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1.
Photosynthetic electron flow, polypeptide pattern, presence of chlorophyll-protein complexes, and phosphorylation of thylakoid polypeptides have been investigated in differentiated mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (B) thylakoids of the C4 plant Zea mays. The polypeptide pattern of M thylakoids and their photosynthetic electron flow are comparable to those of other green plants. B thylakoids exhibit only photosystem I (PSI) activity, contain only traces of the PSII light harvesting (LHCII) polypeptide, do not bind [3H] diuron, and lack polypeptides of the water-oxidation complex of PSII and the herbicide binding 32-kDa polypeptide, as detected by specific antibodies. However, B thylakoids possess a partially active PSII reaction center, as demonstrated by light-dependent reduction of silicomolybdate with 1,5-diphenylcarbazide (DPC) as an electron donor, and the presence of the PSII reaction center polypeptides of 44-47 kDa. Only one chlorophyll a-protein complex, corresponding to the PSI reaction center-core antenna, was detectable in B thylakoids, as opposed to chlorophyll a and chlorophyll a,b-protein complexes present in M thylakoids. The light-dependent, membrane-bound kinase activity present in M thylakoids could not be detected in B thylakoids which, nevertheless, contain a protein kinase able to phosphorylate casein. A total of 19 differences between the electrophoretic pattern of B and M thylakoid polypeptides were observed. The mRNA coding for the LHCII polypeptide is primarily, if not exclusively, localized in M cells. The development of PSII complex precedes that of PSI during the differentiation of B and M chloroplasts in expanding leaves of light-grown plants and during the greening of dark-grown etiolated seedlings. The differentiation of the maize leaf into cells programmed to form B or M chloroplasts does not require light. In light-grown plants, the differentiation of B and M thylakoids occurred progressively from the base of the leaf and was completed at 4-5 cm from the leaf base.  相似文献   

2.
Monospecific antibodies directed against typical domains of type 1, 2, and 3 light-harvesting complex (LHC) II apoproteins have been used (a) to identify these apoproteins on denaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate gels of barley (Hordeum vulgare) thylakoids, (b) to determine their distribution between grana and stroma membranes, and (c) to follow their accumulation during light-induced greening of etioplasts. In addition, we have studied the light-induced assembly of chlorophyll-protein complexes with a native green gel system (K.D. Allen, L.A. Staehelin [1991] Anal Biochem 194: 214-222). Western blot analysis of the three major LHCII apoprotein bands has identified the highest molecular mass band at 27.5 kD as containing the type 2 LHCII apoproteins, the middle band at 26.9 kD as containing the type 1 LHCII apoproteins, and the lowest band at 26.0 kD as containing the type 3 LHCII apoproteins. During light-induced greening of 6-d-old etiolated barley seedlings, the type 1, 2, and 3 LHCII apoproteins accumulate simultaneously and at similar rates but appear somewhat sooner (< 4 h) in thylakoids from apical than from basal (4-8 h) leaf segments. LHCI polypeptides accrue with similar kinetics, whereas the 33-kD oxygen-evolving complex polypeptides can be detected already in the 0-h light samples. During the most rapid phase of thylakoid development (8-24 h), two slightly larger (28.3 and 28.7 kD) type 2 LHCII apoproteins (precursor intermediates?) also accumulate in the thylakoids. No corresponding higher molecular mass forms of type 1 and 3 LHCII apoproteins could be detected. It is interesting that differences are still apparent in the composition of chlorophyll-protein complexes of light-control plants and those of etiolated plants greened for 8 d.  相似文献   

3.
Geoffrey C. Owens  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(1):234-241
Thylakoid polypeptide phosphorylation has been studied in vivo and in vitro during plastid differentiation in Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1. Pulse labeling cells at different stages of greening with [32P]orthophosphate revealed differences in the pattern of protein phosphorylation. In the early phase of greening the 44–47 kDa reaction center II polypeptides were labeled but the 22–24 kDa polypeptides of the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein complex (LHC) were not. Later in the greening, coinciding with the formation of the antenna of Photosystem I and membrane stacking, the converse was found. Furthermore, the 22–24 kDa polypeptides of grana lamellae were less labeled than the same polypeptides found in the corresponding stroma lamellae. Polypeptides in the molecular mass range of 32–34 kDa were phosphorylated at all stages following the onset of greening. Dark-grown cells did not incorporate 32P in vivo or in vitro into the polypeptides present in the residual thylakoids. Similarly, cells greened in the presence of chloramphenicol, in which the synthesis of reaction centers is inhibited, showed no light-stimulated phosphorylation in vitro. However, the residual 32–34 kDa and 44–47 kDa polypeptides found in thylakoids of these cells were phosphorylated in vivo, whereas the LHC polypeptides synthesized in the presence of chloramphenicol were not. Phosphorylation of the LHC polypeptides (22–24 kDa) in these cells occurred if new reaction center polypeptides and all antennae components were formed, following removal of the inhibitor and further incubation of the cells in the light. Phosphorylation of LHC polypeptides was not resumed if active reaction centers were formed in the absence of complete restoration of all antenna components (incubation in the dark or light with addition of cycloheximide). It is concluded that phosphorylation is correlated with the thylakoid polypeptide content and organization.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of protein phosphorylation on electron transportactivities of thylakoids isolated from wheat leaves was investigated.Protein phosphorylation resulted in a reduction in the apparentquantum yield of whole chain and photosystem II (PSII) electrontransport but had no effect on photosystem I (PSI) activity.The affinity of the D1 reaction centre polypeptide of PSII tobind atrazine was diminished upon phosphorylation, however,this did not reduce the light-saturated rate of PSII electrontransport. Phosphorylation also produced an inhibition of thelight-saturated rate of electron transport from water or durohydroquinoneto methyl viologen with no similar effect being observed onthe light-saturated rate of either PSII or PSI alone. This suggeststhat phosphorylation produces an inhibition of electron transportat a site, possibly the cytochrome b6/f complex, between PSIIand PSI. This inhibition of whole-chain electron transport wasalso observed for thylakoids isolated from leaves grown underintermittent light which were deficient in polypeptides belongingto the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex associatedwith photosystem II (LHCII). Consequently, this phenomenon isnot associated with phosphorylation of LCHII polypeptides. Apossible role for cytochrome b6/f complexes in the phosphorylation-inducedinhibition of whole chain electron transport is discussed. Key words: Electron transport, light harvesting, photosystem 2, protein phosphorylation, thylakoid membranes, wheat (Triticum aestivum)  相似文献   

5.
Activation of the redox-controlled protein kinase of thylakoid membranes is detectable in vivo by measuring radioisotope incorporation into the light-harvesting Chl a/b protein and four photosystem II proteins (8.3, 32, 34, and 44 kDa). In normal barley leaves, the kinase is active under both aerobic and anaerobic (N2) conditions, but in the Chl b-less chlorina f2 mutant it is active only under anaerobic conditions. The responsiveness of this enzyme in the mutant to changes in the gas phase has been exploited to distinguish its protein substrates from those of other leaf protein kinases. Most of the soluble phosphoproteins of normal and mutant leaves (including a conspicuously labeled 67-kDa polypeptide) are labeled equally under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions, indicating that they are not substrates of the redox-controlled protein kinase. The major exception is a 12-kDa phosphoprotein, which is labeled in the mutant only under anaerobic conditions. The 67- and 12-kDa phosphoproteins are located in the chloroplast and are labeled when isolated organelles are incubated with [32P]orthophosphate in the light. When thylakoids and stroma are prepared from chloroplasts and are incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP in vitro, the 12-kDa protein is phosphorylated in the thylakoid preparation and then released from the membranes into the medium. The electron transport inhibitor diuron blocks activation of the redox-controlled kinase and prevents phosphorylation of the 12-kDa protein, which is thus the first example of a soluble protein to be phosphorylated by the thylakoid-bound protein kinase. The 67-kDa protein is phosphorylated by a distinct stromal kinase whose activity is not sensitive to diuron.  相似文献   

6.
The activity of thylakoid protein kinase and the regulation of excitation energy distribution between photosystems I and II was examined during chloroplast biogenesis in light-grown Triticum aestivum (wheat) leaves. The specific activity of the thylakoid protein kinase decreased some six-fold during development from the young plastids at the base of the 7-d-old leaf to the mature chloroplasts at the leaf tip. Appreciable activity was also detected in plastids isolated from etiolated leaves. In mature chloroplasts the majority of phosphate was incorporated into the Mr=26,000 apo-proteins of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHCP). However, at early stages of chloroplast development and in the etioplast, the phosphate was predominantly incorporated into a polypeptide of Mr=9,000 dalton. Immature thylakoids, isolated from the base of the leaf, had relatively low concentrations of LHCP and could perform a State 1-State 2 transition, as demonstrated by ATP-induced quenching of photosystem II fluorescence. Analyses of photosystem I and photosystem II fluorescence-induction curves from intact leaf tissue demonstrated that this transition occurs in vivo at early stages of leaf development and, therefore, may play an important role in regulating energy transduction during chloroplast biogenesis.  相似文献   

7.
Cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard strain cw15arg7A contain electron-opaque material, often in the form of large granules, within cytoplasmic vacuoles. Immunoelectron microscopy with antibodies to polypeptide 11, a component of the major light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-protein complex (LHCII,) of thylakoid membranes, revealed the presence of LHCII Polypeptides within the chloroplast and in vacuolar material in cells grown in the light. Vacuolar material was also heavily immunodecorated in dark-grown cells that did not synthesize Chl. Accumulation of LHCII polypeptides was further studied in greening and light-grown cells of a pale green mutant, deficient in LHCII, that was derived from cu15arg7A by insertional mutagenesis. Light-grown cells of this mutant strain contained relatively few thylakoid membranes and synthesized LHCII polypeptides at a low rate. However, cytoplasmic vacuoles were immunoreactive. Appearance of mature-sized LHCII polypeptides in vacuoles suggested that these proteins were partially translocated across the envelope but not retained by the chloroplast without assembly of LHCII.  相似文献   

8.
Light-induced phosphorylation of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex II (LHCII) proteins in plant thylakoid membranes requires an activation of the LHCII kinase via binding of plastoquinol to cytochrome b(6)f complex. However, a gradual down-regulation of LHCII protein phosphorylation occurs in higher plant leaves in vivo with increasing light intensity. This inhibition is likely to be mediated by increasing concentration of thiol reductants in the chloroplast. Here, we have determined the components involved in thiol redox regulation of the LHCII kinase by studying the restoration of LHCII protein phosphorylation in thylakoid membranes isolated from high-light-illuminated leaves of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo), spinach (Spinacia oleracea), and Arabidopsis. We demonstrate an experimental separation of two dynamic activities associated with isolated thylakoid membranes and involved in thiol regulation of the LHCII kinase. First, a thioredoxin-like compound, responsible for inhibition of the LHCII kinase, became tightly associated and/or activated within thylakoid membranes upon illumination of leaves at high light intensities. This reducing activity was completely missing from membranes isolated from leaves with active LHCII protein phosphorylation, such as dark-treated and low-light-illuminated leaves. Second, hydrogen peroxide was shown to serve as an oxidant that restored the catalytic activity of the LHCII kinase in thylakoids isolated from leaves with inhibited LHCII kinase. We propose a dynamic mechanism by which counteracting oxidizing and reducing activities exert a stimulatory and inhibitory effect, respectively, on the phosphorylation of LHCII proteins in vivo via a novel membrane-bound thiol component, which itself is controlled by the thiol redox potential in chloroplast stroma.  相似文献   

9.
Coupling of phosphorylation to electron transport was examined by measuring the photosynthetic control ratio for broken wheat plastids isolated from seedlings at different greening stages. The photosynthetic control ratio progressively increased during greening and tight coupling was noted after granal stacking and thylakoid elongation. ADP impaired nonphosphorylating (state 2) electron transport rates of plastids at extremely early stages of greening and interfered with photosynthetic control measurements. Partially developed plastids exhibited low nonphosphorylating electron flow rates but did not exhibit high phosphorylating or uncoupled electron transport rates to the same extent as nearly developed plastids. Prolamellar body dispersal, primary thylakoid production, and the development of photosynthetic control were stimulated equally by 48 minutes of low irradiance, in cycles of 2 minutes every 2 hours, or by 9 hours of continuous light of moderate irradiance. Wheat plastids that greened for 6 hours in continuous light of moderate intensity did not exhibit photosynthetic control or much differentiation beyond the etioplast stage. It is concluded that plastid differentiation and the development of photosynthetic control early in greening under continuous light were limited by developmental time (dark time) rather than by either light intensity or duration.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. The ultrastructure of chloroplasts from palisade and spongy tissue was studied in order to analyse the adaptation of chloroplasts to the light gradient within the bifacial leaves of pea. Chloroplasts of two nuclear gene mutants of Pisum sativum (chlorotica-29 and chlorophyll b-less 130A), grown under normal light conditions, were compared with the wild type (WT) garden-pea cv. ‘Dippes Gelbe Viktoria’. The differentiation of the thylakoid membrane system of plastids from normal pea leaves exhibited nearly the same degree of grana formation in palisade and in spongy tissue. Using morphometrical measurements, only a slight increase in grana stacking capacity was found in chloroplasts of spongy tissue. In contrast, chloroplasts of mutant leaves differed in grana development in palisade and spongy tissue, respectively. Their thylakoid systems appeared to be disorganized and not developed as much as in chloroplasts from normal pea leaves. Grana contained fewer lamellae per granum, the number of grana per chloroplast section was reduced and the length of appressed thylakoid regions was decreased. Nevertheless, chloroplasts of the mutants were always differentiated into grana and stroma thylakoids. The structural changes observed and the reduction of the total chlorophyll content correlated with alterations in the polypeptide composition of thylakoid membrane preparations from mutant chloroplasts. In sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), polypeptide bands with a relative molecular mass of 27 and 26 kilodalton (kD) were markedly reduced in mutant chloroplasts. These two polypeptides represented the major apoproteins of the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex from photosystem II (LHC-II) as inferred from a comparison with the electrophoretic mobility of polypeptides isolated from the LHC-II.  相似文献   

11.
A 31 kDa polypeptide that accumulates in the thylakoids when maize leaves are chilled to 5°C in the light is characterized using monoclonal antibodies and analyses of chlorophyll-protein complexes. This polypeptide reacted with a monoclonal antibody, MLH2, that was specific for the 28 kDa polypeptide of the light-harvesting complex (LHCII) of pea leaves. On chilling leaves the appearance of a chlorophyll-protein complex having an apparent molecular weight of 31 kDa coincided with the appearance of a 31 kDa polypeptide and a decrease in the 29 kDa chlorophyll-protein, CP29. Returning the leaves to 25°C for 1 h produced a loss of both the 31 kDa chlorophyll-protein and 31 kDa polypeptide from the thylakoids, and an increase in the amount of CP29. Breakdown of the 31 kDa polypeptide in vitro was Mg2+-dependent and inhibited by EDTA and transition metal ions. It is suggested that the 31 kDa polypeptide may be a precursor of the apoprotein of CP29 and can bind chlorophyll. The appearance of the 31 kDa polypeptide correlated with a marked change in the 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of isolated LHCII particles, which did not revert with the disappearance of the 31 kDa on returning the leaves to 25°C for 1 h. The physiological significance of this spectral perturbation is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
In the last few years the presence in thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts of a NAD(P)H-plastoquinone oxidoreductase complex (Ndh complex) homologous to mitochondrial complex I has been well established. Herein, we report the identification of the Ndh complex in barley etioplast membranes. Two plastid DNA-encoded polypeptides of the Ndh complex (NDH-A and NDH-F) were relatively more abundant in etioplast membranes than in thylakoids from greening chloroplasts. Conversion of etioplast into chloroplast, after light exposure of barley seedlings grown in the dark, was accompanied by a decrease in the NADH dehydrogenase activity associated to plastid membranes. Using native-PAGE and immunolabelling techniques we have determined that a NADH specific dehydrogenase activity associated with plastid membranes, which was more active in etioplasts than in greening chloroplasts, contained the NDH-A and NDH-F polypeptides. These results complemented by those obtained through blue-native-PAGE indicated that NDH-A and NDH-F polypeptides are part of a 580 kDa NADH dependent dehydrogenase complex present in etioplast membranes. This finding proves that accumulation of the Ndh complex is independent of light. The decrease in the relative levels and specific activity of this complex during the transition from etioplast to chloroplasts was accompanied by a parallel decrease in the specific activity of peroxidase associated to plastid membranes. Based on the mentioned observations it is proposed that an electron transport chain from NADH to H2O2 could be active in barley etioplasts.  相似文献   

13.
Lipid and fatty acid analyses were performed on whole leaf extracts and isolated thylakoids from winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Puma) grown at 5°C cold-hardened rye (RH) and 20°C nonhardened rye (RNH). Although no significant change in total lipid content was observed, growth at low, cold-hardening temperature resulted in a specific 67% (thylakoids) to 74% (whole leaves) decrease in the trans3-hexadecenoic acid (trans-16:1) level associated with phosphatidyldiacylglycerol (PG). Electron spin resonance and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) indicated no significant difference in the fluidity of RH and RNH thylakoids. Separation of chlorophyll-protein complexes by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the ratio of oligomeric light harvesting complex:monomeric light harvesting complex (LHCII1:LHCII3) was 2-fold higher in RNH than RH thylakoids. The ratio of CP1a:CP1 was also 1.5-fold higher in RNH than RH thylakoids. Analyses of winter rye grown at 20, 15, 10, and 5°C indicated that both, the trans-16:1 acid levels in PG and the LHCII1:LHCII3 decreased concomitantly with a decrease in growth temperature. Above 40°C, differential scanning calorimetry of RNH thylakoids indicated the presence of five major endotherms (47, 60, 67, 73, and 86°C). Although the general features of the temperature transitions observed above 40°C in RH thylakoids were similar to those observed for RNH thylakoids, the transitions at 60 and 73°C were resolved as inflections only and RH thylakoids exhibited transitions at 45 and 84°C which were 2°C lower than those observed in RNH thylakoids. Since polypeptide and lipid compositions of RH and RNH thylakoids were very similar, we suggest that these differences reflect alterations in thylakoid membrane organization. Specifically, it is suggested that low developmental temperature modulates LHCII organization such that oligomeric LHCII predominates in RNH thylakoids whereas a monomeric or an intermediate form of LHCII predominates in RH thylakoids. Furthermore, we conclude that low developmental temperature modulates LHCII organization by specifically altering the fatty composition of thylakoid PG.  相似文献   

14.
Chloroplast thylakoid contains several membrane-bound protein kinases that phosphorylate thylakoid polypeptides for the regulation of photosynthesis. Thylakoid protein phosphorylation is activated when the plastoquinone pool is reduced either by light-dependent electron flow through photosystem 2 (PS2) or by adding exogenous reductants such as durohydroquinone in the dark. The major phosphorylated proteins on thylakoid are components of light-harvesting complex 2 (LHC2) and a PS2 associated 9 kDa phosphoprotein. Radiation inactivation technique was employed to determine the functional masses of various kinases for protein phosphorylation in thylakoids. Under the photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), the apparent functional masses of thylakoid protein kinase systems (TPKXs) for catalyzing phosphorylation of LHC2 27 and 25 kDa polypeptides were 540±50 and 454±35 kDa as well as it was 448±23 kDa for PS2 9 kDa protein phosphorylation. Furthermore, the functional sizes of dark-regulated TPKXs for 25 and 9 kDa proteins were 318±25 and 160±8 kDa. The 9 kDa protein phosphorylation was independent of LHC2 polypeptides phosphorylation with regard to its TPKX functional mass. Target size analysis of protein phosphorylation mentioned above indicates that thylakoid contains a group of distinct protein kinase systems. A working model is accordingly proposed to interpret the interaction between these protein kinase systems.  相似文献   

15.
Thylakoid energy metabolism is crucial for plant growth, development and acclimation. Non‐appressed thylakoids harbor several high molecular mass pigment–protein megacomplexes that have flexible compositions depending upon the environmental cues. This composition is important for dynamic energy balancing in photosystems (PS) I and II. We analysed the megacomplexes of Arabidopsis wild type (WT) plants and of several thylakoid regulatory mutants. The stn7 mutant, which is defective in phosphorylation of the light‐harvesting complex (LHC) II, possessed a megacomplex composition that was strikingly different from that of the WT. Of the nine megacomplexes in total for the non‐appressed thylakoids, the largest megacomplex in particular was less abundant in the stn7 mutant under standard growth conditions. This megacomplex contains both PSI and PSII and was recently shown to allow energy spillover between PSII and PSI (Nat. Commun., 6, 2015, 6675). The dynamics of the megacomplex composition was addressed by exposing plants to different light conditions prior to thylakoid isolation. The megacomplex pattern in the WT was highly dynamic. Under darkness or far red light it showed low levels of LHCII phosphorylation and resembled the stn7 pattern; under low light, which triggers LHCII phosphorylation, it resembled that of the tap38/pph1 phosphatase mutant. In contrast, solubilization of the entire thylakoid network with dodecyl maltoside, which efficiently solubilizes pigment–protein complexes from all thylakoid compartments, revealed that the pigment–protein composition remained stable despite the changing light conditions or mutations that affected LHCII (de)phosphorylation. We conclude that the composition of pigment–protein megacomplexes specifically in non‐appressed thylakoids undergoes redox‐dependent changes, thus facilitating maintenance of the excitation balance between the two photosystems upon changes in light conditions.  相似文献   

16.
《FEBS letters》1987,221(2):205-210
The thylakoid protein kinase(s) activity of Lemna perpusilla strain 6746 (wild type, WT) and the cytochrome (cyt) b6/f-less mutant 1073 was compared. Isolated thylakoids of both WT and mutant phosphorylated the polypeptides of 9–15, 29, 32–34 and 40–45 kDa. This kinase(s) activity was light-dependent and could be elicited by addition of duroquinol in the dark. Thylakoids from both WT and mutant phosphorylated histone III-S at comparable rates. However, the redox-controlled phosphorylation of the LHCII polypeptide which could be demonstrated in vitro and in vivo in the WT thylakoids could not be detected under any experimental condition in the cyt b6/f-less thylakoids. Halogenated quinone analogues known to inhibit reduction of the cyt b6/f complex inhibited both the electron flow and duroquinol-activated LHCII phosphorylation, but had no effect on the duroquinol-dependent phosphorylation of the other thylakoid polypeptides. These results indicate that the Lemna thylakoids contain at least two redox-activated protein kinase(s). A quinone-binding site is involved in the activation of the LHCII kinase system which is rendered inactive in the absence of the cyt b6/f complex.  相似文献   

17.
Allen KD  Staehelin LA 《Plant physiology》1992,100(3):1517-1526
The photosystem (PS) II antenna system comprises several biochemically and spectroscopically distinct complexes, including light-harvesting complex II (LHCII), chlorophyll-protein complex (CP) 29, CP26, and CP24. LHCII, the most abundant of these, is both structurally and functionally diverse. The photosynthetic apparatus is laterally segregated within the thylakoid membrane into PSI-rich and PSII-rich domains, and the distribution of antenna complexes between these domains has implications for antenna function. We report a detailed analysis of the differences in the polypeptide composition of LHCII, CP29, and CP26 complexes associated with grana and stroma thylakoid fractions from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.), making use of a very high-resolution denaturing gel system, coupled with immunoblots using monospecific antibodies to identify specific antenna components. We first show that the polypeptide composition of the PSII antenna system is more complex than previously thought. We resolved at least five type I LHCII apoproteins and two to three type II LHCII apoproteins. We also resolved at least two apoproteins each for CP29 and CP26. In state 1-adapted grana and stroma thylakoid membranes, the spectrum of LHCII apoproteins is surprisingly similar. However, in addition to overall quantitative differences, we saw subtle but reproducible qualitative differences in the spectrum of LHCII apoproteins in grana and stroma membrane domains, including two forms of the major type II apoprotein. The implications of these findings for models of PSII antenna function in spinach are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of changes in photosystem I (PSI), photosystemII (PSII), and whole chain (PSII and PSI) electron transport,chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, the capacity to bind atrazineand the polypeptide profiles of thylakoids isolated from wheatleaves on exposure to a photon flux density of 2000 µmolm–2 s–1 were determined. Severe and similar levelsof photo-inhibitory damage to both PSII and whole chain electrontransport occurred and were correlated with decreases in theratio of variable to maximal fluorescence, the proportionalcontribution of the rapid a phase of the fluorescence kineticsand the capacity to bind atrazine. Severe photo-inhibition ofelectron transport was not associated with a major loss of chlorophyllor total thylakoid protein. However, a small decrease in a 70kDa polypeptide together with increases in a number of low molecularmass polypeptides (8–24 kDa) occurred. Phosphorylation of thylakoid polypeptides alleviated photo-inhibitionof PSII electron transport but stimulated photoinhibitory damageto whole chain electron transport. The consequences of suchphosphorylation-induced effects on photoinhibition in vivo areconsidered. Key words: Chlorophyll fluorescence, electron transport, photo-inhibition, protein phosphorylation, thylakoid membranes, wheat (Triticum aestivum)  相似文献   

19.
In recent years major progress has been made in describing the gene families that encode the polypeptides of the light-harvesting antenna system of photosystem II (PSII). At the same time, advances in the biochemical characterization of these antennae have been hampered by the high degree of similarity between the apoproteins. To help interpret the molecular results, we have re-examined the composition, the assembly and the phosphorylation patterns of the light-harvesting antenna of PSII (LHCII) in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang, using a non-Tris SDS-PAGE system capable of resolving polypeptides that differ by as little as 200 daltons. Research to date has suggested that in C. reinhardtii the LHCII comprises just four polypeptides (p11, p13, p16 and p17), and CP29 and CP26 just one polypeptide each (p9 and p10, respectively), i.e. a total of six polypeptides. We report here that these antenna systems contain at least 15 polypeptides, 10 associated with LHCII, 3 with CP29, and 2 with CP26. All of these polypeptides have been positively identified by means of appropriate antibodies. We also demonstrate substantial heterogeneity to the pattern of in-vitro phosphorylation, with major differences found among members of closely spaced and immunologically related polypeptides. Most intriguing is the fact that the polypeptides that cross-react with the anti-type 2 LHCII antibodies of higher plants (p16, and to a lesser extent p11) are not phosphorylated, whereas in higher plants these are the most highly phosphorylated polypeptides. Also, unlike in higher plants, CP29 is heavily phosphorylated. Phosphorylation does not appear to have any effect on the mobility of polypeptides on fully denaturing SDS-PAGE gels. To learn more about the accumulation and organization of the light-harvesting polypeptides, we have also investigated a chlorophyll b-less mutant, cbn1-48. The LHCII is almost completely lost in this mutant, along with at least some LHCI. But the accumulation of CP29 and CP26 and their binding to PSII core complexes, is relatively unaffected. As expected, the loss of antenna polypeptides is accompanied by a reduction of the size of large reaction-center complexes. Following in-vitro phosphorylation the number of phosphorylated proteins is greatly increased in the mutant thylakoids compared to wildtype thylakoids. We present a model of the PSII antenna system to account for the new polypeptide complexity we have demonstrated.This work was supported by National Institute of Health grant GM22912 to L.A.S. We would like to thank Anastasios Melis for helpful discussions.  相似文献   

20.
Conversion of solar energy into chemical energy in plant chloroplasts concomitantly modifies the thylakoid architecture and hierarchical interactions between pigment–protein complexes. Here, the thylakoids were isolated from light‐acclimated Arabidopsis leaves and investigated with respect to the composition of the thylakoid protein complexes and their association into higher molecular mass complexes, the largest one comprising both photosystems (PSII and PSI) and light‐harvesting chlorophyll a/b‐binding complexes (LHCII). Because the majority of plant light‐harvesting capacity is accommodated in LHCII complexes, their structural interaction with photosystem core complexes is extremely important for efficient light harvesting. Specific differences in the strength of LHCII binding to PSII core complexes and the formation of PSII supercomplexes are well characterized. Yet, the role of loosely bound L‐LHCII that disconnects to a large extent during the isolation of thylakoid protein complexes remains elusive. Because L‐LHCII apparently has a flexible role in light harvesting and energy dissipation, depending on environmental conditions, its close interaction with photosystems is a prerequisite for successful light harvesting in vivo. Here, to reveal the labile and fragile light‐dependent protein interactions in the thylakoid network, isolated membranes were subjected to sequential solubilization using detergents with differential solubilization capacity and applying strict quality control. Optimized 3D‐lpBN‐lpBN‐sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis system demonstrated that PSII–LHCII supercomplexes, together with PSI complexes, hierarchically form larger megacomplexes via interactions with L‐LHCII trimers. The polypeptide composition of LHCII trimers and the phosphorylation of Lhcb1 and Lhcb2 were examined to determine the light‐dependent supramolecular organization of the photosystems into megacomplexes.  相似文献   

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