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1.
2.
Reversible phosphorylation of the D1 reaction centre protein of photosystem II (PSII) occurs in thylakoid membranes of higher plants. The significance of D1 protein phosphorylation in the function of PSII is not yet clear. This paper summarizes the data implying that phosphorylation of D1 protein in higher plants is involved in the regulation of the repair cycle of photoinhibited PSII centres. Photoinhibition of PSII, D1 protein phosphorylation and degradation have been studied in vivo in higher plant leaves acclimated to different growth irradiances. It is shown that photoinhibitory illumination induces maximal phosphorylation of the D1 protein. Under these conditions D1 turnover is also saturated. We postulate that phosphorylation retards the degradation of damaged D1 protein under conditions where rapid replacement by a new D1 copy is not possible. This would protect PSII from total disassembly and degradation of all PSII subunits. We conclude that the phosphorylation of D1 protein and the regulation of D1 protein degradation may have evolved together. Furthermore, these characteristics seem to be related to the highly organized structure of higher-plant type thylakoid membranes, since the capability to phosphorylate D1 protein is restricted to seed plants.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of cadmium stress (CdCl2) on photochemical activity and protein behaviour of photosystem II (PSII) were studied in vivo and in vitro . Treatments of pea ( Pisum sativum ) and broad bean ( Vicia faba ) plants with 0·05–5 m M cadmium (CdCl2) modified PSII activity with a resulting increase in electron transfer followed by an inhibition and damage to the oxygen-evolving complex. Pulse-chase experiments with [35S]methionine in vivo followed by the separation of the radiolabelled thylakoids into grana and stroma exposed regions indicated that the synthesis, degradation and assembly of the D1 protein were greatly affected by cadmium. Initially D1 synthesis increased, later slowing down when the stress became advanced; at the same time the D1 degradation was increased. Binding studies with radiolabelled [14C]herbicide revealed that the QB pocket activity was also altered. However, the primary consequence of cadmium stress was the disassembly of the stacked regions. The measurements indicated differential tolerance to cadmium stress between the two plant species, which was not caused by either differential metal uptake or binding to the PSII complex. This suggests that the resulting changes in D1 turnover are a consequence of an unknown primary effect of cadmium on the PSII apparatus. However, we show that the higher tolerance to heavy metal stress found in broad bean plants relative to pea is accompanied by stimulation of D1 turnover. These experiments supported by previous data suggest that modulation of D1 turnover under stress is a commonly occurring process.  相似文献   

4.
In the 1990's, evidence has accumulated that various unfavourable environmental conditions substantially affect the turnover of the D1 protein of reaction centre II, the psb A gene product. Biochemical, molecular and physiological studies in higher plants indicate that alterations of D1 protein turnover occur under drought, nutrition deficiency, heat, chemical stress, ozone fumigation as well as UV-B and visible photo-stresses. The behaviour of photosystem II under these various stress conditions indicates that the response of D1 protein turnover can be interpreted as a general adaptive response to environmental extremes.  相似文献   

5.
Photoinhibition is caused by an imbalance between the rates of the damage and repair cycle of photosystem II D1 protein in thylakoid membranes. The PSII repair processes include (i) disassembly of damaged PSII-LHCII supercomplexes and PSII core dimers into monomers, (ii) migration of the PSII monomers to the stroma regions of thylakoid membranes, (iii) dephosphorylation of the CP43, D1 and D2 subunits, (iv) degradation of damaged D1 protein, and (v) co-translational insertion of the newly synthesized D1 polypeptide and reassembly of functional PSII complex. Here, we studied the D1 turnover cycle in maize mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts using a protein synthesis inhibitor, lincomycin. In both types of maize chloroplasts, PSII was found as the PSII-LHCII supercomplex, dimer and monomer. The PSII core and the LHCII proteins were phosphorylated in both types of chloroplasts in a light-dependent manner. The rate constants for photoinhibition measured for lincomycin-treated leaves were comparable to those reported for C3 plants, suggesting that the kinetics of the PSII photodamage is similar in C3 and C4 species. During the photoinhibitory treatment the D1 protein was dephosphorylated in both types of chloroplasts but it was rapidly degraded only in the bundle sheath chloroplasts. In mesophyll chloroplasts, PSII monomers accumulated and little degradation of D1 protein was observed. We postulate that the low content of the Deg1 enzyme observed in mesophyll chloroplasts isolated from moderate light grown maize may retard the D1 repair processes in this type of plastids.  相似文献   

6.
Analysis of the Structure of the PsbO Protein and its Implications   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The PsbO protein is a ubiquitous extrinsic subunit of Photosystem II (PS II), the water splitting enzyme of photosynthesis. A recently determined 3D X-ray structure of a cyanobacterial protein bound to PS II has given an opportunity to conduct complete analyses of its sequence and structural characteristics using bioinformatic methods. Multiple sequence alignments for the PsbO family are constructed and correlated with the cyanobacterial structure. We identify the most conserved regions of PsbO and the mapping of their positions within the structure indicates their functional roles especially in relation to interactions of this protein with the lumenal surface of PS II. Homologous models for eukaryotic PsbO were built in order to compare with the prokaryotic protein. We also explore structural homology between PsbO and other proteins for which 3D structures are known and determine its structural classification. These analyses contribute to the understanding of the function and evolutionary origin of the PS II manganese stabilising protein.  相似文献   

7.
Ala-251 in the membrane-parallel helix in the D-E loop of the D1 polypeptide close to the QB pocket of photosystem II (PS II), was mutated to aspartate (D), lysine (K), leucine (L) or serine (S) in Synechocystis 6803. O2 evolution rates (H2ODCBQ; 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone) of A251D, A251L and A251S were lower, being 38, 16, 62 and 70%, respectively, of that of the control, and there was an even more drastic impairment of O2 evolution when measured from H2O to DMBQ (2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone), demonstrating modifications in the QB pocket. However, in all other mutants but A251K, the QB function could sustain O2 evolution at a level high enough to support photosynthetic growth. The mutant A251S, carrying a substitution of alanine for a chemically quite similar residue serine, was less severely affected. Substitution by a positively charged residue drastically delayed chlorophyll a fluorescence relaxation in the non-photosynthetic strain A251K, implying strong impairment of QA-to-QB electron transfer. Delay of fluorescence relaxation was clear in A251D as well, carrying a substitution of alanine for a negatively charged residue. The effects of the substitutions of A251 demonstrate the importance of this residue of the D1 polypeptide in the conformation of the acceptor side of PS II and, accordingly, the effect on the acceptor-side function of PS II was very clear. Nevertheless, the tolerance of PS II activity to high-light-induced photoinhibition in vivo and the subsequent D1 degradation were not much impaired in any of the photosynthetic mutant strains as compared to the control.  相似文献   

8.
The D1 protein, a key subunit of photosystem II reaction center, is synthesized as a precursor form with a carboxyl-terminal extension, in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms with some exceptions. This part of the protein is removed by the action of an endopeptidase, and the proteolytic processing is indispensable for the manifestation of oxygen-evolving activity in photosynthesis. The carboxyl-terminus of mature D1 protein, which appears upon the cleavage, has recently been demonstrated to be a ligand for a manganese atom in the Mn4Ca-cluster, which is responsible for the water oxidation chemistry in photosystem II, based on the isotope-edited Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and the X-ray crystallography. On the other hand, the structure of a peptidase involved in the cleavage of precursor D1 protein has been resolved at a higher resolution, and the enzyme–substrate interactions have extensively been analyzed both in vivo and in vitro. The present article briefly summarizes the history of research and the present state of our knowledge on the carboxyl-terminal processing of precursor D1 protein in the photosystem II reaction center.  相似文献   

9.
A wide range of values for the photosystem II to photosystem I stoichiometry have been reported. It is likely that some of this variation is due to measurement artifacts, which are discussed. Careful measurements of photosystem II reactions by absorption change at 325 nm, and flash yields of oxygen evolution, of protons from oxidation of water and of reduction of dichloroindophenol give equivalent results. Stoichiometries other than 1:1 are routinely found, and they vary with growth conditions as well as plant type. Two atrazine binding sites are found for every photosystem II reaction center that is active in oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

10.
A recent report (Nanba O, Satoh K: Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84: 109–112, 1987) described the isolation from spinach of a putative photosystem 2 reaction centre which contained cytochrome b-559 and three other electrophoretically resolvable polypeptide bands, two of which have molecular weights comparable to the D1 and D2 polypeptides. We have used in vivo labelling with radioactive methionine and probed with D1 and D2 monospecific antibodies (raised against synthetically expressed sequences of the psbA and psbD genes) for specific detection of these proteins in a similarly prepared photosystem 2 reaction centre preparation. These techniques identified a 32 000 dalton D1 band, a 30 000 dalton D2 band and a 55 000 dalton D1/D2 aggregate, the latter apparently arising from the detergent treatments employed. Digestions with a lysine-specific protease further confirmed the identification of the lysine-free D1 polypeptide and also confirmed that the D1 molecules in the 55 000 dalton band were in aggregation with other bands and not in self-aggregates. The D1 and D2 polypeptides (including the aggregate) are considerably enriched in the photosystem two reaction centre preparation compared to the other resolved fractions.  相似文献   

11.
A chloroplast protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was previously proposed to regulate translation of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast psbA mRNA, encoding the D1 protein, in response to light. Here we show that AtPDI6, one of 13 Arabidopsis thaliana PDI genes, also plays a role in the chloroplast. We found that AtPDI6 is targeted and localized to the chloroplast. Interestingly, AtPDI6 knockdown plants displayed higher resistance to photoinhibition than wild‐type plants when exposed to a tenfold increase in light intensity. The AtPDI6 knockdown plants also displayed a higher rate of D1 synthesis under a similar light intensity. The increased resistance to photoinhibition may not be rationalized by changes in antenna or non‐photochemical quenching. Thus, the increased D1 synthesis rate, which may result in a larger proportion of active D1 under light stress, may led to the decrease in photoinhibition. These results suggest that, although the D1 synthesis rates observed in wild‐type plants under high light intensities are elevated, repair can potentially occur faster. The findings implicate AtPDI6 as an attenuator of D1 synthesis, modulating photoinhibition in a light‐regulated manner.  相似文献   

12.
Divergent theories on the mechanism behind, and the nature of, photoinhibition are discussed, especially in relation to observations made in higher plant leaves. Comparisons are made with 'lower' plant groups and results of in vivo and in vitro experiments are considered. Irradiance-induced mechanisms involved in the regulation of PSII function and structure are discussed in connection with turnover of the DI protein. A model is presented in which a structural change in DI protein facilitates the formation of a population of dissipative PSII centres that do not participate in linear electron transport to PSI. We suggest a sophisticated regulatory mechanism whereby this variable PSII function is controlled with respect to both incident light and biochemical demand, a control which relies on feedback from both light and dark reactions.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Photoinhibition of PSII and turnover of the D1 reaction-centre protein in vivo were studied in pumpkin leaves (Cucurbita pepo L.) acclimated to different growth irradiances and in low-light-grown moss, (Ceratodon purpureus) (Hedw.) Brid. The low-light-acclimated pumpkins were most susceptible to photoinhibition. The production rate of photoinhibited PSII centres (kPI), determined in the presence of a chloroplast-encoded protein-synthesis inhibitor, showed no marked difference between the high- and low-light-grown pumpkin leaves. On the other hand, the rate constant for the repair cycle (kREC) of PSII was nearly three times higher in the high-light-grown pumpkin when compared to low-light-grown pumpkin. The slower degradation rate of the damaged D1 protein in the low-light-acclimated leaves, determined by pulsechase experiments with [35S]methionine suggested that the degradation of the Dl protein retards the repair cycle of PSII under photoinhibitory light. Slow degradation of the D1 protein in low-light-grown pumpkin was accompanied by accumulation of a phosphorylated form of the D1 protein, which we postulate as being involved in the regulation of D1-protein degradation and therefore the whole PSII repair cycle. In spite of low growth irradiance the repair cycle of PSII in the moss Ceratodon was rapid under high irradiance. When compared to the high- or low-light-acclimated pumpkin leaves, Ceratodon had the highest rate of D1-protein degradation at 1000 mol photons m–2 s–1. In contrast to the higher plants, the D1 protein of Ceratodon was not phosphorylated either under high irradiance in vivo or under in-vitro conditions, which readily phosphorylate the D1 protein of higher plants. This is consistent with the rapid degradation of the D1 protein in Ceratodon. Screening experiments indicated that D1 protein can be phosphorylated in the thylakoid membranes of angiosperms and conifers but not in lower plants. The postulated regulation mechanism of D1-protein degradation involving phosphorylation and the role of thylakoid organization in the function of PSII repair cycle are discussed.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - D1* phosphorylated form of D1 protein - Fmax and Fv maximal and variable fluorescence respectively - kPJ and kREC rate constants of photoinhibition and concurrent recovery respectively - LHCII lightharvesting chlorophyll a/bprotein of PSII - PFD photon flux density Dr. R. Barbato (Dipartimento di Biologia, Universita di Padova, Padova, Italy), Prof. P. Böger (Lehrstuhl fur Physiologie und Biochemie der Pflanzen, Universität Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany), Prof. A. Melis (Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Berkeley, USA), Prof. I. Ohad (Department of Biological Chemistry, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel) and Mr. A. Soitamo (Department of Biology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland) are gratefully acknowledged for the D1-protein-specific antibodies. The authors thank Ms. Virpi Paakkarinen for excellent technical assistance. This work was supported by the Academy of Finland and the Foundation of the University of Turku.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of high light on the acceptor side of photosystem II of chloroplasts and core particles of spinach was studied. BothV max and apparentK m for DCIP were altered in photoinhibited photosystem II core particles. The double reciprocal plot analysis as a function of actinic light showed increased slope in chloroplasts photoinhibited in the presence of DCMU. Exposure of chloroplasts to high light in the presence of DCMU did not protect the chloroplast against high light induced decrease in Fm, level. Further the high light stress induced decrease inF m level was not restored by the addition of DCMU. These results suggest that the high light stress induced damage to chloroplast involves alteration in the binding site forQ B on the DI protein on the acceptor side of photosystem II  相似文献   

16.
Huesgen PF  Schuhmann H  Adamska I 《FEBS letters》2006,580(30):6929-6932
In plants exposed to high irradiances of visible light, the D1 protein in the reaction center of photosystem II is oxidatively damaged and rapidly degraded. Earlier work in our laboratory showed that the serine protease Deg2 performs the primary cleavage of photodamaged D1 protein in vitro. Here, we demonstrate that the rate of D1 protein degradation under light stress conditions in Arabidopsis mutants lacking the Deg2 protease is similar to those in wild-type plants. Therefore, we propose that several redundant D1 protein degradation pathways might exist in vivo.  相似文献   

17.
Photoinactivation and photoprotection of photosystem II in nature   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Photosystem II plays a central role not only in energy transduction, but also in monitoring the molecular redox mechanisms involved in signal transduction for acclimation to environmental stresses. Central to the regulation of photosystem II (PSII) function as a light-driven molecular machine in higher plant leaves, is an inevitable photo-inactivation of one PSII after 106–107 photons have been delivered to the leaf, although the act of photoinactivation per se requires only one photon. PSII function in acclimated pea leaves shows a reciprocity between irradiance and the time of illumination, demonstrating that the photoinactivation of PSII is a light dosage effect, depending on the number of photons absorbed rather than the rate of photon absorption. Hence, PSII photoinactivation will occur at low as well as high irradiance. There is a heterogeneity of PSII functional stability, possibly with less stable PSII monomers being located in grana margins and more stable PSII dimers in appressed granal domains. Matching the inevitable photoinactivation of PSII, green plants have an intrinsic capacity for D1 protein synthesis to restore PSII function which is saturated at very low light. Photoinhibition of PSII in vivo is often a photoprotective strategy rather than a damaging process.  相似文献   

18.
Site-directed mutations were constructed in photosystem II of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 in which the axial ligand, D1-His198, of special pair chlorophyll PD1 was replaced with Gln and where D1-Thr179, which overlies monomeric chlorophyll ChlD1, was replaced with His. The D1-His198Gln mutation produces a 3nm displacement to the blue of the bleaching minimum in the Soret and in the Qy region of the (P+QA--PQA) absorbance difference spectrum. To a first approximation, the bleaching can be assigned to the low-energy exciton transition of the special pair chlorophylls PD1/PD2. The D1-Thr179His mutation produces a 2nm displacement to the red of the bleaching minimum in the Qy region of the (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectrum. Analysis of the flash-induced (P+QA--PQA) and (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectra of both mutants compared with wild-type at 80K indicate that the cation of the oxidized donor P+ is predominantly localized on the chlorophyll PD1 of the special pair and that the reaction centre triplet state, produced upon charge recombination from 3[P+Pheo-], when the primary quinone electron acceptor QA is doubly reduced, is primarily localized on ChlD1.  相似文献   

19.
AtCYP38 is a thylakoid lumen protein comprising the immunophilin domain and the phosphatase inhibitor module. Here we show the association of AtCYP38 with the photosystem II (PSII) monomer complex and address its functional role using AtCYP38-deficient mutants. The dynamic greening process of etiolated leaves failed in the absence of AtCYP38, due to specific problems in the biogenesis of PSII complexes. Also the development of leaves under short-day conditions was severely disturbed. Detailed biophysical and biochemical analysis of mature AtCYP38-deficient plants from favorable growth conditions (long photoperiod) revealed: (i) intrinsic malfunction of PSII, which (ii) occurred on the donor side of PSII and (iii) was dependent on growing light intensity. AtCYP38 mutant plants also showed decreased accumulation of PSII, which was shown not to originate from impaired D1 synthesis or assembly of PSII monomers, dimers and supercomplexes as such but rather from the incorrect fine-tuning of the oxygen-evolving side of PSII. This, in turn, rendered PSII centers extremely susceptible to photoinhibition. AtCYP38 deficiency also drastically decreased the in vivo phosphorylation of PSII core proteins, probably related to the absence of the AtCYP38 phosphatase inhibitor domain. It is proposed that during PSII assembly AtCYP38 protein guides the proper folding of D1 (and CP43) into PSII, thereby enabling the correct assembly of the water-splitting Mn4–Ca cluster even with high turnover of PSII.  相似文献   

20.
Reversible phosphorylation and turnover of the D1 protein in vivo were studied under low-temperature photoinhibition of pumpkin leaves and under subsequent recovery at low light at 4 °C or 23 °C. The inactivation of PS II and photodamage to D1 were not enhanced during low-temperature photoinhibition when compared to that at room temperature. The PS II repair cycle, however, was completely blocked at 4 °C at the level of D1 degradation. Both the recovery of the photochemical activity of PS II and the degradation of the damaged D1 protein at low light at 23 °C were delayed about 1 hour after low-temperature photoinhibition, suggesting that in addition to the decrease in catalytic turnover of the enzyme, the protease was specifically inactivated in vivo at low temperature. The effect of low temperature on the other regulatory enzymes of PS II repair, protein kinase and phosphatase [Rintamäki et al. (1996) J Biol Chem 271: 14870-14875] was variable. The D1 protein kinase was operational at low temperature while dephosphorylation of the D1 protein seemed to be completely inhibited during low temperature treatment. Under subsequent recovery conditions at low light and 23 °C, the high phosphorylation level of D1 was sustained in leaf discs photoinhibited at low temperature, despite the recovery of the phosphatase activity. This high phosphorylation level of D1 was due to the persistently active kinase. The D1 kinase, previously shown to get activated by reduction of plastoquinone, was, however, found to be maximally active already at relatively low redox state of the plastoquinone pool. We suggest that phosphorylation of PS II centers increases the stability of PS II complexes and concomitantly improves their survival under stress conditions.  相似文献   

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