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1.
CP43, a component of Photosystem II (PSII) in higher plants, algae and cyanobacteria, is encoded by the psbC gene. Previous work demonstrated that alteration of an arginine residue occurring at position 305 to serine produced a strain (R305S) with altered PSII characteristics including lower oxygen-evolving activity, fewer assembled reaction centers, higher sensitivity to photoinactivation, etc. [Biochemistry 38 (1999) 1582]. Additionally, it was determined that the mutant exhibited an enhanced stability of its S2 state. Recently, we observed a significant chloride effect under chloride-limiting conditions. The mutant essentially lost the ability to grow photoautotrophically, assembled fewer fully functional PSII reaction centers and exhibited a very low rate of oxygen evolution. Thus, the observed phenotype of this mutation is very similar to that observed for the Delta(psb)V mutant, which lacks cytochrome c550 (Biochemistry 37 (1998) 1551). A His-tagged version of the R305S mutant was produced to facilitate the isolation of PSII particles. These particles were analyzed for the presence of cytochrome c550. Reduced minus oxidized difference spectroscopy and chemiluminescence examination of Western blots indicated that cytochrome c550 was absent in these PSII particles. Whole cell extracts from the R305S mutant, however, contained a similar amount of cytochrome c550 to that observed in the control strain. These results indicate that the mutation R305S in CP43 prevents the strong association of cytochrome c550 with the PSII core complex. We hypothesize that this residue is involved in the formation of the binding domain for the cytochrome.  相似文献   

2.
Expression of β-galactosidase from a nrd–lacZ fusion was used to determine the role in nrd regulation of an inverted sequence upstream of the promoter. Removal or replacement of a 45 bp inverted repeat with an altered sequence including a 48 bp perfect inverted repeat resulted in a mutant phenotype that was low in nrd expression in an exponentially growing culture and that did not increase during DNA synthesis inhibition. Changing the 22 bp in the upstream half of the inverted repeat resulted in the same phenotype, whereas changing the 22 bp in the downstream half of the inverted repeat decreased nrd expression to a lesser extent in an exponentially growing culture and had only a smaller effect on nrd expression during DNA synthesis inhibition. As other mutants with the phenotype of the upstream inverted repeat mutant were found to lack cell cycle regulation, expression of nrd – lac mRNA produced from a plasmid with this mutation in the nrd–lacZ fusion gene was compared with nrd mRNA produced from the chromosomal nrd gene in a synchronized culture. The results indicated that the upstream half of the nrd inverted repeat contains a cis -acting element essential for nrd cell cycle regulation.  相似文献   

3.
CP 47, a component of photosystem II (PSII) in higher plants, algae and cyanobacteria, is encoded by the psbB gene. Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to alter a portion of the psbB gene encoding the large extrinsic loop E of CP 47 in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. Alteration of a lysine residue occurring at position 321 to glycine produced a strain with altered PSII activity. This strain grew at wild-type rates in complete BG-11 media (480 µM chloride). However, oxygen evolution rates for this mutant in complete media were only 60% of the observed wild-type rates. Quantum yield measurements at low light intensities indicated that the mutant had 66% of the fully functional PSII centers contained in the control strain. The mutant proved to be extremely sensitive to photoinactivation at high light intensities, exhibiting a 3-fold increase in the rate of photoinactivation. When this mutant was grown in media depleted of chloride (30 µM chloride), it lost the ability to grow photoautotrophically while the control strain exhibited a normal rate of growth. The effect of chloride depletion on the growth rate of the mutant was reversed by the addition of 480 µM bromide to the chloride-depleted BG-11 media. In the presence of glucose, the mutant and control strains grew at comparable rates in either chloride-containing or chloride-depleted media. Oxygen evolution rates for the mutant were further depressed (28% of control rates) under chloride-limiting conditions. Addition of bromide restored these rates to those observed under chloride-sufficient conditions. Measurements of the variable fluorescence yield indicated that the mutant assembled fewer functional centers in the absence of chloride. These results indicate that the mutation K321G in CP 47 affects PSII stability and/or assembly under conditions where chloride is limiting.  相似文献   

4.
The psbC gene encodes CP43, a component of Photosystem II (PSII) in higher plants, algae, and cyanobacteria. Previous work demonstrated that alteration of an arginine residue occurring at position 305 to serine produced a strain (R305S) with altered PSII activity (Knoepfle, N., Bricker, T. M., and Putnam-Evans, C. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 1582-1588). This strain grew at wild-type rates in complete BG-11 media (480 microM chloride) and evolved oxygen at rates that were 60-70% of the observed wild-type rates. The R305S strain assembled approximately 70-80% of the functional PSII centers contained in the control strain, and these PSII centers were very sensitive to photoinactivation at high light intensities. We recently observed that the R305S mutant exhibited a pronounced chloride effect. When this mutant was grown in media depleted of chloride (30 microM chloride), it exhibited a severely reduced photoautotrophic growth rate. The effect of chloride depletion on the growth rate of the mutant was reversed by the addition of 480 microM bromide to the chloride-depleted BG-11 media. Oxygen evolution rates for the mutant were further depressed to about 22% of that observed in control cells under chloride-limiting conditions. Addition of bromide restored these rates to those observed under chloride-sufficient conditions. The mutant exhibited a significantly lower relative quantum yield for oxygen evolution than did the control strain, and this was exacerbated under chloride-limiting conditions. Fluorescence yield measurements indicated that both the mutant and the control strains assembled fewer PSII reaction centers under chloride-limiting conditions. The reaction centers assembled by the mutant exhibited an enhanced sensitivity to photoinactivation under chloride-limiting conditions, with a t(1/2) of photoinactivation of 2.6 min under chloride-limiting conditions as compared to a t(1/2) of 4.7 min under normal growth conditions. The mutant also exhibited an enhanced stability of its S(2) state and increased number of centers in the S(1) state following dark incubation. These results indicate that the mutant R305S exhibits a defect in its ability to utilize chloride in support of efficient oxygen evolution in PSII. This is the first mutant of this type described in the CP43 protein.  相似文献   

5.
A novel complex mutation with the presence of both deletion and insertion in very close proximity in the same region was detected in exon 8 of the LDL receptor gene from two apparently unrelated Japanese families with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). In this mutant LDL receptor gene, the nine bases from nucleotide (nt) 1115 to nt 1123 (AGGGTGGCT) were replaced by six different bases (CACTGA), and consequently the four amino acids from codon 351 to 354, Glu-Gly-Gly-Tyr, were replaced by three amino acids, Ala-Leu-Asn, in the conserved amino acid region of the growth factor repeat B of the LDL receptor. The nature of the amino acid substitution and data on the families suggest that this mutation is very likely to affect the LDL receptor function and cause FH. The generation of this complex mutation can be explained by the simultaneous occurrence of deletion and insertion through the formation of a hairpin-loop structure mediated by inverted repeat sequences. Thus this mutation supports the hypothesis that inverted repeat sequences influence the stability of a given gene and promote human gene mutations.  相似文献   

6.
《BBA》2022,1863(7):148580
Photosystem (PS) II is prone to photodamage both as a direct consequence of light, and indirectly by producing reactive oxygen species. Engineering high-light tolerance in cyanobacteria with minimal impact on PSII function is desirable in synthetic biology. IsiA, a CP43 homolog found exclusively in cyanobacteria, can dissipate excess light energy. We have recently determined that the sole cysteine residue of IsiA in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has a critical role in non-photochemical quenching. Similar cysteine-mediated energy quenching has also been observed in green?sulfur bacteria. Sequence analysis of IsiA and CP43 aligns cysteine 260 of IsiA with valine 277 of CP43 in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. In the current study, we explore the impact of replacing valine 277 of CP43 to a cysteine on growth, PSII activity and high-light tolerance. Our results imply a decline in the PSII output for the mutant (CP43V277C) presumably due to the dissipation of absorbed light energy by cysteine. Spectroscopic analysis of isolated PSII from this mutant strain also suggests a delayed transfer of excitation energy from CP43-associated chlorophyll a to PSII reaction center. The mutation makes the PSII high-light tolerant and provides a small advantage in growth under high-light conditions. This previously unexplored strategy to engineer high-light tolerance could be a step further towards developing cyanobacterial cells as biofactories.  相似文献   

7.
PsbZ (Ycf9) is a membrane protein of PSII complexes and is highly conserved from cyanobacteria to plants. We deleted the psbZ gene in the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Thermosynechococcus elongatus. The mutant cells showed photoautotrophic growth indistinguishable from that of the wild type under low and standard light conditions, while they showed even better growth than the wild type under high light. The mutant accumulated less carotenoids and more phycobiliproteins than the wild type under high light, suggestive of tolerance to photoinhibition. The mutant cells evolved oxygen at a rate comparable with the wild type, while the PSII complex isolated from the mutant retained much lower activity than the wild type. N-terminal sequencing revealed that Ycf12 and PsbK proteins were almost lost in the PSII complex. These results indicate that PsbZ is involved in functional integrity of the PSII complex by stabilizing PsbK and Ycf12. We suggest that Ycf12 is an unidentified membrane-spanning polypeptide that is placed near PsbZ and PsbK in the crystal structure of PSII.  相似文献   

8.
The Arabidopsis thaliana subunit PsbS of photosystem II (PSII) is essential for the non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and thus for ΔpH-dependent energy dissipation (qE). As a result of the excision of an En-transposon, a frameshift mutation in the psbS gene was obtained, which results in the complete absence of the PsbS protein and of qE. Two-dimensional gel analyses of thylakoid membranes indicated that the depletion of PsbS has no effect on PSII composition, excluding a structural role for PsbS in the organization of the PSII antenna. The susceptibility of mutant plants to photoinactivation of PSII was significantly increased during exposure to high light for up to 8 h. Divergence of mutant plants from wild-type levels of photoinactivation were most pronounced during the first 2 h of illumination, while after longer exposure times the rate of PSII inactivation were similar in both genotypes. The increased PSII inactivation in the mutant was not accompanied by an increased rate of D1 protein degradation, and recovery of PSII activity in the mutant under low light was similar or even faster in comparison to wild-type plants. However, growth under high light intensities resulted in decreased growth rates of psbs mutant plants. We conclude that energy dissipation in PSII related to qE is not primarily required for the protection of PSII against light-induced destruction, but may rather be involved in reducing the electron pressure on the photosynthetic electron transport chain at saturating light intensities.  相似文献   

9.
We have used a technique referred to as ``sheltered RIP' (repeat induced point mutation) to create mutants of the mom-19 gene of Neurospora crassa, which encodes an import receptor for nuclear encoded mitochondrial precursor proteins. Sheltered RIP permits the isolation of a mutant gene in one nucleus, even if that gene is essential for the survival of the organism, by sheltering the nucleus carrying the mutant gene in a heterokaryon with an unaffected nucleus. Furthermore, the nucleus harboring the RIPed gene contains a selectable marker so that it is possible to shift nuclear ratios in the heterokaryons to a state in which the nucleus containing the RIPed gene predominates in cultures grown under selective conditions. This results in a condition where the target gene product should be present at very suboptimal levels and allows the study of the mutant phenotype. One allele of mom-19 generated by this method contains 44 transitions resulting in 18 amino acid substitutions. When the heterokaryon containing this allele was grown under conditions favoring the RIPed nucleus, no MOM19 protein was detectable in the mitochondria of the strain. Homokaryotic strains containing the RIPed allele exhibit a complex and extremely slow growth phenotype suggesting that the product of the mom-19 gene is important in N. crassa.  相似文献   

10.
Photosystem II (PSII), the enzyme responsible for photosynthetic oxygen evolution, is a rapidly turned over membrane protein complex. However, the factors that regulate biogenesis of PSII are poorly defined. Previous proteomic analysis of the PSII preparations from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 detected a novel protein, Psb29 (Sll1414), homologs of which are found in all cyanobacteria and vascular plants with sequenced genomes. Deletion of psb29 in Synechocystis 6803 results in slower growth rates under high light intensities, increased light sensitivity, and lower PSII efficiency, without affecting the PSII core electron transfer activities. A T-DNA insertion line in the PSB29 gene in Arabidopsis thaliana displays a phenotype similar to that of the Synechocystis mutant. This plant mutant grows slowly and exhibits variegated leaves, and its PSII activity is light sensitive. Low temperature fluorescence emission spectroscopy of both cyanobacterial and plant mutants shows an increase in the proportion of uncoupled proximal antennae in PSII as a function of increasing growth light intensities. The similar phenotypes observed in both plant and cyanobacterial mutants demonstrate that the function of Psb29 has been conserved throughout the evolution of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms and suggest a role for the Psb29 protein in the biogenesis of PSII.  相似文献   

11.
Carotene isomerase mutant (crtH mutant) cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 can accumulate beta-carotene under light conditions. However, the mutant cells grown under a light-activated heterotrophic growth condition contained detectable levels of neither beta-carotene nor D1 protein of the photosystem (PS) II reaction center, and no oxygen-evolving activity of PSII was detected. beta-Carotene and D1 protein appeared and a high level of PSII activity was detected after the cells were transferred to a continuous light condition. The PSI activities of thylakoid membranes from mutant cells were almost the same as those of thylakoid membranes from wild-type cells, both before and after transfer to the continuous light condition. These results suggest that beta-carotene is required for the assembly of PSII but not for that of PSI.  相似文献   

12.
Havaux M  Tardy F 《Plant physiology》1997,113(3):913-923
The chlorophyll-b-less chlorina-f2 barley mutant is deficient in the major as well as some minor light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complexes of photosystem II (LHCII). Although the LHCII deficiency had relatively minor repercussions on the leaf photosynthetic performances, the responses of photosystem II (PSII) to elevated temperatures and to bright light were markedly modified. The chlorina-f2 mutation noticeably reduced the thermostability of PSII, with thermal denaturation of PSII starting at about 35[deg]C and 38.5[deg]C in chlorina-f2 and in the wild type, respectively. The increased susceptibility of PSII to heat stress in chlorina-f2 leaves was due to the weakness of its electron donor side, with moderate heat stress causing detachment of the 33-kD extrinsic PSII protein from the oxygen-evolving complex. Prolonged dark adaptation of chlorina-f2 leaves was also observed to inhibit the PSII donor side. However, weak illumination slowly reversed the dark-induced inhibition of PSII in chlorina-f2 and cancelled the difference in PSII thermostability observed between chlorina-f2 and wild-type leaves. The mutant was more sensitive to photoinhibition than the wild type, with strong light stress impairing the PSII donor side in chlorina-f2 but not in the wild type. This difference was not observed in anaerobiosis or in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)- 1,1-dimethylurea, diuron. The acceptor side of PSII was only slightly affected by the mutation and/or the aforementioned stress conditions. Taken together, our results indicate that LHCII stabilize the PSII complexes and maintain the water-oxidizing system in a functional state under varying environmental conditions.  相似文献   

13.
In most oxygenic phototrophs, including cyanobacteria, two independent enzymes catalyze the reduction of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyllide, which is the penultimate step in chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis. One is light-dependent NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (LPOR) and the second type is dark-operative protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (DPOR). To clarify the roles of both enzymes, we assessed synthesis and accumulation of Chl-binding proteins in mutants of cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 that either completely lack LPOR or possess low levels of the active enzyme due to its ectopic regulatable expression. The LPOR-less mutant grew photoautotrophically in moderate light and contained a maximum of 20 % of the wild-type (WT) Chl level. Both Photosystem II (PSII) and Photosystem I (PSI) were reduced to the same degree. Accumulation of PSII was mostly limited by the synthesis of antennae CP43 and especially CP47 as indicated by the accumulation of reaction center assembly complexes. The phenotype of the LPOR-less mutant was comparable to the strain lacking DPOR that also contained <25 % of the wild-type level of PSII and PSI when cultivated under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions. However, in the latter case, we detected no reaction center assembly complexes, indicating that synthesis was almost completely inhibited for all Chl-proteins, including the D1 and D2 proteins.  相似文献   

14.
PSII-X is a small hydrophobic protein, which is universally present in photosystem II (PSII) core complex among cyanobacteria and plants. The role of PSII-X was studied by directed mutagenesis and biochemical analysis in the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus. The psbX-disrupted mutant could grow photoautotrophically indicative of non-essential function, while it showed growth defect under low CO(2) conditions. An active O(2)-evolving PSII complex was successfully isolated from the mutant and wild type. Protein composition of the isolated PSII complex was the same as wild type except for the absence of PSII-X. O(2) evolution supported by artificial quinones was affected in the psbX-disrupted mutant. At high concentration of 2,6-dichlorobenzoquinone or 2,6-dimethylbenzoquinone, the mutant showed much lower activity than wild type, while not much difference was found at low concentration. These results imply that binding or turnover of quinones at the Q(B) site depends, at least in part, on PSII-X protein in the PSII complex. Gel filtration chromatography of the PSII complex revealed that the dimeric structure of the complex was not greatly affected in the psbX-disrupted mutant.  相似文献   

15.
The physiological role of sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol (SQDG) in photosynthesis was investigated with a SQDG defective mutant (hf-2) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that did not have any detectable amount of SQDG. The mutant showed a lower rate of photosystem II (PSII) activity by approximately 40% and also a lower growth rate than those of the wild-type. Results of genetical analysis of hf-2 strongly suggest that the SQDG defect and the lowered PSII activity are due to a single gene mutation. The supplementation of SQDG to hf-2 cells restored the lowered PSII activity to the same level as that of wild-type cells, and also enabled the mutant to grow even in the presence of 135 nm 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Moreover, the incubation of isolated thylakoid membranes of hf-2 with SQDG raised the lowered PSII activity. Chemical modifications of SQDG impaired the recovery of PSII activity. The results suggest that SQDG is indispensable for PSII activity in Chlamydomonas by maintaining PSII complexes in their proper state.  相似文献   

16.
The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cia3 mutant has a phenotype indicating that it requires high-CO(2) levels for effective photosynthesis and growth. It was initially proposed that this mutant was defective in a carbonic anhydrase (CA) that was a key component of the photosynthetic CO(2)-concentrating mechanism (CCM). However, more recent identification of the genetic lesion as a defect in a lumenal CA associated with photosystem II (PSII) has raised questions about the role of this CA in either the CCM or PSII function. To resolve the role of this lumenal CA, we re-examined the physiology of the cia3 mutant. We confirmed and extended previous gas exchange analyses by using membrane-inlet mass spectrometry to monitor(16)O(2),(18)O(2), and CO(2) fluxes in vivo. The results demonstrate that PSII electron transport is not limited in the cia3 mutant at low inorganic carbon (Ci). We also measured metabolite pools sizes and showed that the RuBP pool does not fall to abnormally low levels at low Ci as might be expected by a photosynthetic electron transport or ATP generation limitation. Overall, the results demonstrate that under low Ci conditions, the mutant lacks the ability to supply Rubisco with adequate CO(2) for effective CO(2) fixation and is not limited directly by any aspect of PSII function. We conclude that the thylakoid CA is primarily required for the proper functioning of the CCM at low Ci by providing an ample supply of CO(2) for Rubisco.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A light-sensitive and chlorophyll (Chl)-deficient mutant of the green alga Dunaliella salina (dcd1) showed an amplified response to irradiance stress compared to the wild-type. The mutant was yellow-green under low light (100 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)) and yellow under high irradiance (2000 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)). The mutant had lower levels of Chl, lower levels of light harvesting complex II, and a smaller Chl antenna size. The mutant contained proportionately greater amounts of photodamaged photosystem (PS) II reaction centers in its thylakoid membranes, suggesting a greater susceptibility to photoinhibition. This phenotype was more pronounced under high than low irradiance. The Cbr protein, known to accumulate when D. salina is exposed to irradiance stress, was pronouncedly expressed in the mutant even under low irradiance. This positively correlated with a higher zeaxanthin content in the mutant. Cbr protein accumulation, xanthophyll cycle de-epoxidation state, and fraction of photodamaged PSII reaction centers in the thylakoid membrane showed a linear dependence on the chloroplast 'photoinhibition index', suggesting a cause-and-effect relationship between photoinhibition, Cbr protein accumulation and xanthophyll cycle de-epoxidation state. These results raised the possibility of zeaxanthin and Cbr involvement in the PSII repair process through photoprotection of the partially disassembled, and presumably vulnerable, PSII core complexes from potentially irreversible photooxidative bleaching.  相似文献   

19.
We identified a spontaneously generated mutant from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 wild-type cells grown in BG-11 agar plates containing 5 mM Glu and 10 μM DCMU. This mutant carries an R7L mutation on the α-subunit of cyt b559 in photosystem II (PSII). In the recent 2.9 Å PSII crystal structural model, the side chain of this arginine residue is in close contact with the heme propionates of cyt b559. We called this mutant WR7Lα cyt b559. This mutant grew at about the same rate as wild-type cells under photoautotrophical conditions but grew faster than wild-type cells under photoheterotrophical conditions. In addition, 77 K fluorescence and 295 K chlorophyll a fluorescence spectral results indicated that the energy delivery from phycobilisomes to PSII reaction centers was partially inhibited or uncoupled in this mutant. Moreover, WR7Lα cyt b559 mutant cells were more susceptible to photoinhibition than wild-type cells under high light conditions. Furthermore, our EPR results indicated that in a significant fraction of mutant reaction centers, the R7Lα cyt b559 mutation induced the displacement of one of the axial histidine ligands to the heme of cyt b559. On the basis of these results, we propose that the Arg7Leu mutation on the α-subunit of cyt b559 alters the interaction between the APC core complex and PSII reaction centers, which reduces energy delivery from the antenna to the reaction center and thus protects mutant cells from DCMU-induced photo-oxidative stress.  相似文献   

20.
In a previous study, we characterized a high chlorophyll fluorescence lpa1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, in which approximately 20% photosystem (PS) II protein is accumulated. In the present study, analysis of fluorescence decay kinetics and thermoluminescence profiles demonstrated that the electron transfer reaction on either the donor or acceptor side of PSII remained largely unaffected in the lpa1 mutant. In the mutant, maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm, where Fm is the maximum fluorescence yield and Fv is variable fluorescence) decreased with increasing light intensity and remained almost unchanged in wild-type plants under different light conditions. The Fv/Fm values also increased when mutant plants were transferred from standard growth light to low light conditions. Analysis of PSII protein accumulation further confirmed that the amount of PSII reaction center protein is correlated with changes in Fv/Fm in lpa1 plants. Thus, the assembled PSII in the mutant was functional and also showed increased photosensitivity compared with wild-type plants.(Author for correspondence. Tel: +86 (0)10 6283 6256; Fax: +86 (0)10 8259 9384; E-mail: zhanglixin@ibcas.ac.cn)  相似文献   

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