首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Microbial production of carotenoids has mainly focused towards a few products, such as β-carotene, lycopene and astaxanthin. However, other less explored carotenoids, like violaxanthin, have also shown unique properties and promissory applications. Violaxanthin is a plant-derived epoxidated carotenoid with strong antioxidant activity and a key precursor of valuable compounds, such as fucoxanthin and β-damascenone. In this study, we report for the first time the heterologous production of epoxycarotenoids in yeast. We engineered the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae following multi-level strategies for the efficient accumulation of violaxanthin. Starting from a β-carotenogenic yeast strain, we first evaluated the performance of several β-carotene hydroxylases (CrtZ), and zeaxanthin epoxidases (ZEP) from different species, together with their respective N-terminal truncated variants. The combined expression of CrtZ from Pantoea ananatis and truncated ZEP of Haematococcus lacustris showed the best performance and led to a yield of 1.6 mg/gDCW of violaxanthin. Further improvement of the epoxidase activity was achieved by promoting the transfer of reducing equivalents to ZEP by expressing several redox partner systems. The co-expression of the plant truncated ferredoxin-3, and truncated root ferredoxin oxidoreductase-1 resulted in a 2.2-fold increase in violaxanthin yield (3.2 mg/gDCW). Finally, increasing gene copy number of carotenogenic genes enabled reaching a final production of 7.3 mg/gDCW in shake flask cultures and batch bioreactors, which is the highest yield of microbially produced violaxanthin reported to date.  相似文献   

2.
The temperature dependence of the rate of de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin was determined in leaves of chilling-sensitive Gossypium hirsutum L. (cotton) and chilling-resistant Malva parviflora L. by measurements of the increase in absorbance at 505 nm (A 505) and in the contents of antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin that occur upon exposure of predarkened leaves to excessive light. A linear relationship between A 505 and the decrease in the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll-cycle pigment pool was obtained over the range 10–40° C. The maximal rate of de-epoxidation was strongly temperature dependent; Q10 measured around the temperature at which the leaf had developed was 2.1–2.3 in both species. In field-grown Malva the rate of de-epoxidation at any given measurement temperature was two to three times higher in leaves developed at a relatively low temperature in the early spring than in those developed in summer. Q10 measured around 15° C was in the range 2.2–2.6 in both kinds of Malva leaves, whereas it was as high as 4.6 in cotton leaves developed at a daytime temperature of 30° C. Whereas the maximum (initial) rate of de-epoxidation showed a strong decrease with decreased temperature the degree of de-epoxidation reached in cotton leaves after a 1–2 · h exposure to a constant photon flux density increased with decreased temperature as the rate of photosynthesis decrease. The zeaxanthin content rose from 2 mmol · (mol chlorophyll)–1 at 30° C to 61 mmol · (mol Chl)–1 at 10° C, corresponding to a de-epoxidation of 70% of the violaxanthin pool at 10° C. The degree of de-epoxidation at each temperature was clearly related to the amount of excessive light present at that temperature. The relationship between non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and zeaxanthin formation at different temperatures was determined for both untreated control leaves and for leaves in which zeaxanthin formation was prevented by dithiothreitol treatment. The rate of development of that portion of non-photochemical quenching which was inhibited by dithiothreitol decreased with decreasing temperature and was linearly related to the rate of zeaxanthin formation over a wide temperature range. In contrast, the rate of development of the dithiothreitol-resistant portion of non-photochemical quenching was remarkably little affected by temperature. Evidently, the kinetics of the development of non-photochemical quenching upon exposure of leaves to excessive light is therefore in large part determined by the rate of zeaxanthin formation. For reasons that remain to be determined the relaxation of dithiothreitolsensitive quenching that is normally observed upon darkening of illuminated leaves was strongly inhibited at low temperatures.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol - EPS epoxidation state - NPQ non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II - F, Fm fluorescence emission at the actual, full closure of the PSII centers C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 1092We thank Connie Shih for skillful assistance in growing the plants, for conducting the HPLC analyses, and for preparing the figures. A Carnegie Institution Fellowship and a Feodor-Lynen-Fellowship by the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation to W.B. is gratefully acknowledged. This work was supported by Grant No. 89-37-280-4902 of the Competitive Grants Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture to O.B.  相似文献   

3.
The activity of violaxanthin de-epoxidase has been studied both in isolated thylakoids and after partial purification, as a function of pH and ascorbate concentration. We demonstrate that violaxanthin de-epoxidase has a Km for ascorbate that is strongly dependent on pH, with values of 10, 2.5, 1.0 and 0.3 mM at pH 6.0, 5.5, 5.0 and 4.5, respectively. These values can be expressed as a single Km±0.1±0.02 mM for the acid form of ascorbate. Release of the protein from the thylakoids by sonication was also found to be strongly pH dependent with a cooperativity of 4 with respect to protons and with an inflexion point at pH 6.7. These results can explain some of the discrepancies reported in the literature and provide a more consistent view of zeaxanthin formation in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
The xanthophyll cycle pigments, violaxanthin and zeaxanthin, present outside the light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes of Photosystem II (LHCII) considerably enhance specific aggregation of proteins as revealed by analysis of the 77 K chlorophyll a fluorescence emission spectra. Analysis of the infrared absorption spectra in the Amide I region shows that the aggregation is associated with formation of intermolecular hydrogen bonding between the α helices of neighboring complexes. The aggregation gives rise to new electronic energy levels, in the Soret region (530 nm) and corresponding to the Q spectral region (691 nm), as revealed by analysis of the resonance light scattering spectra. New electronic energy levels are interpreted in terms of exciton coupling of protein-bound photosynthetic pigments. The energy of the Q excitonic level of chlorophyll is not high enough to drive the light reactions of Photosystem II but better suited to transfer excitation energy to Photosystem I, which creates favourable energetic conditions for the state I-state II transition. The lack of fluorescence emission from this energy level, at physiological temperatures, is indicative of either very high thermal energy conversion rate or efficient excitation quenching by carotenoids. Chlorophyll a fluorescence was quenched up to 61% and 34% in the zeaxanthin- and violaxanthin-containing samples, respectively, as compared to pure LHCII. Enhanced aggregation of LHCII, observed in the presence of the xanthophyll cycle pigments, is discussed in terms of the switch between light-harvesting and energy dissipation systems.  相似文献   

5.
A. Hager  K. Holocher 《Planta》1994,192(4):581-589
The formation of zeaxanthin (Zea) from violaxanthin (Vio) in chloroplasts of leaves and algae upon strong illumination is currently suggested to play a role in the photoprotection of plants. Properties and location of the enzyme Vio de-epoxidase, which is responsible for the transformation of Vio to Zea, were studied using thylakoid membrane vesicles isolated from leaves of Spinacia oleracea L. Without using detergents a repeated freeze-thaw treatment of thylakoid vesicles was sufficient to release the enzyme into the medium. With the same procedure the mobile electron carrier plastocyanin, known to occur in the thylakoid lumen, was also released. The enzyme was demonstrated by its activity in the supernatant of the pelleted thylakoid vesicles in the presence of the added substrates Vio and ascorbic acid, as well as by staining of the released proteins after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The release of the deepoxidase from the vesicles was pH-dependent, declined below pH 6.5 and ceased in the pH range around 5, which corresponds to the pH optimum of the enzyme activity. By using thylakoid vesicles isolated from pre-illuminated and therefore Zea-containing leaves the release by freeze-thaw cycles of both the de-epoxidase and plastocyanin was diminished compared with the dark control. However, the reason for this effect was not the Zea content but an unknown effect of the illumination on the thylakoid membrane properties. The de-epoxidase collected at pH 7 was able to re-bind to thylakoid membranes at pH 5.5 and to transform intrinsic Vio to Zea in the presence of ascorbate. The isolated de-epoxidase, as well as the endogenous membrane-bound de-epoxidase, was inhibited by dithiothreitol. From these results it is concluded that Vio de-epoxidase, like plastocyanin, is mobile within the thylakoid lumen at neutral pH values which occur under in-vivo conditions in the dark. However, upon strong illumination, when the lumen pH drops (pH < 6.5) due to the formation of a proton gradient, the properties of the de-epoxidase are altered and the enzyme becomes tightly bound to the membrane (in contrast to plastocyanin) thus gaining access to its substrate Vio. These findings corroborate the assumption of a transmembrane opposite location of the two enzymes of the xanthophyll cycle, the ascorbate-dependent Vio deepoxidase at the lumenal side and the NADPH-dependent Zea epoxidase at the stromal side. Indications in favour of a location of Vio within the lipid bilayer of the thylakoid membrane and of a binding of the active deepoxidase to these areas are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The present study shows that thylakoid membranes of the diatom Cyclotella meneghiniana contain much higher amounts of negatively charged lipids than higher plant or green algal thylakoids. Based on these findings, we examined the influence of SQDG on the de-epoxidation reaction of the diadinoxanthin cycle and compared it with results from the second negatively charged thylakoid lipid PG. SQDG and PG exhibited a lower capacity for the solubilization of the hydrophobic xanthophyll cycle pigment diadinoxanthin than the main membrane lipid MGDG. Although complete pigment solubilization took place at higher concentrations of the negatively charged lipids, SQDG and PG strongly suppressed the de-epoxidation of diadinoxanthin in artificial membrane systems. In in vitro assays employing the isolated diadinoxanthin cycle enzyme diadinoxanthin de-epoxidase, no or only a very weak de-epoxidation reaction was observed in the presence of SQDG or PG, respectively. In binary mixtures of the inverted hexagonal phase forming lipid MGDG with the negatively charged bilayer lipids, comparable suppression took place. This is in contrast to binary mixtures of MGDG with the neutral bilayer lipids DGDG and PC, where rapid and efficient de-epoxidation was observed. In complex lipid mixtures resembling the lipid composition of the native diatom thylakoid membrane, we again found strong suppression of diadinoxanthin de-epoxidation due to the presence of SQDG or PG. We conclude that, in the native thylakoids of diatoms, a strict separation of the MGDG and SQDG domains must occur; otherwise, the rapid diadinoxanthin de-epoxidation observed in intact cells upon illumination would not be possible.  相似文献   

7.
Changes in the carotenoid composition of leaves in response to diurnal changes in sunlight were determined in the crop species Helianthus annuus L. (sunflower), Cucurbita pepo L. (pumpkin), and Cucumls sativus L. (cucumber), in the diaheliotropic mesophyte Malva neglecta Wallr., and in the perennial shrub Euonymus kiautschovicus Loesner. Large daily changes were observed in the relative proportions of the components of the xanthophyll cycle, violaxanthin (V), antheraxanthin (A), and zeaxanthin (Z) in plants grown in full sunlight. In all leaves large amounts of Z were formed at peak irradiance, with the changes in Z content closely following changes in incident photon flux density (PFD) over the course of the day. All leaves also contained large total pools of the three xanthophyll-cycle components. However, the extent to which the V pool present at dawn became de-epoxidized during the day varied widely among leaves, from a 27% decrease in M. neglecta to a 90% decrease in E. kiautschovicus. The largest amounts of Z and the lowest amounts of V at peak irradiance (full sunlight) were observed in the species with the lower rates of photosynthesis (particularly in E. kiautschovicus and pumpkin), and smaller amounts of Z and a lesser decrease in V content were found at peak irradiance in those species with the higher rates of photosynthesis (particularly in M. neglecta and sunflower). In all species some Z was present in the leaves prior to sunrise. Furthermore, in individuals of sunflower, pumpkin, and cucumber grown at 85% of full sunlight and transferred to full sunlight, a further increase in the already large pool of the xanthophyll-cycle pigments occurred over the course of 1 d.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - -Car, -Car - and -carotene - EPS epoxidation state - PFD photon flux density, between 400 and 700 nm - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Competitive Research Grants Office, award No. 90-37130-5422, and a Faculty Development Award from the University of Colorado to W.W. Adams III.  相似文献   

8.
The prasinophycean alga Mantoniella squamata uses in vivo an incomplete violaxanthin cycle. Although the violaxanthin cycle in Mantoniella is capable of converting violaxanthin to zeaxanthin, in intact cells only antheraxanthin accumulates during periods of strong illumination. Antheraxanthin enhances non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. Inhibition of antheraxanthin synthesis by the de-epoxidase inhibitor dithiothreitol abolishes increased thermal energy dissipation. Antheraxanthin-dependent non-photochemical quenching, like zeaxanthin-mediated non-photochemical quenching in higher plants, is uncoupler-sensitive. Mantoniella squamata cells cultivated at high light intensities contain higher amounts of violaxanthin than cells grown at low light. The increased violaxanthin-cycle pool size in high-light-grown Mantoniella cells is accompanied by higher de-epoxidation rates in the light and by a greater capacity to quench chlorophyll fluorescence non-photochemically. Antheraxanthin-dependent amplification of non-photochemical quenching is discussed in the light of recent models developed for zeaxanthin- and diatoxanthin-mediated enhanced heat dissipation. Received: 4 September 1997 / Accepted: 22 December 1997  相似文献   

9.
Violaxanthin de-epoxidase (VDE) catalyzes the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin in the xanthophyll cycle. Tobacco was transformed with an antisense VDE construct under control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter to determine the effect of reduced levels of VDE on plant growth. Screening of 40 independent transformants revealed 18 antisense lines with reduced levels of VDE activity with two in particular (TAS32 and TAS39) having greater than 95% reduction in VDE activity. Northern analysis demonstrated that these transformants had greatly suppressed levels of VDE mRNA. De-epoxidation of violaxanthin was inhibited to such an extent that no zeaxanthin and only very low levels of antheraxanthin could be detected after exposure of leaves to high light (2000 μmol m−2 s−1 for 20 min) with no observable effect on levels of other carotenoids and chlorophyll. Non-photochemical quenching was greatly reduced in the antisense VDE tobacco, demonstrating that a significant level of the non-photochemical quenching in tobacco requires de-epoxidation of violaxanthin. Although the antisense plants demonstrated a greatly impaired de-epoxidation of violaxanthin, no effect on plant growth or photosynthetic rate was found when plants were grown at a photon flux density of 500 or 1000 μmol m−2 s−1 under controlled growth conditions as compared to wild-type tobacco. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

10.
The lutein-epoxide cycle (Lx cycle) is an auxiliary xanthophyll cycle known to operate only in some higher-plant species. It occurs in parallel with the common violaxanthin cycle (V cycle) and involves the same epoxidation and de-epoxidation reactions as in the V cycle. In this study, the occurrence of the Lx cycle was investigated in the two major families of mistletoe, the Loranthaceae and the Viscaceae. In an attempt to find the limiting factor(s) for the occurrence of the Lx cycle, pigment profiles of mistletoes with and without the Lx cycle were compared. The availability of lutein as a substrate for the zeaxanthin epoxidase appeared not to be critical. This was supported by the absence of the Lx cycle in the transgenic Arabidopsis plant lutOE, in which synthesis of lutein was increased at the expense of V by overexpression of -cyclase, a key enzyme for lutein synthesis. Furthermore, analysis of pigment distribution within the mistletoe thylakoids excluded the possibility of different localizations for the Lx- and V-cycle pigments. From these findings, together with previous reports on the substrate specificity of the two enzymes in the V cycle, we propose that mutation to zeaxanthin epoxidase could have resulted in altered regulation and/or substrate specificity of the enzyme that gave rise to the parallel operation of two xanthophyll cycles in some plants. The distribution pattern of Lx in the mistletoe phylogeny inferred from 18S rRNA gene sequences also suggested that the occurrence of the Lx cycle is determined genetically. Possible molecular evolutionary processes that may have led to the operation of the Lx cycle in some mistletoes are discussed.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - - and -Car - and -carotene - Chl chlorophyll - -DM dodecyl--d-maltoside - DPS de-epoxidation state of the violaxanthin cycle (= [A+Z]/[V+A+Z]) - Lut lutein - Lx lutein epoxide - Caro total carotenoid concentration - V violaxanthin - VAZ pool size of the violaxanthin cycle (= V+A+Z) - VDE violaxanthin de-epoxidase - Z zeaxanthin - ZE zeaxanthin epoxidase  相似文献   

11.
The xanthophyll cycle apparently aids the photoprotection of photosystem II by regulating the nonradiative dissipation of excess absorbed light energy as heat. However, it is a controversial question whether the resulting nonphotochemical quenching is soley dependent on xanthophyll cycle activity or not. The xanthophyll cycle consists of two enzymic reactions, namely deepoxidation of the diepoxide violaxanthin to the epoxide-free zeaxanthin and the much slower, reverse process of epoxidation. While deepoxidation requires a transthylakoid pH gradient (ΔpH), epoxidation can proceed irrespective of a ΔpH. Herein, we compared the extent and kinetics of deepoxidation and epoxidation to the changes in fluorescence in the presence of a light-induced thylakoid ΔpH. We show that epoxidation reverses fluorescence quenching without affecting thylakoid ΔpH. These results suggest that epoxidase activity reverses quenching by removing deepoxidized xanthophyll cycle pigments from quenching complexes and converting them to a nonquenching form. The transmembrane organization of the xanthophyll cycle influences the localization and the availability of deepoxidized xanthophylls is to support nonphotochemical quenching capacity. The results confirm the view that rapidly reversible nonphotochemical quenching is dependent on deepoxidized xanthophyll.  相似文献   

12.
In the present study, the solubility and enzymatic de-epoxidation of diadinoxanthin (Ddx) was investigated in three different artificial membrane systems: (1) Unilamellar liposomes composed of different concentrations of the bilayer forming lipid phosphatidylcholine (PC) and the inverted hexagonal phase (HII phase) forming lipid monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG), (2) liposomes composed of PC and the HII phase forming lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), and (3) an artificial membrane system composed of digalactosyldiacylglycerol (DGDG) and MGDG, which resembles the lipid composition of the natural thylakoid membrane. Our results show that Ddx de-epoxidation strongly depends on the concentration of the inverted hexagonal phase forming lipids MGDG or PE in the liposomes composed of PC or DGDG, thus indicating that the presence of inverted hexagonal structures is essential for Ddx de-epoxidation. The difference observed for the solubilization of Ddx in HII phase forming lipids compared with bilayer forming lipids indicates that Ddx is not equally distributed in the liposomes composed of different concentrations of bilayer versus non-bilayer lipids. In artificial membranes with a high percentage of bilayer lipids, a large part of Ddx is located in the membrane bilayer. In membranes composed of equal proportions of bilayer and HII phase forming lipids, the majority of the Ddx molecules is located in the inverted hexagonal structures. The significance of the pigment distribution and the three-dimensional structure of the HII phase for the de-epoxidation reaction is discussed, and a possible scenario for the lipid dependence of Ddx (and violaxanthin) de-epoxidation in the native thylakoid membrane is proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Recent advances in the fields of chromatography, mass spectrometry, and chemical analysis have greatly improved the efficiency with which carotenoids can be extracted and analyzed from avian plumage. Prior to these technological developments, Brush (1968) [1] concluded that the burgundy-colored plumage of the male pompadour Cotinga Xipholena punicea is produced by a combination of blue structural color and red carotenoids, including astaxanthin, canthaxanthin, isozeaxanthin, and a fourth unidentified, polar carotenoid. However, X. punicea does not in fact exhibit any structural coloration. This work aims to elucidate the carotenoid pigments of the burgundy color of X. punicea plumage using advanced analytical methodology. Feathers were collected from two burgundy male specimens and from a third aberrant orange-colored specimen. Pigments were extracted using a previously published technique (McGraw et al. (2005) [2]), separated by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and analyzed by UV/Vis absorption spectroscopy, chemical analysis, mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and comparison with direct synthetic products. Our investigation revealed the presence of eight ketocarotenoids, including astaxanthin and canthaxanthin as reported previously by Brush (1968) [1]. Six of the ketocarotenoids contained methoxyl groups, which is rare for naturally-occurring carotenoids and a novel finding in birds. Interestingly, the carotenoid composition was the same in both the burgundy and orange feathers, indicating that feather coloration in X. punicea is determined not only by the presence of carotenoids, but also by interactions between the bound carotenoid pigments and their protein environment in the barb rami and barbules. This paper presents the first evidence of metabolically-derived methoxy-carotenoids in birds.  相似文献   

14.
Plants are able to deal with variable environmental conditions; when exposed to strong illumination, they safely dissipate excess energy as heat and increase their capacity for scavenging reacting oxygen species. Both these protection mechanisms involve activation of the xanthophyll cycle, in which the carotenoid violaxanthin is converted to zeaxanthin by violaxanthin de-epoxidase, using ascorbate as the source of reducing power. In this work, following determination of the three-dimensional structure of the violaxanthin de-epoxidase catalytic domain, we identified the putative binding sites for violaxanthin and ascorbate by in silico docking. Amino acid residues lying in close contact with the two substrates were analyzed for their involvement in the catalytic mechanism. Experimental results supported the proposed substrate-binding sites and point to two residues, Asp-177 and Tyr-198, which are suggested to participate in the catalytic mechanism, based on complete loss of activity in mutant proteins. The role of other residues and the mechanistic similarity to aspartic proteases and epoxide hydrolases are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
In higher plants, the major part of the xanthophyll cycle pigment violaxanthin (Vx) is non-covalently bound to the main light-harvesting complex of PSII (LHCII). Under saturating light conditions Vx has to be released from its binding site into the surrounding lipid phase, where it is converted to zeaxanthin (Zx) by the enzyme Vx de-epoxidase (VDE). In the present study we investigated the influence of thylakoid lipids on the de-epoxidation of Vx, which was still associated with the LHCII. We isolated LHCII with different concentrations of native, endogenous lipids and Vx by sucrose gradient centrifugation or successive cation precipitation. Analysis of the different LHCII preparations showed that the concentration of LHCII-associated Vx was correlated with the concentration of the main thylakoid lipid monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) associated with the complexes. Decreases in the MGDG content of the LHCII led to a diminished Vx concentration, indicating that a part of the total Vx pool was located in an MGDG phase surrounding the LHCII, whereas another part was bound to the LHCII apoproteins. We further studied the convertibility of LHCII-associated Vx in in-vitro enzyme assays by addition of isolated VDE. We observed an efficient and almost complete Vx conversion in the LHCII fractions containing high amounts of endogenous MGDG. LHCII preparations with low concentrations of MGDG exhibited a strongly reduced Vx de-epoxidation, which could be increased by addition of exogenous, pure MGDG. The de-epoxidation of LHCII-associated Vx was saturated at a much lower concentration of native, endogenous MGDG compared with the concentration of isolated, exogenous MGDG, which is needed for optimal VDE activity in in-vitro assays employing pure isolated Vx.  相似文献   

16.
The blue absorbance change occurring in flashed bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) leaves when exposed to continuous light (first observed by Strasser; Strasser, R.J. (1973) Arch. Int. Physiol. Biochem. 81, 935–955) is caused by the conversion of the following xanthophylls: violaxanthine → antheraxanthine → zeaxanthine. This conclusion is derived from the simultaneous occurrence of both reactions: (a) In flashed leaves, blue absorbance change and xanthophyll conversion take place under strong (2 mW · cm?2) but not under weak (0.02 mW · cm?2) white light. (b) In chloroplasts isolated from flashed leaves, the blue absorbance change occurs in the dark under conditions that also induce the xanthophyll conversion. (c) Blue absorbance change and xanthophyll conversion are both inhibited by dithiothreitol. In addition, the light-induced blue absorbance change is reversed in the dark if aerobic conditions are maintained, i.e. under conditions that in normal leaves favor the reversal of the above reaction sequence.The significance of the xanthophyll conversion is discussed in relation to other phenomena occurring in flashed leaves after exposure to continuous illumination.  相似文献   

17.
Wilson KE  Huner NP 《Planta》2000,212(1):93-102
The long-term photoacclimation of Chlorella vulgaris Beijer (UTEX 265) to growth irradiance and growth temperature under ambient CO2 conditions was examined. While cultures grew at a faster rate at 27 than at 5 °C, growth rates appeared to be independent of irradiance. Decreases in light-harvesting polypeptide accumulation, increases in xanthophyll pool size and changes in the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle pigments were correlated linearly with increases in the relative reduction state of QA, the primary quinone receptor of photosystem II, when estimated as 1−qP under steady-state growth conditions. However, we show that there is also a specific temperature-dependent component, in addition to the redox-state of the QA, involved in regulating the content and composition of light-harvesting complex II of C. vulgaris. In contrast, modulation of the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll pool in response to increased 1−qP in cells grown at 5 °C was indistinguishable from that of cells grown at 27 °C, indicating that light and temperature interact in a similar way to regulate xanthophyll cycle activity in C. vulgaris. Because C. vulgaris exhibited a low-light phenotype in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), but a high-light phenotype upon addition of 2,5-dibromo-6-isopropyl-3-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone, we conclude that the plastoquinone pool acts as a sensor regulating the accumulation of light-harvesting polypeptides in C. vulgaris. However, concomitant measurements of non-photochemical fluorescence quenching (qN) and the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll pool appear to indicate that, in addition to the redox-state of the plastoquinone pool, the trans-thylakoid ΔpH may also contribute to sensing changes in irradiance and temperature that would lead to over-excitation of the photosynthetic apparatus. We suggest that sink capacity as reflected in photosynthate utilization and cell growth ultimately regulate photoacclimation in C. vulgaris. Received: 17 April 2000 / Accepted: 23 May 2000  相似文献   

18.
The structure of molecular aggregates of the photosynthetic pigment violaxanthin has been studied using electron and vibrational absorption spectroscopies and the diffractometric method. The results discussed in terms of the exciton-splitting theory lead to the conclusion that the aggregated forms of violaxanthin are organized as planar structures: about 40 molecules wide and 2 molecules high. The biological importance of the occurrence of violaxanthin in an aggregated form is also discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) is a carboxyl group modifier and it is an inhibitor of various ATPases. Present experiments, using an in vitro preparation, were designed to study whether DCCD affected the transporters of the bullfrog cornea epithelium, specifically, the Na+/K+ ATPase pump located in the basolateral membrane. For this purpose, corneas were impaled with microelectrodes and experiments were done under short-circuit current (I sc ) conditions. Addition of DCCD to a concentration of 10−4 m to the tear solution gave a marked decrease in I sc ; a marked depolarization of the intracellular potential, V o ; and a significant decrease in the apical membrane fractional resistance, fR o . There were small and variable although significant changes in the transepithelial conductance, g t . The effects may be explained by a decrease in the basolateral membrane K+ conductance, in combination with a partial inhibition of the Na+/K+-ATPase pump located in the basolateral membrane. There is also evidence for an increase in the apical membrane Cl conductance. Received: 12 August 1999/Revised: 16 November 1999  相似文献   

20.
Lohr M  Wilhelm C 《Planta》2001,212(3):382-391
Recently, we reported the presence of the violaxanthin-antheraxanthin-zeaxanthin cycle in diatoms, and showed that violaxanthin is the putative precursor of both diadinoxanthin and fucoxanthin in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin (M. Lohr and C. Wilhelm, 1999, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96: 8784–8789). In the present study, two possible intermediates in the synthesis of violaxanthin from β-carotene were identified in P. tricornutum, namely β-cryptoxanthin and β-cryptoxanthin epoxide. In low light, the latter pigment prevails, but in high light β-cryptoxanthin accumulates, probably as the result of an increased activity of the xantophyll-cycle de-epoxidase. The apparent kinetics of several xanthophyll conversion steps were determined for P. tricornutum and Cyclotella meneghiniana Kützing. The experimentally determined conversion rates were used to evaluate the hypothetical pathway of xanthophyll synthesis in diatoms. For this purpose a mathematical model was developed which allows the calculation of theoretical rates of pigment conversion for microalgae under steady-state growth conditions. A comparison between measured and calculated conversion rates agreed well with the proposal of a sequential synthesis of fucoxanthin via violaxanthin and diadinoxanthin. The postulation of zeaxanthin as an obligatory intermediate in the synthesis of violaxanthin, however, resulted in large discrepancies between the measured and calculated rates of its epoxidation. Instead of zeaxanthin, β-cryptoxanthin epoxide may be involved in the biosynthesis of violaxanthin in diatoms. Received: 16 March 2000 / Accepted: 30 June 2000  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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