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1.
Extraction conditions have been found which result in the retention of managanese to the 33–34 kDa protein, first isolated as an apoprotein by Kuwabara and Murata (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1979) Biochim. Biophys Acta 581, 228–236). By maintaining an oxidizing-solution potential, with hydrophilic and lipophilic redox buffers during protein extraction of spinach grana-thylakoid membranes, the 33–34 kDa protein is observed to bind a maximum of 2 Mn/protein which are not released by extended dialysis versus buffer. This manganese is a part of the pool of 4 Mn/Photosystem II normally associated with the oxygen-evolving complex. The mechanism for retention of Mn to the protein during isolation appears to be by suppression of chemical reduction of natively bound, high-valent Mn to the labile Mn(II) oxidation state. This protein is also present in stoichiometric levels in highly active, O2-evolving, detergent-extracted PS-II particles which contain 4–5 Mn/PS II. Conditions which result in the loss of Mn and O2 evolution activity from functional membranes, such as incubation in 1.5 mM NH2OH or in ascorbate plus dithionite, also release Mn from the protein. The protein exists as a monomer of 33 kDa by gel filtration and 34 kDa by gel electrophoresis, with an isoelectric point of 5.1 ± 0.1. The protein exhibits an EPR spectrum only below 12 K which extends over at least 2000 G centered at g = 2 consisting of non-uniformly separated hyperfine transitions with average splitting of 45–55 G. The magnitude of this splitting is nominally one-half the splitting observed in monomeric manganese complexes having O or N donor ligands. This is apparently due to electronic coupling of the two 55Mn nuclei in a presumed binuclear site. Either a ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn2(III,III) site or an antiferromagnetically coupled mixed-valence Mn2(II,III) site are considered as possible oxidation states to account for the EPR spectrum. Qualitatively similar hyperfine structure splittings are observed in ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn complexes having even-spin ground states. The extreme temperature dependence suggests the population of low-lying excited spin states such as are present in weakly coupled dimers and higher clusters of Mn ions, or, possibly, from efficient spin relaxation such as occurs in the Mn(III) oxidation state. Either 1.5 mM NH2OH or incubation with reducing agents abolishes the low temperature EPR signal and releases two Mn(II) ions to solution. This is consistent with the presence of Mn(III) in the isolated protein. The intrinsically unstable Mn2(II,III) oxidation state observed in model compounds favors the assignment of the stable protein oxidation state to the Mn2(III,III) formulation. This protein exhibits characteristics consistent with an identification with the long-sought Mn site for photosynthetic O2 evolution. An EPR spectrum having qualitatively similar features is observable in dark-adapted intact, photosynthetic membranes (Dismukes, G.C., Abramowicz, D.A., Ferris, F.K., Mathur, P., Upadrashta, B. and Watnick, P. (1983) in The Oxygen-Evolving System of Plant Photosynthesis (Inoue, Y., ed.), pp. 145–158, Academic Press, Tokyo) and in detergent-extracted, O2-evolving Photosystem-II particles (Abramowicz, D.A., Raab, T.K. and Dismukes, G.C. (1984) Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Photosynthesis (Sybesma, C., ed.), Vol. I, pp. 349–354, Martinus Nijhoff/Dr. W. Junk Publishers, The Hague, The Netherlands), thus establishing a direct link with the O2 evolving complex.  相似文献   

2.
The binding of endogenous manganese (Mn) to proteins released from spinach grana-thylakoid membranes by 2% cholate detergent or by osmotic shock is investigated. A mixture of 15-20 proteins is released by cholate and has been separated by isoelectric focusing in a sucrose gradient or by chromatofocusing. Mn coelutes with several proteins, but is lost upon dialysis. A dramatic redistribution of this Mn occurs in proteins released by osmotic shock in the presence of hydrophobic and hydrophilic oxidants. Maintaining an oxidizing solution potential during extraction apparently precludes reduction of the higher oxidation states of Mn to the labile Mn(II) state by reducing agents released from the membranes during lysing. This allows proteins to be separated which bind non-labile Mn ions. Under these extraction conditions, a protein is isolated which has an apparent molecular weight (Mr) of 65000 or 56000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis depending on the sample buffer system used. The nondissociated protein occurs as a monomer of 58 kDa (90%) and an apparent dimer of 112 kDa (10%) by gel filtration. This protein binds little Mn if extracted by cholate and separated by isoelectric focusing. However, extraction by osmotic shock in the presence of oxidants and separation by chromatofocusing results in the retention of 1.9 +/- 0.3 Mn ions per monomer. This protein is identical to that reported by Spector and Winget (Spector, M., and Winget, G.D. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 957-959). Contrary to their result, this protein does not reconstitute O2 evolution when added to depleted membranes. Rabbit antibody to this purified protein inhibits O2 evolution by 20% when incubated with intact grana-thylakoid membranes or 10-20% with partially inverted, French-pressed thylakoids. This inhibition is completely removed by 10(-3)M NH3Cl as an uncoupler of photophosphorylation. These results support a role in Phosphorylation and a location on the outer surface of the thylakoids. This antibody also selectively binds purified coupling factor, CF1, the multisubunit phosphorylation enzyme which is located on the outer thylakoid surface and which is known to bind two Mn ions tightly (Hochman, Y. and Carmeli, C. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 6293-6297). Thus the beta-subunit of CF1, which has a molecular weight of 56 kDa, can be identified as the locus of Mn binding in CF1 and as the Mn protein isolated by Spector and Winget. This protein plays no role on O2 evolution.  相似文献   

3.
Akihiko Yamagishi  Sakae Katoh 《BBA》1984,765(2):118-124
The Photosystem-II reaction-center complex of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. was resolved into two complemental chlorophyll-protein complexes, CP2b which contained a chlorophyll-binding 47 kDa polypeptide, two polypeptides in the 28–31 kDa region and a 9 kDa polypeptide, and CP2c which had only a chlorophyll-binding 40 kDa polypeptide. CP2b was found to be highly active in photoreduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol with diphenylcarbazide as an electron donor. The activity was insensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and ioxynil but was half inactivated by the treatment of the complex at 50°C for 5 min, or on addition of 0.001% sodium dodecyl sulfate, indicating its dependence on the protein conformation. CP2c also showed a low activity of the dye photoreduction, which was insensitive to heat and enhanced at high concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The quantum yield of the photoreduction was estimated to be 0.12 for CP2b and 0.002 for CP2c. It is concluded that the 47 kDa polypeptide is the site of the Photosystem-II reaction center and the 40 kDa polypeptide is not required for the Photosystem-II-driven electron transport.  相似文献   

4.
Extraction conditions have been found which result in the retention of manganese to the 33-34 kDa protein, first isolated as an apoprotein by Kuwabara and Murata (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1979) Biochim. Biophys Acta 581, 228-236). By maintaining an oxidizing-solution potential, with hydrophilic and lipophilic redox buffers during protein extraction of spinach grana-thylakoid membranes, the 33-34 kDa protein is observed to bind a maximum of 2 Mn/protein which are not released by extended dialysis versus buffer. This manganese is a part of the pool of 4 Mn/Photosystem II normally associated with the oxygen-evolving complex. The mechanism for retention of Mn to the protein during isolation appears to be by suppression of chemical reduction of natively bound, high-valent Mn to the labile Mn(II) oxidation state. This protein is also present in stoichiometric levels in highly active, O2-evolving, detergent-extracted PS-II particles which contain 4-5 Mn/PS II. Conditions which result in the loss of Mn and O2 evolution activity from functional membranes, such as incubation in 1.5 mM NH2OH or in ascorbate plus dithionite, also release Mn from the protein. The protein exists as a monomer of 33 kDa by gel filtration and 34 kDa by gel electrophoresis, with an isoelectric point of 5.1 +/- 0.1. The protein exhibits an EPR spectrum only below 12 K which extends over at least 2000 G centered at g = 2 consisting of non-uniformly separated hyperfine transitions with average splitting of 45-55 G. The magnitude of this splitting is nominally one-half the splitting observed in monomeric manganese complexes having O or N donor ligands. This is apparently due to electronic coupling of the two 55Mn nuclei in a presumed binuclear site. Either a ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn2(III,III) site or an antiferromagnetically coupled mixed-valence Mn2(II,III) site are considered as possible oxidation states to account for the EPR spectrum. Qualitatively similar hyperfine structure splittings are observed in ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn complexes having even-spin ground states. The extreme temperature dependence suggests the population of low-lying excited states such as are present in weakly coupled dimers and higher clusters of Mn ions, or, possibly, from efficient spin relaxation such as occurs in the Mn(III) oxidation state. Either 1.5 mM NH2OH or incubation with reducing agents abolishes the low temperature EPR signal and releases two Mn(II) ions to solution. This is consistent with the presence of Mn(III) in the isolated protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
An O2-evolving Photosystem II subchloroplast preparation was obtained from spinach chloroplasts, using low concentrations of digitonin and Triton X-100. The preparation showed an O2 evolution activity equivalent to 20% of the uncoupled rate of fresh broken chloroplasts, but had no significant Photosystem-I-dependent O2 uptake activity. The preparation showed a chlorophyll ab ratio of 1.9 and a P-700chlorophyll ratio of 12400. Absorption spectra at room temperature and fluorescence emission spectra of chlorophyll at 77 K suggested a significant decrease in Photosystem I antenna chlorophylls in the O2-evolving Photosystem II preparation.  相似文献   

6.
Rita Barr  Frederick L. Crane 《BBA》1980,591(1):127-134
Two possible 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-insensitive sites were found in PS II of spinach chloroplasts, depending on the pH of the assay medium used. The low site (pH 6) can be inhibited by certain quinolines, such as 8-hydroxyquinoline at concentrations less than 50 μM. The high pH site (pH 8) can be inhibited by disodium cyanamide, folic acid, or 5,6-benzoquinoline at concentrations from 50 μM to 5 mM. With the exception of orthophenanthroline, which stimulates the high pH site but does not show much inhibition at low pH, all other inhibitors gave opposite effects at the pH values used, i.e., they stimulated at low pH or inhibited at high pH, or vice versa. Several mechanisms for the observed effects are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
(1) The relationship between activation of the membrane-bound ATPase and the stimulation of dissipation of the flash-induced membrane potential by preillumination was studied in intact spinach leaves by measuring the ATPase activity of rapidly isolated chloroplasts and the decay of the flash-induced 515-nm absorbance change (ΔA515) in intact leaves. (2) The decay of ΔA515 was accelerated by preillumination. The ΔA515 decay in leaves treated with N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) became slower and was not accelerated by preillumination. However, treatment with DCCD did not lower the intensity of delayed fluorescence. (3) Membrane-bound ATPase of chloroplasts which were rapidly isolated from the preilluminated leaves (90 s preparation time) showed a higher activity (over 200 μmol Pi/mg chlorophyll per h in the case of 2-min preillumination) than that of chloroplasts isolated from dark-adapted leaves. (4) The acceleration of ΔA515 decay and the activation of ATPase showed similar dependences on illumination time in intact leaves. 3-(3′,4′-Dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, carbonyl cyanide p-chlorophenylhydrazone and DCCD inhibited the activation of ATPase and the acceleration of the ΔA515 decay by preillumination. (5) The ATPase activity of chloroplasts isolated from illuminated leaves showed a single exponential decay (‘dark inactivation in vitro’). The ATPase activity induced by illuminating the leaves became lower as the dark interval between illumination and the isolation of chloroplasts was increased (‘dark inactivation in vivo’). The time course of the decay of activity had a lag and showed a sigmoidal curve when plotted semilogarithmically. The decay had an apparent half-time of 25 min. (6) The recovery of the accelerated ΔA515 decay in preilluminated leaves to the original slow rate showed a sigmoidal decay similar to that of the activity of ATPase in intact leaves with a half-time of about 23 min in the dark. (7) It was concluded that the decay rate of ΔA515 reflected the chloroplast ATPase activity in intact leaves and that the ion conductance of thylakoid membrane was mainly determined by the H+ flux through the ATPase, the activity of which was increased after the formation of the high-energy state.  相似文献   

8.
Michael Seibert  Jean Lavorel 《BBA》1983,723(2):160-168
Patterns of O2 evolution resulting from sequences of short flashes are reported for Photosystem (PS) II preparations isolated from spinach and containing an active, O2-evolving system. The results can be interpreted in terms of the S-state model developed to explain the process of photosynthetic water splitting in chloroplasts and algae. The PS II samples display damped, oscillating patterns of O2 evolution with a period of four flashes. Unlike chloroplasts, the flash yields of the preparations decay with increasing flash number due to the limited plastoquinone acceptor pool on the reducing side of PS II. The optimal pH for O2 evolution in this system (pH 5.5–6.5) is more acidic than in chloroplasts (pH 6.5–8.0). The O2-evolution, inactivation half-time of dark-adapted preparations was 91 min (on the rate electrode) at room temperature. Dark-inactivation half-times of 14 h were observed if the samples were aged off the electrode at room temperature. Under our conditions (experimental conditions can influence flash-sequence results), deactivation of S3 was first order with a half-time of 105 s while that of S2 was biphasic. The half-times for the first-order rapid phase were 17 s (one preflash) and 23 s (two preflashes). The longer S2 phase deactivated very slowly (the minimum half-time observed was 265 s). These results indicate that deactivation from S3 → S2 → S1, thought to be the dominant pathway in chloroplasts, is not the case for PS II preparations. Finally, it was demonstrated that the ratio of S1 to S0 can be set by previously developed techniques, that S0 is formed mostly from activated S3 (S4), and that both S0 and S1 are stable in the dark.  相似文献   

9.
Shmuel Malkin  Jim Barber 《BBA》1978,502(3):524-541
1. Using a phosphoroscope, delayed luminescence and prompt chlorophyll fluorescence from isolated chloroplasts have been compared during the induction period.2. Two distinct decay components of delayed luminescence were measured a “fast” component (from ≈1 ms to ≈6 ms) and a “slow” component (at ≈6 ms).3. The fast luminescence component often did not correlate with the fluorescence changes while the slow component significantly changed its intensity during the induction period in a manner which could usually be linearly correlated with variable portion of the fluorescence yield change.4. This correlation was evident after preillumination with far-red light or after allowing a considerable time for dark relaxation.5. The close relationship between the slow luminescence component and variable fluorescence yield was observed with a large range of light intensities and also in the presence of 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea which considerably changes the fluorescence induction kinetics.6. Valinomycin and other antibiotics reduced the amplitude of the 6 ms (slow) luminescence without affecting its relation with the fluorescence induction suggesting possibly that a constant electrical gradient exist in the dark or formed very rapidly in the light, which effects the emission intensity.7. Changes in salt levels of suspending media equally affected the amplitude of both delayed luminescence and variable fluorescence under conditions when the reduction of Q is maximal and constant.8. The results are discussed in terms of several models. It is concluded that the model of independent Photosystem II units together with photosynthetic back reaction concept is incompatible with the data. Other alternative models (the “lake” model and photosynthetic back reaction; recombination of charges in the antenna chlorophyll; the “W” hypothesis) were in closer agreement with the results.  相似文献   

10.
Bruce A. Diner  René Delosme 《BBA》1983,722(3):443-451
Redox titration of the electrochromic carotenoid band shift, detected at 50 μs after a saturating actinic flash, in spinach chloroplasts, shows that only one electron acceptor in Photosystem II participates in a transmembrane primary electron transfer. This species, the primary quinone acceptor, Q, shows only one midpoint potential (Em,7.5) of approx. 0 V and is undoubtedly equivalent to the fluorescence quencher, QH. A second titration wave is observed at low potential (Em,7.5 ? ? 240 mV) and at greater than 3 ms after a saturating actinic flash. This wave has an action spectrum different from that of Photosystem II centers containing Q and could arise from a secondary but not primary electron transfer. A low-potential fluorescence quencher is observed in chloroplasts which largely disappears in a single saturating flash at ? 185 mV and which does not participate in a transmembrane electron transfer. This low-potential quencher (probably equivalent to fluorescence quencher, QL) and Q are altogether different species. Redox titration of C550 shows that if electron acceptor Qβ is indeed characterized by an Em,7 of + 120 mV, then this acceptor does not give rise to a C550 signal upon reduction and does not participate in a transmembrane electron transfer. This titration also shows that C550 is not associated with QL.  相似文献   

11.
Detailed absorbance difference spectra are reported for the Photosystem II acceptor Q, the secondary donor Z, and the donor involved in photosynthetic oxygen evolution which we call M. The spectra of Z and Q could be resolved by analysis of flash-induced kinetics of prompt and delayed fluorescence, EPR signal IIf and absorbance changes in Tris-washed system II preparations in the presence of ferricyanide and 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). The spectrum of Z oxidation consists mainly of positive bands at 260, 300 and 390–450 nm on which a chlorophyll a band shift around 438 nm is superimposed, and is largely pH-independent as is also the case for the spectrum of Q reduction. The re-reduction of Z+ occurred in the millisecond time range, and could be explained by a competition between back reaction with Q? (120 ms at pH 6.0) and reduction by ferrocyanide. When the Tris treatment is omitted the preparations evolve oxygen, and the photoreduction of Q (with DCMU present) is accompanied by the oxidation of M. The Q spectrum being known, the spectrum of the oxidation of M could be determined as well. It consists of a broad, asymmetric increase peaking near 305 nm and of a Chl a band shift, which is about the same as that accompanying Z in Tris-washed system II. Comparison with spectra of model compounds suggests that Z is a bound plastoquinol which is oxidized to the semiquinone cation and that the oxidation of M is an Mn(III) → Mn(IV) transition.  相似文献   

12.
B.G. De Grooth  H.J. Van Gorkom 《BBA》1981,635(3):445-456
An electric field pulse was applied to a suspension of osmotically swollen spinach chloroplasts after illumination with a saturating flash in the presence of DCMU. In addition to the stimulation of delayed fluorescence by the electric field, discovered by Arnold and Azzi (Arnold, W.A. and Azzi, R. (1971) Photochem. Photobiol. 14, 233–240) a sudden drop in fluorescence yield was observed. The kinetics of this fluorescence change were identical to those of the integrated delayed fluorescence emission induced by the pulse. The S-state dependence of the stimulated emission was very similar to that of the normal luminescence. We assume that the membrane potential generated by the pulse changes the activation energy for the back reaction in Photosystem II. On this basis, and making use of data we obtained earlier from electrochromic absorbance changes induced by the pulse, the kinetics of the field-induced prompt and delayed fluorescence changes, and also the amplitude of the fluorescence decrease, which was about 12% for a nearly saturating pulse, are explained. Our results indicate that in those reaction centers where a decrease of the activation energy occurs the effect of a pulse can be quite spectacular: the back reaction, which normally takes seconds, is completed in a few hundred microseconds when a sufficiently strong pulse is applied. Measurements of the polarization of the stimulated luminescence supported the interpretation given above.Only 2.8% of the back reaction was found to proceed via transition of reexcited chlorophyll to the ground state, both during the field pulse and in the absence of the field.  相似文献   

13.
The fluorescence yield of chloroplasts reflects the redox state of the electron acceptor of the Photosystem II reaction center, with increasing yield as the acceptor is reduced. Chemical reductive titrations of fluorescence yield in chloroplasts at room temperature indicate two distinct midpoint potentials, suggesting the possibility of Photosystem II electron acceptor heterogeneity. We have carried out a potentiometric titration of the fluorescence decay kinetics in spinach chloroplasts using a continuous mode-locked dye laser with low-intensity excitation pulses and a picosecond-resolution single-photon timing system. At all potentials the fluorescence decay is best described by three exponential components. As the potential is lowered, the slow phase changes 30-fold in yield with two distinct midpoint potentials, accompanied by a modest (3-fold) increase in the lifetime. The titration curve for the slow component of the fluorescence decay of spinach chloroplasts is best characterized by two single-electron redox reactions with midpoint potentials at pH 8.0 of +119 and ?350 mV, with corresponding relative contributions to the fluorescence yield of 49 and 51%, respectively. There is little change in the fast and middle components of the fluorescence decay. We found that the oxidized form of the redox mediator 2-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone preferentially quenches the fluorescence, causing an anomalous decrease in the apparent midpoint of the high-potential transition. This effect accounts for a significant difference between the midpoint potentials that we observe and some of those previously reported. The selective effect of reduction potentials on particular fluorescence decay components provides useful information about the organization and distribution of the Photosystem II electron acceptor.  相似文献   

14.
The spectra of the absorbance changes due to the turnover of the so-called S-states of the oxygen-evolving apparatus were determined. The changes were induced by a series of saturating flashes in dark-adapted Photosystem II preparations, isolated from spinach chloroplasts. The electron acceptor was 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone. The fraction of System II centers involved in each S-state transition on each flash was calculated from the oscillation pattern of the 1 ms absorbance transient which accompanies oxygen release. The difference spectrum associated with each S-state transition was then calculated from the observed flash-induced difference spectra. The spectra were found to contain a contribution by electron transfer at the acceptor side, which oscillated during the flash series approximately with a periodicity of two and was apparently modulated to some extent by the redox state of the donor side. At the donor side, the S0 → S1, S1 → S2 and S2 → S3 transitions were all three accompanied by the same absorbance difference spectrum, attributed previously to an oxidation of Mn(III) to Mn(IV) (Dekker, J.P., Van Gorkom, H.J., Brok, M. and Ouwehand, L. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 764, 301–309). It is concluded that each of these S-state transitions involves the oxidation of an Mn(III) to Mn(IV). The spectrum and amplitude of the millisecond transient were in agreement with its assignment to the reduction of the oxidized secondary donor Z+ and the three Mn(IV) ions.  相似文献   

15.
(1) Using asolectin (mixed soybean phospholipids) liposomes, extra lipid, with or without additional plastoquinone, has been introduced into isolated thylakoid membranes of pea chloroplasts. (2) Evidence for this lipid enrichment was obtained from freeze-fracture which indicated that a decrease in the numbers of EF and PF particles per unit area of membrane occurred with increasing lipid incorporation. The decrease was not due to loss of integral membrane polypeptides as judged by assay of cytochrome present or SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of lipid-enriched membrane fractions. Moreover, the enrichment procedure did not lead to extraction of low molecular weight lipophilic membrane components or of thylakoid membrane lipids. (3) The introduction of phospholipids into the membrane affected steady-state electron transport. Inhibition of electron transport was observed when either water (Photosystem (PS) II + PS I) or duroquinol (PS I) was used as electron donor with methyl viologen as electron acceptor, and the degree of inhibition increased with higher enrichment levels. Introduction of exogenous plastoquinone with the additional lipid had little effect on whole-chain electron transport, but caused an increase in the 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB)-sensitive rate of PS I electron transport. The inhibition was also detected by flash-induced oxidation-reduction changes of cytochrome f.  相似文献   

16.
R.L. Pan  S. Izawa 《BBA》1979,547(2):311-319
NH2OH-treated, non-water-splitting chloroplasts can oxidize H2O2 to O2 through Photosystem II at substantial rates (100–250 μequiv · h?1 · mg?1 chlorophyll with 5 mM H2O2) using 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone as an electron acceptor in the presence of the plastoquinone antagonist dibromothymoquinone. This H2O2 → Photosystem II → dimethylquinone reaction supports phosphorylation with a Pe2 ratio of 0.25–0.35 and proton uptake with H+e values of 0.67 (pH 8)–0.85 (pH 6). These are close to the Pe2 value of 0.3–0.38 and the H+e values of 0.7–0.93 found in parallel experiments for the H2O → Photosystem II → dimethylquinone reaction in untreated chloroplasts. Semi-quantitative data are also presented which show that the donor → Photosystem II → dibromothymoquinone (→O2) reaction can support phosphorylation when the donor used is a proton-releasing reductant (benzidine, catechol) but not when it is a non-proton carrier (I?, ferrocyanide).  相似文献   

17.
J.L. Zimmermann  A.W. Rutherford 《BBA》1984,767(1):160-167
The light-induced EPR multiline signal is studied in O2-evolving PS II membranes. The following results are reported: (1) Its amplitude is shown to oscillate with a period of 4, with respect to the number of flashes given at room temperature (maxima on the first and fifth flashes). (2) Glycerol enhances the signal intensity. This effect is shown to come from changes in relaxation properties rather than an increase in spin concentration. (3) Deactivation experiments clearly indicate an association with the S2 state of the water-oxidizing enzyme. A signal at g = 4.1 with a linewidth of 360 G is also reported and it is suggested that this arises from an intermediate donor between the S states and the reaction centre. This suggestion is based on the following observations: (1) The g = 4.1 signal is formed by illumination at 200 K and not by flash excitation at room temperature, suggesting that it arises from an intermediate unstable under physiological conditions. (2) The formation of the g = 4.1 signal at 200 K does not occur in the presence of DCMU, indicating that more than one turnover is required for its maximum formation. (3) The g = 4.1 signal decreases in the dark at 220 K probably by recombination with Q?AFe. This recombination occurs before the multiline signal decreases, indicating that the g = 4.1 species is less stable than S2. (4) At short times, the decay of the g = 4.1 signal corresponds with a slight increase in the multiline S2 signal, suggesting that the loss of the g = 4.1 signal results in the disappearance of a magnetic interaction which diminishes the multiline signal intensity. (5) Tris-washed PS II membranes illuminated at 200 K do not exhibit the signal.  相似文献   

18.
Using thoroughly dark-adapted thylakoids and an unmodulated Joliot-type oxygen electrode, the following results were obtained. (i) At high flash frequency (4 Hz), the oxygen yield at the fourth flash (Y4) is lower compared to Y3 than at lower flash frequency. At 4 Hz, the calculated S0 concentration after thorough dark adaptation is found to approach zero, whereas at 0.5 Hz the apparent S0(S0 + S1) ratio increases to about 0.2. This is explained by a relatively fast donation (t12 = 1.0–1.5 s) of one electron by an electron donor to S2 and S3 in 15–25% of the Photosystem II reaction chains. The one-electron donor to S2 and S3 appears to be rereduced very slowly, and may be identical to the component that, after oxidation, gives rise to ESR signal IIs. (ii) The probability for the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 has nearly been the same in triazine-resistant and triazine-susceptible thylakoids. However, most of the slow phase of the S2 decay becomes 10-fold faster (t12 = 5–6 s) in the triazine-resistant ones. In a small part of the Photosystem II reaction chains, the S2 decay was extremely slow. The S3 decay in the triazine-resistant thylakoids was not significantly different from that in triazine-susceptible thylakoids. This supports the hypothesis that S2 is reduced mainly by Q?A, whereas S3 is not. (iii) In the absence of CO2/HCO?A and in the presence of formate, the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 does not occur. Addition of HCO?3 restores the fast decay of part of S2 and S3 to almost the same extent as in control thylakoids. The slow phase of S2 and S3 decay is not influenced significantly by CO2/HCO?3. The chlorophyll a fluorescence decay kinetics in the presence of DCMU, however, monitoring the Q?A oxidation without interference of QB, were 2.3-fold slower in the absence of CO2/HCO?3 than in its presence. (iv) An almost 3-fold decrease in decay rate of S2 is observed upon lowering the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. The kinetics of chlorophyll a fluorescence decay in the presence of DCMU are slightly accelerated by a pH change from 7.6 to 6.0. This indicates that the equilibrium Q?A concentration after one flash is decreased (by about a factor of 4) upon changing the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. When direct or indirect protonation of Q?B is responsible for this shift of equilibrium Q?A concentration, these data would suggest that the pKa value for Q?B protonation is somewhat higher than 7.6, assuming that the protonated form of Q?B cannot reduce QA.  相似文献   

19.
An oxygen-evolving Photosystem (PS) II preparation was isolated after Triton X-100 treatment of spinach thylakoids in the presence of Mg2+. The structural and functional components of this preparation have been identified by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and sensitive spectrophotometric analysis. The main findings were: (1) The concentration of the primary acceptor Q of PS II was 1 per 230 chlorophyll molecules. (2) There are 6 to 7 plastoquinone molecules associated with a ‘quinone-pool’ reducible by Q. (3) The only cytochrome present in significant amounts (cytochrome b-559) occurred at a concentration of 1 per 125 chlorophyll molecules. (4) The only kind of photochemical reaction center complex present was identified by fluorescence induction kinetic analysis as PS IIα. (5) An Em = ? 10 mV has been measured at pH 7.8 for the primary electron acceptor Qα of PS IIα. (6) With conventional SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the preparation was resolved into 13 prominent polypeptide bands with relative molecular masses of 63, 55, 51, 48, 37, 33, 28, 27, 25, 22, 15, 13 and 10 kDa. The 28 kDa band was identified as the PS II light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein. In the presence of 2 M urea, however, SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed seven prominent polypeptides with molecular masses of 47, 39, 31, 29, 27, 26 and 13 kDa as well as several minor components. CP I under identical conditions had a molecular mass of 60–63 kDa.  相似文献   

20.
Rita Barr  Frederick L. Crane 《BBA》1982,681(1):139-142
A 120 min incubation period with sulfhydryl reagents, such as p-chloromercuribenzoic acid, shows greater than 50% loss of electron-transport activity in Photosystem (PS) II of spinach chloroplasts. Since p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid, a nonpenetrating sulfhydryl reagent, and 4,4′-dithiopyridine, a bifunctional sulfhydryl reagent, show greater inhibition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction than of dibromothymoquinone-insensitive indophenol reduction, it is postulated that two different sulfhydryl reagent-sensitive sites are involved in the PS II electron-transport chain of spinach chloroplasts.  相似文献   

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