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1.
The putative gene (st2133) for ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) from Sulfolobus tokodaii, a thermoacidophilic crenarchaeon, was heterologously expressed. About 90 % of the purified product was a homodimer containing 0.46 mol FAD/mol subunit, and showing NADPH:DCPIP oxidoreductase activity, V max being 1.38 and 21.8 U/mg (70 °C) in the absence and presence of 1 mM FMN. NADPH was a much better electron donor than NADH with various electron acceptors, such as oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, DCPIP, cytochrome c, and dithiobisnitrobenzoate. Most of the reactions were activated by 15- to 140-fold on addition of FMN, while FAD was 5–10 times less effective. Ferredoxin (Fd) from S. tokodaii served as an electron carrier in both Fd-dependent NADPH formation and NADPH-dependent Fd reduction. ST2133 belongs to the thioredoxin reductase-like protein family, which is slightly distantly related to FNR family proteins from bacteria, plants and man. This is the first report on FNR from a crenarchaeon, providing a clue to the recycling of Fd during archaeal metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
In photosynthetic organisms, ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) is known to provide NADPH for CO2 assimilation, but it also utilizes NADPH to provide reduced ferredoxin. The cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803 produces two FNR isoforms, a small one (FNRS) similar to the one found in plant plastids and a large one (FNRL) that is associated with the phycobilisome, a light-harvesting complex. Here we show that a mutant lacking FNRL exhibits a higher NADP+/NADPH ratio. We also purified to homogeneity a phycobilisome subcomplex comprising FNRL, named FNRL-PC. The enzymatic activities of FNRL-PC were compared with those of FNRS. During NADPH oxidation, FNRL-PC exhibits a 30% decrease in the Michaelis constant Km(NADPH), and a 70% increase in Km(ferredoxin), which is in agreement with its predicted lower activity of ferredoxin reduction. During NADP+ reduction, the FNRL-PC shows a 29/43% decrease in the rate of single electron transfer from reduced ferredoxin in the presence/absence of NADP+. The increase in Km(ferredoxin) and the rate decrease of single reduction are attributed to steric hindrance by the phycocyanin moiety of FNRL-PC. Both isoforms are capable of catalyzing the NADP+ reduction under multiple turnover conditions. Furthermore, we obtained evidence that, under high ionic strength conditions, electron transfer from reduced ferredoxin is rate limiting during this process. The differences that we observe might not fully explain the in vivo properties of the Synechocystis mutants expressing only one of the isoforms. Therefore, we advocate that FNR localization and/or substrates availability are essential in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
An NADPH-dependent NO2-reducing system was reconstituted in vitro using ferredoxin (Fd) NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR), Fd, and nitrite reductase (NiR) from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. NO2 reduction was dependent on all protein components and was operated under either aerobic or anaerobic conditions. NO2 reduction by this in vitro pathway was inhibited up to 63% by 1 mm NADP+. NADP+ did not affect either methyl viologen-NiR or Fd-NiR activity, indicating that inhibition was mediated through FNR. When NADPH was replaced with a glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH)-dependent NADPH-generating system, rates of NO2 reduction reached approximately 10 times that of the NADPH-dependent system. G6PDH could be replaced by either 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase or isocitrate dehydrogenase, indicating that G6PDH functioned to: (a) regenerate NADPH to support NO2 reduction and (b) consume NADP+, releasing FNR from NADP+ inhibition. These results demonstrate the ability of FNR to facilitate the transfer of reducing power from NADPH to Fd in the direction opposite to that which occurs in photosynthesis. The rate of G6PDH-dependent NO2 reduction observed in vitro is capable of accounting for the observed rates of dark NO3 assimilation by C. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

4.
Ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase is an enzyme associated with the stromal side of the thylakoid membrane in the chloroplast. It is involved in photosynthetic linear electron transport to produce NADPH and is supposed to play a role in cyclic electron transfer, generating a transmembrane pH gradient allowing ATP production, if photosystem II is non-functional or no NADP+ is available for reduction. Different FNR isoforms have been described in non-photosynthetic tissues, where the enzyme catalyses the NADPH-dependent reduction of ferredoxin (Fd), necessary for some biosynthetic pathways. Here, we report the isolation and purification of two FNR isoproteins from wheat leaves, called FNR-A and FNR-B. These forms of the enzyme were identified as products of two different genes, as confirmed by mass spectrometry. The molecular masses of FNR-A and FNR-B were 34.3 kDa and 35.5 kDa, respectively. The isoelectric point of both FNR-A and FNR-B was about 5, but FNR-B appeared more acidic (of about 0.2 pH unit) than FNR-A. Both isoenzymes were able to catalyse a NADPH-dependent reduction of dibromothymoquinone and the mixture of isoforms catalysed reduction of cytochrome c in the presence of Fd. For the first time, the pH- and ionic strength dependent oligomerization of FNRs is observed. No other protein was necessary for complex formation. The putative role of the two FNR isoforms in photosynthesis is discussed based on current knowledge of electron transport in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

5.
Ferredoxin:NADP+:reductase (FNR) catalyzes one terminal step of the conversion of light energy into chemical energy during photosynthesis. FNR uses two high energy electrons photoproduced by photosystem I (PSI) and conveyed, one by one, by a ferredoxin (Fd), to reduce NADP+ to NADPH. The reducing power of NADPH is finally involved in carbon assimilation. The interaction between oxidized FNR and Fd was studied by crystallography at 2.4 Å resolution leading to a three-dimensional picture of an Fd–FNR biologically relevant complex. This complex suggests that FNR and Fd specifically interact prior to each electron transfer and disassemble upon a redox-linked conformational change of the Fd.  相似文献   

6.
Rapid reaction studies presented herein show that ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR, EC 1.18.1.2) catalyzes electron transfer from spinach ferredoxin (Fd) to NADP+ via a ternary complex, Fd X FNR X NADP+. In the absence of NADP+, reduction of ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase by Fd was much slower than the catalytic rate: 37-80 s-1 versus at least 445 e-s-1; dissociation of oxidized spinach ferredoxin (Fdox) from one-electron reduced ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (FNRsq) limited the reduction of FNR. This confirms the steady-state kinetic analysis of Masaki et al. (Masaki, R., Yoshikaya, S., and Matsubara, H. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 700, 101-109). Occupation of the NADP+ binding site of FNR by NADP+ or by 2',5'-ADP (a nonreducible NADP+ analogue) greatly increased the rate of electron transfer from Fd to FNR, releiving inhibition by Fdox. NADP+ (and 2',5'-ADP) probably facilitate the dissociation of Fdox; equilibrium studies have shown that nucleotide binding decreases the association of Fd with FNR (Batie, C. J. (1983) Ph.D. dissertation, Duke University; Batie, C. J., and Kamin, H. (1982) in Flavins and Flavoproteins VII (Massey, V., and Williams, C. H., Jr., eds) pp. 679-683, Elsevier, New York; Batie, C.J., and Kamin, H. (1982) Fed. Proc. 41, 888; and Batie, C.J., and Kamin, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 8832-8839). Premixing Fd with FNR was found to inhibit the reaction of the flavoprotein with NADP+ and with NADPH; thus, substrate binding may be ordered, NADP+ first, then Fd. FNRred and NADP+ very rapidly formed an FNRred X NADP+ complex with flavin to nicotinamide charge transfer bands. The Fdred X NADP+ complex then relaxed to an equilibrium species; the spectrum indicated a predominance of FNRox X NADPH charge-transfer complex. However, charge-transfer species were not observed during turnover; thus, their participation in catalysis of electron transfer from Fd to NADP+ remains uncertain. The catalytic rate of Fd to NADP+ electron transfer, as well as the rates of electron transfer from Fd to FNR, and from FNR to NADP+ were decreased when the reactants were in D2O; diaphorase activity was unaffected by solvent. On the basis of the data presented, a scheme for the catalytic mechanism of catalysis by FNR is presented.  相似文献   

7.
《BBA》2014,1837(2):251-263
Ferredoxin-nicotinamide–adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) reductase (FNR) catalyses the production of reduced nicotinamide–adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) in photosynthetic organisms, where its flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor takes two electrons from two reduced ferredoxin (Fd) molecules in two sequential steps, and transfers them to NADP+ in a single hydride transfer (HT) step. Despite the good knowledge of this catalytic machinery, additional roles can still be envisaged for already reported key residues, and new features are added to residues not previously identified as having a particular role in the mechanism. Here, we analyse for the first time the role of Ser59 in Anabaena FNR, a residue suggested by recent theoretical simulations as putatively involved in competent binding of the coenzyme in the active site by cooperating with Ser80. We show that Ser59 indirectly modulates the geometry of the active site, the interaction with substrates and the electronic properties of the isoalloxazine ring, and in consequence the electron transfer (ET) and HT processes. Additionally, we revise the role of Tyr79 and Ser80, previously investigated in homologous enzymes from plants. Our results probe that the active site of FNR is tuned by a H-bond network that involves the side-chains of these residues and that results to critical optimal substrate binding, exchange of electrons and, particularly, competent disposition of the C4n (hydride acceptor/donor) of the nicotinamide moiety of the coenzyme during the reversible HT event.  相似文献   

8.
Direct interaction of ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) with thylakoid membranes was postulated as a part of the cyclic electron flow mechanism. In vitro binding of FNR to digalactosyldiacylglycerol and monogalactosyldiacylglycerol membranes was also shown. In this paper we deal with the latter interaction in more detail describing the effect for two FNR forms of Synechocystis PCC 6803. The so-called short FNR (sFNR) is homologous to FNR from higher plant chloroplasts. The long FNR (lFNR) form contains an additional domain, responsible for the interaction with phycobilisomes. We compare the binding of both sFNR and lFNR forms to native and non-native lipids. We also include factors which could modulate this process: pH change, temperature change, presence of ferredoxin, NADP+ and NADPH and heavy metals. For the lFNR, we also include phycobilisomes as a modulating factor. The membrane binding is generally faster at lower pH. The sFNR was binding faster than lFNR. Ferredoxin isoforms with higher midpoint potential, as well as NADPH and NADP+, weakened the binding. Charged lipids and high phosphate promoted the binding. Heavy metal ions decreased the rate of membrane binding only when FNR was preincubated with them before injection beneath the monolayer. FNR binding was limited to surface lipid groups and did not influence hydrophobic chain packing. Taken together, FNR interaction with lipids appears to be non-specific, with an electrostatic component. This suggests that the direct FNR interaction with lipids is most likely not a factor in directing electron transfer, but should be taken into account during in vitro studies.  相似文献   

9.
During daffodil flower development, chloroplasts differentiate into photosynthetically inactive chromoplasts having lost functional photosynthetic reaction centers. Chromoplasts exhibit a respiratory activity reducing oxygen to water and generating ATP. Immunoblots revealed the presence of the plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX), the NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH) complex, the cytochrome b6f complex, ATP synthase and several isoforms of ferredoxin‐NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR), and ferredoxin (Fd). Fluorescence spectroscopy allowed the detection of chlorophyll a in the cytochrome b6f complex. Here we characterize the electron transport pathway of chromorespiration by using specific inhibitors for the NDH complex, the cytochrome b6f complex, FNR and redox‐inactive Fd in which the iron was replaced by gallium. Our data suggest an electron flow via two separate pathways, both reducing plastoquinone (PQ) and using PTOX as oxidase. The first oxidizes NADPH via FNR, Fd and cytochrome bh of the cytochrome b6f complex, and does not result in the pumping of protons across the membrane. In the second, electron transport takes place via the NDH complex using both NADH and NADPH as electron donor. FNR and Fd are not involved in this pathway. The NDH complex is responsible for the generation of the proton gradient. We propose a model for chromorespiration that may also be relevant for the understanding of chlororespiration and for the characterization of the electron input from Fd to the cytochrome b6f complex during cyclic electron transport in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

10.
We have successfully expressed recombinant mitochondrial‐type ferredoxin (mtFd) and ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (mtFNR) from Cryptosporidium parvum and characterized their biochemical features for the first time for an apicomplexan. Both C. parvum mtFd (CpmtFd) and FNR (CpmtFNR) were obtained and purified as holo‐proteins, in which the correct assembly of [2Fe–2S] cluster in Fd and that of FAD in FNR were confirmed and characterized by UV/vis and electron paramagnetic resonance. These proteins were fully functional and CpmtFNR was capable of transferring electrons from NADPH to CpmtFd in a cytochrome c‐coupled assay that followed a typical Michaelis‐Menten kinetics. Apicomplexan mtFd and mtFNR proteins were evolutionarily divergent from their counterparts in humans and animals and could be explored as potential drug targets in Cryptosporidium and other apicomplexans.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Working in tandem, two photosystems in the chloroplast thylakoid membranes produce a linear electron flow from H2O to NADP+. Final electron transfer from ferredoxin to NADP+ is accomplished by a flavoenzyme ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR). Here we describe TROL (t hylakoid r ho danese‐l ike protein), a nuclear‐encoded component of thylakoid membranes that is required for tethering of FNR and sustaining efficient linear electron flow (LEF) in vascular plants. TROL consists of two distinct modules; a centrally positioned rhodanese‐like domain and a C‐terminal hydrophobic FNR binding region. Analysis of Arabidopsis mutant lines indicates that, in the absence of TROL, relative electron transport rates at high‐light intensities are severely lowered accompanied with significant increase in non‐photochemical quenching (NPQ). Thus, TROL might represent a missing thylakoid membrane docking site for a complex between FNR, ferredoxin and NADP+. Such association might be necessary for maintaining photosynthetic redox poise and enhancement of the NPQ.  相似文献   

13.
《BBA》2020,1861(3):148140
Among the thioredoxin reductase-type ferredoxin-NAD(P)+ oxidoreductase (FNR) family, FNR from photosynthetic purple non‑sulfur bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris (RpFNR) is distinctive because the predicted residue on the re-face of the isoalloxazine ring portion of the FAD prosthetic group is a tyrosine. Here, we report the crystal structure of wild type RpFNR and kinetic analyses of the reaction of wild type, and Y328F, Y328H and Y328S mutants with NADP+/NADPH using steady state and pre-steady state kinetic approaches.The obtained crystal structure of wild type RpFNR confirmed the presence of Tyr328 on the re-face of the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD prosthetic group through the unique hydrogen bonding of its hydroxyl group. In the steady state assays, the substitution results in the decrease of Kd for NADP+ and KM for NADPH in the diaphorase assay; however, the kcat values also decreased significantly. In the stopped-flow spectrophotometry, mixing oxidized RpFNRs with NADPH and reduced RpFNRs with NADP+ resulted in rapid charge transfer complex formation followed by hydride transfer. The observed rate constants for the hydride transfer in both directions were comparable (>400 s−1). The substitution did not drastically affect the rate of hydride transfer, but substantially slowed down the subsequent release and re-association of NADP+/NADPH in both directions. The obtained results suggest that Tyr328 stabilizes the stacking of C-terminal residues on the isoalloxazine ring portion of the FAD prosthetic group, which impedes the access of NADP+/NADPH on the isoalloxazine ring portions, in turn, enhancing the release of the NADP+/NADPH and/or reaction with electron transfer proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Bojko  M.  Więckowski  S. 《Photosynthetica》2001,39(4):553-556
The effects of phenylmercuric acetate (PMA) and apoferredoxin (apoFd) on the diaphorase activity of spinach ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) in the presence of dibromothymoquinone (DBMIB) or cytochrome c (Cyt c) were studied. PMA inhibited effectively (I50 = < 5 M) ferredoxin-dependent Cyt c reduction but did not affect evidently the enzyme activity in the presence of DBMIB as an electron acceptor. ApoFd caused also inhibition of Cyt c reduction but slightly stimulated, like ferredoxin, DBMIB reduction. We confirm a hypothesis according to which three binding sites for substrates [NADP(H), Fd-Cyt c, quinone/dichlorophenol indophenol] occur within the molecule of isolated FNR.  相似文献   

15.
Utilization of electrons from the photosynthetic water splitting reaction for the generation of biofuels, commodities as well as application in biotransformations requires a partial rerouting of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Due to its rather negative redox potential and its bifurcational function, ferredoxin at the acceptor side of Photosystem 1 is one of the focal points for such an engineering. With hydrogen production as model system, we show here the impact and potential of redox partner design involving ferredoxin (Fd), ferredoxin-oxido-reductase (FNR) and [FeFe]?hydrogenase HydA1 on electron transport in a future cyanobacterial design cell of Synechocystis PCC 6803. X-ray-structure-based rational design and the allocation of specific interaction residues by NMR-analysis led to the construction of Fd- and FNR-mutants, which in appropriate combination enabled an about 18-fold enhanced electron flow from Fd to HydA1 (in competition with equimolar amounts of FNR) in in vitro assays. The negative impact of these mutations on the Fd-FNR electron transport which indirectly facilitates H2 production (with a contribution of ≤42% by FNR variants and ≤23% by Fd-variants) and the direct positive impact on the Fd-HydA1 electron transport (≤23% by Fd-mutants) provide an excellent basis for the construction of a hydrogen-producing design cell and the study of photosynthetic efficiency-optimization with cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

16.
Ferredoxin (Fd) is the major iron-containing protein in photosynthetic organisms and is central to reductive metabolism in the chloroplast. The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genome encodes six plant type [Fe2S2] ferredoxins, products of PETF, FDX2–FDX6. We performed the functional analysis of these ferredoxins by localizing Fd, Fdx2, Fdx3, and Fdx6 to the chloroplast by using isoform-specific antibodies and monitoring the pattern of gene expression by iron and copper nutrition, nitrogen source, and hydrogen peroxide stress. In addition, we also measured the midpoint redox potentials of Fd and Fdx2 and determined the kinetic parameters of their reactions with several ferredoxin-interacting proteins, namely nitrite reductase, Fd:NADP+ oxidoreductase, and Fd:thioredoxin reductase. We found that each of the FDX genes is differently regulated in response to changes in nutrient supply. Moreover, we show that Fdx2 (Em = −321 mV), whose expression is regulated by nitrate, is a more efficient electron donor to nitrite reductase relative to Fd. Overall, the results suggest that each ferredoxin isoform has substrate specificity and that the presence of multiple ferredoxin isoforms allows for the allocation of reducing power to specific metabolic pathways in the chloroplast under various growth conditions.Ferredoxins are small (∼11,000-kDa), soluble, iron-sulfur cluster-containing proteins with strongly negative redox potentials (−350 to −450 mV) that function as electron donors at reductive steps in various metabolic pathways (13). In photosynthetic organisms, the well studied ferredoxin (Fd4; the product of the PETF gene) is the most abundant iron-containing protein in the chloroplast and is central to the distribution of photosynthetically derived reductive power (4).The most well known Fd-dependent reaction is the transfer of electrons from photosystem I (PSI) to NADPH, catalyzed by Fd:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR). The NADPH produced by this reaction donates electrons to the only reductant-requiring step in the Calvin cycle and other steps in anabolic pathways that require NADPH as reductant. In addition, reduced Fd directly donates electrons to other metabolic pathways by interacting with various enzymes in the chloroplast. This includes Fd:thioredoxin reductase (FTR), which converts a light-driven electron signal into a thiol signal that is transmitted to thioredoxins (TRXs) present in the plastid as different types (or different isoforms). Once reduced, TRXs interact with specific disulfide bonds on target enzymes, modulating their activities (5). Other Fd targets include hydrogenase, which is responsible for hydrogen production in anaerobic conditions in green algae; glutamine-oxoglutarate amidotransferase in amino acid synthesis; nitrite and sulfite reductases in nitrate and sulfate assimilation, respectively; stearoyl-ACP Δ9-desaturase in fatty acid desaturation; and phycocyanobilin:Fd oxidoreductase in synthesis of phytochromobilin (6). Fd also functions in non-photosynthetic cells. Here, FNR catalyzes the reduction of Fd by NADPH produced in the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, enabling Fd-dependent metabolism to occur in the dark (7, 8).The single-celled green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is an excellent reference organism for studying both metabolic adaptation to nutrient stress and photosynthesis (913). The Chlamydomonas genome encodes six highly related plant type ferredoxin genes (9). Until recently, only the major photosynthetic ferredoxin, Fd (encoded by PETF), which mediates electron transfer between PSI and FNR, had been characterized in detail (14).Many land plants are known to have multiple ferredoxins. Typically, they are differently localized on the basis of their function. Photosynthetic ferredoxins reduce NADP+ at a faster rate and are localized to the leaves, whereas non-photosynthetic ferredoxins are more efficiently reduced by NADPH and are localized to the roots. Arabidopsis thaliana has a total of six ferredoxin isoforms (15). Of these, two are photosynthetic and localized in the leaves. The most abundant, AtFd2, is involved in linear electron flow, and the less abundant (5% of the ferredoxin pool), AtFd1, has been implicated in cyclic electron flow (16). There is one non-photosynthetic ferredoxin located in the roots, AtFd3, which is nitrate-inducible. This protein has higher electron transfer activity with sulfite reductase in in vitro assays compared with other Arabidopsis ferredoxin isoforms, suggesting in vivo function of AtFd3 in nitrate and sulfate assimilation (15, 17). In addition, there is one evolutionarily distant ferredoxin, AtFd4, of unknown function with a more positive redox potential present in the leaves and two other proteins which are “ferredoxin-like” and uncharacterized (15). Zea mays has four ferredoxin isoforms, two photosynthetic and two non-photosynthetic (18). One of the non-photosynthetic isoforms is specifically induced by nitrite, suggestive of a role in nitrate metabolism (19). A cyanobacterium, Anabaena 7120, has two ferredoxins, vegetative and heterocyst type (by analogy to leaf and root types, respectively). The heterocyst type is present only in cells that have differentiated into nitrogen-fixing cells, indicating that this form may serve to transfer electrons to nitrogenase (20).We hypothesize that the presence of as many as six ferredoxin isoforms in a single-celled organism like C. reinhardtii allows for the differential regulation of each isoform and therefore the prioritization of reducing power toward certain metabolic pathways under changing environmental conditions. To test this hypothesis, expression of the genes (PETF and FDX2–FDX6) encoding the six ferredoxin isoforms in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was monitored under various conditions in which well characterized ferredoxin-dependent enzymes are known to be expressed. In addition, we also analyzed the interaction of Fd and Fdx2 with several ferredoxin-interacting proteins, such as NiR, FNR, and FTR, and determined the kinetic parameters of the corresponding reactions.We found that each of the FDX genes is indeed differently regulated in response to changes in nutrient supply. In the case of FDX2 whose product is most similar to classical Fd, we suggest that it has specificity for nitrite reductase based on its pattern of expression and activity with nitrite reductase.  相似文献   

17.
The human malaria parasite (Plasmodium falciparum) possesses a plastid-derived organelle called the apicoplast, which is believed to employ metabolisms crucial for the parasite's survival. We cloned and studied the biochemical properties of plant-type ferredoxin (Fd) and Fd-NADP+ reductase (FNR), a redox system that potentially supplies reducing power to Fd-dependent metabolic pathways in malaria parasite apicoplasts. The recombinant P. falciparum Fd and FNR proteins were produced by synthetic genes with altered codon usages preferred in Escherichia coli. The redox potential of the Fd was shown to be considerably more positive than those of leaf-type and root-type Fds from plants, which is favourable for a presumed direction of electron flow from catabolically generated NADPH to Fd in the apicoplast. The backbone structure of P. falciparum Fd, as solved by X-ray crystallography, closely resembles those of Fds from plants, and the surface-charge distribution shows several acidic regions in common with plant Fds and some basic regions unique to this Fd. P. falciparum FNR was able to transfer electrons selectively to P. falciparum Fd in a reconstituted system of NADPH-dependent cytochrome c reduction. These results indicate that an NADPH-FNR-Fd cascade is operative in the apicoplast of human malaria parasites.  相似文献   

18.
The contribution to reduction of oxygen by ferredoxin (Fd) to the overall reduction of oxygen in isolated pea thylakoids was studied in the presence of Fd versus Fd + NADP+. The overall rate of electron transport was measured using a determination of Photosystem II quantum yield from chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, and the rate of oxidation of Fd was measured from the light-induced redox changes of Fd. At low light intensity, increasing Fd concentration from 5 to 30 μM in the absence of NADP+ increased the proportion of oxygen reduction by Fd from 25–35 to 40–60% in different experiments. This proportion decreased with increasing light intensity. When NADP+ was added in the presence of 15 μM Fd, which was optimal for the NADP+ reduction rate, the participation of Fd in the reduction of oxygen was low, no more than 10%, and it also decreased with increasing light intensity. At high light intensity, the overall oxygen reduction rates in the presence of Fd + NADP+ and in the presence of Fd alone were comparable. The significance of reduction of dioxygen either by water-soluble Fd or by the membrane-bound carriers of the photosynthetic electron transport chain for redox signaling under different light intensities is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
[Bu4N]2[Pt12(CO)24] (1) catalyses the selective reduction of electron acceptors (S), methylene blue (MB+), safranine O (Saf+), methyl viologen (MV2+) and ferricyanide by dihydrogen. Macroscopic rate investigations for the cationic substrates in DMF, and for ferricyanide in DMSO have been carried out. In all cases, kobs is given by k1 [S] + k2, indicating that there are two catalytic cycles. In one of them, the formation of a complex between S and [Pt12(CO)24]2− in the rate determining step (rate constant k1) is followed by electron transfer and/or other fast steps. In the other catalytic cycle, the rate determining step (rate constant k2) involves formation of the solvated cluster anion [Pt12(CO)24]2−. The solvated cluster then undergoes fast reduction by dihydrogen and other reactions. The relative contributions of these two cycles depend on the substrate, and for MB+, Saf+, MV2+ and [Fe(CN)6]3− the contribution of the second cycle is about 99%, 55%, 77% and 97%, respectively. Both k1 and k2 of ferricyanide are about three orders of magnitude smaller than those of the cationic electron acceptors. The rates of reduction of MB+ and Saf+ have also been studied in the presence of added water. Rates increase as the presence of water provides an additional pathway for the reduction of [Pt12(CO)24]2− to [Pt9(CO)18]2−.  相似文献   

20.
Cyclic electron transport around PSI through the NAD(P)H dehydrogenasecomplex (NDH) in tobacco leaf disks, measured as an increasein the dark level of Chl fluorescence after the onset of darkness,was inhibited by antimycin A, an inhibitor of ferredoxin quinonereductase (FQR), suggesting that antimycin A inhibits not onlythe FQR-mediated cyclic flow but also the NDH-dependent flow.This electron flow was inhibited also by amytal, an inhibitorof mitochondrial NDH and by nigericin. The reduction of plastoquinonewas detected when NADPH and ferredoxin were added to the suspensionof the osmotically ruptured chloroplasts of the wild type andNDH-defective mutant. Because the addition of NADPH alone didnot induce the reduction, membrane-bound ferredoxin NADP+reductase(FNR) was supposed to reduce ferredoxin, which may be a moredirect electron donor for the plastoquinone reduction. The presenceof two types of reducing enzymes was suggested from the bi-phasicinhibition of plastoquinone reduction by antimycin A in thewild type. It is proposed that the reducing activity inhibitedby antimycin A at a low concentration is attributed to FQR andthe less sensitive activity to NDH. (Received June 29, 1998; Accepted September 7, 1998)  相似文献   

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