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1.
Geranylgeranyl reductase catalyses the reduction of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to phytyl pyrophosphate required for synthesis of chlorophylls, phylloquinone and tocopherols. The gene chlP (ORF sll1091) encoding the enzyme has been inactivated in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The resulting ΔchlP mutant accumulates exclusively geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a instead of its phytylated analogue as well as low amounts of α-tocotrienol instead of α-tocopherol. Whereas the contents of chlorophyll and total carotenoids are decreased, abundance of phycobilisomes is increased in ΔchlP cells. The mutant assembles functional photosystems I and II as judged from 77 K fluorescence and electron transport measurements. However, the mutant is unable to grow photoautotrophically due to instability and rapid degradation of the photosystems in the absence of added glucose. We suggest that instability of the photosystems in ΔchlP is directly related to accumulation of geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a. Increased rigidity of the chlorophyll isoprenoid tail moiety due to three additional CC bonds is the likely cause of photooxidative stress and reduced stability of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes assembled with geranylgeranylated chlorophyll a in the ΔchlP mutant.  相似文献   

2.
The arsenate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been characterized in terms of the redox properties of its cysteine residues and their role in the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Of the five cysteines present in the enzyme, two (Cys13 and Cys35) have been shown not to be required for catalysis, while Cys8, Cys80 and Cys82 have been shown to be essential. The as-isolated enzyme contains a single disulfide, formed between Cys80 and Cys82, with an oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (Em) value of − 165 mV at pH 7.0. It has been shown that Cys15 is the only one of the four cysteines present in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 glutaredoxin A required for its ability to serve as an electron donor to arsenate reductase, while the other three cysteines (Cys18, Cys36 and Cys70) play no role. Glutaredoxin A has been shown to contain a single redox-active disulfide/dithiol couple, with a two-electron, Em value of − 220 mV at pH 7.0. One cysteine in this disulfide/dithiol couple has been shown to undergo glutathionylation. An X-ray crystal structure, at 1.8 Å resolution, has been obtained for glutaredoxin A. The probable orientations of arsenate reductase disulfide bonds present in the resting enzyme and in a likely reaction intermediate of the enzyme have been examined by in silico modeling, as has the surface environment of arsenate reductase in the vicinity of Cys8, the likely site for the initial reaction between arsenate and the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
To determine the mechanism of carotenoid-sensitized non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria, the kinetics of blue-light-induced quenching and fluorescence spectra were studied in the wild type and mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 grown with or without iron. The blue-light-induced quenching was observed in the wild type as well as in mutants lacking PS II or IsiA confirming that neither IsiA nor PS II is required for carotenoid-triggered fluorescence quenching. Both fluorescence at 660 nm (originating from phycobilisomes) and at 681 nm (which, upon 440 nm excitation originates mostly from chlorophyll) was quenched. However, no blue-light-induced changes in the fluorescence yield were observed in the apcE mutant that lacks phycobilisome attachment. The results are interpreted to indicate that interaction of the Slr1963-associated carotenoid with - presumably - allophycocyanin in the phycobilisome core is responsible for non-photochemical energy quenching, and that excitations on chlorophyll in the thylakoid equilibrate sufficiently with excitations on allophycocyanin in wild type to contribute to quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence.  相似文献   

4.
Roles of oxidative stress and photoinhibition in high light acclimation were studied using a regulatory mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The mutant strain ΔsigCDE contains the stress responsive SigB as the only functional group 2 σ factor. The ?sigCDE strain grew more slowly than the control strain in methyl-viologen-induced oxidative stress. Furthermore, a fluorescence dye detecting H2O2, hydroxyl and peroxyl radicals and peroxynitrite, produced a stronger signal in ?sigCDE than in the control strain, and immunological detection of carbonylated residues showed more protein oxidation in ?sigCDE than in the control strain. These results indicate that ?sigCDE suffers from oxidative stress in standard conditions. The oxidative stress may be explained by the findings that ?sigCDE had a low content of glutathione and low amount of Flv3 protein functioning in the Mehler-like reaction. Although ?sigCDE suffers from oxidative stress, up-regulation of photoprotective carotenoids and Flv4, Sll2018, Flv2 proteins protected PSII against light induced damage by quenching singlet oxygen more efficiently in ?sigCDE than in the control strain in visible and in UV-A/B light. However, in UV-C light singlet oxygen is not produced and PSII damage occurred similarly in the ?sigCDE and control strains. According to our results, resistance against the light-induced damage of PSII alone does not lead to high light tolerance of the cells, but in addition efficient protection against oxidative stress would be required.  相似文献   

5.
The cyanobacterial phycobilisome (PBS) is a giant pigment-protein complex which harvests light energy for photosynthesis and comprises two structures: a core and peripheral rods. Most studies on PBS structure and function are based on mutants of unicellular strains. In this report, we describe the phenotypic and genetic characterization of a transposon mutant of the filamentous Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120, denoted LC1, which cannot synthesize the phycobiliprotein phycocyanin (PC), the main component of the rods; in this mutant, the transposon had inserted into the cpcB gene (orf alr0528) which putatively encodes PC-β chain. Mutant LC1 was able to synthesize phycoerythrocyanin (PEC), a phycobiliprotein (PBP) located at the terminal region of the rods; but in the absence of PC, PEC did not attach to the PBSs that only retained the allophycocyanin (APC) core; ferredoxin: NADP+-oxidoreductase (FNR) that is associated with the PBS in the wild type, was not found in isolated PBSs from LC1. The performance of the mutant exposed to different environmental conditions was evaluated. The mutant phenotype was successfully complemented by cloning and transfer of the wild type complete cpc operon to mutant LC1. Interestingly, LC1 compensated its mutation by significantly increasing the number of its core-PBS and the effective quantum yield of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry; this feature suggests a more efficient energy conversion in the mutant which may be useful for biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

6.
The PsaE protein is located at the reducing side of photosystem I (PSI) and is involved in docking the soluble electron acceptors, particularly ferredoxin. However, deletion of the psaE gene in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 inhibited neither photoautotrophic growth, nor in vivo linear and cyclic electron flows. Using photoacoustic spectroscopy, we detected an oxygen-dependent, PSI-mediated energy storage activity in the ΔpsaE null mutant, which was not present in the wild type (WT). The expression of the genes encoding catalase (katG) and iron superoxide dismutase (sodB) was upregulated in the ΔpsaE mutant, and the increase in katG expression was correlated with an increase in catalase activity of the cells. When catalases were inhibited by sodium azide, the production of reactive oxygen species was enhanced in ΔpsaE relative to WT. Moreover, sodium azide strongly impaired photoautotrophic growth of the ΔpsaE mutant cells while WT was much less sensitive to this inhibitor. The katG gene was deleted in the ΔpsaE mutant, and the resulting double mutant was more photosensitive than the single mutants, showing cell bleaching and lipid peroxidation in high light. Our results show that the presence of the PsaE polypeptide at the reducing side of PSI has a function in avoidance of electron leakage to oxygen in the light (Mehler reaction) and the resulting formation of toxic oxygen species. PsaE-deficient Synechocystis cells can counteract the chronic photoreduction of oxygen by increasing their capacity to detoxify reactive oxygen species.  相似文献   

7.
We generated Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 strains, designated F-His and J-His, which express histidine-tagged PsaF and PsaJ subunits, respectively, for simple purification of the photosystem I (PSI) complex. Six histidine residues were genetically added to the C-terminus of the PsaF subunit in F-His cells and the N-terminus of the PsaJ subunit in J-His cells. The histidine residues introduced had no apparent effect on photoautotrophic growth of the cells or the activity of PSI and PSII in thylakoid membranes. PSI complexes could be simply purified from the F-His and J-His cells by Ni2+-affinity column chromatography. When thylakoid membranes corresponding to 20 mg chlorophyll were used, PSI complexes corresponding to about 7 mg chlorophyll could be purified in both strains. The purified PSI complexes could be separated into monomers and trimers by ultracentrifugation in glycerol density gradient and high activity was recorded for trimers isolated from the F-His and J-His strains. Blue-Native PAGE and SDS-PAGE analysis of monomers and trimers indicated the existence of two distinct monomers with different subunit compositions and no contamination of PSI with other complexes, such as PSII and Cyt b6f. Further analysis of proteins and lipids in the purified PSI indicated the presence of novel proteins in the monomers and about six lipid molecules per monomer unit in the trimers. These results demonstrate that active PSI complexes can be simply purified from the constructed strains and the strains are very useful tools for analysis of PSI.  相似文献   

8.
Dmitrii Vavilin 《BBA》2007,1767(7):920-929
Chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by incubating cells in the presence of 13C-labeled glucose or 15N-containing salts. Upon mass spectral analysis of chlorophyll isolated from cells grown in the presence of 13C-glucose for different time periods, four chlorophyll pools were detected that differed markedly in the amount of 13C incorporated into the porphyrin (Por) and phytol (Phy) moieties of the molecule. These four pools represent (i) unlabeled chlorophyll (12Por12Phy), (ii) 13C-labeled chlorophyll (13Por13Phy), and (iii, iv) chlorophyll, in which either the porphyrin or the phytol moiety was 13C-labeled, whereas the other constituent of the molecule remained unlabeled (13Por12Phy and 12Por13Phy). The kinetics of 12Por12Phy disappearance, presumably due to chlorophyll de-esterification, and of 13Por12Phy, 12Por13Phy, and 13Por13Phy accumulation due to chlorophyll synthesis provided evidence for continuous chlorophyll turnover in Synechocystis cells. The loss of 12Por12Phy was three-fold faster in a photosystem I-less strain than in a photosystem II-less strain and was accelerated in wild-type cells upon exposure to strong light. These data suggest that most chlorophyll appears to be de-esterified in Synechocystis upon dissociation and repair of damaged photosystem II. A substantial part of chlorophyllide and phytol released upon the de-esterification of chlorophyll can be recycled for the biosynthesis of new chlorophyll molecules contributing to the formation of 13Por12Phy and 12Por13Phy chlorophyll pools. The phytol kinase, Slr1652, plays a significant but not absolutely critical role in this recycling process.  相似文献   

9.
Cyanobacteria are capable of using dissipation of phycobilisome-absorbed energy into heat as part of their photoprotective strategy. Non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria cells is triggered by absorption of blue-green light by the carotenoid-binding protein, and involves quenching of phycobilisome fluorescence. In this study, we find direct evidence that the quenching is accompanied by a considerable reduction of energy flow to the photosystems. We present light saturation curves of photosystems’ activity in quenched and non-quenched states in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In the quenched state, the quantum efficiency of light absorbed by phycobilisomes drops by about 30-40% for both photoreactions—P700 photooxidation in the photosystem II-less strain and photosystem II fluorescence induction in the photosystem I-less strain of Synechocystis. A similar decrease of the excitation pressure on both photosystems leads us to believe that the core-membrane linker allophycocyanin APC-LCM is at or beyond the point of non-photochemical quenching. We analyze 77 K fluorescence spectra and suggest that the quenching center is formed at the level of the short-wavelength allophycocyanin trimers. It seems that both chlorophyll and APC-LCM may dissipate excess energy via uphill energy transfer at physiological temperatures, but neither of the two is at the heart of the carotenoid-binding protein-dependent non-photochemical quenching mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
In this work, we investigated electron transport processes in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, with a special emphasis focused on oxygen-dependent interrelations between photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport chains. Redox transients of the photosystem I primary donor P700 and oxygen exchange processes were measured by the EPR method under the same experimental conditions. To discriminate between the factors controlling electron flow through photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport chains, we compared the P700 redox transients and oxygen exchange processes in wild type cells and mutants with impaired photosystem II and terminal oxidases (CtaI, CydAB, CtaDEII). It was shown that the rates of electron flow through both photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport chains strongly depended on the transmembrane proton gradient and oxygen concentration in cell suspension. Electron transport through photosystem I was controlled by two main mechanisms: (i) oxygen-dependent acceleration of electron transfer from photosystem I to NADP+, and (ii) slowing down of electron flow between photosystem II and photosystem I governed by the intrathylakoid pH. Inhibitor analysis of P700 redox transients led us to the conclusion that electron fluxes from dehydrogenases and from cyclic electron transport pathway comprise 20-30% of the total electron flux from the intersystem electron transport chain to P700+.  相似文献   

11.
Rates of chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 wild type and mutants lacking one or both photosystems by labeling cells with (15NH4)2SO4 and Na15NO3. Pigments extracted from cells were separated by HPLC and incorporation of the 15N label into porphyrins was subsequently examined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The life time (τ) of chlorophyll in wild-type Synechocystis grown at a light intensity of 100 μmol photons m−2 s−1 was determined to be about 300 h, much longer than the cell doubling time of about 14 h. Slow chlorophyll degradation (τ ∼200-400 h) was also observed in Photosystem I-less and in Photosystem II-less Synechocystis mutants, whereas in a mutant lacking both Photosystem I and Photosystem II chlorophyll degradation was accelerated 4-5 fold (τ ∼50 h). Chlorophyllide and pheophorbide were identified as intermediates of chlorophyll degradation in the Photosystem I-less/Photosystem II-less mutant. In comparison with the wild type, the chlorophyll synthesis rate was five-fold slower in the Photosystem I-less strain and about eight-fold slower in the strain lacking both photosystems, resulting in different chlorophyll levels in the various mutants. The results presented in this paper demonstrate the presence of a regulation that adjusts the rate of chlorophyll synthesis according to the needs of chlorophyll-binding polypeptides associated with the photosystems.  相似文献   

12.
As high-intensity solar radiation can lead to extensive damage of the photosynthetic apparatus, cyanobacteria have developed various protection mechanisms to reduce the effective excitation energy transfer (EET) from the antenna complexes to the reaction center. One of them is non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of the phycobilisome (PB) fluorescence. In Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 this role is carried by the orange carotenoid protein (OCP), which reacts to high-intensity light by a series of conformational changes, enabling the binding of OCP to the PBs reducing the flow of energy into the photosystems. In this paper the mechanisms of energy migration in two mutant PB complexes of Synechocystis sp. were investigated and compared. The mutant CK is lacking phycocyanin in the PBs while the mutant ΔPSI/PSII does not contain both photosystems. Fluorescence decay spectra with picosecond time resolution were registered using a single photon counting technique. The studies were performed in a wide range of temperatures — from 4 to 300 K. The time course of NPQ and fluorescence recovery in darkness was studied at room temperature using both steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence measurements. The OCP induced NPQ has been shown to be due to EET from PB cores to the red form of OCP under photon flux densities up to 1000 μmol photons m− 2 s− 1. The gradual changes of the energy transfer rate from allophycocyanin to OCP were observed during the irradiation of the sample with blue light and consequent adaptation to darkness. This fact was interpreted as the revelation of intermolecular interaction between OCP and PB binding site. At low temperatures a significantly enhanced EET from allophycocyanin to terminal emitters has been shown, due to the decreased back transfer from terminal emitter to APC. The activation of OCP not only leads to fluorescence quenching, but also affects the rate constants of energy transfer as shown by model based analysis of the decay associated spectra. The results indicate that the ability of OCP to quench the fluorescence is strongly temperature dependent. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: Keys to Produce Clean Energy.  相似文献   

13.
The D1 protein of Photosystem II (PSII) is recognized as the main target of photoinhibitory damage and exhibits a high turnover rate due to its degradation and replacement during the PSII repair cycle. Damaged D1 is replaced by newly synthesized D1 and, although reasonable, there is no direct evidence for selective replacement of damaged D1. Instead, it remains possible that increased turnover of D1 subunits occurs in a non-selective manner due for example, to a general up-regulation of proteolytic activity triggered during damaging environmental conditions, such as high light. To determine if D1 degradation is targeted to damaged D1 or generalized to all D1, we developed a genetic system involving simultaneous dual expression of wild type and mutant versions of D1 protein. Dual D1 strains (nS345P:eWT and nD170A:eWT) expressed a wild type (WT) D1 from ectopic and a damage prone mutant (D1-S345P, D1-D170A) from native locus on the chromosome. Characterization of strains showed that all dual D1 strains restore WT like phenotype with high PSII activity. Higher PSII activity indicates increased population of PSII reaction centers with WT D1. Analysis of steady state levels of D1 in nS345P:eWT by immunoblot showed an accumulation of WT D1 only. But, in vivo pulse labeling confirmed the synthesis of both S345P (exists as iD1) and WT D1 in the dual strain. Expression of nS345P:eWT in FtsH2 knockout background showed accumulation of both iD1 and D1 proteins. This demonstrates that dual D1 strains express both forms of D1, yet only damage prone PSII complexes are selected for repair providing evidence that the D1 degradation process is targeted towards damaged PSII complexes. Since the N-terminus has been previously shown to be important for the degradation of damaged D1, the possibility that the highly conserved cysteine 18 residue situated in the N-terminal domain of D1 is involved in the targeted repair process was tested by examining site directed mutants of this and the other cysteines of the D1 protein. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: Keys to Produce Clean Energy.  相似文献   

14.
Sigal Shcolnick  Nir Keren 《BBA》2007,1767(6):814-819
The mrgA protein of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 is a member of the DPS Fe storage protein family. The physiological role of this protein was studied using a disruption mutant in the mrgA gene (slr1894) and by measuring intracellular Fe quotas, 77K chlorophyll fluorescence and growth rates. It was found that the deletion of the mrgA gene did not impair the Fe storage capacity, as the intracellular Fe quotas of the ΔmrgA cells were comparable to those of the wild type. Furthermore, the cellular response to decreasing external Fe concentrations, as detected by the emergence of the CP43′ 77K fluorescence band, was similar in wild type and mutant cultures. On the other hand, a considerable slow down in the growth rate of ΔmrgA cultures was observed upon transfer from Fe replete to Fe depleted medium, indicating impeded utilization of the plentiful intracellular Fe. Based on these results, we suggest that mrgA plays an important role in the transport of intracellular Fe from storage (within bacterioferritins) to biosynthesis of metal cofactors throughout the cell's growth.  相似文献   

15.
Daping Yang  Chen Min 《BBA》2010,1797(2):204-211
The gene encoding a chlorophyll d-binding light-harvesting protein, pcbA from Acaryochloris marina (now called as accessory Chlorophyll Binding Protein CBPII) marked with a His-tag was transformed into the genome of Synechocystis PCC6803. Protein gel electrophoresis and western blotting confirmed that this foreign chlorophyll d-binding protein CBPII was expressed and integrated into the thylakoid membrane and bound with chlorophyll a, the only type of chlorophyll present in Synechocystis PCC 6803. Native electrophoresis suggested that CBPII interacts with photosystem II of Synechocystis PCC 6803. Surprisingly, spectral analyses showed that the phycobiliproteins were suppressed in the transformed Synechocystis pcbA+, with a lower ratio of phycobilins to chlorophyll a. These results suggest that there are competitive interactions between the external antenna system of phycobiliproteins and the integral antenna system of chlorophyll-bound protein complexes.  相似文献   

16.
Chung-Hsien Hung 《BBA》2007,1767(6):686-693
Cytochrome (cyt) b559 has been proposed to play an important role in the cyclic electron flow processes that protect photosystem II (PSII) from light-induced damage during photoinhibitory conditions. However, the exact role(s) of cyt b559 in the cyclic electron transfer pathway(s) in PSII remains unclear. To study the exact role(s) of cyt b559, we have constructed a series of site-directed mutants, each carrying a single amino acid substitution of one of the heme axial-ligands, in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. In these mutants, His-22 of the α or the β subunit of cyt b559 was replaced with either Met, Glu, Tyr, Lys, Arg, Cys or Gln. On the basis of oxygen-evolution and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements, we found that, among all mutants that were constructed, only the H22Kα mutant grew photoautotrophically, and accumulated stable PSII reaction centers (∼ 81% compared to wild-type cells). In addition, we isolated one pseudorevertant of the H22Yβ mutant that regained the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers (∼ 79% compared to wild-type cells). On the basis of 77 K fluorescence emission measurements, we found that energy transfer from the phycobilisomes to PSII reaction centers was uncoupled in those cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no stable PSII. Furthermore, on the basis of immunoblot analyses, we found that in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 mutants that assembled little or no PSII, the amounts of the D1, D2, cyt b559α and β polypeptides were very low or undetectable but their CP47 and PsaC polypeptides were accumulated to the wild-type level. We also found that the amounts of cyt b559β polypeptide were significantly increased (larger than two folds) in thylakoid membranes of cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant cells. We suspected that the increase in the amounts of cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant polypeptides in thylakoid membranes might facilitate the assembly of functional PSII in cyt b559 H22YβPS+ mutant cells. Moreover, we found that isolated His-tagged PSII particles from H22Kα mutant cells gave rise to redox-induced optical absorption difference spectra of cyt b559. Therefore, our results concluded that significant fractions of H22Kα mutant PSII particles retained the heme of cyt b559. Finally, this work is the first report of cyt b559 mutants having substitutions of an axial heme-ligands that retain the ability to grow photoautotrophically and to assemble stable PSII reaction centers. These two cyt b559 mutants (H22Kα and H22YβPS+) and their PSII reaction centers will be very suitable for further biophysical and biochemical studies of the functional role(s) of cyt b559 in PSII.  相似文献   

17.
The FtsH2 protease, encoded by the slr0228 gene, plays a key role in the selective degradation of photodamaged D1 protein during the repair of Photosystem II (PSII) in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. To test whether additional proteases might be involved in D1 degradation during high rates of photodamage, we have studied the synthesis and degradation of the D1 protein in ΔPsbO and ΔPsbV mutants, in which the CaMn4 cluster catalyzing oxygen evolution is less stable, and in the D1 processing mutants, D1-S345P and ΔCtpA, which are unable to assemble a functional cluster. All four mutants exhibited a dramatically increased rate of D1 degradation in high light compared to the wild-type. Additional inactivation of the ftsH2 gene slowed the rate of D1 degradation dramatically and increased the level of PSII complexes. We conclude that FtsH2 plays a major role in the degradation of both precursor and mature forms of D1 following donor-side photoinhibition. However, this conclusion concerned only D1 assembled into larger complexes containing at least D2 and CP47. In the ΔpsbEFLJ deletion mutant blocked at an early stage in PSII assembly, unassembled D1 protein was efficiently degraded in the absence of FtsH2 pointing to the involvement of other protease(s). Significantly, the ΔPsbO mutant displayed unusually low levels of cellular chlorophyll at extremely low-light intensities. The possibilities that PSII repair may limit the availability of chlorophyll for the biogenesis of other chlorophyll-binding proteins and that PsbO might have a regulatory role in PSII repair are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Chlorophyll (Chl) a in a cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was replaced with di-vinyl (DV)-Chl a by knock-out of the specific gene (slr1923), responsible for the reduction of a 8-vinyl group, and optical and photochemical properties of purified photosystem (PS) II complexes (DV-PS II) were investigated. We observed differences in the peak wavelengths of absorption and fluorescence spectra; however, replacement of Chl a with DV-Chl a had limited effects. On the contrary, photochemical reactions were highly sensitive to high-light treatments in the mutant. Specifically, DV-Chl a was rapidly bleached under high-light conditions, and we detected significant dissociation of complexes and degradation of D1 proteins (PsbA). By comparing the SDS-PAGE patterns observed in this study to those observed in spinach chloroplasts, this degradation is assigned to the acceptor-side photoinhibition. The delayed fluorescence in the nanosecond time region at 77 K was suppressed in DV-PS II, possibly increasing triplet formation of Chl molecules. Our findings provide insight into the evolutionary processes of cyanobacteria. The effects of pigment replacement on the optimization of reactions are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Site-directed mutations were constructed in photosystem II of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 in which the axial ligand, D1-His198, of special pair chlorophyll PD1 was replaced with Gln and where D1-Thr179, which overlies monomeric chlorophyll ChlD1, was replaced with His. The D1-His198Gln mutation produces a 3nm displacement to the blue of the bleaching minimum in the Soret and in the Qy region of the (P+QA--PQA) absorbance difference spectrum. To a first approximation, the bleaching can be assigned to the low-energy exciton transition of the special pair chlorophylls PD1/PD2. The D1-Thr179His mutation produces a 2nm displacement to the red of the bleaching minimum in the Qy region of the (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectrum. Analysis of the flash-induced (P+QA--PQA) and (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectra of both mutants compared with wild-type at 80K indicate that the cation of the oxidized donor P+ is predominantly localized on the chlorophyll PD1 of the special pair and that the reaction centre triplet state, produced upon charge recombination from 3[P+Pheo-], when the primary quinone electron acceptor QA is doubly reduced, is primarily localized on ChlD1.  相似文献   

20.
The Photosystem II (PS II) assembly factors Psb27 and Ycf48 are transiently associated with PS II during its biogenesis and repair pathways. We investigated the function of these proteins by constructing knockout mutants in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In ΔYcf48 cells, PS II electron transfer and stable oxygen evolution were perturbed. Additionally, Psb27 was required for photoautotrophic growth of cells lacking Ycf48 and assembly beyond the RC47 assembly complex in ΔYcf48:ΔPsb27 cells was impeded. Our results suggest the RC47 complex formed in ΔYcf48 cells is defective and that this deficiency is exacerbated if CP43 binds in the absence of Psb27.  相似文献   

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