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1.
Photosynthetic supercomplexes from the cryptophyte Rhodomonas CS24 were isolated by a short detergent treatment of membranes from the cryptophyte Rhodomonas CS24 and studied by electron microscopy and low-temperature absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. At least three different types of supercomplexes of photosystem I (PSI) monomers and peripheral Chl a/c(2) proteins were found. The most common complexes have Chl a/c(2) complexes at both sides of the PSI core monomer and have dimensions of about 17x24 nm. The peripheral antenna in these supercomplexes shows no obvious similarities in size and/or shape with that of the PSI-LHCI supercomplexes from the green plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and may be comprised of about 6-8 monomers of Chl a/c(2) light-harvesting complexes. In addition, two different types of supercomplexes of photosystem II (PSII) dimers and peripheral Chl a/c(2) proteins were found. The detected complexes consist of a PSII core dimer and three or four monomeric Chl a/c(2) proteins on one side of the PSII core at positions that in the largest complex are similar to those of Lhcb5, a monomer of the S-trimer of LHCII, Lhcb4 and Lhcb6 in green plants.  相似文献   

2.
Action spectra for photosystem II (PSII)-driven oxygen evolution and of photosystem I (PSI)-mediated H(2) photoproduction and photoinhibition of respiration were used to determine the participation of chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-binding Pcb proteins in the functions of pigment apparatus of Prochlorothrix hollandica. Comparison of the in situ action spectra with absorption spectra of PSII and PSI complexes isolated from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 revealed a shoulder at 650 nm that indicated presence of Chl b in the both photosystems of P. hollandica. Fitting of two action spectra to absorption spectrum of the cells showed a chlorophyll ratio of 4:1 in favor of PSI. Effective antenna sizes estimated from photochemical cross-sections of the relevant photoreactions were found to be 192+/-28 and 139+/-15 chlorophyll molecules for the competent PSI and PSII reaction centers, respectively. The value for PSI is in a quite good agreement with previous electron microscopy data for isolated Pcb-PSI supercomplexes from P. hollandica that show a trimeric PSI core surrounded by a ring of 18 Pcb subunits. The antenna size of PSII implies that the PSII core dimers are associated with approximately 14 Pcb light-harvesting proteins, and form the largest known Pcb-PSII supercomplexes.  相似文献   

3.
Photosynthesis powers nearly all life on Earth. Light absorbed by photosystems drives the conversion of water and carbon dioxide into sugars. In plants, photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) work in series to drive the electron transport from water to NADP+. As both photosystems largely work in series, a balanced excitation pressure is required for optimal photosynthetic performance. Both photosystems are composed of a core and light-harvesting complexes (LHCI) for PSI and LHCII for PSII. When the light conditions favor the excitation of one photosystem over the other, a mobile pool of trimeric LHCII moves between both photosystems thus tuning their antenna cross-section in a process called state transitions. When PSII is overexcited multiple LHCIIs can associate with PSI. A trimeric LHCII binds to PSI at the PsaH/L/O site to form a well-characterized PSI–LHCI–LHCII supercomplex. The binding site(s) of the “additional” LHCII is still unclear, although a mediating role for LHCI has been proposed. In this work, we measured the PSI antenna size and trapping kinetics of photosynthetic membranes from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants. Membranes from wild-type (WT) plants were compared to those of the ΔLhca mutant that completely lacks the LHCI antenna. The results showed that “additional” LHCII complexes can transfer energy directly to the PSI core in the absence of LHCI. However, the transfer is about two times faster and therefore more efficient, when LHCI is present. This suggests LHCI mediates excitation energy transfer from loosely bound LHCII to PSI in WT plants.

The light-harvesting antennae of photosystem I facilitate energy transfer from trimeric light-harvesting complex II to photosystem I in the stroma lamellae membrane.  相似文献   

4.
The photosynthetic acclimation of Tradescantia albiflora (Kunth), a trailing ground species naturally occurring in the deep shade of rainforests, was studied in relation to growth irradiance (glasshouse; direct light and 1 to 4 layers of shade cloth, giving 100 to 1.4% relative growth irradiance). Contrary to other irradiance studies of higher plants grown in natural habitats or controlled light environments, the chlorophyll a/b ratios of Tradescantia leaves were low (∼2.2) and constant. Acclimation to growth irradiance caused no changes in the relative amounts of specific Chl-proteins or the numbers of photosystem I (PSI) and PSII reaction centres on a chlorophyll basis, indicating that the light-harvesting antenna sizes of PSII and PSI, as well as the photosystem stoichiometry, were independent of growth irradiance. However, the amount of cytochrome f and ATP synthase on a chlorophyll basis increased with increasing the relative growth irradiance from 1.4 to 35%, showing acclimation of electron transport and photophosphorylation capacity. The photosynthetic capacity and ribulose 1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) activity also increased with increase of the growth irradiance to 35%. Beyond that, the inflexible PSII/PSI stoichiometry and shade-type photosystem II/light-harvesting units in Tradescaniia are a disadvantage for long-term exposure to high irradiance since the leaves are more prone to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The adaptability of the thylakoid membrane to extended photoperiod (from natural to 24 h) was studied using a photoperiod-sensitive species ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Trend) and a non-photoperiod-sensitive species ( Capsicum annuum L. cv. Delphin). Our results have shown that thylakoid membranes of both species adapt to an extended photoperiod by increasing their photosystem II to photosystem I ratio (PSII/PSI) in order to provide a more balanced energy distribution between both photosystems to improve quantum yield. In tomato plants, these results correspond with a lower chlorophyll (Chl) a/b ratio, a decrease in Chl associated with PSI light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complexes and with an increase in Chl associated with PSII light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complexes. In spite of these changes, the electron transport capacity through PSII and PSI per unit of Chl and the light saturation point of PSII remained unchanged. The inability of tomato plants to use supplemental light for an extended photoperiod is not the result of photoinhibitory conditions. In pepper plants a significant increase in electron transport capacity and in the light saturation point of PSII was found. There was a significant increase in CO2 assimilation when the light period was increased from 12 to 24 h. In contrast to tomato, pepper plants adapt to a 24-h photoperiod by increasing their carboxylation capacity which is accompanied by an increase in electron transport capacity and the light saturation point.  相似文献   

7.
The response of the photosynthetic apparatus in the green alga Dunaliella salina, to irradiance stress was investigated. Cells were grown under physiological conditions at 500 millimoles per square meter per second (control) and under irradiance-stress conditions at 1700 millimoles per square meter per second incident intensity (high light, HL). In control cells, the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I (PSI) contained 210 chlorophyll a/b molecules. It was reduced to 105 chlorophyll a/b in HL-grown cells. In control cells, the dominant form of photosystem II (PSII) was PSIIα(about 63% of the total PSII) containing >250 chlorophyll a/b molecules. The smaller antenna size PSIIβ centers (about 37% of PSII) contained 135 ± 10 chlorophyll a/b molecules. In sharp contrast, the dominant form of PSII in HL-grown cells accounted for about 95% of all PSII centers and had an antenna size of only about 60 chlorophyll a molecules. This newly identified PSII unit is termed PSIIγ. The HL-grown cells showed a substantially elevated PSII/PSI stoichiometry ratio in their thylakoid membranes (PSII/PSI = 3.0/1.0) compared to that of control cells (PSII/PSI = 1.4/1.0). The steady state irradiance stress created a chronic photoinhibition condition in which D. salina thylakoids accumulate an excess of photochemically inactive PSII units. These PSII units contain both the reaction center proteins and the core chlorophyll-protein antenna complex but cannot perform a photochemical charge separation. The results are discussed in terms of regulatory mechanism(s) in the plant cell whose function is to alleviate the adverse effect of irradiance stress.  相似文献   

8.
Light drives photosynthesis. In plants it is absorbed by light-harvesting antenna complexes associated with Photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII). As PSI and PSII work in series, it is important that the excitation pressure on the two photosystems is balanced. When plants are exposed to illumination that overexcites PSII, a special pool of the major light-harvesting complex LHCII is phosphorylated and moves from PSII to PSI (state 2). If instead PSI is over-excited the LHCII complex is dephosphorylated and moves back to PSII (state 1). Recent findings have suggested that LHCII might also transfer energy to PSI in state 1. In this work we used a combination of biochemistry and (time-resolved) fluorescence spectroscopy to investigate the PSI antenna size in state 1 and state 2 for Arabidopsis thaliana. Our data shows that 0.7 ± 0.1 unphosphorylated LHCII trimers per PSI are present in the stroma lamellae of state-1 plants. Upon transition to state 2 the antenna size of PSI in the stroma membrane increases with phosphorylated LHCIIs to a total of 1.2 ± 0.1 LHCII trimers per PSI. Both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated LHCII function as highly efficient PSI antenna.  相似文献   

9.
Arabidopsis plants with a reduced expression of CHL27 ( chl27 ), an enzyme (EC 1.14.13.81) required for the synthesis of Pchlide, are chlorotic and have a Chl a / b ratio two times higher than wild-type (WT). Knockdown plants transformed with a construct constitutively expressing CHL27 recovered regarding Chl level, a / b ratio and 77K fluorescence. A negative correlation was found between total Chl and Chl a / b ratio in the examined plants. The chl27 plants fail to assemble WT amounts of complete PSI and PSII, leading to an elevated PSII/PSI ratio. The PSI remaining in chl27 is fully functional with a quantum yield higher than for WT. Despite a severe reduction of photosystem II antennae protein (LHCII) and an increased proportion of stroma lammella, the chl27 plants are able to perform state transitions. No major differences were found regarding PSII quantum yield, qN and 1 − qp whereas non-photochemical quenching was decreased by a factor two in chl27 plants. The PSII quantum yield for dark-adapted plants and plants given 10 min recovery after high light treatment were similar for both WT and chl27 showing that chl27 plants are not more susceptible to photoinhibition than WT. Taken together the plant manage to acclimate and to balance the two photosystems well even when it is severely limited in Chl. The way to achieve this differs for the two photosystems: regarding PSI a general reduction of core and antenna subunits occurs with no apparent change in the antenna composition; whereas for PSII there is a preferential loss of antenna proteins.  相似文献   

10.
The present study was performed to investigate the adjustment of the constituents of the light and dark reactions of photosynthesis to the natural growth irradiance in the leaves of an overstorey species, Betula pendula Roth, a subcanopy species Tilia cordata P. Mill., and a herb Solidago virgaurea L. growing in a natural plant community in Järvselja, Estonia. Shoots were collected from the site and properties of individual leaves were measured in a laboratory, by applying a routine of kinetic gas exchange and optical measurements that revealed photosystem II (PSII), photosystem I (PSI), and cytochrome b6f densities per leaf area and the distribution of excitation (or chlorophyll, Chl) between the two photosystems. In parallel, N, Chl and ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) content was measured from the same leaves. The amount of N in photosynthetic proteins was calculated from the measured contents of the components of the photosynthetic machinery. Non-photosynthetic N was found as the residual of the budget. Growth in shade resulted in the decrease of leaf dry mass to a half of the DW in sun leaves in each species, but the total variation, from the top to the bottom of the canopy, was larger. Through the whole cross-section of the canopy, leaf dry weight (DW) and Rubisco content per area decreased by a factor of four, N content by a factor of three, but Chl content only by a factor of 1.7. PSII density decreased by a factor of 1.9, but PSI density by a factor of 3.2. The density of PSI adjusted to shade to a greater extent than the density of PSII. In shade, the distribution of N between the components of the photosynthetic machinery was shifted toward light-harvesting proteins at the expense of Rubisco. Non-photosynthetic N decreased the most substantially, from 54% in the sun leaves of B. pendula to 11% in the shade leaves of T. cordata. It is concluded that the redistribution of N toward light-harvesting Chl proteins in shade is not sufficient to keep the excitation rate of a PSII centre invariant. Contrary to PSII, the density of PSI – the photosystem that is in immediate contact with the carbon assimilation system – shade-adjusts almost proportionally with the latter, whereas its Chl antenna correspondingly increases. Even under N deficiency, a likely condition in the natural plant community, a substantial part of N is stored in non-photosynthetic proteins under abundant irradiation, but much less under limiting irradiation. At least in trees the general sequence of down-regulation due to shade adjustment is the following: (1) non-protein cell structures and non-photosynthetic proteins; (2) carbon assimilation proteins; (3) light reaction centre proteins, first PSI; and (4) chlorophyll-binding proteins.  相似文献   

11.
State transitions are an important photosynthetic short-term response that allows energy distribution balancing between photosystems I (PSI) and II (PSII). In plants when PSII is preferentially excited compared with PSI (State II), part of the major light-harvesting complex LHCII migrates to PSI to form a PSI-LHCII supercomplex. So far, little is known about this complex, mainly due to purification problems. Here, a stable PSI-LHCII supercomplex is purified from Arabidopsis thaliana and maize (Zea mays) plants. It is demonstrated that LHCIIs loosely bound to PSII in State I are the trimers mainly involved in state transitions and become strongly bound to PSI in State II. Specific Lhcb1-3 isoforms are differently represented in the mobile LHCII compared with S and M trimers. Fluorescence analyses indicate that excitation energy migration from mobile LHCII to PSI is rapid and efficient, and the quantum yield of photochemical conversion of PSI-LHCII is substantially unaffected with respect to PSI, despite a sizable increase of the antenna size. An updated PSI-LHCII structural model suggests that the low-energy chlorophylls 611 and 612 in LHCII interact with the chlorophyll 11145 at the interface of PSI. In contrast with the common opinion, we suggest that the mobile pool of LHCII may be considered an intimate part of the PSI antenna system that is displaced to PSII in State I.  相似文献   

12.
《BBA》2020,1861(4):148038
Photosynthesis is a fundamental biological process involving the conversion of solar energy into chemical energy. The initial photochemical and photophysical events of photosynthesis are mediated by photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI). Both PSII and PSI are multi-subunit supramolecular machineries composed of a core complex and a peripheral antenna system. The antenna system serves to capture light energy and transfer it to the core efficiently. Both PSII and PSI in the green lineage (plants and green algae) and PSI in red algae have an antenna system comprising a series of chlorophyll- and carotenoid-binding membrane proteins belonging to the light-harvesting complex (LHC) superfamily, including LHCII and LHCI. However, the antenna size and subunit composition vary considerably in the two photosystems from diverse organisms. On the basis of the plant and algal LHCII and LHCI structures that have been solved by X-ray crystallography and single-particle cryo-electron microscopy we review the detailed structural features and characteristic pigment properties of these LHCs in PSII and PSI. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Light harvesting, edited by Dr. Roberta Croce.  相似文献   

13.
Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to changes in the light environment was studied in the unicellular red alga Porphyridium cruentum (American Type Culture Collection No. 50161). Absolute or relative amounts of four photosynthetic enzymes and electron carriers were measured, and the data were compared with earlier observations on light-harvesting components (F.X. Cunningham, Jr., R.J. Dennenberg, L. Mustárdy, P.A. Jursinic, E. Gantt [1989] Plant Physiol 91: 1179-1187; F.X. Cunningham, Jr., R.J. Dennenberg, P.A. Jursinic, E. Gantt [1990] Plant Physiol 93: 888-895) and with measurements of photosynthetic capacity. Pmax, the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis on a chlorophyll (Chl) basis, increased more than 4-fold with increase in growth irradiance from 6 to 280 μeinsteins·m−2·s−1. Amounts of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, and cytochrome f increased in parallel with Pmax, whereas numbers of the light-harvesting complexes (photosystem [PS] I, PSII, and phycobilisomes) changed little, and ATP synthase increased 7-fold relative to Chl. The calculated minimal turnover time for PSII under the highest irradiance, 5 ms, was thus about 4-fold faster than that calculated for cultures grown under the lowest irradiance (19 ms). A change in the spectral composition of the growth light (irradiance kept constant at 15 μeinsteins·m−2·s−1) from green (absorbed predominantly by the phycobilisome antenna of PSII) to red (absorbed primarily by the Chl antenna of PSI) had little effect on the amounts of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, ATP synthase, and phycobilisomes on a Chl, protein, or thylakoid area basis. However, the number of PSI centers declined by 40%, cytochrome f increased by 40%, and both PSII and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase increased approximately 3-fold on a thylakoid area basis. The substantial increase in ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase under PSI light is inconsistent with a PSI-mediated reduction of NADP as the sole function of this enzyme. Our results demonstrate a high degree of plasticity in content and composition of thylakoid membranes of P. cruentum.  相似文献   

14.
Action spectra for photosystem II (PSII)-driven oxygen evolution and of photosystem I (PSI)-mediated H2 photoproduction and photoinhibition of respiration were used to determine the participation of chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-binding Pcb proteins in the functions of pigment apparatus of Prochlorothrix hollandica. Comparison of the in situ action spectra with absorption spectra of PSII and PSI complexes isolated from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 revealed a shoulder at 650 nm that indicated presence of Chl b in the both photosystems of P. hollandica. Fitting of two action spectra to absorption spectrum of the cells showed a chlorophyll ratio of 4:1 in favor of PSI. Effective antenna sizes estimated from photochemical cross-sections of the relevant photoreactions were found to be 192 ± 28 and 139 ± 15 chlorophyll molecules for the competent PSI and PSII reaction centers, respectively. The value for PSI is in a quite good agreement with previous electron microscopy data for isolated Pcb-PSI supercomplexes from P. hollandica that show a trimeric PSI core surrounded by a ring of 18 Pcb subunits. The antenna size of PSII implies that the PSII core dimers are associated with ∼ 14 Pcb light-harvesting proteins, and form the largest known Pcb-PSII supercomplexes.  相似文献   

15.
Cyanobacteria are oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes that are the progenitors of the chloroplasts of algae and plants. These organisms harvest light using large membrane-extrinsic phycobilisome antenna in addition to membrane-bound chlorophyll-containing proteins. Similar to eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms, cyanobacteria possess thylakoid membranes that house photosystem (PS) I and PSII, which drive the oxidation of water and the reduction of NADP+, respectively. While thylakoid morphology has been studied in some strains of cyanobacteria, the global distribution of PSI and PSII within the thylakoid membrane and the corresponding location of the light-harvesting phycobilisomes are not known in detail, and such information is required to understand the functioning of cyanobacterial photosynthesis on a larger scale. Here, we have addressed this question using a combination of electron microscopy and hyperspectral confocal fluorescence microscopy in wild-type Synechocystis species PCC 6803 and a series of mutants in which phycobilisomes are progressively truncated. We show that as the phycobilisome antenna is diminished, large-scale changes in thylakoid morphology are observed, accompanied by increased physical segregation of the two photosystems. Finally, we quantified the emission intensities originating from the two photosystems in vivo on a per cell basis to show that the PSI:PSII ratio is progressively decreased in the mutants. This results from both an increase in the amount of photosystem II and a decrease in the photosystem I concentration. We propose that these changes are an adaptive strategy that allows cells to balance the light absorption capabilities of photosystems I and II under light-limiting conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Photosynthetic supercomplexes from the cryptophyte Rhodomonas CS24 were isolated by a short detergent treatment of membranes from the cryptophyte Rhodomonas CS24 and studied by electron microscopy and low-temperature absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. At least three different types of supercomplexes of photosystem I (PSI) monomers and peripheral Chl a/c2 proteins were found. The most common complexes have Chl a/c2 complexes at both sides of the PSI core monomer and have dimensions of about 17 × 24 nm. The peripheral antenna in these supercomplexes shows no obvious similarities in size and/or shape with that of the PSI-LHCI supercomplexes from the green plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and may be comprised of about 6-8 monomers of Chl a/c2 light-harvesting complexes. In addition, two different types of supercomplexes of photosystem II (PSII) dimers and peripheral Chl a/c2 proteins were found. The detected complexes consist of a PSII core dimer and three or four monomeric Chl a/c2 proteins on one side of the PSII core at positions that in the largest complex are similar to those of Lhcb5, a monomer of the S-trimer of LHCII, Lhcb4 and Lhcb6 in green plants.  相似文献   

17.
Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to light absorbed primarily by photosystem I (PSI) or by photosystem II (PSII) was studied in the unicellular red alga Porphyridium cruentum (ATCC 50161). Cultures grown under green light of 15 microeinsteins per square meter per second (PSII light; absorbed predominantly by the phycobilisomes) exhibited a PSII/PSI ratio of 0.26 ± 0.05. Under red light (PSI light; absorbed primarily by chlorophyll) of comparable quantum flux, cells contained nearly five times as many PSII per PSI (1.21 ± 0.10), and three times as many PSII per cell. About 12% of the chlorophyll was attributed to PSII in green light, 22% in white light, and 39% in red light-grown cultures. Chlorophyll antenna sizes appeared to remain constant at about 75 chlorophyll per PSII and 140 per PSI. Spectral quality had little effect on cell content or composition of the phycobilisomes, thus the number of PSII per phycobilisome was substantially greater in red light-grown cultures (4.2 ± 0.6) than in those grown under green (1.6 ± 0.3) or white light (2.9 ± 0.1). Total photosystems (PSI + PSII) per phycobilisome remained at about eight in each case. Carotenoid content and composition was little affected by the spectral composition of the growth light. Zeaxanthin comprised more than 50% (mole/mole), β-carotene about 40%, and cryptoxanthin about 4% of the carotenoid pigment. Despite marked changes in the light-harvesting apparatus, red and green light-grown cultures have generation times equal to that of cultures grown under white light of only one-third the quantum flux.  相似文献   

18.
R. E. Glick  S. W. McCauley  A. Melis 《Planta》1985,164(4):487-494
The effect of light quality during plant growth of chloroplast membrane organization and function in peas (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) was investigated. In plants grown under photosystem (PS) I-enriched (far-red enriched) illumination both the PSII/PSI stoichiometry and the electrontransport capacity ratios were high, about 1.9. In plants grown under PSII-enriched (far-red depleted) illumination both the PSII/PSI stoichiometry and the electron-transport capacity ratios were significantly lower, about 1.3. In agreement, steady-state electron-transport measurements under synchronous illumination of PSII and PSI demonstrated an excess of PSII in plants grown under far-red-enriched light. Sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of chlorophyll-containing complexes showed greater relative amounts of the PSII reaction center chlorophyll-protein complex in plants grown under farred-enriched light. Additional changes were observed in the ratio of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein to PSII reaction center chlorophyll-protein under the two different light-quality regimes. The results demonstrate the dynamic nature of chloroplast structure and support the notion that light quality is an important factor in the regulation of chloroplast membrane organization and-function.Abbreviations and symbols Chl chlorophyll - CPa PSII reaction center chlorophyll protein complex - CPI PSI chlorophyll protein complex - FR-D light depleted in far-red sensitizing primarily PSII - FR-E light enriched in far-red sensitizing primarily PSI - LHCP PSII light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex - P 700 primary electron donor of PSI - PSI, PSII photosystems I and II, respectively - Q primary electron acceptor of PSII  相似文献   

19.
Spectrophotometric and kinetic measurements were applied to yield photosystem (PS) stoichiometries and the functional antenna size of PSI, PSIIα, and PSIIβ in Zea mays chloroplasts in situ. Concentrations of PSII and PSI reaction centers were determined from the amplitude of the light-induced absorbance change at 320 and 700 nm, which reflect the photoreduction of the primary electron acceptor Q of PSII and the photooxidation of the reaction center P700 of PSI, respectively. Determination of the functional chlorophyll antenna size (N) for each photosystem was obtained from the measurement of the rate of light absorption by the respective reaction center. Under the experimental conditions employed, the rate of light absorption by each reaction center was directly proportional to the number of light-harvesting chlorophyll molecules associated with the respective photosystem. We determined NP700 = 195, Nα = 230, Nβ = 50 for the number of chlorophyll molecules in the light-harvesting antenna of PSI, PSIIα, and PSIIβ, respectively. The above values were used to estimate the PSII/PSI electron-transport capacity ratio (C) in maize chloroplasts. In mesophyll chloroplasts C > 1.4, indicating that, under green actinic excitation when Chl a and Chl b molecules absorb nearly equal amounts of excitation, PSII has a capacity to turn over electrons faster than PSI. In bundle sheath chloroplasts C < 1, suggesting that such chloroplasts are not optimally poised for linear electron transport and reductant generation.  相似文献   

20.
In photosynthetic membranes of cyanobacteria, algae, and higher plants, photosystem I (PSI) mediates light-driven transmembrane electron transfer from plastocyanin or cytochrome c6 to the ferredoxin-NADP complex. The oxidoreductase function of PSI is sensitized by a reversible photooxidation of primary electron donor P700, which launches a multistep electron transfer via a series of redox cofactors of the reaction center (RC). The excitation energy for the functioning of the primary electron donor in the RC is delivered via the chlorophyll core antenna in the complex with peripheral light-harvesting antennas. Supermolecular complexes of the PSI acquire remarkably different structural forms of the peripheral light-harvesting antenna complexes, including distinct pigment types and organizational principles. The PSI core antenna, being the main functional unit of the supercomplexes, provides an increased functional connectivity in the chlorophyll antenna network due to dense pigment packing resulting in a fast spread of the excitation among the neighbors. Functional connectivity within the network as well as the spectral overlap of antenna pigments allows equilibration of the excitation energy in the depth of the whole membrane within picoseconds and loss-free delivery of the excitation to primary donor P700 within 20-40 ps. Low-light-adapted cyanobacteria under iron-deficiency conditions extend this capacity via assembly of efficiently energy coupled rings of CP43-like complexes around the PSI trimers. In green algae and higher plants, less efficient energy coupling in the eukaryotic PSI-LHCI supercomplexes is probably a result of the structural adaptation of the Chl a/b binding LHCI peripheral antenna that not only extends the absorption cross section of the PSI core but participates in regulation of excitation flows between the two photosystems as well as in photoprotection.  相似文献   

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