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1.
In green plant-like photosynthesis, oxygen evolution is catalyzed by a thylakoid membrane-bound protein complex, photosystem II. Cytochrome b559, a protein component of the reaction center of this complex, is absent in a genetically engineered mutant of the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis 6803 [Pakrasi, H.B., Williams, J.G.K., and Arntzen, C.J. (1988). EMBO J. 7, 325-332]. In this mutant, the genes psbE and psbF, encoding cytochrome b559, were deleted by targeted mutagenesis. Two other protein components, D1 and D2 of the photosystem II reaction center, are also absent in this mutant. However, two chlorophyll-binding proteins, CP47 and CP43, as well as a manganese-stabilizing extrinsic protein component of photosystem II are stably assembled in the thylakoids of this mutant. Thus, this deletion mutation destabilizes the reaction center of photosystem II only. The mutant also lacks a fluorescence maximum peak at 695 nm (at 77 K) even though the CP47 protein, considered to be the origin of this fluorescence peak, is present in this mutant. We propose that the fluorescence at 695 nm originates from an interaction between the reaction center of photosystem II and CP47. The deletion mutant shows the absence of variable fluorescence at room temperature, indicating that its photosystem II complex is photochemically inactive. Also, photoreduction of QA, the primary acceptor quinone in photosystem II, could not be detected in the mutant. We conclude that cytochrome b559 plays at least an essential structural role in the reaction center of photosystem II.  相似文献   

2.
Oxygen evolution by photosystem II membranes was inhibited by Cu(II) when 2,6-dichlorobenzoquinone or ferricyanide, but not silicomolybdate, was used as electron acceptor. This indicated that Cu(II) affected the reducing side of the photosystem II. The inhibition curves of Cu(II), o-phenanthroline and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), were compared; the inhibitory patterns of Cu(II) and o-phenanthroline were very similar and different in turn from that of DCMU. Cu(II) did not eliminate or modify the electron paramagnetic resonance signal at g = 8.1 ascribed to the non-heme iron of the photosystem II reaction center, indicating that the inhibition by Cu(II) was not the result of the replacement of the iron by Cu(II). Controlled trypsin digestion of thylakoid membranes inhibited oxygen evolution using 2,6-dichlorobenzoquinone, but had no effect when using ferricyanide or silicomolybdate. Using ferricyanide, oxygen evolution of trypsin-treated thylakoids was insensitive to DCMU but became even more sensitive to Cu(II) and o-phenanthroline than nontreated thylakoids; however, trypsinized thylakoids were insensitive to inhibitors in the presence of silicomolybdate. We conclude that Cu(II) impaired the photosystem II electron transfer before the QB niche, most probably at the pheophytin-QA-Fe domain.  相似文献   

3.
The triplet states of photosystem II core particles from spinach were studied using time-resolved cw EPR technique at different reduction states of the iron--quinone complex of the reaction center primary electron acceptor. With doubly reduced primary acceptor, the well-known photosystem II triplet state characterised by zero-field splitting parameters |D|=0.0286 cm(-1), |E|=0.0044 cm(-1) was detected. When the primary acceptor was singly reduced either chemically or photochemically, a triplet state of a different spectral shape was observed, bearing the same D and E values and characteristic spin polarization pattern arising from RC radical pair recombination. The latter triplet state was strongly temperature dependent disappearing at T=100 K, and had a much faster decay than the former one. Based on its properties, this triplet state was also ascribed to the photosystem II reaction center. A sequence of electron-transfer events in the reaction centers is proposed that explains the dependence of the triplet state properties on the reduction state of the iron--quinone primary acceptor complex.  相似文献   

4.
Accumulation of monomer and dimer photosystem (PS) II reaction center core complexes has been analyzed by two-dimensional Blue-native/SDS-PAGE in Synechocystis PCC 6803 wild type and in mutant strains lacking genes psbA, psbB, psbC, psbDIC/DII, or the psbEFLJ operon. In vivo pulse-chase radiolabeling experiments revealed that mutant cells assembled PSII precomplexes only. In DeltapsbC and DeltapsbB, assembly of reaction center cores lacking CP43 and reaction center complexes was detected, respectively. In DeltapsbA, protein subunits CP43, CP47, D2, and cytochrome b559 were synthesized, but proteins did not assemble. Similarly, in DeltapsbD/C lacking D2, and CP43, the de novo synthesized proteins D1, CP47, and cytochrome b559 did not form any mutual complexes, indicating that assembly of the reaction center complex is a prerequisite for assembly with core subunits CP47 and CP43. Finally, although CP43 and CP47 accumulated in DeltapsbEFLJ, D2 was neither expressed nor accumulated. We, furthermore, show that the amount of D2 is high in the strain lacking D1, whereas the amount of D1 is low in the strain lacking D2. We conclude that expression of the psbEFLJ operon is a prerequisite for D2 accumulation that is the key regulatory step for D1 accumulation and consecutive assembly of the PSII reaction center complex.  相似文献   

5.
EPR characteristics of transient paramagnetic states photoinduced in isolated reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 with intact electron transfer have been studied. It was demonstrated that the detected weak triplet state EPR signal belongs to the primary donor molecule and is populated via the conventional mechanism of radical pair S-T0 mixing. The distortion of the spectral shape of this signal is explained by the triplet quantum yield anisotropy brought about by the short lifetime of precursor radical pairs. The angular dependence of the anisotropy was evaluated. It was shown that the spectral shape of the triplet state of photosystem II reaction center observed in the case of singly-reduced primary quinone acceptor can also be described by the anisotropic quantum yield of the triplet, with practically the same angular dependence. These properties confirm the conclusions on the mechanism of photoinduced electron transfer in photosystem II, made in previous publications. The peculiarities in the functioning of photosystem II reaction centers are probably determined by strict limitations on the triplet state generation.  相似文献   

6.
C Ma  B A Barry 《Biophysical journal》1996,71(4):1961-1972
Photosystem II contains two well-characterized tyrosine radicals, D(.) and Z(.). Z is an electron carrier between the primary chlorophyll donor and the manganese catalytic site and is essential for enzymatic function. On the other hand, D forms a stable radical with no known role in oxygen evolution. D(.) and Z(.) give rise to similar, but not identical, room temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals, which can be distinguished by their decay kinetics. A third room temperature EPR signal has also been observed in site-directed mutants in which a nonredox active amino acid is substituted at the D or Z site. This four-line EPR signal has been shown to have a tyrosine origin by isotopic labeling (Boerner and Barry, 1994, J. Biol. Chem. 269:134-137), but such an EPR signal has never before been observed from a tyrosyl radical. The radical giving rise to this third unique signal has been named M+. Here we provide kinetic evidence that this signal arises from a third redox active tyrosine, distinct from tyrosine D and Z, in the photosystem II reaction center. Isotopic labeling and EPR spectroscopy provide evidence that M is a covalently modified tyrosine.  相似文献   

7.
EPR characteristics of transient paramagnetic states photoinduced in isolated reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 with intact electron transfer have been studied. It was demonstrated that the detected weak triplet state EPR signal belongs to the primary donor molecule and is populated via the conventional mechanism of radical pair S-T0 mixing. The distortion of the spectral shape of this signal is explained by the triplet quantum yield anisotropy brought about by the short lifetime of precursor radical pairs. The angular dependence of the anisotropy was evaluated. It was shown that the spectral shape of the triplet state of photosystem II reaction center observed in the case of singly-reduced primary quinone acceptor can also be described by the anisotropic quantum yield of the triplet, with practically the same angular dependence. These properties confirm the conclusions on the mechanism of photoinduced electron transfer in photosystem II, made in previous publications. The peculiarities in the functioning of photosystem II reaction centers are probably determined by strict limitations on the triplet state generation.  相似文献   

8.
G H Noren  B A Barry 《Biochemistry》1992,31(13):3335-3342
The currently accepted model for the location of the redox-active tyrosines, D and Z, in photosystem II suggests that they are symmetrically located on the D1 and D2 polypeptides, which are believed to form the heterodimer core of the reaction center. Z, the electron conduit from the manganese catalytic site to the primary chlorophyll donor, has been identified with tyrosine-161 of D1. The YF161D1 mutant of Synechocystis 6803 [Debus, R. J., Barry, B. A., Sithole, I., Babcock, G. T., & McIntosh, L. (1988b) Biochemistry 27, 9071-9074; Metz, J. G., Nixon, P. J., Rogner, M., Brudvig, G. W., & Diner, B. A. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6960-6969], in which this tyrosine has been changed to a phenylalanine, should have no light-induced EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) signal from a tyrosine radical. This negative result has indeed been obtained in analysis of one of two independently constructed mutants through the use of a non-oxygen-evolving core preparation (Metz et al., 1989). Here, we present an analysis of a YF161D1 mutant through the use of a photosystem II purification procedure that gives oxygen-evolving particles from wild-type Synechocystis cultures. In our mutant preparation, a light-induced EPR signal from a photosystem II radical is observed under conditions in which, in a wild-type preparation, we can accumulate an EPR signal from Z+. This EPR signal has a different lineshape from that of the Z+ tyrosine radical, and spin quantitation shows that this radical can be produced in up to 60% of the mutant reaction centers. The EPR lineshape of this radical suggests that photosystem II reaction centers of the YF161D1 mutant contain a redox-active amino acid.  相似文献   

9.
Electron transfer in photosystem II at cryogenic temperatures   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The photochemistry in photosystem II of spinach has been characterized by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in the temperature range of 77-235 K, and the yields of the photooxidized species have been determined by integration of their EPR signals. In samples treated with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), a single stable charge separation occurred throughout the temperature range studied as reflected by the constant yield of the Fe(II)-QA-EPR signal. Three distinct electron donation pathways were observed, however. Below 100 K, one molecule of cytochrome b559 was photooxidized per reaction center. Between 100 and 200 K, cytochrome b559 and the S1 state competed for electron donation to P680+. Photooxidation of the S1 state occurred via two intermediates: the g = 4.1 EPR signal species first reported by Casey and Sauer [Casey, J. L., & Sauer, K. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 767, 21-28] was photooxidized between 100 and 160 K, and upon being warmed to 200 K in the dark, this EPR signal yielded the multiline EPR signal associated with the S2-state. Only the S1 state donated electrons to P680+ at 200 K or above, giving rise to the light-induced S2-state multiline EPR signal. These results demonstrate that the maximum S2-state multiline EPR signal accounts for 100% of the reaction center concentration. In samples where electron donation from cytochrome b559 was prevented by chemical oxidation, illumination at 77 K produced a radical, probably a chlorophyll cation, which accounted for 95% of the reaction center concentration. This electron donor competed with the S1 state for electron donation to P680+ below 100 K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The EPR spectrum of the triplet state of photosystem II reaction centers has been studied in the case of the singly reduced primary acceptor complex QAFe2+. It was demonstrated that the shape of the spectrum does not change much when the relaxation of the primary acceptor is accelerated and when magnetic interaction between the reduced quinone molecule QA and the non-heme iron Fe2+ is disrupted. This observation confirms the earlier conclusion that the anomalous shape of the EPR spectrum is due mainly to the anisotropy of the quatum yield of the triplet state. A scheme of primary events in photosystem II is discussed, which is consistent with the observed properties of the EPR spectrum of the triplet state.  相似文献   

11.
The parallel polarization electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) method has been applied to investigate manganese EPR signals of native S1 and S3 states of the water oxidizing complex (WOC) in photosystem (PS) II. The EPR signals in both states were assigned to thermally excited states with S=1, from which zero-field interaction parameters D and E were derived. Three kinds of signals, the doublet signal, the singlet-like signal and g=11-15 signal, were detected in Ca2+-depleted PS II. The g=11-15 signal was observed by parallel and perpendicular modes and assigned to a higher oxidation state beyond S2 in Ca2+-depleted PS II. The singlet-like signal was associated with the g=11-15 signal but not with the Y(Z) (the tyrosine residue 161 of the D1 polypeptide in PS II) radical. The doublet signal was associated with the Y(Z) radical as proved by pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and ENDOR-induced EPR. The electron transfer mechanism relevant to the role of Y(Z) radical was discussed.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
A photosystem II complex containing the reaction center proteins D1 and D2, a 47-kDa chlorophyll-binding protein (CP47), and cytochrome b-559 was isolated with high yield, purity, and homogeneity; small but well-ordered two-dimensional crystals were prepared from the particles. The crystals and the isolated particles were analyzed by electron microscopy using negatively stained specimens. The information of 20 different digitized crystals was combined by alignment programs based on correlation methods to obtain a final average. The calculated diffraction pattern, with spots up to a resolution of 2.5 nm, and the optical diffraction pattern of a single crystal indicate that the plane group is p22121 (also called p2gg) and that the unit cell is rectangular with parameters of 23.5 x 16.0 nm, containing four stain-excluding monomers (two face-up and two face-down). In projection, the monomers have an asymmetrical shape with a length of 10 nm, a maximal width of 7.5 nm, and a height of 6 nm; their molecular mass is 175 +/- 40 kDa.  相似文献   

14.
Effects on the PS II acceptor side caused by exposure to strong white light (180 W/m2) of PS II membrane fragments (spinach) at pH 6.5 and 0 degrees C were analyzed by measuring low temperature EPR signals and flash-induced transient changes of the fluorescence quantum yield. The following results were obtained: (a) the extent of the light induced g = 1.9 EPR signal as a measure of photochemical Fe2+QA- formation declines with progressing photoinhibition. The half-life of this effect is independent of the absence or presence of an exogenous electron acceptor during the photoinhibitory treatment; (b) in samples photoinhibited in the absence of an electron acceptor and subsequently incubated with K3[Fe(CN)6] in the dark, the extent of the g = 8 EPR signal (reflecting the oxidized Fe3+ form of the endogenous non-heme iron center) and of the flash-induced change of the fluorescence yield (as a measure of fast electron transfer from QA- to Fe3+ after the first flash; [see (1992) Photosynth. Res. 31, 113-126] exhibits the same dependence on photoinhibition time as the g = 1.9 EPR signal; (c) in samples photoinhibited in the presence of an exogenous electron acceptor, the signals reflecting Fe(3+)-formation and fast electron transfer from QA- to Fe3+ decline faster than the g = 1.9 EPR signal. These results provide for the first time direct evidence that the endogenous non-heme iron center located between QA and QB is susceptible to modifications by light stress. The implications of this finding will be discussed.  相似文献   

15.
W. Onno Feikema  Irina B. Klenina 《BBA》2005,1709(2):105-112
The triplet states of photosystem II core particles from spinach were studied using time-resolved cw EPR technique at different reduction states of the iron-quinone complex of the reaction center primary electron acceptor. With doubly reduced primary acceptor, the well-known photosystem II triplet state characterised by zero-field splitting parameters |D| = 0.0286 cm−1, |E| = 0.0044 cm−1 was detected. When the primary acceptor was singly reduced either chemically or photochemically, a triplet state of a different spectral shape was observed, bearing the same D and E values and characteristic spin polarization pattern arising from RC radical pair recombination. The latter triplet state was strongly temperature dependent disappearing at T = 100 K, and had a much faster decay than the former one. Based on its properties, this triplet state was also ascribed to the photosystem II reaction center. A sequence of electron-transfer events in the reaction centers is proposed that explains the dependence of the triplet state properties on the reduction state of the iron-quinone primary acceptor complex.  相似文献   

16.
Depletion of bicarbonate (carbon dioxide) from oxygenic cells or organelles not only causes cessation of carbon dioxide fixation, but also a strong decrease in the activity of photosystem II; the photosystem II activity can be restored by readdition of bicarbonate. Effects of bicarbonate exist on both the acceptor as well as on the donor side of photosystem II. The influence on the acceptor side is located between the primary and secondary quinone electron acceptor of photosystem II, and can be demonstrated in intact cells or leaves as well as in isolated thylakoids and reaction center preparations. At physiological pH, bicarbonate ions are suggested to form hydrogen bonds to several amino acids on both D1 and D2 proteins, the reaction center subunits of photosystem II, as well as to form ligands to the non-heme iron between the D1 and D2 proteins. Bicarbonate, at physiological pH, has an important role in the water-plastoquinone oxido-reductase: on the one hand it may stabilize, by conformational means, the reaction center protein of photosystem II that allows efficient electron flow and protonation of certain amino acids near the secondary quinone electron acceptor of photosystem II; and, on the other hand, it akppears to play a significant role in the assembly or functioning of the manganese complex at the donor side. Functional roles of bicarbonate in vivo, including protection against photoinhibition, are also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Linear dichroism (LD) spectroscopy is an important technique in the study of the orientation and organization of pigments in the photosynthetic membrane complexes in vivo and in vitro. In this work, the orientation of the pigments in the isolated photosystem Ⅱ (PSⅡ) sub-core reaction center complexes was analyzed and characterized by means of low temperature absorption and LD spectroscopy. The preparations containing different amounts of CP47 isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplast were used in order to investigate the orientation of pigments in the PSⅡ sub-core CP47/D1/D2/Cyt b-559 (CP47/D1/D2) complexes. Chlorophyll a (Chl a) absorbing at 680 nm in CP47/D1/D2/Cyt b-559 complex showed an orientation of the Q y transition parallel to the membrane plane. It is proposed that there are two forms of β-carotene (β-Car) in CP47/D1/D2/Cyt b-559 complex, denoted as β-Car (Ⅰ)and β-Car (Ⅱ), with different orientations, β-Car (Ⅰ) at 470 and 505 nm is roughly parallel to the membrane plane, and β-Car (Ⅱ) at 460 and 490 nm seems to be perpendicular orientation. Upon the photoinhibitory experiment β-Car (Ⅱ) was found to be photosensitive and easily photodamaged. It also showed that the positive LD signal observed at 680 nm was quite complicated. This signal is tentatively attributed to P680 and some Chl a of antenna in CP47 protein based upon our measurements.  相似文献   

18.
Hydroxyl radical generation by photosystem II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The photogeneration of hydroxyl radicals (OH(*)) in photosystem II (PSII) membranes was studied using EPR spin-trapping spectroscopy. Two kinetically distinguishable phases in the formation of the spin trap-hydroxyl (POBN-OH) adduct EPR signal were observed: the first phase (t(1/2) = 7.5 min) and the second phase (t(1/2) = 30 min). The generation of OH(*) was found to be suppressed in the absence of the Mn-complex, but it was restored after readdition of an artificial electron donor (DPC). Hydroxyl radical generation was also lost in the absence of oxygen, whereas it was stimulated when the oxygen concentration was increased. The production of OH(*) during the first kinetic phase was sensitive to the presence of SOD, whereas catalase and EDTA diminished the production of OH(*) during the second kinetic phase. The POBN-OH adduct EPR signal during the first phase exhibits a similar pH-dependence as the ability to oxidize the non-heme iron, as monitored by the Fe(3+) (g = 8) EPR signal: both EPR signals gradually decreased as the pH value was lowered below pH 6.5 and were absent at pH 5. Sodium formate decreases the production of OH(*) in intact and Mn-deleted PSII membranes. Upon illumination of PSII membranes, both superoxide, as measured by EPR signal from the spin trap-superoxide (EMPO-OOH) adduct, and H(2)O(2), measured colormetrically, were generated. These results indicated that OH(*) is produced on the electron acceptor side of PSII by two different routes, (1) O(2)(*)(-), which is generated by oxygen reduction on the acceptor side of PSII, interacts with a PSII metal center, probably the non-heme iron, to form an iron-peroxide species that is further reduced to OH(*) by an electron from PSII, presumably via Q(A)(-), and (2) O(2)(*)(-) dismutates to form free H(2)O(2) that is then reduced to OH(*) via the Fenton reaction in the presence of metal ions, the most likely being Mn(2+) and Fe(2+) released from photodamaged PSII. The two different routes of OH(*) generation are discussed in the context of photoinhibition.  相似文献   

19.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements were performed on photosystem II (PSII) membranes that were treated with 2 M NaCl to release the 17- and 23-kilodalton (kDa) polypeptides. By using 75 microM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea to limit the photosystem II samples to one stable charge separation in the temperature range of 77-273 K, we have quantitated the EPR signals of the several electron donors and acceptors of photosystem II. It was found that removal of the 17- and 23-kDa polypeptides caused low potential cytochrome b559 to become fully oxidized during the course of dark adaptation. Following illumination at 77-130 K, one chlorophyll molecule per reaction center was oxidized. Between 130 and 200 K, both a chlorophyll molecule and the S1 state were photooxidized and, together, accounted for one oxidation per reaction center. Above 200 K, the chlorophyll radical was unstable. Oxidation of the S1 state gave rise to the S2-state multiline EPR signal, which arises from the Mn site of the O2-evolving center. The yield of the S2-state multiline EPR signal in NaCl-washed PSII membranes was as high as 93% of the control, untreated PSII membranes, provided that both Ca2+ and Cl- were bound. Furthermore, the 55Mn nuclear hyperfine structure of the S2-state multiline EPR signal was unaltered upon depletion of the 17- and 23-kDa polypeptides. In NaCl-washed PSII samples where Ca2+ and/or Cl- were removed, however, the intensity of the S2-state multiline EPR signal decreased in parallel with the fraction of PSII lacking bound Ca2+ and Cl-.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Shen JR  Kamiya N 《Biochemistry》2000,39(48):14739-14744
A photosystem II (PSII) complex highly active in oxygen evolution was purified and crystallized from a thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus vulcanus. The PSII complex in the crystals contained the D1/D2 reaction center subunits, CP47 and CP43 (two chlorophyll-binding core antenna proteins of photosystem II), cytochrome b-559 alpha- and beta-subunits, several low molecular weight subunits, and three extrinsic proteins, that is, 33 and 12 kDa proteins and cytochrome c-550. The PSII complex also retained a high rate of oxygen evolution. The apparent molecular mass of the PSII in the crystals was determined to be 580 kDa by gel filtration chromatography, indicating that the PSII crystallized is a dimer. The crystals diffracted to a maximum resolution of 3.5 A at a cryogenic temperature using X-rays from a synchrotron radiation source, SPring-8. The crystals belonged to an orthorhombic system, and the space group was P2(1)2(1)2(1) with unit cell dimensions of a = 129.7 A, b = 226.5 A, and c = 307.8 A. Each asymmetric unit contained one PSII dimer, which gave rise to a specific volume (V(M)) of 3.6 A(3)/Da based on the calculated molecular mass of 310 kDa for a PSII monomer and an estimated solvent content of 66%. Multiple data sets of native crystals have been collected and processed to 4.0 A, indicating that our crystals are suitable for structure analysis at this resolution.  相似文献   

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