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1.
Tracewell CA  Brudvig GW 《Biochemistry》2003,42(30):9127-9136
Photosystem II (PS II) contains secondary electron-transfer paths involving cytochrome b(559) (Cyt b(559)), chlorophyll (Chl), and beta-carotene (Car) that are active under conditions when oxygen evolution is blocked such as in inhibited samples or at low temperature. Intermediates of the secondary electron-transfer pathways of PS II core complexes from Synechocystis PCC 6803 and Synechococcus sp. and spinach PS II membranes have been investigated using low temperature near-IR spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. We present evidence that two spectroscopically distinct redox-active carotenoids are formed upon low-temperature illumination. The Car(+) near-IR absorption peak varies in wavelength and width as a function of illumination temperature. Also, the rate of decay during dark incubation of the Car(+) peak varies as a function of wavelength. Factor analysis indicates that there are two spectral forms of Car(+) (Car(A)(+) has an absorbance maximum of 982 nm, and Car(B)(+) has an absorbance maximum of 1027 nm) that decay at different rates. In Synechocystis PS II, we observe a shift of the Car(+) peak to shorter wavelength when oxidized tyrosine D (Y(D)*) is present in the sample that is explained by an electrostatic interaction between Y(D)* and a nearby beta-carotene that disfavors oxidation of Car(B). The sequence of electron-transfer reactions in the secondary electron-transfer pathways of PS II is discussed in terms of a hole-hopping mechanism to attain the equilibrated state of the charge separation at low temperatures.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of dehydration on the reaction pattern of photosystem II (PS II) has been studied by measuring and analyzing spectral changes induced by continuous wavelength illumination in films of untreated and hydroxylamine-washed PS II membrane fragments dehydrated to different levels. The obtained data revealed (i) the extent of light-induced formation of about one Q(A)(-*)per 230 chlorophylls (Chl) remains virtually invariant to dehydration down to the lowest values of relative humidity (6-8% RH); (ii) a decrease of the RH to 30% leads to severe blockage of the electron transfer from Q(A)(-*) to Q(B) and the progressive replacement of water oxidation by photooxidation of high potential (HP) cytochrome (Cyt) b559 in untreated PS II samples or accessory Chl and carotenoid (Car) molecules in samples with preoxidized Cyt b559; (iii) photooxidation of Cyt b559 is followed by its photoreduction, concomitant with photooxidation of Chl and Car; (iv) in dry samples with preoxidized Cyt b559, not more than a half of total Cyt b559 can be photochemically reduced, independent of the extent of Cyt b559 in the HP form; (v) at low RH values, Cyt b559 photoreduction in samples with preoxidized heme groups and photoaccumulation of Q(A)(-*) take place with biphasic kinetics with similar rate constants for both processes; (vi) Cyt b559 photoreduction in dry samples is DCMU insensitive, while the dark rereduction of photooxidized Cyt b559 is inhibited by DCMU; (vii) fast and slow kinetic phases of Cyt b559 photoreduction dramatically differ in their dependencies on the intensity of CW illumination and are associated with electron donation to Cyt b559 from Q(A)(-*) and pheophytin(-*), respectively. The pathways of light-induced electron transfer in PS II involving Cyt b559 are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Faller P  Pascal A  Rutherford AW 《Biochemistry》2001,40(21):6431-6440
A carotenoid (Car), a chlorophyll (Chl(Z)), and cytochrome b(559) (Cyt b(559)) are able to donate electrons with a low quantum yield to the photooxidized chlorophyll, P680(+), when photosystem II (PSII) is illuminated at low temperatures. Three pathways for electron transfer from Cyt b(559) to P680(+) are considered: (a) the "linear pathway" in which Cyt b(559) donates via Chl(Z) to Car, (b) the "branched pathway" in which Cyt b(559) donates via Car and where Chl(Z) is also able to donate to Car, and (c) the "parallel pathway" where Cyt b(559) donates to P680 without intermediate electron carriers and electron donation from Chl(Z) and Car occurs by a competing pathway. Experiments were performed using EPR and spectrophotometry in an attempt to distinguish among these pathways, and the following observations were made. (1) Using PSII with an intact Mn cluster in which Cyt b(559) was preoxidized, Car oxidation was dominant upon illumination at < or =20 K, while electron donation from Chl dominated at >120 K. (2) When Cyt b(559) was prereduced, its light-induced oxidation occurred at < or =20 K in what appeared to be all of the centers and without the formation of a detectable Car(+) intermediate. The small and variable quantity of Car(+) photoinduced in these experiments can be attributed to the residual centers in which Cyt b(559) remained oxidized prior to illumination. (3) The relative rates for irreversible electron donation from Cyt b(559) and Car were determined indirectly at 20 K by monitoring the flash-induced loss of charge separation (i.e., the accumulation of Cyt b(559)(+)Q(A)(-) or Car(+)Q(A)(-)). Similar yields per flash were observed (13% for Cyt b(559) and 8% for Car), indicating similar donation rates. The slightly lower yield with Car as a donor is attributed at least in part to slow charge recombination occurring from the Car(+)Q(A)(-) radical pair in a fraction of centers. (4) Light-induced oxidation of Cyt b(559) and Car at 20 K was monitored directly by EPR, and the rates were found to be indistinguishable. The parallel pathway predicts that when both Cyt b(559) and Car are prereduced, the relative amounts of Cyt b(559)(+) and Car(+) produced upon illumination at 20 K should depend directly on their relative electron donation rates. The measured similarity in the donation rates thus predicts comparable yields of oxidation for both donors. However, what is observed experimentally is that Cyt b(559) oxidation occurs almost exclusively, and this argues strongly against the parallel pathway. The lack of Car(+) as a detectable intermediate is attributed to rapid electron transfer from Cyt b(559) to Car(+). The trapping of Car(+) at low temperature when Cyt b(559) is preoxidized but its absence when Cyt b(559) is prereduced is taken as an argument against the simple linear pathway. Overall, the data reported here and previously favor the branched pathway over the linear pathway, while the parallel pathway is thought to be unlikely. Structural considerations provide further arguments in favor of the branched model.  相似文献   

4.
Tracewell CA  Brudvig GW 《Biochemistry》2008,47(44):11559-11572
Photosystem II (PS II) is unique among photosynthetic reaction centers in having secondary electron donors that compete with the primary electron donors for reduction of P680(+). We have characterized the photooxidation and dark decay of the redox-active accessory chlorophylls (Chl) and beta-carotenes (Car) in oxygen-evolving PS II core complexes by near-IR absorbance and EPR spectroscopies at cryogenic temperatures. In contrast to previous results for Mn-depleted PS II, multiple near-IR absorption bands are resolved in the light-minus-dark difference spectra of oxygen-evolving PS II core complexes including two fast-decaying bands at 793 and 814 nm and three slow-decaying bands at 810, 825, and 840 nm. We assign these bands to chlorophyll cation radicals (Chl(+)). The fast-decaying bands observed after illumination at 20 K could be generated again by reilluminating the sample. Quantization by EPR gives a yield of 0.85 radicals per PS II, and the yield of oxidized cytochrome b 559 by optical difference spectroscopy is 0.15 per PS II. Potential locations of Chl(+) and Car(+) species, and the pathways of secondary electron transfer based on the rates of their formation and decay, are discussed. This is the first evidence that Chls in the light-harvesting proteins CP43 and CP47 are oxidized by P680(+) and may have a role in Chl fluorescence quenching. We also suggest that a possible role for negatively charged lipids (phosphatidyldiacylglycerol and sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerol identified in the PS II structure) could be to decrease the redox potential of specific Chl and Car cofactors. These results provide new insight into the alternate electron-donation pathways to P680(+).  相似文献   

5.
The stable carotenoid cation radical (Car(*+)) and chlorophyll cation radical (Chl(Z)(*+)) in photosystem II (PS II) have been studied by pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. The spectra were essentially the same for oxygen-evolving PS II and Mn-depleted PS II. The radicals were generated by illumination given at low temperatures, and the ENDOR spectra were attributed to Car(*)(+) and Chl(Z)(*+) on the basis of their characteristic behavior with temperature as demonstrated earlier [Hanley et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 8189-8195]: i.e., (a) the Car(*)(+) alone was generated by illumination at < or =20 K, while Chl(Z)(*+) alone was generated at 200 K, and (b) warming of the sample containing the Car(*+) to 200 K resulted in the loss of the signal attributable to Car(*+) and its replacement by a spectrum attributable to the Chl(Z)(*+). A map of the hyperfine structure of Car(*+) in PS II and in organic solvent was obtained. The largest observed hyperfine splitting for Car(*+) in either environment was in the order of 8-9 MHz. Thus, the spin density on the cation is proposed to be delocalized over the carotenoid molecule. The pulsed ENDOR spectrum of Chl(Z)(*)(+) was compared to that obtained from a Chl a cation in frozen organic solvent. The hyperfine coupling constants attributed to the beta-protons at position 17 and 18 are well resolved from Chl(Z)(*+) in PS II (10. 8 and 14.9 MHz) but not in Chl a(*+) in organic solvent (12.5 MHz). This suggests a more defined conformation of ring IV with respect to the rest of the tetrapyrrole ring plane of Chl(Z)(*+) than Chl a(*+) probably induced by the protein matrix.  相似文献   

6.
Photosystem II (PSII) contains two accessory chlorophylls (Chl(Z), ligated to D1-His118, and Chl(D), ligated to D2-His117), carotenoid (Car), and heme (cytochrome b(559)) cofactors that function as alternate electron donors under conditions in which the primary electron-donation pathway from the O(2)-evolving complex to P680(+) is inhibited. The photooxidation of the redox-active accessory chlorophylls and Car has been characterized by near-infrared (near-IR) absorbance, shifted-excitation Raman difference spectroscopy (SERDS), and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy over a range of cryogenic temperatures from 6 to 120 K in both Synechocystis PSII core complexes and spinach PSII membranes. The following key observations were made: (1) only one Chl(+) near-IR band is observed at 814 nm in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, which is assigned to Chl(Z)(+) based on previous spectroscopic studies of the D1-H118Q and D2-H117Q mutants [Stewart, D. H., Cua, A., Chisholm, D. A., Diner, B. A., Bocian, D. F., and Brudvig, G. W. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 10040-10046]; (2) two Chl(+) near-IR bands are observed at 817 and 850 nm in spinach PSII membranes which are formed with variable relative yields depending on the illumination temperature and are assigned to Chl(Z)(+), and Chl(D)(+), respectively; (3) the Chl and Car cation radicals have significantly different stabilities at reduced temperatures with Car(+) decaying much faster; (4) in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, Car(+) decays by recombination with Q(A)(-) and not by Chl(Z)/Chl(D) oxidation, with multiphasic kinetics that are attributed to an ensemble of protein conformers that are trapped as the protein is frozen; and (5) in spinach PSII membranes, Car(+) decays mainly by recombination with Q(A)(-), but also partly by formation of the 850 nm Chl cation radical. The greater stability of Chl(Z)(+) at low temperatures enabled us to confirm that resonance Raman bands previously assigned to Chl(Z)(+) are correctly assigned. In addition, the formation and decay of these cations provide insight into the alternate electron-donation pathways to P680(+).  相似文献   

7.
Restoration of a high potential (HP) form of cytochrome b-559 (Cyt b-559) from a low potential (LP) form was the primary process in the reconstitution of O2-evolving center during the photoreactivation of Tris-inactivated chloroplasts. In normal chloroplasts, about 0.5 to 0.7 mol of Cyt b-559 was present in the HP form per 400 chlorophyll molecules. However, the HP form was converted to the LP form when the O2-evolving center was inactivated by 0.8 M alkaline Tris-washing (pH 9.1). The inactivation was reversible and both the Cyt b-559 HP form and the O2-evolving activity were restored by incubating the inactivated chloroplasts with weak light, Mn2+, Ca2+ and an electron donor (photoreactivation). The recovery of the HP form preceded the recovery of O2-evolving activity. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB) did not inhibit the recovery of the HP form. Thus, the recovery of Cyt b-559 HP form was the primary reaction in the photoreactivation, which was stimulated by the light-induced redox reaction of the PS-II core center.Abbreviations ASC ascorbate - BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - Cyt b-559 HP form high potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt b-559 LP form low potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt b-559 VLP form very low potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt f cytochrome f - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethyl-piperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - HQ hydroquinone - SHN chloroplast-preparation medium containing 0.4 M sucrose, 50 mM Hepes-Na (pH 7.8) and 20 mM NaCl - PS-II Photosystem II  相似文献   

8.
The oxidation of carotenoid upon illumination at low temperature has been studied in Mn-depleted photosystem II (PSII) using EPR and electronic absorption spectroscopy. Illumination of PSII at 20 K results in carotenoid cation radical (Car+*) formation in essentially all of the centers. When a sample which was preilluminated at 20 K was warmed in darkness to 120 K, Car+* was replaced by a chlorophyll cation radical. This suggests that carotenoid functions as an electron carrier between P680, the photooxidizable chlorophyll in PSII, and ChlZ, the monomeric chlorophyll which acts as a secondary electron donor under some conditions. By correlating with the absorption spectra at different temperatures, specific EPR signals from Car+* and ChlZ+* are distinguished in terms of their g-values and widths. When cytochrome b559 (Cyt b559) is prereduced, illumination at 20 K results in the oxidation of Cyt b559 without the prior formation of a stable Car+*. Although these results can be reconciled with a linear pathway, they are more straightforwardly explained in terms of a branched electron-transfer pathway, where Car is a direct electron donor to P680(+), while Cyt b559 and ChlZ are both capable of donating electrons to Car+*, and where the ChlZ donates electrons when Cyt b559 is oxidized prior to illumination. These results have significant repercussions on the current thinking concerning the protective role of the Cyt b559/ChlZ electron-transfer pathways and on structural models of PSII.  相似文献   

9.
This study describes an analysis of different treatments that influence the relative content and the midpoint potential of HP Cyt b559 in PS II membrane fragments from higher plants. Two basically different types of irreversible modification effects are distinguished: the HP form of Cyt b559 is either predominantly affected when the heme group is oxidized ("O-type" effects) or when it is reduced ("R-type" effects). Transformation of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (IP and LP forms) by the "O-type" mechanism is induced by high pH and detergent treatments. In this case the effects consist of a gradual decrease in the relative content of HP Cyt b559 while its midpoint potential remains unaffected. Transformation of HP Cyt b559 via an "R-type" mechanism is caused by a number of exogenous compounds denoted L: herbicides, ADRY reagents and tetraphenylboron. These compounds are postulated to bind to the PS II complex at a quinone binding site designated as Q(C) which interacts with Cyt b559 and is clearly not the Q(B) site. Binding of compounds L to the Q(C) site when HP Cyt b559 is oxidized gives rise to a gradual decrease in the E(m) of HP Cyt b559 with increasing concentration of L (up to 10 K(ox)(L) values) while the relative content of HP Cyt b559 is unaffected. Higher concentrations of compounds L required for their binding to Q(C) site when HP Cyt b559 is reduced (described by K(red)(L)) induce a conversion of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms ("R-type" transformation). Two reaction pathways for transitions of Cyt b559 between the different protein conformations that are responsible for the HP and IP/LP redox forms are proposed and new insights into the functional regulation of Cyt b559 via the Q(C) site are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
"Reduced minus oxidized" difference extinction coefficients Deltavarepsilon in the alpha-bands of Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 were determined by using functionally and structurally well-characterized PS II core complexes from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Values of 25.1+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) and 27.0+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) were obtained for Cyt b559 and Cyt c550, respectively. Anaerobic redox titrations covering the wide range from -250 up to +450 mV revealed that the heme groups of both Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 exhibit homogenous redox properties in the sample preparation used, with E(m) values at pH 6.5 of 244+/-11 mV and -94+/-21 mV, respectively. No HP form of Cyt b559 could be detected. Experiments performed on PS II membrane fragments of higher plants where the content of the high potential form of Cyt b559 was varied by special treatments (pH, heat) have shown that the alpha-band extinction of Cyt b559 does not depend on the redox form of the heme group. Based on the results of this study the Cyt b559/PSII stoichiometry is inferred to be 1:1 not only in thermophilic cyanobacteria as known from the crystal structure but also in PSII of plants. Possible interrelationships between the structure of the Q(B) site and the microenvironment of the heme group of Cyt b559 are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Beta-carotene has been identified as an intermediate in a secondary electron transfer pathway that oxidizes Chl(Z) and cytochrome b(559) in Photosystem II (PS II) when normal tyrosine oxidation is blocked. To test the redox function of carotenoids in this pathway, we replaced the zeta-carotene desaturase gene (zds) or both the zds and phytoene desaturase (pds) genes of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with the phytoene desaturase gene (crtI) of Rhodobacter capsulatus, producing carotenoids with shorter conjugated pi-electron systems and higher reduction potentials than beta-carotene. The PS II core complexes of both mutant strains contain approximately the same number of chlorophylls and carotenoids as the wild type but have replaced beta-carotene (11 double bonds), with neurosporene (9 conjugated double bonds) and beta-zeacarotene (9 conjugated double bonds and 1 beta-ionylidene ring). The presence of the ring appears necessary for PS II assembly. Visible and near-infrared spectroscopy were used to examine the light-induced formation of chlorophyll and carotenoid radical cations in the mutant PS II core complexes at temperatures from 20 to 160 K. At 20 K, a carotenoid cation radical is formed having an absorption maximum at 898 nm, an 85 nm blue shift relative to the beta-carotene radical cation peak in the WT, and consistent with the formation of the cation radical of a carotenoid with 9 conjugated double bonds. The ratio of Chl(+)/Car(+) is higher in the mutant core complexes, consistent with the higher reduction potential for Car(+). As the temperature increases, other carotenoids become accessible to oxidation by P(680)(+).  相似文献   

12.
This study describes an analysis of different treatments that influence the relative content and the midpoint potential of HP Cyt b559 in PS II membrane fragments from higher plants. Two basically different types of irreversible modification effects are distinguished: the HP form of Cyt b559 is either predominantly affected when the heme group is oxidized (“O-type” effects) or when it is reduced (“R-type” effects). Transformation of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (IP and LP forms) by the “O-type” mechanism is induced by high pH and detergent treatments. In this case the effects consist of a gradual decrease in the relative content of HP Cyt b559 while its midpoint potential remains unaffected. Transformation of HP Cyt b559 via an “R-type” mechanism is caused by a number of exogenous compounds denoted L: herbicides, ADRY reagents and tetraphenylboron. These compounds are postulated to bind to the PS II complex at a quinone binding site designated as QC which interacts with Cyt b559 and is clearly not the QB site. Binding of compounds L to the QC site when HP Cyt b559 is oxidized gives rise to a gradual decrease in the Em of HP Cyt b559 with increasing concentration of L (up to 10 Kox(L) values) while the relative content of HP Cyt b559 is unaffected. Higher concentrations of compounds L required for their binding to QC site when HP Cyt b559 is reduced (described by Kred(L)) induce a conversion of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (“R-type” transformation). Two reaction pathways for transitions of Cyt b559 between the different protein conformations that are responsible for the HP and IP/LP redox forms are proposed and new insights into the functional regulation of Cyt b559 via the QC site are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Transformation of three-component redox pattern of cytochrome (Cyt) b559 in PS II membrane fragments upon various treatments is manifested in decrease of the relative content (R) of the high potential (HP) redox form of Cyt b559 and concomitant increase in the fractions of the two lower potential forms. Redox titration of Cyt b559 in different types of PS II membrane preparations was performed and revealed that (1) alteration of redox titration curve of Cyt b559 upon treatment of a sample is not specific to the type of treatment; (2) each value of RHP defines the individual shape of the redox titration curve; (3) population of Cyt b559 may exist in several stable forms with multicomponent redox pattern: three types of three-component redox pattern and one type of two-component redox pattern as well as in the form with a single Em; (4) transformation of Cyt b559 proceeds as successive conversion between the stable forms with multicomponent redox pattern; (5) upon harsh treatments, Cyt b559 abruptly converts into the state with a single Em which value is intermediate between the Em values of the two lower potential forms. Analysis of the data using the model of Cyt b559-quinone redox interaction revealed that diminution of RHP in a range from 80 to 10% reflects a shift in redox equilibrium between the heme group of Cyt b559 and the interacting quinone, due to a gradual decrease of 90?mV in Em of the heme group at the virtually unchanged Em of the quinone component.  相似文献   

14.
李新国  孟庆伟 《植物学报》2003,20(6):680-687
Cyt b559是由两条多肽,即α_、β_两个亚基组成的一种血红蛋白,是光系统Ⅱ(PSⅡ)蛋白复合体必不可少的组分。简要介绍了Cyt b559的分子组成及其氧化还原特性。重点阐述了在光抑制条件下Cyt b559对PSⅡ反应中心的可能保护机制和由Cyt b559参与的围绕PSⅡ的循环电子传递。  相似文献   

15.
The possibility of a Photosystem II (PS II) cyclic electron flow via Cyt b-559 catalyzed by carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) was further examined by studying the effects of the PS II electron acceptor 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone (DCBQ) on the light-induced changes of the redox states of Cyt b-559. Addition to barley thylakoids of micromolar concentrations of DCBQ completely inhibited the changes of the absorbance difference corresponding to the photoreduction of Cyt b-559 observed either in the presence of 10 M ferricyanide or after Cyt b-559 photooxidation in the presence of 2 M CCCP. In CCCP-treated thylakoids, the concentration of photooxidized Cyt b-559 decreased as the irradiance of actinic light increased from 2 to 80 W m-2 but remained close to the maximal concentration (0.53 photooxidized Cyt b-559 per photoactive Photosystem II) in the presence of 50 M DCBQ. The stimulation of Cyt b-559 photooxidation in parallel with the inhibition of its photoreduction caused by DCBQ demonstrate that the extent of the light-induced changes of the redox state of Cyt b-559 in the presence of CCCP is determined by the difference between the rates of photooxidation and photoreduction of Cyt b-559 occuring simultaneously in a cyclic electron flow around PS II.We also observed that the Photosystem I electron acceptor methyl viologen (MV) at a concentration of 1 mM barely affected the rate and extent of the light-induced redox changes of Cyt b-559 in the presence of either FeCN or CCCP. Under similar experimental conditions, MV strongly quenched Chl-a fluorescence, suggesting that Cyt b-559 is reduced directly on the reducing side of Photosystem II.Abbreviations ADRY acceleration of the deactivation reactions of the water-splitting system Y - ANT-2p 2-(3-chloro-4-trifluoromethyl)anilino-3,5-dinitrothiophene - CCCP carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DCBQ 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - FeCN ferricyanide - MV methyl viologen - P680 Photosystem II reaction center Chl-a dimer CIW-DPB publication No. 1118.  相似文献   

16.
The vibrational infrared absorption changes associated with the oxidation of cytochrome b559 (Cyt b559) have been characterized. In photosystem II (PS II) enriched membranes, low-potential (LP) and high-potential (HP) Cyt b559 were investigated by light-induced FTIR difference spectroscopy. The redox transition of isolated Cyt b559 is characterized by protein electrochemistry. On the basis of a model of the assembly of Cyt b559 with the two axial Fe ligands being histidine residues of two distinct polypeptides, each forming a transmembrane alpha-helix [Cramer, W.A., Theg, S.M., & Widger, W.R. (1986) Photosynth. Res. 10, 393-403], the bisimidazole and bismethylimidazole complexes of Fe protoporphyrin IX were electrochemically oxidized and reduced to detect the IR oxidation markers of the heme and its two axial ligands. Major bands at 1674/1553, 1535, and 1240 cm-1 are tentatively assigned to nu 37 (CaCm), nu 38-(CbCb) and delta (CmH) modes, respectively; other bands at 1626, 1613, 1455, 1415, and 1337 cm-1 are assigned to porphyrin skeletal and vinyl modes. Modes at 1103 and 1075/1066 cm-1 are assigned to the 4-methylimidazole and imidazole ligands, respectively. For the isolated Cyt b559, it is shown that both the heme (at 1556-1535, 1337, and 1239 cm-1), the histidine ligands at 1104 cm-1 and the protein (between 1600 and 1700 cm-1 and at 1545 cm-1) are affected by the charge stabilization. The excellent agreement between model compounds and isolated Cyt b559 reinforces the validity of the model of a heme iron coordinated to two histidine residues for Cyt b559. A differential signal at 1656/1641 cm-1 is assigned to peptide C = O mode(s). We speculate that this signal reflects the change in strength of a hydrogen bond formed between the histidine ligand(s) and the polypeptide backbone upon oxidoreduction of the cytochrome. In PS II membranes, the signals characteristic of Cyt b559 photooxidation are found at 1660/1652 and 1625 cm-1, for both the high- and low-potential forms. The differences observed in the amplitude of the 1660/1652-cm-1 band, at 1700 and 1530-1510 cm-1 in the light-induced FTIR difference spectra of Cyt b559 HP and LP, show that the mechanisms of heme oxidation in vivo imply different molecular processes for the two forms Cyt b559 HP and LP.  相似文献   

17.
Low-temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission spectra of intact cells of a cyanobacterium, Synechocystis sp. PCC 6714, and a green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, were quantitatively analyzed to examine differences in PS I/PS II stoichiometries. Cells cultured under different spectral conditions had various PS I/PS II molar ratios when estimated by oxidation-reduction difference absorption spectra of P700 (for PS I) and Cyt b-559 (for PS II) with thylakoid membranes. The fluorescence emission spectra under the Chl a excitation at 435 nm were resolved into several component bands using curve-fitting methods and the relative band area between PS II (F685 and F695) and PS I (F710 or F720) emissions was compared with the PS I/PS II stoichiometries of the various cell types. The results indicated that the PS I/PS II fluorescence ratios correlated closely with photosystem stoichiometries both in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6714 and in C. reinhardtii grown under different light regimes. Furthermore, the correlation between the PS I/PS II fluorescence ratios and the photosystem stoichiometries is also applicable to vascular plants.  相似文献   

18.
“Reduced minus oxidized” difference extinction coefficients Δ? in the α-bands of Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 were determined by using functionally and structurally well-characterized PS II core complexes from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Values of 25.1 ± 1.0 mM−1 cm−1 and 27.0 ± 1.0 mM−1 cm−1 were obtained for Cyt b559 and Cyt c550, respectively. Anaerobic redox titrations covering the wide range from −250 up to +450 mV revealed that the heme groups of both Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 exhibit homogenous redox properties in the sample preparation used, with Em values at pH 6.5 of 244 ± 11 mV and −94 ± 21 mV, respectively. No HP form of Cyt b559 could be detected. Experiments performed on PS II membrane fragments of higher plants where the content of the high potential form of Cyt b559 was varied by special treatments (pH, heat) have shown that the α-band extinction of Cyt b559 does not depend on the redox form of the heme group. Based on the results of this study the Cyt b559/PSII stoichiometry is inferred to be 1:1 not only in thermophilic cyanobacteria as known from the crystal structure but also in PSII of plants. Possible interrelationships between the structure of the QB site and the microenvironment of the heme group of Cyt b559 are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
A detailed analysis of the properties of cytochrome b(559) (Cyt b(559)) in photosystem II (PS II) preparations with different degrees of structural complexity is presented. It reveals that (i) D1-D2-Cyt b(559) complexes either in solubilized form or incorporated into liposomes contain only one type of Cyt b(559) with E(m) values of 60 +/- 5 and 100 +/- 10 mV, respectively, at pH 6.8; (ii) in oxygen-evolving solubilized PS II core complexes Cyt b(559) exists predominantly (>85%) as an LP form with an E(m,7) of 125 +/- 10 mV and a minor fraction with an E(m,7) of -150 +/- 15 mV; (iii) in oxygen-evolving PS II membrane fragments three different redox forms are discernible with E(m) values of 390 +/- 15 mV (HP form), 230 +/- 20 mV (IP form), and 105 +/- 25 mV (LP form) and relative amplitudes of 58, 24, and 18%, respectively, at pH 7.3; (iv) the E(m) values are almost pH-independent between pH 6 and 9.5 in all sample types except D1-D2-Cyt b(559) complexes incorporated into liposomes with a slope of -29 mV/pH unit, when the pH increases from 6 to 9.5 (IP and LP form in PS II membrane fragments possibly within a restricted range from pH 6.5 to 8); (v) at pH >8 the HP Cyt b(559) progressively converts to the IP form with increasing pH; (vi) the reduced-minus-oxidized optical difference spectra of Cyt b(559) are very similar in the lambda range of 360-700 nm for all types except for the HP form which exhibits pronounced differences in the Soret band; and (vii) PS II membrane fragments and core complexes are inferred to contain about two Cyt b(559) hemes per PS II. Possible implications of conformational changes near the heme group and spin state transitions of the iron are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Pure and active oxygen-evolving PS II core particles containing 35 Chl per reaction center were isolated with 75% yield from spinach PS II membrane fragments by incubation with n-dodecyl--D-maltoside and a rapid one step anion-exchange separation. By Triton X-100 treatment on the column these particles could be converted with 55% yield to pure and active PS II reaction center particles, which contained 6 Chl per reaction center.Abbreviations Bis-Tris bis[2-hydroxyethyl]imino-tris[hydroxymethyl]methane - Chl chlorophyll - CP29 Chl a/b protein of 29 kDa - Cyt b 559 cytochrome b 559 - DCBQ 2,5-dichloro-p-benzo-quinone - LHC II light-harvesting complex II, predominant Chl a/b protein - MES 2-[N-Morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid - Pheo pheophytin - PS H photosystem II - QA bound plastoquinone, serving as the secondary electron acceptor in PS II (after Pheo) - SDS sodiumdodecylsulfate  相似文献   

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