacement, and (2) herbicide binding is affected both by the fully oxidized and fully reduced form of a quinone. Quinone function and inhibitor binding were also investigated in thylakoids isolated from triazine-resistant weed biotypes. We conclude the following. (1) The affinity of the secondary accepting quinone, B, is decreased in resistant thylakoids. (2) The observation that the equilibrium concentration of reduced Q after transferring one electron to the acceptor side of PS II is increased in resistant as compared to susceptible chloroplasts may be explained both by a decrease in the affinity of PQ for the herbicide / quinone binding environment, and by a decrease of the midpont redox potential of the B / B couple. (3) The binding environment regulating quinone and herbicide affinity may be divided roughly into two domains; we suggest that the domain regulating quinone head-group binding is little changed in resistant membranes, whereas the domain-regulating quinone side-group binding (and atrazine) is altered. This results in increased inhibitory activity of tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone and phenolic herbicides, which are hypothesized to utilize the quinone head-group domain. The two domains appear to be spatially overlapping because efficient atrazine displacement by tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone is observed.  相似文献   

17.
Peroxynitrite is a strong oxidant that has been proposed to form in chloroplasts. The interaction between peroxynitrite and photosystem II (PSII) has been investigated to determine whether this oxidant could be a hazard for PSII. Peroxynitrite is shown to inhibit oxygen evolution in PSII membranes in a dose-dependent manner. Analyses by PAM fluorimetry and EPR spectroscopy have demonstrated that the inhibition target of peroxynitrite is on the PSII acceptor side. In the presence of the herbicide DCMU, the chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence induction curve is inhibited by peroxynitrite, but the slow phase of the Chl a fluorescence decay does not change. EPR studies demonstrate that the Signal IIslow and Signal IIfast of peroxynitrite-treated Tris-washed PSII membranes are induced at room temperature, implying that the redox active tyrosines YZ and YD of PSII are not significantly nitrated. A featureless EPR signal with a g value of approximately 2.0043 ± 0.0003 and a line width of 10 ± 1 G is induced under continuous illumination in the presence of peroxynitrite. This new EPR signal corresponds with the semireduced plastoquinone QA in the absence of magnetic interaction with the non-heme Fe2+. We conclude that peroxynitrite impairs PSII electron transport in the QAFe2+ niche.  相似文献   

18.
We have compared the fluidity of thylakoid membranes with the membrane present in a Triton X-100-derived, oxygen-evolving Photosystem II (PS II) preparation using two different spin labels. Data obtained with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpipiridine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) shows that the PS II preparation contains less fluid membrane than the thylakoid. The TEMPO partition parameter (f) is about 2.5-times greater for the thylakoids at 6 mg chlorophyll/ml than for the PS II preparation at the same chlorophyll concentration. Similarly, the rotational correlation time, τ, of TEMPO residing in the membrane of the PS II preparation is about 2-times longer than the τ for TEMPO in the thylakoid membrane. A spin label which partitions more completely into the bilayer, 2-heptyl-2-hexyl-5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-N-oxyl (7N14), indicates a much greater fluidity in the thylakoid membrane than the membrane of the PS II preparation. The PS II preparation appears to have a hydrocarbon phase which approaches the rigid limit of EPR detectable motion. These results are discussed in terms of possible lipid depletion in the PS II preparation and in terms of lateral heterogeneity of hydrocarbon fluidity in the thylakoid membrane caused by the lateral heterogeneity in protein components.  相似文献   

19.
An O2-evolving Photosystem (PS) II preparation was isolated from maize by a Triton X-100 procedure (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1982) Plant Cell Physiol. 23, 533–539). A highly active O2-evolving preparation was obtained which evolved O2 at 76% the rate of fresh chloroplasts (H2O → 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone) and was very sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. There was no detectable PS I activity in the preparation (2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine → methyl viologen). When analyzed by lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis the O2-evolving preparation was shown to be highly depleted in CP I, CF1, and devoid of cytochromes f and b-563 (the absence of which was confirmed by difference spectroscopy). The preparation was enriched in the PS II reaction center polypeptides I and II, the 34 kDa polypeptide (Metz, J., Wong, J. and Bishop, N.I. (1980) FEBS Lett. 114, 61–66), the Coomassie blue-stainable 32 kDa polypeptide (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 581, 228–236), LHCP-associated polypeptides and cytochrome b-559. Polypeptides of unknown function at 40.5, 25, 24, 22, 16.6 and 14 kDa were also present in the O2-evolving preparation. Triton X-114 phase partitioning (Bricker, T.M. and Sherman, L.A. (1982) FEBS Lett. 149, 197–202) indicated that the majority of these polypeptides were intrinsic. Only the polypeptides at 32, 25, 24 and 14 kDa were extrinsic. When examined by the octylglucoside procedure of Camm and Green (Camm, E.L. and Green, B.R. (1980) Plant Physiol. 66, 428–432) the PS II O2-evolving preparation was shown to contain the chlorophyll-proteins CP 27, CP 29, CP II1, D, and CP a-1 and CP a-2. Chlorophyll-proteins associated with PS I were highly depleted. The visible absorption spectra indicated an enrichment of chlorophyll b and carotenoids in the preparation. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum (excitation wavelength = 435 nm) exhibits a strong F-686 with little F-695 shoulder and a broad, low-intensity F-735 emission.  相似文献   

20.
The toxic effect of Ni2+ on photosynthetic electron transport was studied in a photosystem II submembrane fraction. It was shown that Ni2+ strongly inhibits oxygen evolution in the millimolar range of concentration. The inhibition was insensitive to NaCl but significantly decreased in the presence of CaCl2. Maximal chlorophyll fluorescence, together with variable fluorescence, maximal quantum yield of photosystem II, and flash-induced fluorescence decays were all significantly declined by Ni2+. Further, the extrinsic polypeptides of 16 and 24 kDa associated with the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II were depleted following Ni2+ treatment. It was deduced that interaction of Ni2+ with these polypeptides caused a conformational change that induced their release together with Ca2+ from the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II with consequent inhibition of the electron transport activity.  相似文献   

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