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1.
Photosystem I (PS I) is a transmembranal multisubunit complex that mediates light-induced electron transfer from plactocyanine to ferredoxin. The electron transfer proceeds from an excited chlorophyll a dimer (P700) through a chlorophyll a (A0), a phylloquinone (A1), and a [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster FX, all located on the core subunits PsaA and PsaB, to iron-sulfur clusters FA and FB, located on subunit PsaC. Earlier, it was attempted to determine the function of FX in the absence of FA/B mainly by chemical dissociation of subunit PsaC. However, not all PsaC subunits could be removed from the PS I preparations by this procedure without partially damaging FX. We therefore removed subunit PsaC by interruption of the psaC2 gene of PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Cells could not grow under photosynthetic conditions when subunit PsaC was deleted, yet the PsaC-deficient mutant cells grew under heterotrophic conditions and assembled the core subunits of PS I in which light-induced electron transfer from P700 to A1 occurred. The photoreduction of FX was largely inhibited, as seen from direct measurement of the extent of electron transfer from A1 to FX. From the crystal structure it can be seen that the removal of subunits PsaC, PsaD, and PsaE in the PsaC-deficient mutant resulted in the braking of salt bridges between these subunits and PsaB and PsaA and the formation of a net of two negative surface charges on PsaA/B. The potential induced on FX by these surface charges is proposed to inhibit electron transport from the quinone. In the complete PS I complex, replacement of a cysteine ligand of FX by serine in site-directed mutation C565S/D566E in subunit PsaB caused an approximately 10-fold slow down of electron transfer from the quinone to FX without much affecting the extent of this electron transfer compared with wild type. Based on these and other results, we propose that FX might have a major role in controlling electron transfer through PS I.  相似文献   

2.
The two [4Fe-4S] clusters F(A) and F(B) are the terminal electron acceptors of photosystem I (PSI) that are bound by the stromal subunit PsaC. Soluble ferredoxin (Fd) binds to PSI via electrostatic interactions and is reduced by the outermost iron-sulfur cluster of PsaC. We have generated six site-directed mutants of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in which residues located close to the iron-sulfur clusters of PsaC are changed. The acidic residues Asp(9) and Glu(46), which are located one residue upstream of the first cysteine liganding cluster F(B) and F(A), respectively, were changed to a neutral or a basic amino acid. Although Fd reduction is not affected by the E46Q and E46K mutations, a slight increase of Fd affinity (from 1.3- to 2-fold) was observed by flash absorption spectroscopy for the D9N and D9K mutant PSI complexes. In the FA(2) triple mutant (V49I/K52T/R53Q), modification of residues located next to the F(A) cluster leads to partial destabilization of the PSI complex. The electron paramagnetic resonance properties of cluster F(A) are affected, and a 3-fold decrease of Fd affinity is observed. The introduction of positively charged residues close to the F(B) cluster in the FB(1) triple mutant (I12V/T15K/Q16R) results in a 60-fold increase of Fd affinity as measured by flash absorption spectroscopy and a larger amount of PsaC-Fd cross-linking product. The first-order kinetics are similar to wild type kinetics (two phases with t((1)/(2)) of <1 and approximately 4.5 microseconds) for all mutants except FB(1), where Fd reduction is almost monophasic with t((1)/(2)) < 1 microseconds. These data indicate that F(B) is the cluster interacting with Fd and therefore the outermost iron-sulfur cluster of PSI.  相似文献   

3.
PsaC is the stromal subunit of photosystem I (PSI) which binds the two terminal electron acceptors FA and FB. This subunit resembles 2[4Fe-4S] bacterial ferredoxins but contains two additional sequences: an internal loop and a C-terminal extension. To gain new insights into the function of the internal loop, we used an in vivo degenerate oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis approach for analysing this region in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Analysis of several psaC mutants affected in PSI function or assembly revealed that K35 is a main interaction site between PsaC and ferredoxin (Fd) and that it plays a key role in the electrostatic interaction between Fd and PSI. This is based upon the observation that the mutations K35T, K35D and K35E drastically affect electron transfer from PSI to Fd, as measured by flash-absorption spectroscopy, whereas the K35R change has no effect on Fd reduction. Chemical cross-linking experiments show that Fd interacts not only with PsaD and PsaE, but also with the PsaC subunit of PSI. Replacement of K35 by T, D, E or R abolishes Fd cross-linking to PsaC, and cross-linking to PsaD and PsaE is reduced in the K35T, K35D and K35E mutants. In contrast, replacement of any other lysine of PsaC does not alter the cross-linking pattern, thus indicating that K35 is an interaction site between PsaC and its redox partner Fd.  相似文献   

4.
J Zhao  N Li  P V Warren  J H Golbeck  D A Bryant 《Biochemistry》1992,31(22):5093-5099
The terminal electron acceptors FA and FB exist as two [4Fe-4S] clusters located on the 8.9-kDa PsaC protein in photosystem I. We have used site-directed mutagenesis to produce a complementary pair of mutant PsaC proteins in which specific cysteine ligands to the [4Fe-4S] clusters were changed to aspartic acid residues. The mutant proteins, denoted C14D and C51D, were overproduced in Escherichia coli; the iron-sulfur clusters were inserted in vitro; and the reconstituted proteins were rebound to the P700-FX core of Synechococcus sp. PCC 6301 in the presence of the PsaD protein. In complexes reconstituted with C51D a rhombic ESR spectrum with g-values of 2.063, 1.934, and 1.879 in the reduced state identifies the intact [4Fe-4S] cluster as FB, while an intense axial spectrum with g-values of 2.020 and 1.997 in the oxidized state identifies the altered cluster in the aspartate site as a [3Fe-4S] cluster. The [3Fe-4S] cluster corresponding to FA can be reduced chemically with dithionite and photochemically by illumination at room temperature but is not reduced by illumination at 15 K. With reconstituted C14D a rhombic ESR spectrum with g-values of 2.043, 1.942, and 1.853 in the reduced state identified the unaltered [4Fe-4S] cluster as FA, while a complex spectrum with a gz-value of 2.194 and an asymmetric gx,y set of resonances between 2.092 and 1.999 indicates an altered cluster of unknown identity in the site containing the aspartate ligand. The ESR signals arising from the altered cluster corresponding to FB are not diminished by illumination at either room temperature or 15 K.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
V P Chitnis  A Ke    P R Chitnis 《Plant physiology》1997,115(4):1699-1705
The PsaD subunit of photosystem I (PSI) is a peripheral protein that provides a docking site for ferredoxin and interacts with the PsaB, PsaC, and PsaL subunits of PSI. We used site-directed mutagenesis to determine the function of a basic region in PsaD of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. We generated five mutant strains in which one or more charged residues were altered. Western blotting showed that replacement of lysine (Lys)-74 with glutamine or glutamic acid led to a substantial decrease in the level of PsaD in the membranes. The mutant PSI complexes showed reduced NADP+ photoreduction activity mediated by ferredoxin; the decrease in activity correlated with the reduced level of PsaD. Using protein synthesis inhibitors we showed that the degradation rates of the mutant and wild-type PsaD were similar, indicating a defect in the assembly of the mutant protein. Treatment of the mutant PSI complexes with a different concentration of NaI showed that the mutations decreased affinity between PsaD and the transmembrane components of PSI. With glutaraldehyde, the mutant and wild-type PsaD proteins could be cross-linked with PsaC, but the PsaD-PsaL cross-linked product was reduced drastically when arginine-72, Lys-74, and Lys-76 were mutated simultaneously. These studies demonstrate that the basic residues in the central region of PsaD, especially Lys-74, are crucial in the assembly of PsaD into the PSI complex.  相似文献   

6.
Nield J  Morris EP  Bibby TS  Barber J 《Biochemistry》2003,42(11):3180-3188
Here we describe the three-dimensional structure of the newly discovered CP43'-photosystem I (PSI) supercomplex of cyanobacteria calculated by single-particle analysis of images obtained by electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM). This large membrane protein complex has a molecular mass of approximately 2 MDa and is found in cyanobacteria when grown in iron deficient media. It is composed of a reaction center trimer surrounded by 18 subunits of the chlorophyll a binding CP43'protein, encoded by the isiA gene, which increases the light harvesting capacity of PSI by approximately 70%. By modeling higher-resolution structural data obtained from X-ray crystallography into the three-dimensional (3D) cryo-EM map, we have been able to gain a better understanding of the structure and functional properties of this supermolecular complex. We have identified three separate clusters of chlorophyll molecules at the periphery of the PSI core which may aid energy transfer from the CP43' antenna ring to the reaction center. Moreover, it is shown that despite the replacement of ferredoxin with flavodoxin as an electron acceptor under iron stress conditions, the 3D map has density to accommodate the extrinsic proteins, PsaC, PsaD, and PsaE. The presence of these three proteins was also confirmed by immunoblotting.  相似文献   

7.
The psaC gene product from Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 and the psaD gene product from Nostoc sp. PCC 8009 were synthesized in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Incubation of the PsaC apoprotein with the Synechoccus sp. PCC 6301 photosystem I core protein in the presence of FeCl3, Na2S, and beta-mercaptoethanol resulted in a time-dependent transition in the flash-induced absorption change from a 1.2-ms, P700+ FX- back-reaction to a long-lived, P700+ [FA/FB]- back-reaction. ESR studies showed that FB and FA were photoreduced about equally at 19 K, and while the resonances were shifted upfield, they remained as broad as in the free PsaC holoprotein. When the reconstituted complex was purified in a sucrose gradient containing 0.1% Triton X-100, most of the optical absorption transient reverted to that characteristic of the P700+ FX- back-reaction. Addition of purified PsaD to the incubation mixture led to a greater extent of recovery of electron flow to FA/FB for any given concentration of PsaC. ESR studies showed that FA, rather than FB, became the preferred electron acceptor at 19 K; moreover, the resonances moved upfield and sharpened to become nearly identical with those of a control photosystem I complex. When the sample was purified in a sucrose gradient containing 0.1% Triton X-100, the long-lived P700+ [FA/FB]- optical transient remained stable. Analysis by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the PsaC and PsaD proteins had rebound to the photosystem I core. The data indicate that although PsaC can bind loosely, the presence of PsaD leads to a stable, isolatable photosystem I complex which is spectroscopically indistinguishable from the native complex. Since a PsaC1 fusion protein which contains an amino-terminal extension of five amino acids (MEHSM...) does not bind in the absence of PsaD [Zhao, J., et al. (1990) FEBS Lett. 276, 175-180], the N-terminus of the PsaC protein could provide a site of interaction with the photosystem I core. We propose that the binding of PsaC to the PsaA/PsaB heterodimer is potentiated by insertion of the FA/FB clusters into PsaC, and stabilized by the presence of PsaD.  相似文献   

8.
Photosystem I (PS I) mediates electron-transfer from plastocyanin to ferredoxin via a photochemically active chlorophyll dimer (P700), a monomeric chlorophyll electron acceptor (A0), a phylloquinone (A1), and three [4Fe-4S] clusters (FX/A/B). The sequence of electron-transfer events between the iron-sulfur cluster, FX, and ferredoxin is presently unclear. Owing to the presence of a 2-fold symmetry in the PsaC protein to which the iron-sulfur clusters F(A) and F(B) are bound, the spatial arrangement of these cofactors with respect to the C2-axis of symmetry in PS I is uncertain as well. An unequivocal determination of the spatial arrangement of the iron-sulfur clusters FA and FB within the protein is necessary to unravel the complete electron-transport chain in PS I. In the present study, we generate EPR signals from charge-separated spin pairs (P700+-FredX/A/B) in PS I and characterize them by progressive microwave power saturation measurements to determine the arrangement of the iron-sulfur clusters FX/A/B relative to P700. The microwave power at half saturation (P1/2) of P700+ is greater when both FA and FB are reduced in untreated PS I than when only FA is reduced in mercury-treated PS I. The experimental P1/2 values are compared to values calculated by using P700-FA/B crystallographic distances and assuming that either FA or FB is closer to P700+. On the basis of this comparison of experimental and theoretical values of spin relaxation enhancement effects on P700+ in P700+ [4Fe-4S]- charge-separated pairs, we find that iron-sulfur cluster FA is in closer proximity to P700 than the FB cluster.  相似文献   

9.
A site directed mutant of the Photosystem I reaction center of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been described previously. [Hallahan et al. (1995) Photosynth Res 46: 257–264]. The mutation, PsaA: D576L, changes the conserved aspartate residue adjacent to one of the cysteine ligands binding the Fe-SX center to PsaA. The mutation, which prevents photosynthetic growth, was observed to change the EPR spectrum of the Fe-SA/B centers bound to the PsaC subunit. We suggested that changes in binding of PsaC to the PsaA/PsaB reaction center prevented efficient electron transfer. Second site suppressors of the mutation have now been isolated which have recovered the ability to grow photosynthetically. DNA analysis of four suppressor strains showed the original D576L mutation is intact, and that no mutations are present elsewhere within the Fe-SX binding region of either PsaA or PsaB, nor within PsaC or PsaJ. Subsequent genetic analysis has indicated that the suppressor mutation(s) is nuclear encoded. The suppressors retain the altered binding of PsaC, indicating that this change is not the cause of failure to grow photosynthetically. Further analysis showed that the rate of electron transfer from the quinone electron carrier A1 to Fe-SX is slowed in the mutant (by a factor of approximately two) and restored to wild type rates in the suppressors. ENDOR spectra of A1 ·– in wild-type and mutant preparations are identical, indicating that the electronic structure of the phyllosemiquinone is not changed. The results suggest that the quinone to Fe-SX center electron transfer is sensitive to the structure of the iron-sulfur center, and may be a critical step in the energy conversion process. They also indicate that the structure of the reaction center may be modified as a result of changes in proteins outside the core of the reaction center.  相似文献   

10.
Electron input from plastocyanin into photosystem I (PSI) is slowed down in the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants affected at the donor side (PsaF or PsaB, lumenal loop j) of PSI. In contrast, electron exit from PSI to ferredoxin is diminished in the PSI acceptor side PsaC mutants K35E and FB1. Although, the electron transfer reactions are diminished to a similar extent in both type of mutants, the PsaC mutants K35E and FB1 are more light‐sensitive than the PsaF‐deficient strain 3bF or the PsaB mutants E613N and W627F. To assess the differential photosensitivity of donor and acceptor side mutants fluorescence transients, gross oxygen evolution and uptake, PSII photo‐inhibition and rate of recovery were measured as well as NADP+ photoreduction. The NADP+ photoreduction measurements indicated that the donor side is limiting the reduction rate. In contrast, measurements of gross oxygen evolution and uptake showed that the reducing side limits linear electron transfer. However, under high light, donor and acceptor side mutations lead to PSII photo‐inhibition and to a diminished rate of PSII recovery, cause lipid peroxidation and result in a decrease in the levels of PSI and PSII. The wild type is not affected under the same conditions. These responses are most pronounced in the PsaC‐K35E and PsaB‐W627F mutants, and they correlate with the light sensitivity of these strains. The correlation between limitation of electron transfer through PSI and the formation of reactive oxygen species as a cause for the light‐sensitivity is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Although progress has been made in determining the structure and understanding the function of photosystem I (PSI), the PSI assembly process remains poorly understood. PsaC is an essential subunit of PSI and participates in the transfer of electrons to ferredoxin. However, how PsaC is assembled during accumulation of the PSI complex is unknown. In the present study, we showed that Pyg7 localized to the stromal thylakoid and associated with the PSI complex. We also showed that Pyg7 interacted with PsaC. Furthermore, we found that the PSI assembly process was blocked following formation of the PsaAB heterodimer in the pyg7 mutant. In addition, the analyses of PSI stability in Pyg7RNAi plants showed that Pyg7 is involved in maintaining the assembled PSI complex under excess‐light conditions. Moreover, we demonstrated that decreased Pyg7 content resulted in decreased efficiency of PSI assembly in Pyg7RNAi plants. These findings suggest that the role of Pyg7 in PSI biogenesis has evolved as an essential assembly factor by interacting with PsaC in Arabidopsis, in addition to being a stability factor for PSI as seen in Synechocystis.  相似文献   

12.
Chemical rescue of site-modified amino acids using externally supplied organic molecules represents a powerful method to investigate structure-function relationships in proteins. Here we provide definitive evidence that aryl and alkyl thiolates, reagents typically used for in vitro iron-sulfur cluster reconstitutions, serve as rescue ligands to a site-specifically modified [4Fe-4S](1+,2+) cluster in PsaC, a bacterial dicluster ferredoxin-like subunit of Photosystem I. PsaC binds two low-potential [4Fe-4S](1+,2+) clusters termed F(A) and F(B). In the C13G/C33S variant of PsaC, glycine has replaced cysteine at position 13 creating a protein that is missing one of the ligating amino acids to iron-sulfur cluster F(B). Using a variety of analytical techniques, including non-heme iron and acid-labile sulfur assays, and EPR, resonance Raman, and M?ssbauer spectroscopies, we showed that the C13G/C33S variant of PsaC binds two [4Fe-4S](1+,2+) clusters, despite the absence of one of the biological ligands. (19)F NMR spectroscopy indicated that the external thiolate replaces cysteine 13 as a substitute ligand to the F(B) cluster. The finding that site-modified [4Fe-4S](1+,2+) clusters can be chemically rescued with external thiolates opens new opportunities for modulating their properties in proteins. In particular, it provides a mechanism to attach an additional electron transfer cofactor to the protein via a bound, external ligand.  相似文献   

13.
A covalent stoichiometric complex between photosystem I (PSI) and ferredoxin from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was generated by chemical cross-linking. The photoreduction of ferredoxin, studied by laser flash absorption spectroscopy between 460 and 600 nm, is a fast process in 60% of the covalent complexes, which exhibit spectral and kinetic properties very similar to those observed with the free partners. Two major phases with t(1/2) <1 micros and approximately 10-14 micros are observed at two different pH values (5.8 and 8.0). The remaining complexes do not undergo fast ferredoxin reduction and 20-25% of the complexes are still able to reduce free ferredoxin or flavodoxin efficiently, thus indicating that ferredoxin is not bound properly in this proportion of covalent complexes. The docking site of ferredoxin on PSI was determined by electron microscopy in combination with image analysis. Ferredoxin binds to the cytoplasmic side of PSI, with its mass center 77 angstroms distant from the center of the trimer and in close contact with a ridge formed by the subunits PsaC, PsaD and PsaE. This docking site corresponds to a close proximity between the [2Fe- 2S] center of ferredoxin and the terminal [4Fe-4S] acceptor FII of PSI and is very similar in position to the docking site of flavodoxin, an alternative electron acceptor of PSI.  相似文献   

14.
The reaction center of photosystem I (PSI) reduces soluble ferredoxin on the stromal side of the photosynthetic membranes of cyanobacteria and chloroplasts. The X-ray structure of PSI from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus has been recently established at a 2.5 A resolution [Nature 411 (2001) 909]. The kinetics of ferredoxin photoreduction has been studied in recent years in many mutants of the stromal subunits PsaC, PsaD and PsaE of PSI. We discuss the ferredoxin docking site of PSI using the X-ray structure and the effects brought by the PSI mutations to the ferredoxin affinity.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Utschig LM  Chen LX  Poluektov OG 《Biochemistry》2008,47(12):3671-3676
Photosystem I (PSI) is a large membrane protein that catalyzes light-driven electron transfer across the thylakoid membrane from plastocyanin located in the lumen to ferredoxin in the stroma. Metal analysis reveals that PSI isolated from the cyanobacterial membranes of Synechococcus leopoliensishas a near-stoichiometric 1 molar equiv of Zn (2+) per PSI monomer and two additional surface metal ion sites that favor Cu (2+) binding. Two-dimensional hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy reveals coupling to the so-called remote nitrogen of a single histidine coordinated to one of the Cu (2+) centers. EPR and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) studies of 2Cu-PSI complexes reveal the direct interaction of ferredoxin with the Cu (2+) centers on PSI, establishing the location of native metal sites on the ferredoxin docking side of PSI. On the basis of these spectroscopic results and previously reported site-directed mutagenesis studies, inspection of the PSI crystal structure reveals a cluster of three highly conserved residues, His(D95), Glu(D103), and Asp(C23), as a likely Cu (2+) binding site. The discovery of surface metal sites on the acceptor side of PSI provides a unique opportunity to probe the stromal region of PSI and the interactions of PSI with its reaction partner, the soluble electron carrier protein ferredoxin.  相似文献   

17.
Chemical rescue of site-modified amino acids using externally supplied organic molecules represents a powerful method to investigate structure-function relationships in proteins. Here we provide definitive evidence that aryl and alkyl thiolates, reagents typically used for in vitro iron-sulfur cluster reconstitutions, serve as rescue ligands to a site-specifically modified [4Fe-4S]1+,2+ cluster in PsaC, a bacterial dicluster ferredoxin-like subunit of Photosystem I. PsaC binds two low-potential [4Fe-4S]1+,2+ clusters termed FA and FB. In the C13G/C33S variant of PsaC, glycine has replaced cysteine at position 13 creating a protein that is missing one of the ligating amino acids to iron-sulfur cluster FB. Using a variety of analytical techniques, including non-heme iron and acid-labile sulfur assays, and EPR, resonance Raman, and Mössbauer spectroscopies, we showed that the C13G/C33S variant of PsaC binds two [4Fe-4S]1+,2+ clusters, despite the absence of one of the biological ligands. 19F NMR spectroscopy indicated that the external thiolate replaces cysteine 13 as a substitute ligand to the FB cluster. The finding that site-modified [4Fe-4S]1+,2+ clusters can be chemically rescued with external thiolates opens new opportunities for modulating their properties in proteins. In particular, it provides a mechanism to attach an additional electron transfer cofactor to the protein via a bound, external ligand.  相似文献   

18.
The proposed structure of Photosystem I depicts two cysteines on the PsaA polypeptide and two cysteines on the PsaB polypeptide in a symmetrical environment, each providing ligands for the interpolypeptide Fx cluster. We studied the role of Fx in electron transfer by substituting serine for cysteine (C565SPsaB and C556SPsaB), thereby introducing the first example of a genetically engineered, mixed-ligand [4Fe-4S] cluster into a protein. Optical kinetic spectroscopy shows that after a single-turnover flash at 298 K, the contribution of A1- (lifetime of 10 microseconds, 40% of total and lifetime of 100 microseconds, 20% of total) and Fx- (lifetime of 500-800 microseconds, 10-15% of total) to the overall P700+ back reaction have increased in C565SPsaB and C556SPsaB at the expense of the back reaction from [FA/FB]-. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of Fx shows g-values of 2.04, 1.94, and 1.81 in both mutants and a similarly decreased amount of FA and FB reduced at 15 K after a single-turnover flash. These results indicate that the mixed-ligand (3 cysteines, 1 serine) Fx cluster is an inefficient electron carrier, but that a small leak through Fx still permits FA and FB to be reduced quantitatively when the samples are frozen during continuous illumination. The data confirm that Fx is a necessary intermediate in the electron transfer pathway from A1 to FA and FB in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

19.
Heinnickel M  Shen G  Golbeck JH 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2530-2536
The Type I homodimeric photosynthetic reaction center found in anaerobic gram-positive bacteria of the genus Heliobacteriaceae incorporates FA- and FB-like iron-sulfur clusters similar to those found in Photosystem I as terminal electron acceptors. We recently isolated the PshB protein that harbors the iron-sulfur clusters from the reaction centers of Heliobacterium modesticaldum. Here, we report the cloning of a candidate gene and the properties of its product. Genuine PshB was dissociated from the reaction center with 1 M NaCl and purified using an affinity strategy. After acquiring its N-terminal amino acid sequence, an fd2-like gene encoding a 5.5-kDa dicluster ferredoxin was identified as a candidate for PshB. The Fd2-like apoprotein was expressed in Escherichia coli with a His tag, and the Fe/S clusters were inserted using inorganic reagents. The optical absorbance and EPR spectra of the Fd2-like holoprotein were similar to those of genuine PshB. The Fd2-like holoprotein was coeluted with P798-FX cores on both G-75 gel filtration and Ni affinity columns. Consistent with binding, the EPR resonances at g = 2.067, 1.933, and 1.890 from [FA/FB]- were restored after illumination at 15 K, and the long-lived, room-temperature charge recombination kinetics between P798+ and [FA/FB]- reappeared on a laser flash. These characteristics indicate that the long-sought gene and polypeptide harboring the FA- and FB-like clusters in heliobacteria have been identified. The amino acid sequence of PshB indicates an entirely different mode of binding with the reaction center core than PsaC, its counterpart in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

20.
Photosystem I (PSI) interacts with plastocyanin or cytochrome c6 on the luminal side. To identify sites of interaction between plastocyanin/cytochrome c6 and the PSI core, site-directed mutations were generated in the luminal J loop of the PsaB protein from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The eight mutant strains differed in their photoautotrophic growth. Western blotting with subunit-specific antibodies indicated that the mutations affected the PSI level in the thylakoid membranes. PSI proteins could not be detected in the S600R/G601C/N602I, N609K/S610C/T611I, and M614I/G615C/W616A mutant membranes. The other mutant strains contained different levels of PSI proteins. Among the mutant strains that contained PSI proteins, the H595C/L596I, Q627H/L628C/I629S, and N638C/N639S mutants showed similar levels of PSI-mediated electron transfer activity when either cytochrome c6 or an artificial electron donor was used. In contrast, cytochrome c6 could not function as an electron donor to the W622C/A623R mutant, even though the PSI activity mediated by an artificial electron donor was detected in this mutant. Thus, the W622C/A623R mutation affected the interaction of the PSI complex with cytochrome c6. Biotin-maleimide modification of the mutant PSI complexes indicated that His-595, Trp-622, Leu-628, Tyr-632, and Asn-638 in wild-type PsaB may be exposed on the surface of the PSI complex. The results presented here demonstrate the role of an extramembrane loop of a PSI core protein in the interaction with soluble electron donor proteins.  相似文献   

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