首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Rates of chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 wild type and mutants lacking one or both photosystems by labeling cells with (15NH4)2SO4 and Na15NO3. Pigments extracted from cells were separated by HPLC and incorporation of the 15N label into porphyrins was subsequently examined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The life time (τ) of chlorophyll in wild-type Synechocystis grown at a light intensity of 100 μmol photons m−2 s−1 was determined to be about 300 h, much longer than the cell doubling time of about 14 h. Slow chlorophyll degradation (τ ∼200-400 h) was also observed in Photosystem I-less and in Photosystem II-less Synechocystis mutants, whereas in a mutant lacking both Photosystem I and Photosystem II chlorophyll degradation was accelerated 4-5 fold (τ ∼50 h). Chlorophyllide and pheophorbide were identified as intermediates of chlorophyll degradation in the Photosystem I-less/Photosystem II-less mutant. In comparison with the wild type, the chlorophyll synthesis rate was five-fold slower in the Photosystem I-less strain and about eight-fold slower in the strain lacking both photosystems, resulting in different chlorophyll levels in the various mutants. The results presented in this paper demonstrate the presence of a regulation that adjusts the rate of chlorophyll synthesis according to the needs of chlorophyll-binding polypeptides associated with the photosystems.  相似文献   

2.
Deletion of the genes for four or five small Cab-like proteins (SCPs) in photosystem (PS) I-less and PS I-less/PS II-less strains of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 caused a large decrease in the chlorophyll and carotenoid content of the cells without accumulation of early intermediates in the chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway, suggesting limited chlorophyll availability. The PS II/PS I ratio increased upon deletion of multiple SCPs in a wild type background, similar to what is observed in the presence of subsaturating concentrations of gabaculin, an inhibitor of an early step in the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway. Upon deletion of multiple SCPs, neither 77 K fluorescence emission properties of phycobilisomeless thylakoids from the PS I-less/PS II-less strain nor the energy trapping efficiency of PS II were affected, indicating that under steady-state conditions SCPs do not bind much chlorophyll and do not serve as PS II antenna. Under conditions where protochlorophyllide reduction and thus chlorophyll synthesis were inhibited, chlorophyll disappeared quickly in a mutant lacking all five SCPs. This implies a role of SCPs in stabilization of chlorophyll-binding proteins and/or in reuse of chlorophylls. Under these conditions of inhibited reduction of protochlorophyllide, the accumulation kinetics of this intermediate were greatly altered in the absence of the five SCPs. This indicates an alteration of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis kinetics by SCPs. Based on this and other evidence, we propose that SCPs bind carotenoids and transiently bind chlorophyll, aiding in the supply of chlorophyll to nascent or reassembling photosynthetic complexes, and regulate the tetrapyrrole biosynthesis pathway as a function of the demand for chlorophyll.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Isotope (Na(15)NO(3), ((15)NH(4))SO(4) or [(13)C]glucose) labeling was used to analyze chlorophyll synthesis and degradation rates in a set of Synechocystis mutants that lacked single or multiple small Cab-like proteins (SCPs), as well as photosystem I or II. When all five small Cab-like proteins were inactivated in the wild-type background, chlorophyll stability was not affected unless the scpABCDE(-) strain was grown at a moderately high light intensity of 100-300 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1). However, the half-life time of chlorophyll was 5-fold shorter in the photosystem I-less/scpABCDE(-) strain than in the photosystem I-less strain even when grown at low light intensity (~3 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) (32 +/- 5 and 161 +/- 25 h, respectively). In other photosystem I-less mutants that lacked one to four of the scp genes the chlorophyll lifetime was in between these two values, with the chlorophyll lifetime generally decreasing with an increasing number of inactivated scps. In contrast, the chlorophyll biosynthesis rate was only marginally affected by inactivation of scps except when all five scp genes were deleted. Small Cab-like protein deficiency did not significantly affect photoinhibition or turnover of photosystem II-associated beta-carotene. It is concluded that SCPs do not alter the stability of functional photosystem II complexes but retard the degradation of photosystem II-associated chlorophyll, consistent with the proposed involvement of SCPs in photosystem II re-assembly or/and repair processes by temporarily binding chlorophyll while photosystem II protein components are being replaced.  相似文献   

5.
To gain insight in the lifetimes of photosystem II (PSII) chlorophyll and proteins, a combined stable isotope labeling (15N)/mass spectrometry method was used to follow both old and new pigments and proteins. Photosystem I-less Synechocystis cells were grown to exponential or post-exponential phase and then diluted in BG-11 medium with [15N]ammonium and [15N]nitrate. PSII was isolated, and the masses of PSII protein fragments and chlorophyll were determined. Lifetimes of PSII components ranged from 1.5 to 40 h, implying that at least some of the proteins and chlorophyll turned over independently from each other. Also, a significant amount of nascent PSII components accumulated in thylakoids when cells were in post-exponential growth phase. In a mutant lacking small Cab-like proteins (SCPs), most PSII protein lifetimes were unaffected, but the lifetime of chlorophyll and the amount of nascent PSII components that accumulated were decreased. In the absence of SCPs, one of the PSII biosynthesis intermediates, the monomeric PSII complex without CP43, was missing. Therefore, SCPs may stabilize nascent PSII protein complexes. Moreover, upon SCP deletion, the rate of chlorophyll synthesis and the accumulation of early tetrapyrrole precursors were drastically reduced. When [14N]aminolevulinic acid (ALA) was supplemented to 15N-BG-11 cultures, the mutant lacking SCPs incorporated much more exogenous ALA into chlorophyll than the control demonstrating that ALA biosynthesis was impaired in the absence of SCPs. This illustrates the major effects that nonstoichiometric PSII components such as SCPs have on intermediates and assembly but not on the lifetime of PSII proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by incubating cells in the presence of 13C-labeled glucose or 15N-containing salts. Upon mass spectral analysis of chlorophyll isolated from cells grown in the presence of 13C-glucose for different time periods, four chlorophyll pools were detected that differed markedly in the amount of 13C incorporated into the porphyrin (Por) and phytol (Phy) moieties of the molecule. These four pools represent (i) unlabeled chlorophyll (12Por12Phy), (ii) 13C-labeled chlorophyll (13Por13Phy), and (iii, iv) chlorophyll, in which either the porphyrin or the phytol moiety was 13C-labeled, whereas the other constituent of the molecule remained unlabeled (13Por12Phy and 12Por13Phy). The kinetics of 12Por12Phy disappearance, presumably due to chlorophyll de-esterification, and of 13Por12Phy, 12Por13Phy, and 13Por13Phy accumulation due to chlorophyll synthesis provided evidence for continuous chlorophyll turnover in Synechocystis cells. The loss of 12Por12Phy was three-fold faster in a photosystem I-less strain than in a photosystem II-less strain and was accelerated in wild-type cells upon exposure to strong light. These data suggest that most chlorophyll appears to be de-esterified in Synechocystis upon dissociation and repair of damaged photosystem II. A substantial part of chlorophyllide and phytol released upon the de-esterification of chlorophyll can be recycled for the biosynthesis of new chlorophyll molecules contributing to the formation of 13Por12Phy and 12Por13Phy chlorophyll pools. The phytol kinase, Slr1652, plays a significant but not absolutely critical role in this recycling process.  相似文献   

7.
The five small CAB-like proteins (ScpA-E) of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 belong to the family of stress-induced light-harvesting-like proteins, but are constitutively expressed in a mutant deficient of Photosystem I (PSI). Using absorption, fluorescence and thermoluminescence measurements this PSI-less strain was compared with a mutant, in which all SCPs were additionally deleted. Depletion of SCPs led to structural rearrangements in Photosystem II (PSII): less photosystems were assembled; and in these, the Q(B) site was modified. Despite the lower amount of PSII, the SCP-deficient cells contained the same amount of phycobilisomes (PBS) as the control. Although the excess PBS were functionally disconnected, their fluorescence was quenched under high irradiance by the activated Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP). Additionally the amount of OCP, but not of the iron-stress induced protein (isiA), was higher in this SCP-depleted mutant compared with the control. As previously described, the lack of SCPs affects the chlorophyll biosynthesis (Vavilin, D., Brune, D. C., Vermaas, W. (2005) Biochim Biophys Acta 1708, 91-101). We demonstrate that chlorophyll synthesis is required for efficient PSII repair and that it is partly impaired in the absence of SCPs. At the same time, the amount of chlorophyll also seems to influence the expression of ScpC and ScpD.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Photosystem I-less Synechocystis 6803 mutants carrying modified PsbH proteins, derived from different combinations of wild-type cyanobacterial and maize genes, were constructed. The mutants were analyzed in order to determine the relative importance of the intra- and extramembrane domains of the PsbH subunit in the functioning of photosystem (PS) II, by a combination of biochemical, biophysical, and physiological approaches. The results confirmed and extended previously published data showing that, besides D1, the whole PsbH protein is necessary to determine the correct structure of a QB/herbicide-binding site. The different turnover of the D1 protein and chlorophyll photobleaching displayed by mutant cells in response to photoinhibitory treatment revealed for the first time the actual role of the PsbH subunit in photoprotection. A functional PsbH protein is necessary for (i) rapid degradation of photodamaged D1 molecules, which is essential to avoid further oxidative damage to the PSII core, and (ii) insertion of newly synthesized D1 molecules into the thylakoid membrane. PsbH is thus required for both initiation and completion of the repair cycle of the PSII complex in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

10.
Cytochrome c(550) is one of the extrinsic Photosystem II subunits in cyanobacteria and red algae. To study the possible role of the heme of the cytochrome c(550) we constructed two mutants of Thermosynechococcus elongatus in which the residue His-92, the sixth ligand of the heme, was replaced by a Met or a Cys in order to modify the redox properties of the heme. The H92M and H92C mutations changed the midpoint redox potential of the heme in the isolated cytochrome by +125 mV and -30 mV, respectively, compared with the wild type. The binding-induced increase of the redox potential observed in the wild type and the H92C mutant was absent in the H92M mutant. Both modified cytochromes were more easily detachable from the Photosystem II compared with the wild type. The Photosystem II activity in cells was not modified by the mutations suggesting that the redox potential of the cytochrome c(550) is not important for Photosystem II activity under normal growth conditions. A mutant lacking the cytochrome c(550) was also constructed. It showed a lowered affinity for Cl(-) and Ca(2+) as reported earlier for the cytochrome c(550)-less Synechocystis 6803 mutant, but it showed a shorter lived S(2)Q(B)(-) state, rather than a stabilized S(2) state and rapid deactivation of the enzyme in the dark, which were characteristic of the Synechocystis mutant. It is suggested that the latter effects may be caused by loss (or weaker binding) of the other extrinsic proteins rather than a direct effect of the absence of the cytochrome c(550).  相似文献   

11.
Part of the chlL gene encoding a component involved in light-independent protochlorophyllide reduction was deleted in wild type and in a photosystem I-less strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In resulting mutants, chlorophyll biosynthesis was fully light-dependent. When these mutants were propagated under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions (in darkness except for 15 min of weak light a day) for several weeks, essentially no chlorophyll was detectable but protochlorophyllide accumulated. Upon return of the chlL - mutant cultures to continuous light, within the first 6 h chlorophyll was synthesized at the expense of protochlorophyllide at a rate independent of the presence of photosystem I. Chlorophyll biosynthesized during this time gave rise to a 685 nm fluorescence emission peak at 77 K in intact cells. This peak most likely originates from a component different from those known to be directly associated with photosystems II and I. Development of 695 and 725 nm peaks (indicative of intact photosystem II and photosystem I, respectively) required longer exposures to light. After 6 h of greening, the rate of chlorophyll synthesis slowed as protochlorophyllide was depleted. In the chlL - strain, greening occurred at the same rate at two different light intensities (5 and 50 E m-2s-1), indicating that also at low light intensity the amount of light is not rate-limiting for protochlorophyllide reduction. Thus, in this system the rate of chlorophyll biosynthesis is limited neither by biosynthesis of photosystems nor by the light-dependent protochlorophyllide reduction. We suggest the presence of a chlorophyll-binding chelator protein (with 77 K fluorescence emission at 685 nm) that binds newly synthesized chlorophyll and that provides chlorophyll for newly synthesized photosynthetic reaction centers and antennae.  相似文献   

12.
The lumenal CD loop region of the D2 protein of photosystem II contains residues that interact with a reaction center chlorophyll and the redox-active Tyr(D). Using combinatorial mutagenesis, photoautotrophic mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been generated with multiple amino acid changes in this region. The CD loop mutations were transferred into a photosystem I-less Synechocystis strain to facilitate characterization of photosystem II properties in the mutants. Most of the combinatorial photosystem I-less mutants obtained had a high yield of variable fluorescence, F(V). However, in three mutants, which shared a replacement of Phe181 by Trp, the F(V) yield was dramatically reduced although a high rate of oxygen evolution was maintained. A site-directed F181W D2 mutant shared similar properties. Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence measurements revealed that in the combinatorial F181W mutants the fluorescence lifetimes in closed and open photosystem II centers were essentially identical and were similar to the fluorescence lifetime in open centers of the control strain. These results are explained by quenching of variable fluorescence in the mutants by charge separation between Trp181 and excited reaction center chlorophyll. This reaction competes efficiently with fluorescence and nonradiative decay in closed photosystem II centers, where the lifetime of the excitation in the chlorophyll antenna is long. Thermodynamic considerations favor the formation of oxidized tryptophan and reduced chlorophyll in the quenching reaction, presumably followed by charge recombination. A possible role of tryptophan-chlorophyll charge separation in the mechanism of energy-dependent quenching of excitations in photosynthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Geranylgeranyl reductase catalyses the reduction of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to phytyl pyrophosphate required for synthesis of chlorophylls, phylloquinone and tocopherols. The gene chlP (ORF sll1091) encoding the enzyme has been inactivated in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The resulting DeltachlP mutant accumulates exclusively geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a instead of its phytylated analogue as well as low amounts of alpha-tocotrienol instead of alpha-tocopherol. Whereas the contents of chlorophyll and total carotenoids are decreased, abundance of phycobilisomes is increased in DeltachlP cells. The mutant assembles functional photosystems I and II as judged from 77 K fluorescence and electron transport measurements. However, the mutant is unable to grow photoautotrophically due to instability and rapid degradation of the photosystems in the absence of added glucose. We suggest that instability of the photosystems in DeltachlP is directly related to accumulation of geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a. Increased rigidity of the chlorophyll isoprenoid tail moiety due to three additional CC bonds is the likely cause of photooxidative stress and reduced stability of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes assembled with geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a in the DeltachlP mutant.  相似文献   

15.
The genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 contains genes identified as menD and menE, homologs of Escherichia coli genes that code for 2-succinyl-6-hydroxyl-2,4-cyclohexadiene-1-carboxylate (SHCHC) synthase and O-succinylbenzoic acid-CoA ligase in the menaquinone biosynthetic pathway. In cyanobacteria, the product of this pathway is 2-methyl-3-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone (phylloquinone), a molecule used exclusively as an electron transfer cofactor in Photosystem (PS) I. The menD(-) and menE(-) strains were generated, and both were found to lack phylloquinone. Hence, no alternative pathways exist in cyanobacteria to produce O-succinylbenzoyl-CoA. Q-band EPR studies of photoaccumulated quinone anion radical and optical kinetic studies of the P700(+) [F(A)/F(B)](-) backreaction indicate that in the mutant strains, plastoquinone-9 functions as the electron transfer cofactor in the A(1) site of PS I. At a light intensity of 40 microE m(-2) s(-1), the menD(-) and menE(-) mutant strains grew photoautotrophically and photoheterotrophically, but with doubling times slower than the wild type. Both of which are sensitive to high light intensities. Low-temperature fluorescence studies show that in the menD(-) and menE(-) mutants, the ratio of PS I to PS II is reduced relative to the wild type. Whole-chain electron transfer rates in the menD(-) and menE(-) mutant cells are correspondingly higher on a chlorophyll basis. The slower growth rate and high-light sensitivity of the menD(-) and menE(-) mutants are therefore attributed to a lower content of PS I per cell.  相似文献   

16.
To determine the mechanism of carotenoid-sensitized non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria, the kinetics of blue-light-induced quenching and fluorescence spectra were studied in the wild type and mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 grown with or without iron. The blue-light-induced quenching was observed in the wild type as well as in mutants lacking PS II or IsiA confirming that neither IsiA nor PS II is required for carotenoid-triggered fluorescence quenching. Both fluorescence at 660 nm (originating from phycobilisomes) and at 681 nm (which, upon 440 nm excitation originates mostly from chlorophyll) was quenched. However, no blue-light-induced changes in the fluorescence yield were observed in the apcE(-) mutant that lacks phycobilisome attachment. The results are interpreted to indicate that interaction of the Slr1963-associated carotenoid with--presumably--allophycocyanin in the phycobilisome core is responsible for non-photochemical energy quenching, and that excitations on chlorophyll in the thylakoid equilibrate sufficiently with excitations on allophycocyanin in wild type to contribute to quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence.  相似文献   

17.
Both chlorophyll (Chl) a and b accumulate in the light in a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 strain that expresses higher plant genes coding for a light-harvesting complex II protein and Chl a oxygenase. This cyanobacterial strain also lacks photosystem (PS) I and cannot synthesize Chl in darkness because of the lack of chlL. When this PS I-less/chlL(-)/lhcb(+)/cao(+) strain was grown in darkness, small amounts of two unusual tetrapyrroles, protochlorophyllide (PChlide) b and pheophorbide (pheide) b, were identified. Accumulation of PChlide b trailed that of PChlide a by several days, suggesting that PChlide a is an inefficient substrate of Chl a oxygenase. The presence of pheide b in this organism suggests a breakdown of Chl b via a pathway that does not involve conversion to a-type pigments. When the PS I-less/chlL(-) control strain was grown in darkness, Chl degradation was much slower than in the PS I-less/chlL(-)/lhcb(+)/cao(+) strain, suggesting that the presence of Chl b leads to more rapid turnover of Chl-binding proteins and/or a more active Chl degradation pathway. Levels and biosynthesis kinetics of Chl and of its biosynthetic intermediates are very different in the PS I-less/chlL(-)/lhcb(+)/cao(+) strain versus in the control. Moreover, when grown in darkness for 14 days, upon the addition of delta-aminolevulinic acid, the level of magnesium-protoporphyrin IX increased 60-fold in the PS I-less/chlL(-)/lhcb(+)/cao(+) strain (only approximately 2-fold in the PS I-less/chlL(-) control strain), whereas the PChlide and protoheme levels remained fairly constant. We propose that a b-type PChlide, Chl, or pheide in the PS I-less/chlL(-)/lhcb(+)/cao(+) strain may bind to tetrapyrrole biosynthesis regulatory protein(s) (for example, the small Cab-like proteins) and thus affect the regulation of this pathway.  相似文献   

18.
The psbX gene (sml0002) coding for a 4.1 kDa protein in Photosystem II of plants and cyanobacteria was deleted in both wild type and in a Photosystem I-less mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Polymerase chain reaction and sequencing analysis showed that the mutants had completely segregated. Deletion of the PsbX protein does not seem to influence growth rate, electron transport or water oxidation ability. Whereas a high light induction of the psbX mRNA could be observed in wild type, deletion of the gene did not lead to high light sensibility. Light saturation measurements and 77K fluorescence measurements indicated a minor disconnection of the antenna in the deletion mutant. Furthermore, fluorescence induction measurements as well as immuno-staining of the D1 protein showed that the amount of Photosystem II complexes in the mutants was reduced by 30%. Therefore, PsbX does not seem to be necessary for the Photosystem II electron transport, but directly or indirectly involved in the regulation of the amount of functionally active Photosystem II centres in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.  相似文献   

19.
Alain Picaud 《BBA》1972,275(3):414-426
Relationship of structure, composition and Triton X-100 fractionation of chloroplas lamellae in wild type and two non-photosynthetic mutant strains of Chlamydomonas reinhardti

In order to provide information on the link between the two photosystems studies on the mode of action of Triton X-100 has been carried out on mutants, strains ac 21, Fl 15 and wild type of Chlamydomonas reinhardti. Experiments show that the release of Photosystem I particles from mutant chloroplast fragments needs less Triton X-100 than wild type does and that, compared to wild type, the chloroplast fragments of mutants appear to be deficient in carotenoids (ac 21) or in lipids (Fl 15). It is possible, therefore, to correlate the easier splitting of the mutant membrane by detergent with a decrease in the amount of these compounds (carotenoids and lipids) in mutant strains.

The following interpretation is proposed: (a) some of the carotenoids could be part of the hydrophobic sites on Photosystem I subchloroplast particles; (b) some polar lipids could be linked to these sites; (c) Triton X-100 could, in a competitive way, replace the membrane lipids linked to the hydrophobic sites of subchloroplast particles. It seems probable that anomalies in the mutant behaviour in regard to the Triton X-100 action are related to membrane structural defects in these mutants.  相似文献   


20.
The antenna composition of the Photosystems IIα, IIβ and I was studied in tobacco chloroplasts. Absorbance spectra, recorded at 4 K, were analyzed for the wild type and the mutants Su/su and Su/su var. Aurea, containing higher concentrations of the photosystems. With chloroplasts of Su/su we measured the action spectra of the three photosystems from 625 to 690 nm. Above 675 nm absorption by Photosystem I dominated. This sytem had a maximum at 678 nm and a shoulder at 660 nm. Of the long-wavelength chlorophyll a forms, absorbing at 690, 697 and 705 nm at 4 K, which are generally assigned to Photosystem I, the 697 nm form occurred in an amount of four molecules per reaction center of Photosystem I in each type of chloroplast. The Photosystem IIα spectrum was characterized by maxima at 650 and 672 nm, showing clearly the participation of the chlorophyll a and b containing light-harvesting complex. In the mutants the light-harvesting complex has a chlorophyll a to chlorophyll b ratio of more than 1; the amount of the 672 nm chlorophyll a was normal, whereas the amount of chlorophyll b was markedly decreased in the mutants relative to the wild type. The Photosystem IIβ spectrum mainly consisted of a band at 683 nm.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号