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1.
In vitro culture of pericarp segments from fruit of Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck cv Valencia was used to determine the temporal sequence in development of chloroplasts from chromoplasts during regreening of the epicarp. Regreening of chromoplasts closely resembled greening of etioplasts, except that regreening proceeded much more slowly. Chlorophyll, the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding protein of photosystem II, the chlorophyll a binding protein of reaction center P-700 of photosystem I, thylakoid membranes, and adenosine triphosphate synthetase were all detected at very low levels in degreened epicarp. All of these increased in parallel during regreening of the epicarp. Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) levels were high in degreened epicarp and declined for the first 10 days of culture before reaccumulating in the regreening segments. Light was necessary for the accumulation of all of the chloroplastic components. A lack of exogenous nitrogen did not prevent the accumulation of any chloroplastic component except Ru-BPCase, although accumulation of the other components was reduced. Sucrose at 150 millimolar in media lacking nitrogen markedly inhibited the accumulation of chlorophyll and light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein.  相似文献   

2.
Hodges M  Barber J 《Plant physiology》1983,72(4):1119-1122
A study has been made on the State 1-State 2 transitions exhibited by the unicellular green algae Chlorella pyrenoidosa. Chlorophyll fluorescence induction curves from algae adapted to State 1 or State 2 have been analyzed and a comparison made with similar curves produced by decreasing the intensity of light going to the photosystem II reaction centers. In both cases, quenching of the maximum fluorescence yield (Fm) and the initial fluorescence yield (Fo) were observed so that the Fv/Fm ratio and the area above the induction curve (Amax) remained constant. The State 1-State 2 transition also produced changes in the βmax component indicative of some alteration within photosystem II organization. The implications of these experiments on the in vivo mechanism for energy redistribution between the two photosystems are discussed in terms of changes in absorption cross-section rather than being due to spillover from photosystem II to photosystem I. These changes may reflect the phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex and its subsequent migration away from the photosystem II core leading to its closer association with photosystem I.  相似文献   

3.
A chlorophyll a/b protein complex has been isolated from a resolved native photosystem I complex by mildly dissociating sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The chlorophyll a/b protein contains a single polypeptide of molecular weight 20 kilodaltons, and has a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 3.5 to 4.0. The visible absorbance spectrum of the chlorophyll a/b protein complex showed a maximum at 667 nanometers in the red region and a 77 K fluorescence emission maximum at 681 nanometers. Alternatively, by treatment of the native photosystem I complex with lithium dodecyl sulfate and Triton, the chlorophyll a/b protein complex could be isolated by chromatography on Sephadex G-75. Immunological assays using antibodies to the P700-chlorophyll a-protein and the photosystem II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein show no cross-reaction between the photosystem I chlorophyll a/b protein and the other two chlorophyll-containing protein complexes.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of nuclear genome duplication on the chlorophyll-protein content and photochemical activity of chloroplasts, and photosynthetic rates in leaf tissue, have been evaluated in haploid, diploid, and tetraploid individuals of the castor bean, Ricinus communis L. Analysis of this euploid series revealed that both photosystem II (2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol reduction) and photosystem I oxygen uptake (N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine to methyl viologen) decrease in plastids isolated from cells with increasingly larger nuclear complement sizes. Photosynthetic O2-evolution and 14CO2-fixation rates in leaf tissue from haploid, diploid, and tetraploid individuals were also found to decrease with the increase in size of the nuclear genome. Six chlorophyll-protein complexes, in addition to a zone of detergent complexed free pigment, were resolved from sodium dodecyl sulfate-solubilized thylakoid membranes from cells of all three ploidy levels. In addition to the P700-chlorophyll a-protein complex and the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex, four minor complexes were revealed, two containing only chlorophyll a and two containing both chlorophyll a and b. The relative distribution of chlorophyll among the resolved chlorophyll-protein complexes and free pigment was found to be similar for all three ploidy levels.  相似文献   

5.
The phosphorylation of thylakoid proteins of rice (Oryza sativa L.) was studied in vitro using [γ-32P]ATP. Several thylakoid proteins are labeled, including the light-harvesting complex of photosystem II. Protein phosphorylation is sensitive to temperature, pH, and ADP, ATP, and divalent cation concentrations. In the range pH 7 to 8.2, phosphorylation of the light-harvesting polypeptides declines above pH 7.5, whereas labeling of several other thylakoid polypeptides increases. Increasing divalent cation concentration from 3 to 20 millimolar results in a decrease in phosphorylation of the 26 kilodalton light-harvesting complex polypeptide and increased phosphorylation of several other polypeptides. ADP has an inhibitory effect on the phosphorylation of the light-harvesting complex polypeptides. Phosphorylation of the 26 kilodalton light-harvesting polypeptide requires 0.45 millimolar ATP for half-maximal phosphorylation, compared to 0.3 millimolar for the 32 kilodalton phosphoprotein. Low temperature inhibits the phosphorylation of thylakoid proteins in chilling-sensitive rice. However, phosphorylation of histones by thylakoid-bound kinase(s) is independent of temperature in the range of 25 to 5°C, suggesting that the effect of low temperature is on accessibility of the substrate, rather than on the activity of the kinase.  相似文献   

6.
The composition and structural organization of thylakoid membranes of a low chlorophyll mutant of Beta vulgaris was investigated using spectroscopic, kinetic and electrophoretic techniques. The data obtained were compared with those of a standard F1 hybrid of the same species. The mutant was depleted in chlorophyll b relative to the hybrid and it had a higher photosystem II/photosystem I reaction center (Q/P700) ratio and a smaller functional chlorophyll antenna size. Analysis of thylakoid membranes by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the mutant lacked a portion of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex but was enriched in the photosystem II reaction center chlorophyll protein complex. Comparison of functional antenna sizes and of photosystem stoichiometries determined electrophoretically were in good agreement with those determined spectroscopically. Both approaches indicated that about 30% of the total chlorophyll was associated with photosystem I and about 70% with photosystem II. A greater proportion of photosystem IIβ was detected in the mutant. The results suggest that a higher photosystem II to photosystem I ratio in the sugar beet mutant has apparently compensated for the smaller photosystem II chlorophyll light-harvesting antenna in its chloroplasts. Moreover, a lack of chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex correlates with the abundance of photosystem IIβ. It is proposed that a developmental relationship exists between the two types of photosystem II where photosystem IIβ is a precursor form of photosystem IIα occurring prior to the addition of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex and grana formation.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of protein phosphorylation and cation depletion on the electron transport rate and fluorescence emission characteristics of photosystem I at two stages of chloroplast development in light-grown wheat leaves are examined. The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex associated with photosystem I (LHC I) was absent from the thylakoids at the early stage of development, but that associated with photosystem II (LHC II) was present. Protein phosphorylation produced an increase in the light-limited rate of photosystem I electron transport at the early stage of development when chlorophyll b was preferentially excited, indicating that LHC I is not required for transfer of excitation energy from phosphorylated LHC II to the core complex of photosystem I. However, no enhancement of photosystem I fluorescence at 77 K was observed at this stage of development, demonstrating that a strict relationship between excitation energy density in photosystem I pigment matrices and the long-wavelength fluorescence emission from photosystem I at 77 K does not exist. Depletion of Mg2+ from the thylakoids produced a stimulation of photosystem I electron transport at both stages of development, but a large enhancement of the photosystem I fluorescence emission was observed only in the thylakoids containing LHC I. It is suggested that the enhancement of PS I electron transport by Mg2+-depletion and phosphorylation of LHC II is associated with an enhancement of fluorescence at 77 K from LHC I and not from the core complex of PS I.  相似文献   

8.
In isolated barley chloroplasts, the presence of 2 millimolar ZnSO4 inhibits the electron transport activity of photosystem II, as measured by photoreduction of dichlorophenolindophenol, O2 evolution, and chlorophyll a fluorescence. The inhibition of photosystem II activity can be restored by the addition of the electron donor hydroxylamine or diphenylcarbazide, but not by benzidine and MnCl2. These observations suggest that Zn inhibits electron flow at the oxidizing side of photosystem II at a site prior to the electron donating site(s) of hydroxylamine and diphenylcarbazide. No inhibition of photosystem I-dependent electron transport by 3 millimolar ZnSO4 is observed. However, with concentrations of ZnSO4 above 5 millimolar, photosystem I activity is partially inactivated. Washing Zn2+-treated chloroplasts partially restores the O2-evolving activity.  相似文献   

9.
A chlorophyll-deficient xantha mutant of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) was examined with respect to development and structural organization of the chloroplast membrane system as affected by disruption of early stages of chlorophyll biosynthesis in the light. The analysis of early chlorophyll precursors showed that the mutant is unable to synthesize 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) in the light. The disorders in early stages of chlorophyll biosynthesis arrested the development of chloroplast membrane system at the stage of vesicles and single thylakoids. The accumulation of 2–5% chlorophyll in the mutant was related to the formation of light-harvesting chlorophyll-a/b-protein complexes I and II, whereas pigment-protein complexes composing reaction centers of photosystem I and photosystem II were lacking. It is concluded that the chloroplast membrane system in the mutant with impaired 5-ALA synthesis is incapable of development and is even reduced upon long-term growing under light.  相似文献   

10.
V. G. Ladygin 《Biophysics》2006,51(4):635-644
A xantha mutant of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) with blocked synthesis of 5-aminolevulinic acid in light accumulates 30 times less chlorophyll than the parental strain. Formation of the chloroplast membrane system in the mutant stops at very early stages, mostly vesicles and single short thylakoids. The mutant plastid membranes contain only light-harvesting chlorophyll-a/b-protein complexes I and II with fluorescence maxima at 728 and 681 nm, respectively. Thus, an early block of chlorophyll synthesis impairs the formation and function of photosystem reaction centers and retards the development of the chloroplast membrane system at the stage of proplastids.  相似文献   

11.
Excitation spectra of chlorophyll a fluorescence in chloroplasts from spinach and barley were measured at 4.2 K. The spectra showed about the same resolution as the corresponding absorption spectra. Excitation spectra for long-wave chlorophyll a emission (738 or 733 nm) indicate that the main absorption maximum of the photosystem (PS) I complex is at 680 nm, with minor bands at longer wavelengths. From the corresponding excitation spectra it was concluded that the emission bands at 686 and 695 nm both originate from the PS II complex. The main absorption bands of this complex were at 676 and 684 nm. The PS I and PS II excitation spectra both showed a contribution by the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab protein(s), but direct energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not observed at 4 K. Omission of Mg2+ from the suspension favored energy transfer from the light-harvesting protein to PS I. Excitation spectra of a chlorophyll b-less mutant of barley showed an average efficiency of 50–60% for energy transfer from β-carotene to chlorophyll a in the PS I and in the PS II complexes.  相似文献   

12.
The light-harvesting chlorophyll protein system of the alga Chlamydobotrys stellata consists of an as yet uncharacterized algal chlorophyll a-protein, called LHCPa, and a common photosystem II-related chlorophyll a/b-protein, called LHCPb (Brandt, Kaiser-Jarry, Wiessner 1982 Biochim Biophys Acta 679: 404-409). For further characterization, this LHCPa was isolated from the organism by polyacrylamide isoelectrofocusing and reelectrophoresis. It contains only chlorophyll a and has only one apoprotein (32,000 daltons). When separated from autotrophically grown cells, its absorption peak is at 674 nm and its isoelectric point at 5.3. Photoheterotrophic cultivation of the algae shifts the absorption maximum of LHCPa to 679 nm and its isoelectric point to 4.8. This LHCPa is a component of photosystem I particles. In relation to the total chlorophyll a content, the amount of LHCPa is low in autotrophic algae, but increases under photoheterotrophic growth conditions, where the organisms do not have the ability to assimilate CO2 photosynthetically.  相似文献   

13.
It was shown earlier that in etiolated bean (Phaseolus vulgaris, var. red kidney) leaves exposed to continuous light for a short time and then transferred to darkness a reorganization of their photosystem II (PSII) unit components occurs. This reorganization involves disorganization of the light-harvesting complex of PSII (LHC-II), destruction of its chlorophyll b and the 25 kilodalton polypeptide, and reuse of its chlorophyll a for the formation of additional, small in size, PSII units (Argyroudi-Akoyunoglou, Akoyunoglou, Kalosakas, Akoyunoglou 1982 Plant Physiol 70: 1242-1248). The present study further shows that parallel to the PSII unit reorganization a reorganization of the PSI unit components also occurs: upon transfer to darkness the 24, 23, and 21 kilodalton polypeptides, components of the light-harvesting complex of PSI (LHC-I), are decreased, the 69 kilodalton polypeptide, component of the chlorophyll a-rich P700-protein complex (CPI), is increased and new smallsized PSI units are formed. Concomitantly, the cytochrome f/chlorophyll and the cytochrome b/chlorophyll ratios are gradually increased. This suggests that the concentration of the electron transport components is also modulated in darkness to allow for adequate electron flow to occur between the newly synthesized PSII and PSI units.  相似文献   

14.
The light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein complex has been isolated from barley thylakoids by a rapid, single-step procedure involving adsorption chromatography on controlled-pore glass columns. The Triton X-100-solubilized complex contains a polypeptide of apparent molecular weight, 26,000; the 0.25% Triton X-100 light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein has spectral characteristics consistent with its assumed in vivo state. On the same column free chlorophyll and carotenoids have been separated from chlorophyll-protein complex 1, but this complex contained many polypeptides other than those associated with chlorophyll. This method is potentially suitable for the isolation of other thylakoid membrane proteins. It may also be generally applicable for fractionation of intrinsic membrane proteins from other sources and for separation of mixed Triton X-100-lipid micelles.  相似文献   

15.
The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex of photosystem II (LHCII) is the most abundant membrane protein in green plants, and its degradation is a crucial process for the acclimation to high light conditions and for the recovery of nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) during senescence. However, the molecular mechanism of LHCII degradation is largely unknown. Here, we report that chlorophyll b reductase, which catalyzes the first step of chlorophyll b degradation, plays a central role in LHCII degradation. When the genes for chlorophyll b reductases NOL and NYC1 were disrupted in Arabidopsis thaliana, chlorophyll b and LHCII were not degraded during senescence, whereas other pigment complexes completely disappeared. When purified trimeric LHCII was incubated with recombinant chlorophyll b reductase (NOL), expressed in Escherichia coli, the chlorophyll b in LHCII was converted to 7-hydroxymethyl chlorophyll a. Accompanying this conversion, chlorophylls were released from LHCII apoproteins until all the chlorophyll molecules in LHCII dissociated from the complexes. Chlorophyll-depleted LHCII apoproteins did not dissociate into monomeric forms but remained in the trimeric form. Based on these results, we propose the novel hypothesis that chlorophyll b reductase catalyzes the initial step of LHCII degradation, and that trimeric LHCII is a substrate of LHCII degradation.  相似文献   

16.
The structure and heterogeneity of LHC II were studied by in vitro reconstitution of apoproteins with pigments (Plumley and Schmidt 1987, Proc Natl Acad Sci 84: 146–150). Reconstituted CP 2 complexes purified by LDS-PAGE were subsequently characterized and shown to have spectroscopic properties and pigment-protein compositions and stoichiometries similar to those of authentic complexes. Heterologous reconstitutions utilizing pigments and light-harvesting proteins from spinach, pea and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii reveal no evidence of specialized binding sites for the unique C. reinhardtii xanthophyll loroxanthin: lutein and loroxanthin are interchangeable for in vitro reconstitution. Proteins modified by the presence of a transit peptide, phosphorylation, or proteolytic removal of the NH2-terminus could be reconstituted. Evidence suggests that post-translational modification are not responsible for the presence of six electrophoretic variants of C. reinhardtii CP 2. Reconstitution is blocked by iodoacetamide pre-treatment of the apoproteins suggesting a role for cysteine in pigment ligation and/or proper folding of the pigment-protein complex. Finally, no effect of divalent cations on pigment reassembly could be detected.Abbreviations cab chlorophyll a/b-binding protein genes - Chl chlorophyll - CP2 light-harvesting chlorophyll A+b-protein complex fractionated by mildly denaturing LDS-PAGE from Photosystem II in thylakoids - CP 43 and CP 47 chlorophyll a-antenna complexes fractionated from Photosystem II in thylakoids by mildly denaturing LDS-PAGE at 4°C - IgG gamma immunoglobulin - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - LDS-PAGE lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at 4°C - LHC I and LHC II thylakoid light-harvesting chlorophyll a+b-protein holocomplexes associated with Photosystems I and II, respectively - PS II Photosystem II - TX100 Triton X-100 - TX100-derived LHC light-harvesting complexes enriched in LHC II following fractionation of thylakoids by TX100  相似文献   

17.
The activity of thylakoid protein kinase and the regulation of excitation energy distribution between photosystems I and II was examined during chloroplast biogenesis in light-grown Triticum aestivum (wheat) leaves. The specific activity of the thylakoid protein kinase decreased some six-fold during development from the young plastids at the base of the 7-d-old leaf to the mature chloroplasts at the leaf tip. Appreciable activity was also detected in plastids isolated from etiolated leaves. In mature chloroplasts the majority of phosphate was incorporated into the Mr=26,000 apo-proteins of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHCP). However, at early stages of chloroplast development and in the etioplast, the phosphate was predominantly incorporated into a polypeptide of Mr=9,000 dalton. Immature thylakoids, isolated from the base of the leaf, had relatively low concentrations of LHCP and could perform a State 1-State 2 transition, as demonstrated by ATP-induced quenching of photosystem II fluorescence. Analyses of photosystem I and photosystem II fluorescence-induction curves from intact leaf tissue demonstrated that this transition occurs in vivo at early stages of leaf development and, therefore, may play an important role in regulating energy transduction during chloroplast biogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
After acid-treatment of spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts, various partial electron transport reactions are inactivated from 25 to 75%. Divalent cations in concentrations from 10 to 50 millimolar can partially restore electron transport rates. Two cation-specific sites have been found in photosystem II: one on the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea-insensitive silicomolybdate pathway, which responds better to restoration by Mg2+ than by Ca2+ ions, the other on the forward pathway to photosystem I, located on the 2,5-dimethylbenzoquinone pathway. This site is selectively restored by Ca2+ ions. When protonated chloroplasts are treated with N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)aziridine, a carboxyl group modifying reagent, presumed to react with glutamic and aspartic acid residues of proteins, restoration of electron transport at the Ca2+-selective site on the 2,5-dimethylbenzoquinone pathway is impaired, while no difference in restoration is seen at the Mg2+ site on the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-insensitive silicomolybdate pathway.

Trypsin treatment of chloroplasts modifies the light-harvesting pigment-protein complex, destroys the dibromothymoquinone-insensitive 2,5-dimethyl-benzoquinone reduction, but does not interfere with the partial restoration of activity of this pathway by Ca2+ ions, implying that the selective Ca2+ effect on photosystem II (selective Ca2+ site) is different from its effects as a divalent cation on the light-harvesting pigment-protein complex involved in the excitation energy distribution between the two photosystems.

  相似文献   

19.
Kargul J  Barber J 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(6):1056-1068
In order to carry out photosynthesis, plants and algae rely on the co-operative interaction of two photosystems: photosystem I and photosystem II. For maximum efficiency, each photosystem should absorb the same amount of light. To achieve this, plants and green algae have a mobile pool of chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins that can switch between being light-harvesting antenna for photosystem I or photosystem II, in order to maintain an optimal excitation balance. This switch, termed state transitions, involves the reversible phosphorylation of the mobile chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins, which is regulated by the redox state of the plastoquinone-mediating electron transfer between photosystem I and photosystem II. In this review, we will present the data supporting the function of redox-dependent phosphorylation of the major and minor chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins by the specific thylakoid-bound kinases (Stt7, STN7, TAKs) providing a molecular switch for the structural remodelling of the light-harvesting complexes during state transitions. We will also overview the latest X-ray crystallographic and electron microscopy-derived models for structural re-arrangement of the light-harvesting antenna during State 1-to-State 2 transition, in which the minor chlorophyll a/b-binding protein, CP29, and the mobile light-harvesting complex II trimer detach from the light-harvesting complex II-photosystem II supercomplex and associate with the photosystem I core in the vicinity of the PsaH/L/O/P domain.  相似文献   

20.
The molecular organization of chlorophyll in Chlamydomonas reinhardii has been shown to be essentially similar to that in higher plants. Some 50% of the chlorophyll in Chlamydomonas reinhardii chloroplast membranes has been shown to be located in a chlorophyll a/b-protein complex. The complex was isolated in a homogeneous form by hydroxylapatite chromatography of sodium dodecyl sulfate extracts of the chloroplast membranes. Its absorption spectrum exhibits two maxima in the red region at 670 and 652 nm due to the presence of equimolar quantities of chlorophylls a and b in the complex. Preparations of the chlorophyll-protein also contain some of each of the carotenoids observed in the intact chloroplast membrane, but not in the same proportions. The native complex (S value = 2.3S) exhibits a molecular weight of 28,000 ± 2,000 on calibrated sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. However, on the basis of its amino acid composition and other data a more probable molecular weight of about 35,000 was calculated. Each 35,000 dalton unit contains three chlorophyll a and three chlorophyll b molecules, and on the average one carotenoid molecule conjugated with probably a single polypeptide of 29,000 daltons. Comparison of spectral and biochemical characteristics demonstrates that this algal chlorophyll-protein is homologous to the previously described major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein of higher plants. It is anticipated that the Chlamydomonas complex functions solely in a light-harvesting capacity in analogy to the function determined for the higher plant component.  相似文献   

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