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1.
Water oxidation generating atmospheric oxygen occurs in photosystem II (PSII), a large protein-pigment complex located in the thylakoid membrane. The recent crystal structures at 3.2 and 3.5 A resolutions provide novel details on amino acid side chains, especially in the D1/D2 subunits. We calculated the redox potentials for one-electron oxidation of the chlorophyll a (Chla) molecules in PSII, considering the protein environment in atomic detail. The calculated redox potentials for the dimer Chla (P(D1/D2)) and accessory Chla (Chl(D1/D2)) were 1.11-1.30 V relative to the normal hydrogen electrode at pH 7, which is high enough for water oxidation. The D1/D2 proteins and their cofactors contribute approximately 390 mV to the enormous upshift of 470 mV compared to the redox potential of monomeric Chla in dimethylformamide. The other subunits are responsible for the remaining 80 mV. The high redox potentials of the two accessory Chla Chl(D1/D2) suggests that they also participate in the charge separation process.  相似文献   

2.
Most of the chlorophyll (Chl) cofactors in photosystem II (PSII) from Acaryochloris marina are Chld, although a few Chla molecules are also present. To evaluate the possibility that Chla may participate in the PD1/PD2 Chl pair in PSII from A. marina, the PD1?+/PD2?+ charge ratio was investigated using the PSII crystal structure analyzed at 1.9-Å resolution, while considering all possibilities for the Chld-containing PD1/PD2 pair, i.e., Chld/Chld, Chla/Chld, and Chld/Chla pairs. Chld/Chld and Chla/Chld pairs resulted in a large PD1?+ population relative to PD2?+, as identified in Chla/Chla homodimer pairs in PSII from other species, e.g., Thermosynechococcus elongatus PSII. However, the Chld/Chla pair possessed a PD1?+/PD2?+ ratio of approximately 50/50, which is in contrast to previous spectroscopic studies on A. marina PSII. The present results strongly exclude the possibility that the Chld/Chla pair serves as PD1/PD2 in A. marina PSII. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

3.
Photosystem II (PSII) contains two accessory chlorophylls (Chl(Z), ligated to D1-His118, and Chl(D), ligated to D2-His117), carotenoid (Car), and heme (cytochrome b(559)) cofactors that function as alternate electron donors under conditions in which the primary electron-donation pathway from the O(2)-evolving complex to P680(+) is inhibited. The photooxidation of the redox-active accessory chlorophylls and Car has been characterized by near-infrared (near-IR) absorbance, shifted-excitation Raman difference spectroscopy (SERDS), and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy over a range of cryogenic temperatures from 6 to 120 K in both Synechocystis PSII core complexes and spinach PSII membranes. The following key observations were made: (1) only one Chl(+) near-IR band is observed at 814 nm in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, which is assigned to Chl(Z)(+) based on previous spectroscopic studies of the D1-H118Q and D2-H117Q mutants [Stewart, D. H., Cua, A., Chisholm, D. A., Diner, B. A., Bocian, D. F., and Brudvig, G. W. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 10040-10046]; (2) two Chl(+) near-IR bands are observed at 817 and 850 nm in spinach PSII membranes which are formed with variable relative yields depending on the illumination temperature and are assigned to Chl(Z)(+), and Chl(D)(+), respectively; (3) the Chl and Car cation radicals have significantly different stabilities at reduced temperatures with Car(+) decaying much faster; (4) in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, Car(+) decays by recombination with Q(A)(-) and not by Chl(Z)/Chl(D) oxidation, with multiphasic kinetics that are attributed to an ensemble of protein conformers that are trapped as the protein is frozen; and (5) in spinach PSII membranes, Car(+) decays mainly by recombination with Q(A)(-), but also partly by formation of the 850 nm Chl cation radical. The greater stability of Chl(Z)(+) at low temperatures enabled us to confirm that resonance Raman bands previously assigned to Chl(Z)(+) are correctly assigned. In addition, the formation and decay of these cations provide insight into the alternate electron-donation pathways to P680(+).  相似文献   

4.
In Part I of the article, a review of recent data on electron-transfer reactions in photosystem II (PSII) and bacterial reaction center (RC) has been presented. In Part II, transient absorption difference spectroscopy with 20-fs resolution was applied to study the primary charge separation in PSII RC (DI/DII/Cyt b 559 complex) excited at 700 nm at 278 K. It was shown that the initial electron-transfer reaction occurs within 0.9 ps with the formation of the charge-separated state P680(+)Chl(D1)(-), which relaxed within 14 ps as indicated by reversible bleaching of 670-nm band that was tentatively assigned to the Chl(D1) absorption. The subsequent electron transfer from Chl(D1)(-) within 14 ps was accompanied by a development of the radical anion band of Pheo(D1) at 445 nm, attributable to the formation of the secondary radical pair P680(+)Pheo(D1)(-). The key point of this model is that the most blue Q(y) transition of Chl(D1) in RC is allowing an effective stabilization of separated charges. Although an alternative mechanism of charge separation with Chl(D1)* as a primary electron donor and Pheo(D1) as a primary acceptor can not be ruled out, it is less consistent with the kinetics and spectra of absorbance changes induced in the PSII RC preparation by femtosecond excitation at 700 nm.  相似文献   

5.
Infrared absorption and electron spin resonance studies have shown that the excited triplet state of chlorophyll formed by radical pair recombination in the PSII reaction center is mainly localized on the accessory chlorophyll, which is most probably located in the D1 protein (Chl(1)). This triplet localization plays two contrasting roles, depending on the redox state of Q(A), in the process of acceptor-side photoinhibition of PSII. In the early stage of photoinhibition, in which singly reduced Q(A) is reversibly stabilized, the triplet state of Chl(1) ((3)Chl(1)*) is rapidly quenched (t(1/2) = 2-20 micro s) by the interaction with Q(A)(-), preventing formation of harmful singlet oxygen. In the next inhibitory stage, in which Q(A) is doubly reduced and then irreversibly released from the Q(A) pocket, the lifetime of (3)Chl(1)* becomes longer by more than two orders of magnitude (t(1/2) = 1-3 ms). As a result, singlet oxygen is produced around Chl(1) in the D1 protein, causing damage preferably to the D1 protein, which induces subsequent proteolytic degradation. Thus, (3)Chl(1)* functions as a switch to change from the protective to the degradative phase of the PSII reaction center by sensing either reversible or irreversible inhibited state at the Q(A) site.  相似文献   

6.
We studied the charge recombination characteristics of Photosystem II (PSII) redox components in whole cells of the chlorophyll (Chl) d-dominated cyanobacterium, Acaryochloris marina, by flash-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thermoluminescence measurements. Flash-induced chlorophyll fluorescence decay was retarded in the mus and ms time ranges and accelerated in the s time range in Acaryochloris marina relative to that in the Chl a-containing cyanobacterium, Synechocystis PCC 6803. In the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea, which blocks the Q(B) site, the relaxation of fluorescence decay arising from S(2)Q(A)(-) recombination was somewhat faster in Acaryochloris marina than in Synechocystis PCC 6803. Thermoluminescence intensity of the so called B band, arising from the recombination of the S(2)Q(B)(-) charge separated state, was enhanced significantly (2.5 fold) on the basis of equal amounts of PSII in Acaryochloris marina as compared with Synechocystis 6803. Our data show that the energetics of charge recombination is modified in Acaryochloris marina leading to a approximately 15 meV decrease of the free energy gap between the Q(A) and Q(B) acceptors. In addition, the total free energy gap between the ground state and the excited state of the reaction center chlorophyll is at least approximately 25-30 meV smaller in Acaryochloris marina, suggesting that the primary donor species cannot consist entirely of Chl a in Acaryochloris marina, and there is a contribution from Chl d as well.  相似文献   

7.
Itoh S  Mino H  Itoh K  Shigenaga T  Uzumaki T  Iwaki M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(43):12473-12481
Reaction center chlorophylls (Chls) in photosystems II and I were studied in the isolated thylakoid membranes of a cyanobacterium, Acaryochloris marina, which contains Chls d and a as the major and minor pigments, respectively. The membranes contained PS I and II complexes at a 1.8:1 molar ratio on the basis of the spin densities on the tyrosine D radical and the photo-oxidized PS I primary donor (P740+). In the presence of ferricyanide, laser excitation induced bleach at 725 nm that recovered with time constants of 25 micros and 1.2 ms. The signal, designated P725, was suppressed by PS II inhibitors DCMU and hydroxylamine. The P725 spectrum was tentatively assigned to the absorption changes of the special pair Chl d, the accessory Chl d, and the acceptor pheophytin a in PS II. The addition of ascorbate induced the additional signal with a slow decay time constant of 4.5 ms. This signal showed a broad bleach at 740 nm and shift-type absorption changes at around 707 and 685 nm, which were assigned to the absorption changes of PS I special pair of Chl d (P740), the accessory Chl d, and the primary acceptor Chl a (A0), respectively. Mechanisms and the evolution of the Chl-d based reaction centers using far-red light are discussed together with the amino acid sequences of PS II D1 and D2 proteins.  相似文献   

8.
Pigment-protein complexes enriched in photosystem II (PS II) have been isolated from the chlorophyll (Chl) d containing cyanobacterium, Acaryochloris marina. A small PS II-enriched particle, we call 'crude reaction centre', contained 20 Chl d, 0.5 Chl a and 1 redox active cytochrome b-559 per 2 pheophytin a, plus the D1 and D2 proteins. A larger PS II-enriched particle, we call 'core', additionally bound the antenna complexes, CP47 and CP43, and had a higher chlorophyll per pheophytin ratio. Pheophytin a could be photoreduced in the presence of a strong reductant, indicating that it is the primary electron acceptor in photosystem II of A. marina. A substoichiometric amount of Chl a (less than one chlorophyll a per 2 pheophytin a) strongly suggests that Chl a does not have an essential role in the photochemistry of PS II in this organism. We conclude that PS II, in A. marina, utilizes Chl d and not Chl a as primary electron donor and that the primary electron acceptor is one of two molecules of pheophytin a.  相似文献   

9.
Thylakoid membranes retaining high oxygen-evolving activity (about 250 micromol O(2)/mg Chl/h) were prepared from a marine centric diatom, Chaetoceros gracilis, after disruption of the cells by freeze-thawing. We also succeeded in purification of Photosystem II (PSII) particles by differential centrifugation of the thylakoid membranes after treatment with 1% Triton X-100. The diatom PSII particles showed an oxygen-evolving activity of 850 and 1045 micromol O(2)/mg Chl/h in the absence and presence of CaCl(2), respectively. The PSII particles contained fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins in addition to main intrinsic proteins of CP47, CP43, D2, D1, cytochrome b559, and the antenna size was estimated to be 229 Chl a per 2 molecules of pheophytin. Five extrinsic proteins were stoichiometrically released from the diatom PSII particles by alkaline Tris-treatment. Among these five extrinsic proteins, four proteins were red algal-type extrinsic proteins, namely, PsbO, PsbQ', PsbV and PsbU, whereas the other one was a novel, hypothetical protein. This is the first report on isolation and characterization of diatom PSII particles that are highly active in oxygen evolution and retain the full set of extrinsic proteins including an unknown protein.  相似文献   

10.
D1-Thr179, which overlies the reaction center chlorophyll Chl D1 of Photosystem II was replaced with His and Glu through site-directed mutation in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Spectroscopic characterization of the mutants indicates that, compared to wild type, the main bleaching in the triplet-minus-singlet absorbance difference spectrum and the electrochromic band shift in the (P680 (+)Q A (-)-P680Q A) absorbance difference spectrum are displaced to the red by approximately 2 nm in the D1-Thr179His mutant and to the blue by approximately 1 nm in the D1-Thr179Glu mutant. These difference spectra are compared with the absorbance difference spectra, measured on the same states in the D1-His198Gln mutant in which the axial ligand D1-His198 of the special pair chlorophyll, P D1, was replaced by glutamine. Together, these results give direct evidence that (a) the reaction center triplet state, produced upon charge recombination from (3)[P (+)Pheo (-)], is primarily localized on Chl D1; (b) the cation of the oxidized donor P (+) is predominantly localized on chlorophyll P D1 of the special pair; and (c) the Q Y band of the accessory chlorophyll Chl D1 is electrochromically shifted in response to charges on P (+) and Q A (-). Light-induced absorbance difference spectra (between 650 and 710 nm), associated with the oxidation of secondary donors and the reduction of Q A, exhibit a bleaching attributed to the oxidation of a Chl Z and strong electrochromic band shifts. On the basis of mutation-induced spectroscopic changes and of structure-based calculations, we conclude that the experimental spectra are best explained by a blue-shift of the Q Y band of the accessory chlorophyll Chl D1, arising from charges on Car D2 (+) and Chl ZD2 (+) and on reduced Q A.  相似文献   

11.
Photochemically active photosystem (PS) I complexes were purified from the chlorophyll (Chl) d-dominated cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina MBIC 11017, and several of their properties were characterized. PS I complexes consist of 11 subunits, including PsaK1 and PsaK2; a new small subunit was identified and named Psa27. The new subunit might replace the function of PsaI that is absent in A. marina. The amounts of pigments per one molecule of Chl d' were 97.0 +/- 11.0 Chl d, 1.9 +/- 0.5 Chl a, 25.2 +/- 2.4 alpha-carotene, and two phylloquinone molecules. The light-induced Fourier transform infrared difference spectroscopy and light-induced difference absorption spectra reconfirmed that the primary electron donor of PS I (P740) was the Chl d dimer. In addition to P740, the difference spectrum contained an additional band at 728 nm. The redox potentials of P740 were estimated to be 439 mV by spectroelectrochemistry; this value was comparable with the potential of P700 in other cyanobacteria and higher plants. This suggests that the overall energetics of the PS I reaction were adjusted to the electron acceptor side to utilize the lower light energy gained by P740. The distribution of charge in P740 was estimated by a density functional theory calculation, and a partial localization of charge was predicted to P1 Chl (special pair Chl on PsaA). Based on differences in the protein matrix and optical properties of P740, construction of the PS I core in A. marina was discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Photosystem II (PSII) is the multi-subunit light-driven oxidoreductase that drives photosynthetic electron transport using electrons extracted from water. To investigate the initial steps of PSII assembly, we used strains of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 arrested at early stages of PSII biogenesis and expressing affinity-tagged PSII subunits to isolate PSII reaction center assembly (RCII) complexes and their precursor D1 and D2 modules (D1mod and D2mod). RCII preparations isolated using either a His-tagged D2 or a FLAG-tagged PsbI subunit contained the previously described RCIIa and RCII* complexes that differ with respect to the presence of the Ycf39 assembly factor and high light-inducible proteins (Hlips) and a larger complex consisting of RCIIa bound to monomeric PSI. All RCII complexes contained the PSII subunits D1, D2, PsbI, PsbE, and PsbF and the assembly factors rubredoxin A and Ycf48, but we also detected PsbN, Slr1470, and the Slr0575 proteins, which all have plant homologs. The RCII preparations also contained prohibitins/stomatins (Phbs) of unknown function and FtsH protease subunits. RCII complexes were active in light-induced primary charge separation and bound chlorophylls (Chls), pheophytins, beta-carotenes, and heme. The isolated D1mod consisted of D1/PsbI/Ycf48 with some Ycf39 and Phb3, while D2mod contained D2/cytochrome b559 with co-purifying PsbY, Phb1, Phb3, FtsH2/FtsH3, CyanoP, and Slr1470. As stably bound, Chl was detected in D1mod but not D2mod, formation of RCII appears to be important for stable binding of most of the Chls and both pheophytins. We suggest that Chl can be delivered to RCII from either monomeric Photosystem I or Ycf39/Hlips complexes.

Analysis of isolated assembly complexes provides new insights into the early stages of photosystem II biogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
Oxygen evolution and Chl fluorescence induction were measured during multiple turnover light pulses (MTP) of 630-nm wavelength, intensities from 250 to 8,000?μmol quanta m(-2)?s(-1) and duration from 0.3 to 200?ms in sunflower leaves at 22?°C. The ambient O(2) concentration was 10-30?ppm and MTP were applied after pre-illumination under far-red light (FRL), which oxidized plastoquinone (PQ) and randomized S-states because of the partial excitation of PSII. Electron (e ( - )) flow was calculated as 4·O(2) evolution. Illumination with MTP of increasing length resulted in increasing O(2) evolution per pulse, which was differentiated against pulse length to find the time course of O(2) evolution rate with sub-millisecond resolution. Comparison of the quantum yields, Y (IIO)?=?e ( - )/hν from O(2) evolution and Y (IIF)?=?(F (m)?-?F)/F (m) from Chl fluorescence, detected significant losses not accompanied by fluorescence emission. These quantum losses are discussed to be caused by charge recombination between Q (A) (-) and oxidized TyrZ at a rate of about 1,000?s(-1), either directly or via the donor side equilibrium complex Q(A)?→?P (D1) (+) ??TyrZ(ox), or because of cycling facilitated by Cyt b (559). Predicted from the suggested mechanism, charge recombination is enhanced by damage to the water-oxidizing complex and by restricted PSII acceptor side oxidation. The rate of PSII charge recombination/cycling is fast enough for being important in photoprotection.  相似文献   

14.
The crystal structure of Photosystem II (PSII) analyzed at a resolution of 1.9 ? revealed deformations of chlorin rings in the chlorophylls for the first time. We investigated the degrees of chlorin ring deformation and factors that contributed to them in the PSII crystal structure, using a normal-coordinate structural decomposition procedure. The out-of-plane distortion of the P(D1) chlorin ring can be described predominantly by a large "doming mode" arising from the axial ligand, D1-His198, as well as the chlorophyll side chains and PSII protein environment. In contrast, the deformation of P(D2) was caused by a "saddling mode" arising from the D2-Trp191 ring and the doming mode arising from D2-His197. Large ruffling modes, which were reported to lower the redox potential in heme proteins, were observed in P(D1) and Chl(D1), but not in P(D2) and Chl(D2). Furthermore, as P(D1) possessed the largest doming mode among the reaction center chlorophylls, the corresponding bacteriochlorophyll P(L) possessed the largest doming mode in bacterial photosynthetic reaction centers. However, the majority of the redox potential shift in the protein environment was determined by the electrostatic environment. The difference in the chlorin ring deformation appears to directly refer to the difference in "the local steric protein environment" rather than the redox potential value in PSII.  相似文献   

15.
Arginine257 (R257), in the de-helix that caps the Q(B) site of the D1 protein, has been shown by mutational studies to play a key role in the sensitivity of Photosystem II (PS II) to bicarbonate-reversible binding of the formate anion. In this article, the role of this residue has been further investigated through D1 mutations (R257E, R257Q, and R257K) in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We have investigated the activity of the Q(B) site by studying differences from wild type on the steady-state turnover of PS II, as assayed through chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence yield decay after flash excitation. The effects of p-benzoquinone (BQ, which oxidizes reduced Q(B), Q(B)(-) ) and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU, which blocks electron flow from Q(A)(-) to Q(B)) were measured. The equilibrium constants of the two-electron gate were obtained through thermoluminescence measurements. The thermoluminescence properties were changed in the mutants, especially when observed after pretreatment with 100 microM BQ. A theoretical analysis of the thermoluminescence data, based mainly on the recombination pathways model of Rappaport et al. (2005), led to the conclusion that the free-energy difference for the recombination of Q(B)(-) with S(2) was reduced by 20-40 mV in the three mutants (D1-R257K, D1-R257Q, and D1-R257E); this was interpreted to be due to a lowering of the redox potential of Q(B)/Q(B)(-). Further, since the recombination of Q(A)(-) with S(2) was unaffected, we suggest that no significant change in redox potential of Q(A)/Q(A)(-) occurred in these three mutants. The maximum variable Chl a fluorescence yield is lowered in the mutants, in the order R257K > R257Q > R257E, compared to wild type. Our analysis of the binary oscillations in Chl a fluorescence following pretreatment of cells with BQ showed that turnover of the Q(B) site was relatively unaffected in the three mutants. The mutant D1-R257E had the lowest growth rate and steady-state activity and showed the weakest binary oscillations. We conclude that the size and the charge of the amino acid at the position D1-257 play a role in PS II function by modulating the effective redox potential of the Q(B)/Q(B)(-) pair. We discuss an indirect mechanism mediated through electrostatic and/or surface charge effects and the possibility of more pleiotropic effects arising from decreased stability of the D1/D2 and D1/CP47 interfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Stewart DH  Nixon PJ  Diner BA  Brudvig GW 《Biochemistry》2000,39(47):14583-14594
Photosystem II (PSII) contains a collection of pheophytins (Pheo) and chlorophylls (Chl) that have unique absorbance spectra depending on their electronic structure and the surrounding protein environment. Despite numerous efforts to identify the spectra of each cofactor, differing assignments of the chromophore absorbance bands and electrochromic effects have led to conflicting models of pigment organization and chromophore interactions in PSII. We have utilized low-temperature measurements on well-defined redox states, together with the use of site-directed mutants, to make spectral assignments of several reaction center (RC) chromophores. Cryogenic (77 K) optical spectroscopy has been used to trap the bound redox-active quinone, Q(A), in the reduced form and measure the effect of the redox state of Q(A) on PSII chromophores without interference from other redox-active cofactors. The Q(A)(-) minus Q(A) difference spectrum contains a number of features that represent the perturbation of Pheo and Chl absorbance bands upon Q(A) reduction. Using site-directed mutants in which the axial ligand of the D1-side monomeric core Chl, P(A), is changed (D1-H198Q) or the hydrogen-bonding environment of the D1-side Pheo is modified (D1-Q130E), we have assigned the Q(y)() absorbance bands of four chromophores shifted by Q(A) reduction including both RC Pheos, the D1-side monomeric accessory Chl (B(A)), and one other Chl in PSII. The absorbance maximum of B(A) was identified at 683.5 nm from least-squares fits of the D1-H198Q minus wild type (WT) Q(A)(-) minus Q(A) double-difference spectrum; this assignment provides new evidence of a secondary effect of site-directed mutation on a RC chromophore. The other chromophores were assigned from simultaneous fits of the WT and D1-Q130E spectra in which the parameters of only the D1-side Pheo were allowed to vary. The D1-side and D2-side Pheos were found to have lambda(max) values at 685.6 and 669.3 nm, respectively, and another Chl influenced by Q(A)(-) was identified at 678.8 nm. These assignments are in good agreement with previous spectral analyses of intact PSII preparations and reveal that the number of chromophores affected by Q(A) reduction has been underestimated previously. In addition, the assignments are generally consistent with chromophore positions that are similar in the PSII RC and the bacterial photosynthetic RC.  相似文献   

17.
Its superior quantum efficiency renders PSII a model for biomimetic systems. However, also in biological water oxidation by PSII, the efficiency is restricted by recombination losses. By laser-flash illumination, the secondary radical pair, P680(+)Q(-) (A) (where P680 is the primary Chl donor in PSII and Q(A), primary quinone acceptor of PSII), was formed in close to 100% of the PSII. Investigation of the quantum efficiency (or yield) of the subsequent steps by time-resolved delayed (10 micros to 60 ms) and prompt (70 micros to 700 ms) Chl fluorescence measurements on PSII membrane particles suggests that (1) the effective rate for P680(+) Q(-) (A) recombination is approximately 5 ms(-1) with an activation energy of approximately 0.34 eV, circumstantially confirming dominating losses by reformation of the primary radical pair followed by ground-state recombination. (2) Because of compensatory influences on recombination and forward reactions, the efficiency is only weakly temperature dependent. (3) Recombination losses are several-fold enhanced at lower pH. (4) Calculation based on delayed-fluorescence data suggests that the losses depend on the state of the water-oxidizing manganese complex, being low in the S(0)-->S(1) and S(1)-->S(2) transition, clearly higher in S(2)-->S(3) and S(3)-->S(4)-->S(0). (5) For the used artificial electron acceptor, the efficiency is limited by acceptor-side processes/S-state decay at high/low photon-absorption rates resulting in optimal efficiency at surprisingly low rates of approximately 0.15-15 photons s(-1) (per PSII). The pH and S-state dependence can be rationalized by the basic model of alternate electron-proton removal proposed elsewhere. A physiological function of the recombination losses could be limitation of the lifetime of the reactive donor-side tyrosine radical (Y(.) (Z)) in the case of low-pH blockage of water oxidation.  相似文献   

18.
A His-tagged PSII core complex was purified from recombinantChlamydomonas reinhardtii D2-H thylakoids by single-step Ni2+-affinitycolumn chromatography and its properties were partially characterizedin terms of their PSII functions and chemical compositions.The PSII core complex that has a His-tag extension at the C-terminusof the D2 protein evolved oxygen at a high rate of 2,400 µmol(mg Chl)–1h–1 at the optimum pH of 6.5 with ferricyanideand 2,6-dichlorobenzoquinone as electron acceptors in the presenceof Ca2+ as an essential cofactor, and approximately 90% of theactivity was blocked by 10 µM DCMU. The core complex exhibitedthe thermoluminescence Q-band but not the B-band regardlessof the presence or absence of DCMU, although both bands wereobserved in the His-tagged thylakoids. The core complex wasfree from PSI and contained one YD, Tyr 160 of the D2 protein,four Mn atoms, two cytochrome b-559, about 46 Chl a molecules,and probably one QA, the primary acceptor quinone of PSII. Itwas inferred from these results that His-tagging at the C-terminusof the D2 protein does not affect the functional and structuralintegrity of the PSII core complex, and that the ‘His-tagstrategy’ is highly useful for biochemical, physicochemical,and structural studies of Chlamydomonas PSII. (Received October 22, 1998; Accepted December 25, 1998)  相似文献   

19.
The primary electron donor of photosystem (PS) II in the chlorophyll (Chl) d-dominated cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina was confirmed by delayed fluorescence (DF) and further proved by pigment contents of cells grown under several light intensities. The DF was found only in the Chl a region, identical to Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and disappeared following heat treatment. Pigment analyses indicated that at least two Chl a molecules were present per each two pheophytin a molecules, and these Chl a molecules are assigned to P(D1) and P(D2). These findings clearly indicate that Chl a is required for water oxidation in PS II.  相似文献   

20.
Perrine Z  Sayre R 《Biochemistry》2011,50(9):1454-1464
One of the unique features of electron transfer processes in photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers (RC) is the exclusive transfer of electrons down only one of the two parallel cofactor branches. In contrast to the RC core polypeptides (psaA and psaB) of photosystem I (PSI), where electron transfer occurs down both parallel redox-active cofactor branches, there is greater protein-cofactor asymmetry between the PSII RC core polypeptides (D1 and D2). We have focused on the identification of protein-cofactor relationships that determine the branch along which primary charge separation occurs (P(680)(+)/pheophytin(-)(Pheo)). We have previously shown that mutagenesis of the strong hydrogen-bonding residue, D1-E130, to less polar residues (D1-E130Q,H,L) shifted the midpoint potential of the Pheo(D1)/Pheo(D1)(-) couple to more negative values, reducing the quantum yield of primary charge separation. We did not observe, however, electron transfer down the inactive branch in D1-E130 mutants. The protein residue corresponding to D1-E130 on the inactive branch is D2-Q129 which presumably has a reduced hydrogen-bonding interaction with Pheo(D2) relative to the D1-E130 residue with Pheo(D1). Analysis of the recent 2.9 ? cyanobacterial PSII crystal structure indicated, however, that the D2-Q129 residue was too distant from the Pheo(D2) headgroup to serve as a possible hydrogen bond donor and directly impact its midpoint potential as well as potentially determine the directionality of electron transfer. Our objective was to characterize the function of this highly conserved inactive branch residue by replacing it with a nonconservative leucine or a conservative histidine residue. Measurements of Chl fluorescence decay kinetics and thermoluminescence studies indicate that the mutagenesis of D2-Q129 decreases the redox gap between Q(A) and Q(B) due to a lowering of the redox potential of Q(B). The resulting increased yield of S(2)Q(B)(-) charge recombination in the D2-Q129 mutants leads to an increased susceptibility to photoinhibitory light presumably due to (3)P(680)-mediated oxidative damage. The results indicate that the D2-Q129 residue plays a critical role in stabilizing the charge-separated state in PSII and further documents the structural and functional asymmetry between the two cofactor branches in PSII.  相似文献   

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