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1.
2.
Electron transport from Photosystem II to Photosystem I of spinach chloroplasts can be stimulated by bicarbonate and various carbonyl or carboxyl compounds. Monovalent or divalent cations, which have hitherto been implicated in the energy distribution between the two photosystems, i.e., spillover phenomena at low light intensities, show a similar effect under high light conditions employed in this study. A mechanism for this stimulation of forward electron transport from Photosystem II to Photosystem I could involve inhibition of two types of Photosystem II partial reactions, which may involve cycling of electrons around Photosystem II. One of these is the DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction, and the other is ferricyanide reduction by Photosystem II at pH 8 in the presence of dibromothymoquinone. Greater stimulation of forward electron transport reactions is observed when both types of Photosystem II cyclic reactions are inhibited by bicarbonate, carbonyl and carboxyl-type compounds, or by certain mono- or divalent cations.Abbreviations used: DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea; DCIP, 2,6-dichloroindophenol; DBMIB, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone; FeCN, potassium ferricyanide; MV, methylviologen; PS I, photosystem I; PS II, photosystem II; SM, silicomolybdic acid.  相似文献   

3.
The ratio of Photosystem (PS) II to PS I electron-transport capacity in spinach chloroplasts was compared from reaction-center and steady-state rate measurements. The reaction-center electron-transport capacity was based upon both the relative concentrations of the PS IIα, PS IIβ and PS I centers, and the number of chlorophyll molecules associated with each type of center. The reaction-center ratio of total PS II to PS I electron-transport capacity was about 1.8:1. Steady-state electron-transport capacity data were obtained from the rate of light-induced absorbance-change measurements in the presence of ferredoxin-NADP+, potassium ferricyanide and 2,5-dimethylbenzoquinone (DMQ). A new method was developed for determining the partition of reduced DMQ between the thylakoid membrane and the surrounding aqueous phase. The ratio of membrane-bound to aqueous DMQH2 was experimentally determined to be 1.3:1. When used at low concentrations (200 μM), potassium ferricyanide is shown to be strictly a PS I electron acceptor. At concentrations higher than 200 μM, ferricyanide intercepted electrons from the reducing side of PS II as well. The experimental rates of electron flow through PS II and PS I defined a PS II/PS I electron-transport capacity ratio of 1.6:1.  相似文献   

4.
It was found that DCMU had a differential effect at two concentration ranges on variable fluorescence kinetics in isolated chloroplasts. The increase in fluorescence rate at low concentrations of DCMU was abolished by preincubation of chloroplasts with ferricyanide or formate, treatments which were shown to convert Fe in the PS II reaction center (i.e., the FeQA complex) into a non-oxidizable form, but it was not affected by Tris treatment. Increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at high concentrations of DCMU was found to be abolished by Tris treatment but it was only marginally affected by ferricyanide or formate treatments. The effect of Tris could be abolished by addition of hydroquinone-ascorbate, which restored electron flow to the pool of secondary acceptors.Contrary to the effect of DCMU, no such differential concentration dependence of the variable fluorescence kinetics was found for atrazine.The increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at a low concentration rate of DCMU is presumably restricted to units which contain an oxidizable Fe in the FeQA complex. Increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at high DCMU concentration is probably related to the effect of DCMU at the QB site.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(34 dichlorophenyl)-1,1 dimethyl urea - PS II Photosystem II - Tris tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane  相似文献   

5.
Photoinhibition of the light-induced Photosystem I (PS I) electron transfer activity from the reduced dichlorophenol indophenol to methyl viologen was studied. PS I preparations with Chl/P700 ratios of about 180 (PS I-180), 100 (PS I-100) and 40 (PS I(HA)-40) were isolated from spinach thylakoid membranes by the treatments with Triton X-100, followed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and hydroxylapatite column chromatography. White light irradiation (1.1 × 104E m–2 s–1) of PS I-180 for 2 hours bleached 50% of the chlorophyll and caused a 58% decrease in the electron transfer activity with virtually no loss of the primary donor, P700. The flash-induced absorbance change showed the decay phase with a half time of about 10 s that was attributed to the P700 triplet, suggesting that the photoinhibitory light treatment caused the destruction of the PS I acceptor(s), Fx and possibly A1. PS I-100 was similarly photobleached by the irradiation and the electron transfer activity decreased. There was, however, no apparent photoinhibition of the electron transport activity in PS I(HA)-40. Photoinhibition similar to that seen in PS I-180 also occurred in membrane fragments that were isolated without any detergent from a PS II-deficient mutant strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. PS I-180 was not photoinhibited under anaerobic conditions. The production of superoxide and fatty acid hydroperoxide during white light irradiation was significantly greater in PS I-180 than in PS I(HA)-40. The mechanism of photoinhibition in PS I preparations is discussed in relation to the formation of toxic oxygen molecules.Abbreviations A0,A1 primary and secondary electron acceptors of PS I - CD circular dichroism - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - FA, FB, FX iron-sulfur centers A, B, X - HA hydroxylapatite - LHCI lightharvesting complex of PS I - MDA malondialdehyde - MV methyl viologen - Na-Asc sodium L-ascorbate - P700 primary electron donor of PS I - PFD photon flux density - PS I-A and PS I-B psaA and psaB gene products - TBA thiobarbituric acid  相似文献   

6.
The functional state of the PS II population localized in the stroma exposed non-appressed thylakoid region was investigated by direct analysis of the PS II content of isolated stroma thylakoid vesicles. This PS II population, possessing an antenna size typical for PS II, was found to have a fully functional oxygen evolving capacity in the presence of an added quinone electron acceptor such as phenyl-p-benzoquinone. The sensitivity to DCMU for this PS II population was the same as for PS II in control thylakoids. However, under more physiological conditions, in the absence of an added quinone acceptor, no oxygen was evolved from stroma thylakoid vesicles and their PS II centers were found to be incapable to pass electrons to PS I and to yield NADPH. By comparison of the effect of a variety of added quinone acceptors with different midpoint potentials, it is concluded that the inability of PS II in the stroma thylakoid membranes to contribute to NADPH formation probably is due to that QA of this population is not able to reduce PQ, although it can reduce some artificial acceptors like phenyl-p-benzoquinone. These data give further support to the notion of a discrete PS II population in the non-appressed stroma thylakoid region, PS II, having a higher midpoint potential of QA than the PS II population in the appressed thylakoid region, PS II. The physiological significance of a PS II population that does not produce any NADPH is discussed.Abbreviations pBQ p-benzoquinone - Chl chlorophyll - DCBQ 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCIP 2,6-dichloroindophenol - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DMBQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - DQ duroquinone(tetramethyl-p-benzoquinone) - FeCN ferricyanide (potassium hexacyanoferrat) - MV methylviologen - NADPH,NADP+ reduced or oxidized form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate respectively - PpBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PQ plastoquinone - PS II photosystem II - PS I photosystem I - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - E microEinstein  相似文献   

7.
In response to excess light, the xanthophyll violaxanthin (V) is deepoxidized to zeaxanthin (Z) via antheraxanthin (A) and the degree of this deepoxidation is strongly correlated with dissipation of excess energy and photoprotection in PS II. However, little is known about the site of V deepoxidation and the localization of Z within the thylakoid membranes. To gain insight into this problem, thylakoids were isolated from cotton leaves and bundle-sheath strands of maize, the pigment protein-complexes separated on Deriphat gels, electroeluted, and the pigments analyzed by HPLC. In cotton thylakoids, 30% of the xanthophyll cycle pigments were associated with the PS I holocomplex, including the PS I light-harvesting complexes and PS I core complex proteins (CC I), and about 50% with the PS II light-harvesting complexes (LHC II). The Chl was evenly distributed between PS I and PS II. Less than 2% of the neoxanthin, about 18% of the lutein, and as much as 76% of the -carotene of the thylakoids were associated with PS I. Exposure of pre-darkened cotton leaves to a high photon flux density for 20 min prior to thylakoid isolation caused about one-half of the V to be converted to Z. The distribution of Z among the pigment-protein complexes was found to be similar to that of V. The distribution of the other carotenoids was unaffected by the light treatment. Similarly, in field-grown maize leaves and in the bundle-sheath strands isolated from them, about 40% of the V present at dawn had been converted to Z at solar noon. Light treatment of isolated bundle-sheath strands which initially contained little Z caused a similar degree of conversion of V to Z. As in cotton thylakoids, about 30% the V+A+Z pool in bundle-sheath thylakoids from maize was associated with the PS I holocomplex and the CC I bands and 46% with the LHC II bands, regardless of the extent of deepoxidation. These results demonstrate that Z is present in PS I as well as in PS II and that deepoxidation evidently takes place within the pigment-protein complexes of both photosystems.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - CC I, CC II Core or reaction center complex of PS I, PS II - CP Chl protein - EPS epoxidation state - Fm Chl fluorescence at closed PS II reaction centers - IEF isoelectric focussing gels - LHC I, LHC II light-harvesting complex of PS I, PS II - OE oxygen evolving polypeptide - PFD photon flux density - PS I* PS I holocomplex - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin - antibody against C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 1127.  相似文献   

8.
S. J. Coughlan  U. Heber 《Planta》1982,156(1):62-69
The quaternary ammonium compound glycinebetaine has been tested for cryoprotective properties, using isolated spinach thylakoids as a model membrane system. The effect of a 3-h,-20°C freezing regime on different photosynthetic parameters was measured. These parameters were the light-stimulated pH formation and dark pH decay, light-stimulated proton uptake, electron flow through photosystem II, photosystem I and total linear electron flow, and pyocyanine-mediated cyclic photophosphorylation. It was shown that below 100 mM glycinebetaine was superior as a cryoprotectant to sucrose on a molar, a molal and an activity basis. At higher concentrations, glycinebetaine was less efficient in preventing inactivation of thylakoids during freezing than sucrose. These observations are discussed in relation to the permeability of biomembranes to glycinebetaine and the colligative theory of cryoprotection. It is concluded that colligative protection is modified by direct interaction between cryoprotectant and membranes.Abbreviations Asc ascorbate - cyt f cytochrome f - DAD 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl--phenylenediamine - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolidophenol - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl--benzoquinone - DNP-INT 1,3-dinitrophenylether of iodonitrothymol - FeCy ferricyanide - MV methylviologen (1,1-dimethyl-4-4-bipyridinium-dichloride) - PQ plastoquinone - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II  相似文献   

9.
The functional organization of competent photosynthetic units in developing thylakoids from intermittent-light grown pea as well as in the unstacked, stacked and phosphorylated stacked thylakoids from its mature chloroplasts was characterized by polarographic measurements of action spectra, reaction centre contents and optical cross-sections for PS I-mediated O2 uptake and PS II-mediated O2 evolution. The minimum antenna sizes of 60 and 37 chlorophyll a molecules for PS I and PS II, respectively, were determined in developing thylakoids with a ratio of Chl a/Chl b>50. In mature chloroplasts, the embedded light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding (LHC) protein complexes increased the PS I and PS II effective antenna sizes by 3–6 times depending on the thylakoid membrane organization. In unstacked thylakoids, a randomization of PS I, PS II and LHC II led to the most uniform spectral distribution of light harvesting between the two photosystems but caused the maximal difference of their antenna sizes to be 370 and 100 Chls for the competent PS I and PS II units, respectively. Following the Mg2+-induced stacking of thylakoids, opposite complementary changes of the action spectra, antenna sizes and Chl a/Chl b ratios indicated a redistribution of a LHC II pool of 100 Chl ( a + b) molecules from PS I to PS II. Unlike to the stroma-exposed PS II in unstacked thylakoids, the granal PS II units of 200 Chls demonstrated an additional 2-fold increase of the effective antenna size due to energy transfer within PS II dimers under strong background illumination, which closed >90% of reaction centres. Protein phosphorylation of the stacked thylakoids induced a significant inactivation of the O2-evolving PS II centres but did not cause complementary changes of the action spectra and antenna sizes of the competent PS I and PS II. In this case, light harvesting parameters of the O2-evolving PS II units were nearly unaffected, whereas the obvious relative increase of the PS I activity at 650 nm and its decrease at >700 nm both in the action spectrum and optical cross-section measurements might suggest a substitution of PS I units in the O2-reducing fraction by another distinct fraction of -type which in turn is not the same to PS I units in unstacked thylakoids.  相似文献   

10.
The photosynthetic energy storage yield of uncoupled thylakoid membranes was monitored by photoacoustic spectroscopy at various measuring beam intensities. The energy storage rate as evaluated by the half-saturation measuring beam intensity (i50) was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1 dimethylurea, by heat inactivation or by artificial electron acceptors specific for photosystem I or photosystem II; and was activated by electron donors to photosystem I. The reactions involving both photosystems were all characterized by a similar maximal energy storage yield of 16±2 percent. The data could be interpreted if we assumed that the energy storage elicited by the photosystems at 35 Hz is detected at the level of the plastoquinone pool.Abbreviations PS photosystem - Tes N-Tris [hydroxymethl] methyl-2-aminoethanesulfonic acid - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - FeCN potassium ferricyanide - DCBQ 2,5-dichlorobenzoquinone - TMPD N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenilenediamine  相似文献   

11.
Recent studies have shown that coleoptile chloroplasts operate the xanthophyll cycle, and that their zeaxanthin concentration co-varies with their sensitivity to blue light. The present study characterized the distribution of photosynthetic pigments in thylakoid pigment–protein complexes from dark-adapted and light-treated coleoptile and mesophyll chloroplasts, the low temperature fluorescence emission spectra, and the rates of PS I and PS II electron transport in both types of chloroplasts from 5-day-old corn seedlings. Pigments were extracted from isolated PS I holocomplex, LHC IIb trimeric and LHC II monomeric complexes and analyzed by HPLC. Chlorophyll distribution in coleoptile thylakoids showed 31% of the total collected Chl in PS I and 65% in the light harvesting complexes of PS II. In mesophyll thylakoids, the values were 44% and 54%, respectively. Mesophyll and coleoptile PS I holocomplexes differed in their Chl t a/Chl t b ratios (8.1 and 6.1, respectively) and -carotene content. In contrast, mesophyll and coleoptile LHC IIb trimers and LHC II monomers had similar Chl t a/Chl t b ratios and -carotene content. The three analyzed pigment–protein complexes from dark-adapted coleoptile chloroplasts contained zeaxanthin, whereas there was no detectable zeaxanthin in the complexes from dark-adapted mesophyll chloroplasts. In both chloroplast types, zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin increased markedly in the three pigment–protein complexes upon illumination, while violaxanthin decreased. In mesophyll thylakoids, zeaxanthin distribution as a percentage of the xanthophyll cycle pool was: LHC II monomers > LHC IIb trimers > PS I holocomplex, and in coleoptile thylakoids, it was: LHC IIb trimers > LHC II monomers = PS I holocomplex. Low temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission spectra showed that the 686 nm emission of coleoptile chloroplasts was approximately 50% larger than that of mesophyll chloroplasts when normalized at 734 nm. The pigment and fluorescence analysis data suggest that there is relatively more PS II per PS I and more LHC I per CC I in coleoptile chloroplasts than in mesophyll chloroplasts. Measurements of t in vitro uncoupled photosynthetic electron transport showed approximately 60% higher rates of electron flow through PS II in coleoptile chloroplasts than in mesophyll chloroplasts. Electron transport rates through PS I were similar in both chloroplast types. Thus, when compared to mesophyll chloroplasts, coleoptile chloroplasts have a distinct PS I pigment composition, a distinct chlorophyll distribution between PS I and PS II, a distinct zeaxanthin percentage distribution among thylakoid pigment–protein complexes, a higher PS II-related fluorescence emission, and higher PS II electron transport capacity. These characteristics may be associated with a sensory transducing role of coleoptile chloroplasts.  相似文献   

12.
High light treatments were given to attached leaves of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) at room temperature and at 1°C where the diffusion- and enzyme-dependent repair processes of Photosystem II are at a minimum. After treatments, electron transfer activities and fluorescence induction were measured from thylakoids isolated from the treated leaves. When the photoinhibition treatment was given at 1°C, the Photosystem II electron transfer assays that were designed to require electron transfer to the plastoquinone pool showed greater inhibition than electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone, which measures all PS II centers. When the light treatment was given at room temperature, electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone was inhibited more than whole-chain electron transfer. Variable fluorescence measured in the presence of ferricyanide decreased only during room-temperature treatments. These results suggest that reaction centers of one pool of Photosystem II, non-QB-PS II, replace photoinhibited reaction centers at room temperature, while no replacement occurs at 1°C. A simulation of photoinhibition at 1°C supports this conclusion.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4,-dichlorophenyl)-1,1,-dimethylurea - DCPIP dichlorophenol-indophenol (2,6-dichloro-4((4-hydroxyphenyl)imino)-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one) - DPC diphenyl carbazide (2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide) - FeCN ferricyanide (hexacyanoferrate(III)) - app apparent quantum yield of photosynthetic oxygen evolution - MV methyl viologen (1,1-dimethyl-4,4-bipyridinium dichloride) - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - PQ pool plastoquinone - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - RT room temperature - WC whole chain electron transfer  相似文献   

13.
Membranes and PS II particles retaining high rates of O2-evolving activity have been isolated from the transformable cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. Membranes from cells grown under red light exhibit rates of O2-evolution ranging from 500–700 mole O2/mg chl/h. PS II particles are prepared by a simple procedure involving DEAE column chromatography of detergent extracts obtained by simultaneous treatment of membranes with octylglucoside and dodecylmaltoside. The isolated PS II fraction is enriched in polypeptides immunologically cross-reactive with polypeptides present in core reaction center preparations of spinach, exhibits 77 K fluorescence emission maxima at 685 and 696 nm, but not emission and absorption due to phycobilines and is capable of rates of O2-evolution exceeding 1000 mole O2/mg chl/h.Abbreviations DM dodecyl--D-maltoside - OG octyl--D-glucoside  相似文献   

14.
P. Hilditch  H. Thomas  L. Rogers 《Planta》1986,167(1):146-151
The photosynthetic capacity of detached leaves of a non-yellowing mutant of Festuca pratensis Huds. declined during senescence at a similar rate to that in a normal cultivar. Respiratory oxygen uptake in the dark continued at similar rates in both genotypes during several days of senescence. In chloroplasts isolated from leaves at intervals after excision, the rate of photosystem I (PS I)-mediated methyl viologen reduction using reduced N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylene diamine as electron donor also declined in both genotypes, possibly due to loss of integrity of the photosynthetic apparatus in the cytochrome f-plastocyanin region. There was a similar fall in PS II electron transport using water as electron donor and measured at the rate of reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. Partial restoration of this activity by the addition of diphenyl carbazide was evidence for lability of the oxygen-evolving complex during senescence. An accentuated difference between mutant and normal material in this case indicated that the mutant retains a greater number of functional PS II centres. Changes in the light-saturation characteristics of the two photosystems have been discussed in relation to the organization of the photosynthetic membranes during senescence.Abbreviations and symbols DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DMSO dimethyl sulphoxide - DPC diphenyl carbazide - MV methyl viologen - PS I, PS II photosystem I, II - TMPD N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylene diamine  相似文献   

15.
A procedure is described which permits determination of the absolute absorption cross-section of a photosynthetic unit from the kinetics of reaction center photo-oxidation under weak, continuous actinic illumination. The method was first tested on a simple model compound of known absorption cross-section. We then applied the technique to absorption cross-section and functional antenna size measurements in photosystem I (PS I). A kinetic model is presented that can be used to fit P700 photo-oxidation measurements and extract the effective photochemical rate constant. The procedure is shown to properly correct for sample scattering and for the presence of heterogeneous absorbers (pigments not functionally coupled to P700). The relevance of these corrections to comparisons of antenna size using techniques that measure relative absorption cross-sections is discussed. Measurements on pea thylakoids in the presence and absence of 5 mM MgCl2 show a 45% increase in PS I absorption cross-section in unstacked thylakoids. Analysis of detergent-isolated native PS I preparations (200 chlorophyll a+b/P700) clearly indicate that the preparation contains a broad distribution of antenna sizes. Finally, we confirm that Chlamydomonas reinhardtii strain LM3-A4d contains a PS I core antenna complex which binds only 60 chlorophyll a/P700, about half the functional size of the wild type complex. Limitations associated with calculation of functional antenna size from cross-section measurements are also discussed.Abbreviations PS photosystem - PS I-200 detergent-isolated photosystem I preparation containing about 200 Chl a+b/P700 - A xxx absorbance at xxx nm - absolute absorption cross-section - I a rate of light absorption - In o incident actinic light intensity - p quantum yield of photochemistry - k eff effective rate constant for P700 photo-oxidation measured under conditions of limiting actinic intensity - k r rate constant for P700+ reduction  相似文献   

16.
A Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002 psaAB::cat mutant has been constructed by deletional interposon mutagenesis of the psaA and psaB genes through selection and segregation under low-light conditions. This strain can grow photoheterotrophically with glycerol as carbon source with a doubling time of 25 h at low light intensity (10 E m–2 s–1). No Photosystem I (PS I)-associated chlorophyll fluorescence emission peak was detected in the psaAB::cat mutant. The chlorophyll content of the psaAB::cat mutant was approximately 20% that of the wild-type strain on a per cell basis. In the absence of the PsaA and PsaB proteins, several other PS I proteins do not accumulate to normal levels. Assembly of the peripheral PS I proteins PsaC,PsaD, PsaE, and PsaL is dependent on the presence of the PsaA and PsaB heterodimer core. The precursor form of PsaF may be inserted into the thylakoid membrane but is not processed to its mature form in the absence of PsaA and PsaB. The absence of PS I reaction centers has no apparent effect on Photosystem II (PS II) assembly and activity. Although the mutant exhibited somewhat greater fluorescence emission from phycocyanin, most of the light energy absorbed by phycobilisomes was efficiently transferred to the PS II reaction centers in the absence of the PS I. No light state transition could be detected in the psaAB::cat strain; in the absence of PS I, cells remain in state 1. Development of this relatively light-tolerant strain lacking PS I provides an important new tool for the genetic manipulation of PS I and further demonstrates the utility of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 for structural and functional analyses of the PS I reaction center.Abbreviations ATCC American type culture collection - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - HEPES N-[2-hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N-[2-ethanesulfonic acid] - PCC Pasteur culture collection - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

17.
We have developed a rapid method for isolation of the Photosystem I (PS1) complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using epitope tagging. Six histidine residues were genetically added to the N-terminus of the PsaA core subunit of PS1. The His6-tagged PS1 could be purified with a yield of 80–90% from detergent-solubilized thylakoid membranes within 3 h in a single step using a Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (Ni-NTA) column. Immunoblots and low-temperature fluorescence analysis indicated that the His6-tagged PS1 preparation was highly pure and extremely low in uncoupled pigments. Moreover, the introduced tag appeared to have no adverse effect upon PS1 structure/function, as judged by photochemical assays and EPR spectroscopy of isolated particles, as well as photosynthetic growth tests of the tagged strain. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

18.
10% of the chlorophyll associated with a ‘native’ Photosystem (PS) I complex (110 chlorophylls/P-700) is chlorophyll (Chl) b. The Chl b is associated with a specific PS I antenna complex which we designate as LHC-I (i.e., a light-harvesting complex serving PS I). When the native PS I complex is degraded to the core complex by LHC-I extraction, there is a parallel loss of Chl b, fluorescence at 735 nm, together with 647 and 686 nm circular dichroism spectral properties, as well as a group of polypeptides of 24-19 kDa. In this paper we present a method by which the LHC-I complex can be dissociated from the native PS I. The isolated LHC-I contains significant amounts of Chl b (Chl ab ? 3.7). The long-wavelength fluorescence at 730 nm and circular dichroism signal at 686 nm observed in native PS I are maintained in this isolated complex. This isolated fraction also contains the low molecular weight polypeptides lost in the preparation of PS I core complex. We conclude that we have isolated the PS I antenna in an intact state and discuss its in vivo function.  相似文献   

19.
Fractionated Photosystem (PS) I particles consisting of six, five or two core proteins were analyzed by HPLC for chlorophyll (Chl) a and phylloquinone (PhQ). Each particle had a Chl a/P700 molar ratio of 50–55 and contained ca. 2 molecules of Chl a per P700. Deliberate control of eluent composition led to isolated elution of PhQ and -carotene in the normal-phase chromatogram. Based on these a simple HPLC procedure has been established to determine the PhQ/P700 molar ratio, which was ca. 2 for the larger two PS I particles and ca. 1 for the smallest particle, in line with previous reports.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of photosystems one and two (PS I and PS II) wasmeasured in chloroplasts isolated from the primary leaves ofPhaseolus vulgaris. During foliar senescence, the rates of electrontransport through PS I and PS II declined by approximately 25%and 33% respectively. These losses of activity could not accountfor the decrease of 80% in the rate of coupled, non-cyclic electrontransport during senescence. It is therefore suggested thatan impairment of electron flow between the photosystems limitednon-cyclic electron transport in chloroplasts from older leaves.In this study the activity of PS II was measured using oxidizedp-phenylenediamine as the electron acceptor, and trifluralinas an inhibitor of electron transport between PS II and PS I.In chloroplasts from young leaves the reduction of ferricyanidewas a measure of non-cyclic electron transport, but in preparationsfrom older leaves ferricyanide received a large proportion ofelectrons from PS II.  相似文献   

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