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1.
The small hydrophobic polypeptide PsbT is associated with the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center (D1/D2 heterodimer). Here, we report the effect of the deletion of PsbT on the biogenesis of PSII complex during light-induced greening of y-1 mutants of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The y-1 is unable to synthesize chlorophylls in the dark but do so in the light. The dark-grown y-1 cells accumulated no major PSII proteins but a small amount of PsbT. Upon illumination, PsbT was immediately synthesized while chlorophylls, major PSII proteins, and O(2)-evolving activity increased after a 1-h lag. The y-1 cells without PsbT accumulated chlorophylls and PSI protein at a similar rate, whereas the accumulation of PSII complex was specifically retarded during greening. The absence of PsbT did not affect the synthesis of PSII proteins. These results indicate that PsbT is required for the efficient biogenesis of PSII complex.  相似文献   

2.
We have characterized a nuclear mutant of barley, viridis-115, lacking photosystem II (PSII) activity and compared it to wild-type seedlings during light-induced chloroplast development. Chloroplasts isolated from wild-type and viridis-115 seedlings illuminated for 1 h synthesized similar polypeptides and had similar protein composition. After 16 h of illumination, however, mutant plastids exhibited reduced ability to radiolabel D1, CP47, and several low Mr membrane polypeptides, and by 72 h, synthesis of these proteins was undetectable. Immunoblot analysis showed that plastids of dark-grown wild-type barley lacked several PSII proteins (D1, D2, CP47, and CP43) and that 16 h of illumination resulted in the accumulation of these polypeptides. In contrast, these polypeptides did not accumulate in illuminated viridis-115 seedlings, although mutant plastids accumulated two PSII proteins that participate in oxygen evolution, oxygen-evolving enhancers 1 and 3. Northern analysis showed that the levels of psbA and psbB mRNA in mutant plastids were equal to or greater than levels in wild-type plastids throughout the developmental period examined here. These results indicate that the nuclear mutation present in viridis-115 affects the translation and stability of the chloroplast-encoded D1 and CP47 polypeptides and that its influence is expressed after the onset of light-induced chloroplast development.  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of accumulation of light harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-binding polypeptides (LHCPs) in thylakoid membranes were analyzed during greening of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y-1 at 38°C. Initial accumulation of LHCPs in thylakoid membranes was linear; LHCP precursors or polypeptides in transit within the chloroplast stroma were not detected. The rate of accumulation in the light was at least five-fold greater than that in the dark. The relatively small amount of LHCPs that accumulated in the dark was integrated properly in the membrane, as judged by the pattern of cleavage in vitro by exogenous proteases, and did not turn over at a significant rate in vivo. The kinetic data suggested that in y-1 cells either translation of LHCP mRNA was inhibited in the dark or newly synthesized polypeptides were degraded concurrently with transport into the chloroplast unless rescued by Chl. LHCPs accumulated in cells of the Chl b-deficient strain pg-113 at the same rate in the dark or the light at 38°C, an indication that light did not affect translation of LHCP mRNA. Membrane-associated LHCPs in pg-113 cells were completely degraded, in contrast to those in y-1 cells, by exogenous proteases, which suggested that pg-113 cells are deficient in a proteolytic activity. A peptidase was recovered from y-1 cells in a membrane fraction with a buoyant density slightly less than that of thylakoid membranes. Although a role for this activity in degradation of LHCPs has not been established, the specific activity of this peptidase in pg-113 cells was only 10 to 15% of the level in y-1 cells.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Photosystem II (PSII) core complexes consist of CP47, CP43, D1, D2 proteins and of several low molecular weight integral membrane polypeptides, such as the chloroplast-encoded PsbE, PsbF, and PsbI proteins. To elucidate the function of PsbI in the photosynthetic process as well as in the biogenesis of PSII in higher plants, we generated homoplastomic knock-out plants by replacing most of the tobacco psbI gene with a spectinomycin resistance cartridge. Mutant plants are photoautotrophically viable under green house conditions but sensitive to high light irradiation. Antenna proteins of PSII accumulate to normal amounts, but levels of the PSII core complex are reduced by 50%. Bioenergetic and fluorescence studies uncovered that PsbI is required for the stability but not for the assembly of dimeric PSII and supercomplexes consisting of PSII and the outer antenna (PSII-LHCII). Thermoluminescence emission bands indicate that the presence of PsbI is required for assembly of a fully functional Q(A) binding site. We show that phosphorylation of the reaction center proteins D1 and D2 is light and redox-regulated in the wild type, but phosphorylation is abolished in the mutant, presumably due to structural alterations of PSII when PsbI is deficient. Unlike wild type, phosphorylation of LHCII is strongly increased in the dark due to accumulation of reduced plastoquinone, whereas even upon state II light phosphorylation is decreased in delta psbI. These data attest that phosphorylation of D1/D2, CP43, and LHCII is regulated differently.  相似文献   

6.
While light is the essential driving force for photosynthetic carbon fixation, high light intensities are toxic to photosynthetic organisms. Prolonged exposure to high light results in damage to the photosynthetic membrane proteins and suboptimal activity, a phenomenon called photoinhibition. The primary target for inactivation is the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center. PSII catalyzes the light-induced oxidation of water at the oxygen-evolving complex. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated under photoinhibitory conditions and induce oxidative post translational modifications of amino acid side chains. Specific modification of tryptophan residues to N-formylkynurenine (NFK) occurs in the CP43 and D1 core polypeptides of PSII. The NFK modification has also been detected in other proteins, such as mitochondrial respiratory enzymes, and is formed by a non-random, ROS-targeted mechanism. NFK has been shown to accumulate in PSII during conditions of high light stress in vitro. This review provides a summary of what is known about the generation and function of NFK in PSII and other proteins. Currently, the role of ROS in photoinhibition is under debate. Furthermore, the triggers for the degradation and accelerated turnover of PSII subunits, which occur under high light, are not yet identified. Owing to its unique optical and Raman signal, NFK provides a new marker to use in the identification of ROS generation sites in PSII and other proteins. Also, the speculative hypothesis that NFK, and other oxidative modifications of tryptophan, play a role in the PSII damage and repair cycle is discussed. NFK may have a similar function during oxidative stress in other biologic systems.  相似文献   

7.
Light induction of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP) mRNA accumulation was studied in light-dark synchronized cultures of Chlamydomonas reinhardi. LHCP mRNA accumulation was prevented by the chlorophyll-synthesis inhibitor alpha,alpha-dipyridyl which blocks late steps in the chlorophyll biosynthetic pathway and leads to the accumulation of the porphyrin intermediate magnesium protoporphyrin methyl ester. LHCP mRNA accumulated normally, however, when chlorophyll synthesis was blocked by inhibitors such as hemin and levulinic acid which interfere with early steps in the chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway prior to the formation of magnesium protoporphyrin methyl ester. Similar effects were observed in the light induction of LHCP mRNA levels in protoporphyrin IX-accumulating mutants, brc-1 and brs-1. These mutants have low levels of LHCP mRNA when grown under heterotrophic conditions in the dark where they accumulate protoporphyrin IX. However, LHCP mRNA is light-induced in brc-1 which synthesizes chlorophyll in the light and presumably consumes porphyrin intermediates in doing so. These results suggest that the chlorophyll-synthesis intermediates, magnesium protoporphyrin methyl ester and its immediate precursors, inhibit by a feedback mechanism the light induction of LHCP mRNA accumulation. Low magnesium protoporphyrin methyl ester levels permit the light-induced accumulation of LHCP mRNA, whereas high magnesium protoporphyrin methyl ester levels destabilize LHCP mRNA regardless of the illumination conditions. Preliminary experiments show that LHCP mRNA accumulation in C. reinhardi is stimulated by blue light, and not by red light which stimulates LHCP mRNA accumulation in higher plants.  相似文献   

8.
PsbT is a small chloroplast-encoded hydrophobic polypeptide associated with the photosystem II (PSII) core complex. A psbT-deficient mutant (Delta psbT) of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grows photoautotrophically, whereas its growth is significantly impaired in strong light. To understand the photosensitivity of Delta psbT, we have studied the effect of strong illumination on PSII activity and proteins. It is shown that the level of PSII activity and proteins is reduced in the Delta psbT more significantly than in wild type under strong light. When recovery of the photodamaged PSII is inhibited by a chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitor, the light-induced inactivation and degradation of PSII occur similarly in wild-type and mutant cells. On the contrary, the recovery of PSII activity after partial photoinactivation is remarkably delayed in the Delta psbT cells, suggesting that PsbT is required for efficient recovery of the photodamaged PSII complex. These results therefore present the first evidence for involvement of this small PSII polypeptide in the recovery process. Partial disintegration of the purified PSII core complex and localization of PSII proteins in the resulting PSII subcore complexes have revealed that PsbT is associated with D1/D2 heterodimer. A possible role of PsbT in the recovery process is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Light-regulated gene expression during maize leaf development   总被引:43,自引:2,他引:41       下载免费PDF全文
We have established schedules of expression during maize leaf development in light and darkness for the messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and polypeptides for ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) subunits, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase), and the light- harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP). Levels of mRNAs were measured by hybridization with cloned probes, and proteins were measured by immunodetection on protein gel blots. The initial synthesis in leaves of all four mRNAs follows a light-independent schedule; illumination influences only the level to which each mRNA accumulates. The synthesis of RuBPCase small and large subunits and of PEPCase polypeptides also follows a light-independent schedule which is modified quantitatively by light. However, the accumulation of LHCP polypeptides absolutely requires illumination. The accumulation of each protein closely follows the accumulation of its mRNA during growth in light. Higher ratios of PEPCase and RuBPCase protein to mRNA occur during dark growth.  相似文献   

10.
Photosystem I and Photosystem II activities, as well as polypeptide content of chlorophyll (Chl)-protein complexes were analyzed in mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (BS) chloroplasts of maize (Zea mays L.) growing under moderate and very low irradiance. This paper discusses the application of two techniques: mechanical and enzymatic, for separation of M and BS chloroplasts. The enzymatic isolation method resulted in depletion of polypeptides of oxygen evolving complex (OEC) and alphaCF1 subunit of coupling factor; D1 and D2 polypeptides of PSII were reduced by 50%, whereas light harvesting complex of photosystem II (LHCII) proteins were still detectable. Loss of PSII polypeptides correlated with the decreasing of Chl fluorescence measured at room temperature. Using mechanical isolation of chloroplasts from BS cells, all tested polypeptides could be detected. We found a total lack of O2 evolution in BS chloroplasts, but dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP) was photoreduced. PSI activity of chloroplasts isolated from 14- and 28-day-old plants was similar in BS chloroplasts in moderate light (ML), but in low light (LL) it was reduced by about 20%. PSI and PSII activities in M chloroplasts of plants growing in ML decreased with aging of plants. In older LL-grown plants, activities of both photosystems were higher than those observed in chloroplasts from ML-grown plants. We suggest that in BS chloroplasts of maize, PSII complex is assembled typically for the agranal membranes (containing mainly stroma thylakoids) and is able to perform very limited electron transport activity. This in turn suggests the role of PSII for poising the redox state of PSI.  相似文献   

11.
Development of chlorosis and loss of PSII were compared in young spinach plants suffering under a combined magnesium and sulphur deficiency. Loss of chlorophyll could be detected already after the first week of deficiency and preceded any permanent functional inhibition of PSII as detected by changes in the chlorophyll fluorescence parameter Fv/Fm. A substantial decrease in Fv/Fm was observed only after the second week of deficiency. After 4 weeks, the plants had lost about 70% of their original chlorophyll content, but fluorescence data indicated that 80% of the existing PSII centers were still capable of initiating photosynthetic electron transport. The degradation of the photosynthetic apparatus without loss of PSII activity was due to changes in protein turnover, especially of the PSII D1 reaction center protein. Already by day 7 of deficiency, a 1.4-fold increase in D1 protein synthesis was observed measured as incorporation of 14C-leucine. Immunological determination by western-blotting did not reveal a change in D1 protein content. Thus, D1 protein was also degraded more rapidly. The increased turnover was high enough to prevent any loss or inhibition of PSII. After 3 weeks, D1 protein synthesis on a chlorophyll basis was further increased by a factor of 2. However, this was not enough to prevent a net loss of D1 protein of about 70%. Immunological determination revealed that together with the D1 protein also other polypeptides of PSII became degraded. This process prevented a large accumulation of photo-inactivated PSII centers. However, it initiated the breakdown of the other thylakoid proteins, especially of LHCII, resulting in the observed chlorosis. Together with the change in protein turnover and stability, a characteristic change in thylakoid protein phosphorylation was observed. In the deficient plants steady state phosphorylation of both LHCII and PSII proteins was increased in the dark. In the light phosphorylation of PSII proteins was stimulated and after 3 weeks of deficiency was even higher in the deficient leaves than in the control plants. In contrast, the phosphorylation level of LHCII decreased in the light and could hardly be detected after 3 weeks of deficiency. Phosphorylation of the reaction center polypeptides presumably increased their stability against proteolytic attack, whereas phosphorylated LHCII seems to be the substrate for proteolysis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Long-term drought stress on photosystem II (PSII) was studied in pea (Pisum sativum L.) seedlings. Drought stress (reduction of water content by 35–80%) led to a considerable depletion of the PSII core, and the remaining PSII complex appeared to be functional and reorganized, with a unit size (LHCP/PSII core) twofold greater than that of well-irrigated plants. By immunoblotting analysis of the PSII proteins from grana and stroma lamellae, the enhanced degradation of CP43 and D1 proteins was observed in water-stressed plants. Also, water stress caused increased phosphorylation of the PSII core and increased D1 protein synthesis. Water-stress-mediated increase in D1 synthesis did not occur when plants were exposed to photoinhibitory light. The depletion of the PSII core was essentially reversed when water-stressed plants grown at low visible irradiance were watered. We suggest that the syndrome caused by the effect of long-term water stress on photosynthesis is a combination of at least two events: a reduction in the number of active PSII centres caused by a physical destabilization of the PSII core and a PSII reorganization with enhanced D1 turnover to counteract the core depletion.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CP43 and CP47 -carotene-Chla-proteins of PSII core - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC diphenylcarbazide - Fv/Fm the ratio of yield of variable fluorescence to yield of maximal fluorescence when all reaction centres are closed - LHC(P) light-harvesting complex (proteins) - Wc water content This work was supported by the Italian National Council of Research special grant RAISA, subproject 2 (paper No. 2179) on water stress B. Geiken was supported by the European program Human Capital and Mobility. We thank Dr. Roberto Barbato (Department of Biology, University of Padua, Italy) for generous gifts of various PSII antibodies.  相似文献   

14.
Light stress in plants results in damage to the water oxidizing reaction center, photosystem II (PSII). Redox signaling, through oxidative modification of amino acid side chains, has been proposed to participate in this process, but the oxidative signals have not yet been identified. Previously, we described an oxidative modification, N-formylkynurenine (NFK), of W365 in the CP43 subunit. The yield of this modification increases under light stress conditions, in parallel with the decrease in oxygen evolving activity. In this work, we show that this modification, NFK365-CP43, is present in thylakoid membranes and may be formed by reactive oxygen species produced at the Mn(4)CaO(5) cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex. NFK accumulation correlates with the extent of photoinhibition in PSII and thylakoid membranes. A modest increase in ionic strength inhibits NFK365-CP43 formation, and leads to accumulation of a new, light-induced NFK modification (NFK317) in the D1 polypeptide. Western analysis shows that D1 degradation and oligomerization occur under both sets of conditions. The NFK modifications in CP43 and D1 are found 17 and 14 Angstrom from the Mn(4)CaO(5) cluster, respectively. Based on these results, we propose that NFK is an oxidative modification that signals for damage and repair in PSII. The data suggest a two pathway model for light stress responses. These pathways involve differential, specific, oxidative modification of the CP43 or D1 polypeptides.  相似文献   

15.
When photosynthetic organisms are exposed to abiotic stress, their photosynthetic activity is significantly depressed. In particular, photosystem II (PSII) in the photosynthetic machinery is readily inactivated under strong light and this phenomenon is referred to as photoinhibition of PSII. Other types of abiotic stress act synergistically with light stress to accelerate photoinhibition. Recent studies of photoinhibition have revealed that light stress damages PSII directly, whereas other abiotic stresses act exclusively to inhibit the repair of PSII after light-induced damage (photodamage). Such inhibition of repair is associated with suppression, by reactive oxygen species (ROS), of the synthesis of proteins de novo and, in particular, of the D1 protein, and also with the reduced efficiency of repair under stress conditions. Gene-technological improvements in the tolerance of photosynthetic organisms to various abiotic stresses have been achieved via protection of the repair system from ROS and, also, by enhancing the efficiency of repair via facilitation of the turnover of the D1 protein in PSII. In this review, we summarize the current status of research on photoinhibition as it relates to the effects of abiotic stress and we discuss successful strategies that enhance the activity of the repair machinery. In addition, we propose several potential methods for activating the repair system by gene-technological methods.  相似文献   

16.
Properties of the Photosystem II (PSII) complex were examined in the wild-type (control) strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 and its site-directed mutant D1-His252Leu in which the histidine residue 252 of the D1 polypeptide was replaced by leucine. This mutation caused a severe blockage of electron transfer between the PSII electron acceptors Q(A) and Q(B) and largely inhibited PSII oxygen evolving activity. Strong illumination induced formation of a D1-cytochrome b-559 adduct in isolated, detergent-solubilized thylakoid membranes from the control but not the mutant strain. The light-induced generation of the adduct was suppressed after prior modification of thylakoid proteins either with the histidine modifier platinum-terpyridine-chloride or with primary amino group modifiers. Anaerobic conditions and the presence of radical scavengers also inhibited the appearance of the adduct. The data suggest that the D1-cytochrome adduct is the product of a reaction between the oxidized residue His(252) of the D1 polypeptide and the N-terminal amino group of the cytochrome alpha subunit. As the rate of the D1 degradation in the control and mutant strains is similar, formation of the adduct does not seem to represent a required intermediary step in the D1 degradation pathway.  相似文献   

17.
Recent work has shown that the light-induced PS II core protein degradation, as monitored by immunostain reduction on Western blots, was stimulated even at low light during phosphorylation of thylakoid proteins in the presence of NaF, and that the thylakoid kinase inhibitor FSBA blocked completely the light- and ATP-stimulated degradation [Georgakopoulos and Argyroudi-Akoyunoglou (1997) Photosynth Res 53: 185–195]. To assess whether D1, D2 or both proteins are degraded, antibodies raised against D1/D2, or the D-E loop of D1 were used. Greatest immunostain reduction was observed with antibodies raised against D1/D2, immunostaining a 34 kDa protein on blots of 15% polyacrylamide-6 M urea gels, suggesting that the phosphorylation-induced degradation may be mainly directed against D2. To see how protein phosphorylation might be implicated in PS II core protein degradation we further tested the effect of free radical scavengers, on thylakoid protein phosphorylation. Active oxygen scavengers like n-propyl gallate, histidine, and imidazole, shown earlier to inhibit high light-induced D1 degradation, also suppressed the phosphorylation of thylakoid proteins; on the other hand, NaN3 and D-mannitol, known to stimulate light- induced D1 degradation did not suppress protein phosphorylation, whereas superoxide dismutase and catalase, known also to inhibit high light-induced D1 degradation, did not affect thylakoid protein phosphorylation. In addition, the ATP-induced degradation was also observed in the dark under conditions of kinase activation, and in the light under anaerobic conditions, that block light-induced degradation, whereas it was reduced in the absence of NaF, the phosphatase inhibitor. The results point to the involvement of a proteolytic system in PS II core protein degradation, which is active in its phosphorylated state.  相似文献   

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20.
In synchronized Euglena gracilis, strain Z, the synthesis of the apoproteins for the chlorophyll-protein-complexes CPI, CPa, and LHCP is light-dependent and takes place in the light period in a characteristic consecutive fashion: CPI at 1 to 2 hours, CPa at 7 to 12 hours, and LHCP at 8 to 12 hours. The syntheses sequence of the chlorophyll-protein-complexes coincides with the efficiency alterations of the photosynthetic apparatus of E. gracilis during the light period of the cell cycle. In particular, the synthesis onset of the photosystem II-related polypeptides CPa and LHCP aligns with the decrease of oxygen evolution at 6 hours of the light period and is discussed as reorganization process in the thylakoids.  相似文献   

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