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1.
Plant chloroplast genes have a codon use that reflects the genome compositional bias of a high A+T content with the single exception of the highly translatedpsbA gene which codes for the photosystem II D1 protein. The codon usage of plantpsbA corresponds more closely to the limited tRNA population of the chloroplast and is very similar to the codon use observed in the chloroplast genes of the green algaChlamydomonas reinhardtii. This pattern of codon use may be an adaptation for increased translation efficiency. A correspondence between codon use of plantpsbA andChlamydomonas chloroplast genes and the tRNAs coded by the chloroplast genome, however, is not observed in all synonymous codon groups. It is shown here that the degree of correspondence between codon use and tRNA population in different synonymous groups is correlated with the second codon position composition. Synonymous groups with an A or T at the second codon position have a high representation of codons for which a complementary tRNA is coded by the chloroplast genome. Those with a G or C at the second position have an increased representation of codons that bind a chloroplast tRNA by wobble. It is proposed that the difference between synonymous groups in terms of codon adaptation to the tRNA population in plantpsbA andChlamydomonas chloroplast genes may be the result of differences in second position composition.  相似文献   

2.
A foxtail millet (Setaria italica L. Beauv.) line resistant to atrazine was obtained through interspecific hybridization between wild S. viridis L. Beauv. and cultivated S. italica. The resistance was proved to be controlled by a chloroplast-inherited gene and it has further been utilized in foxtail millet production. However, the sequence information of the putative atrazine resistance gene, psbA in foxtail millet’s chloroplast genome encoding photosystem II D1 protein (32 kDa thylakoid membrane protein) (photosystem QB protein) and the mutation site responsible for the resistance are not known. In this paper the psbA sequences of six atrazine susceptible/resistant foxtail millet varieties were obtained and compared. The results indicated that there was only one amino acid difference between susceptible and resistance gene, resulting from a single base substitution. It was concluded that a mutant allele of photosystem II protein D1 encoding a Gly residue instead of a Ser residue at position 264 is a major gene of resistance to atrazine. Moreover, the phylogenetic tree based on the psbA coding region of thirty-five plant species was carried out. The phylogenetic relationship between S. italica and other plants and the related evolutionary issues were discussed and it was suggested that psbA sequences could be used in phylogenetic studies in plants. Xiaoping Jia and Jincheng Yuan have equal contribution.  相似文献   

3.
One of the photosystem II reaction center proteins, D1, is encoded by the psbA gene and is synthesized as a precursor form with a carboxyl-terminal extension that is subsequently cleaved between Ala-344 and Ser-345. We have generated three psbA transformants of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in which Ala-344 or Ser-345 have been substituted with Pro or Glu (A344P, S345E, and S345P) to understand the effects of the amino acid substitutions on the processing of the precursor D1. S345E grew photoautotrophically and showed PSII activity like the wild type. However, A344P and S345P were unable to grow photoautotrophically and were significantly photosensitive. A344P was deficient in the processing of precursor D1 and in oxygen-evolving activity, but assembled photosystem II complex capable of charge separation. In contrast, both precursor and mature forms of D1 accumulated in S345P cells from the logarithmic phase and the cells evolved oxygen at 18% of wild-type level. However, S345P cells from the stationary phase contained mostly the mature D1 and showed a twofold increase in oxygen-evolving activity. The rate of processing of the accumulated pD1 was estimated to be about 100 times slower than in the wild type. It is therefore concluded that the functional oxygen-evolving complex is assembled when the precursor D1 is processed, albeit at a very low rate. These results suggest the functional significance of the amino acid residues at the processing site of the precursor D1.  相似文献   

4.
DNA sequence, copy number, expression and phylogenetic relevance of the psbA gene from the abundant marine prokaryote P. marinus CCMP 1375 was analyzed. The 7 amino acids near the C-terminus missing in higher plant and in Prochlorothrix hollandica D1 proteins are present in the derived amino acid sequence. P. marinus contains only a single psbA gene. Thus, this organism lacks the ability to adapt its photosystem II by replacement of one type of D1 by another, as several cyanobacteria do. Phylogenetic trees suggested the D1-1 iso-form from Synechococcus PCC 7942 as the next related D1 protein and place P. Marinus separately from Prochlorothrix hollandica among the cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Many herbicides inhibit the photosynthetic electron transfer in photosystem II by binding to the polypeptide D1. A point mutation in the chloroplast gene psbA, which leads to a change of the amino acid residue 264 of D1 from serine to glycine, is responsible for atrazine resistance in higher plants. We have changed serine 264 to glycine in Synechococcus PCC7942 and compared its phenotype to a mutant with a serine to alanine shift in the same position. The results show that glycine at position 264 in D1 gives rise to a similar phenotype in cyanobacteria and in higher plants, indicating a similar structure of the binding site for herbicides and for the quinone QB in the two systems. A possible mode of binding of phenyl-urea herbicides to D1 is predicted from the difference in herbicidal cross-resistance between glycine and alanine substitutions of serine 264.Abbreviations DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - I50 concentration of herbicide giving 50% inhibition - Kb binding constant - kb kilobase - MES 2(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - PS II photosystem II  相似文献   

6.
Cloning and sequencing of psbA, the gene encoding D1 protein of photosystem II, from six species of dinoflagellates harboring a peridinin type plastid [Prorocentrum micans Ehrenberg, Amphidinium carterae Hulburt, Heterocapsa triquetra Stein, Lingulodinium polyedra (Dodge) Stein, Alexandrium tamarense (Lebour) Balech and Alexandrium catenella (Whedon et Kofoid) Balech] is reported. Using the polymerase chain reaction technique, the psbA gene was detected in a satellite DNA band isolated from total DNA of A. catenella by CsCl-Hoechst 33258 gradient ultracentrifugation. This finding suggests that in dinoflagellates psbA is encoded in the plastid genome. The deduced amino acid sequences of D1 from the dinoflagellates did not reveal a typical ‘C-terminus extension’, which should be removed by proteolytic cleavage from the D1 precursor. Molecular phylogenetic analysis based on the deduced amino acid sequences of D1 revealed that the six species of dinoflagellates are monophyletic and also showed that dinoflagellates cluster with rhodophytes, a cryptophyte and heterokonts. These results support the hypothesis that the peridinin type plastid in dinoflagellates originated from an engulfed red alga.  相似文献   

7.
psbA in Synechocystis 6803 was found to belong to a small multigene family with three copies. The psbA gene family was inactivated in vitro by insertation of bacterial drug resistance markers. Inactivation of all three genes resulted in a transformant that is unable to grow photosynthetically but can be cultured photoheterotrophically. This mutant lacks oxygen evolving capacity but retains photosystem I activity. Room temperature measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence induction demonstrated that the transformant exhibits a high fluorescence yield with little or no variable fluorescence. Immunoblot analyses showed complete loss of the psbA gene product (the DI polypeptide) from thylakoid membranes in the transformant. However, the extrinsic 33 kilodalton polypeptide of the water-splitting complex of photosystem II, is still present. The results indicate that assembly of a partial photosystem II complex may occur even in the absence of the intrinsic D1 polypeptide, a protein implicated as a crucial component of the photosystem II reaction center.  相似文献   

8.
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10.
Expression of the chloroplast psbA gene coding for the D1 protein of Photosystem II is subject to regulation at different levels in higher plants, including control of mRNA accumulation and translation. In dicots, the conserved 5 non-translated leader (5-UTR) of the psbA mRNA is sufficient to direct the light-dependent translation of the D1 protein. In this report we show that the psbA mRNA 5-UTR forms a stem-loop structure and binds a 43 kD chloroplast protein (43RNP). Binding of the 43RNP is sensitive to competition with poly(U), but insensitive to high concentrations of tRNA, the RNA homopolymers poly(A), poly(G), poly(C), or poly(A):poly(U) as a double-strand RNA. The 43RNP does not bind efficiently to the psbA mRNA 3 non-translated region, although the RNA sequence is U-rich and folds into a stem-loop. A deletion mutant of the psbA 5-UTR RNA in which 5 sequences of the stem-loop are removed does not affect 43RNP binding. Together, these properties suggest that the 43RNP binds most effectively to a specific single-strand U-rich sequence preceding the AUG start codon in the psbA mRNA. Binding of the 43RNP is not detectable in plastid protein extracts from 5-day-old dark-grown seedlings, but is detectable in light-grown seedlings as well as mature plants in the light and after shifted to the dark. The 43RNP is therefore a candidate for a regulatory RNA-binding protein that may control the accumulation and/or translation of the psbA mRNA during light-dependent seedling development.Abbreviations DMS dimethylsulfate - psb Photosystem II genes - RNP ribonucleoprotein - UTR non-translated leader - UV crosslinking ultra-violet light crosslinking  相似文献   

11.
The unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 has three psbA genes encoding two different forms of the photosystem II reaction centre protein D1 (D1:1 and D1:2). The level of expression of these psbA genes and the synthesis of D1:1 and D1:2 are strongly regulated under varying light conditions. In order to better understand the regulatory mechanisms underlying these processes, we have constructed a strain of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 capable of over-producing psbA mRNA and D1 protein. In this study, we describe the over-expression of D1:1 using a tac-hybrid promoter in front of the psbAI gene in combination with lacI Q repressor system. Over-production of D1:1 was induced by growing cells for 12 h at 50 mol photons m-2 s-1 in the presence of 40 or 80 g/ml IPTG. The amount of psbAI mRNA and that of D1:1 protein in cells grown with IPTG was three times and two times higher, respectively. A higher concentration of IPTG (i.e., 150 g/ml) did not further increase the production of the psbAI message or D1:1. The over-production of D1:1 caused a decrease in the level of D1:2 synthesised, resulting in most PSII reaction centres containing D1:1. However, the over-production of D1:1 had no effect on the pigment composition (chlorophyll a or phycocyanin/number of cells) or the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. This and the fact that the total amounts of D1 and D2 proteins were not affected by IPTG suggest that the number of PSII centres within the membranes remained unchanged. From these results, we conclude that expression of psbAI can be regulated by using the tac promoter and lacI Q system. However, the accumulation of D1:1 protein into the membrane is regulated by the number of PSII centres.  相似文献   

12.
13.
In this paper, we describe a protocol to obtain a site-directed mutants in thepsbA gene ofChlamydomonas reinhardtii, which overcomes several drawbacks of previous protocols, and makes it possible to generate a mutant within a month. Since the large size of the gene, and the presence of four large introns has made molecular genetics of thepsbA gene rather unwieldy, we have spliced all of the exons of thepsbA gene by PCR to facilitate genetic manipulation and sequencing of the gene. The resultant construct (plasmid pBA153, with several unique restriction sites introduced at exon boundaries) carried 1.2 and 1.8 kb intact sequences from the 5- and 3-flanking regions, respectively. The plasmid was used to transform a D1-deletion mutant and was found to complement the deletion and restore photosynthetic activity. In addition, a bacterialaadA gene conferring spectinomycin resistance (spe r) was inserted downstream of the intron-freepsbA gene, to give construct pBA155. This allowed selection of mutant strains deficient in photosynthesis by using spectinomycin resistance, and eliminated the possibility of selection for revertant strains which is a consequence of having to use photosynthetic activity as a selection pressure. Finally, pBA155 was used to construct pBA157, in which additional restriction sites were inserted to facilitate cassette mutagenesis for generation of mutations in spans thought to be involved in donor-side interactions. AllpsbA deletion strains transformed with intron-freepsbA-aadA constructs encoding the wild-type D1 sequence, and screened on spectinomycin plates for thespe r phenotype, were able to grow photosynthetically, and all showed identical kinetics for electron transfer from primary (QA) to secondary quinone (QB) in Photosystem II, as assayed by the decay of the high fluorescence yield on oxidation of the reduced primary acceptor (QA ).  相似文献   

14.
This study analyzes psbA gene sequences, predicted D1 protein sequences, species relative abundance, and pollution-induced community tolerance in marine periphyton communities exposed to the antifouling compound Irgarol 1051. The mechanism of action of Irgarol is the inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport at photosystem II by binding to the D1 protein. The metagenome of the communities was used to produce clone libraries containing fragments of the psbA gene encoding the D1 protein. Community tolerance was quantified with a short-term test for the inhibition of photosynthesis. The communities were established in a continuous flow of natural seawater through microcosms with or without added Irgarol. The selection pressure from Irgarol resulted in an altered species composition and an inducted community tolerance to Irgarol. Moreover, there was a very high diversity in the psbA gene sequences in the periphyton, and the composition of psbA and D1 fragments within the communities was dramatically altered by increased Irgarol exposure. Even though tolerance to this type of compound in land plants often depends on a single amino acid substitution (Ser264→Gly) in the D1 protein, this was not the case for marine periphyton species. Instead, the tolerance mechanism likely involves increased degradation of D1. When we compared sequences from low and high Irgarol exposure, differences in nonconserved amino acids were found only in the so-called PEST region of D1, which is involved in regulating its degradation. Our results suggest that environmental contamination with Irgarol has led to selection for high-turnover D1 proteins in marine periphyton communities at the west coast of Sweden.  相似文献   

15.
The nomenclature for genes for components of the photosynthetic membranes has been reviewed and updated. Newly discovered genes have been added to the existing convention for gene nomenclature. Genes designatedpetA throughpetI are described for components of the photosynthetic electron transport systems,psaA throughpsaK for photosystem I components, andpsbA throughpsbR for photosystem II, including the extrinsic polypeptides of the oxygen-evolving complex. References for representative examples of each gene are given.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of the histidine axial ligand to the PD1 chlorophyll of photosystem II on the redox potential and spectroscopic properties of the primary electron donor, P680, was investigated in mutant oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) complexes purified from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. To achieve this aim, a mutagenesis system was developed in which the psbA1 and psbA2 genes encoding D1 were deleted from a His-tagged CP43 strain (to generate strain WT?) and mutations D1-H198A and D1-H198Q were introduced into the remaining psbA3 gene. The O2-evolving activity of His-tagged PSII isolated from WT? was found to be significantly higher than that measured from His-tagged PSII isolated from WT in which psbA1 is expected to be the dominantly expressed form. PSII purified from both the D1-H198A and D1-H198Q mutants exhibited oxygen-evolving activity as high as that from WT?. Surprisingly, a variety of kinetic and spectroscopic measurements revealed that the D1-H198A and D1-H198Q mutations had little effect on the redox and spectroscopic properties of P680, in contrast to the earlier results from the analysis of the equivalent mutants constructed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 [B.A. Diner, E. Schlodder, P.J. Nixon, W.J. Coleman, F. Rappaport, J. Lavergne, W.F. Vermaas, D.A. Chisholm, Site-directed mutations at D1-His198 and D2-His197 of photosystem II in Synechocystis PCC 6803: sites of primary charge separation and cation and triplet stabilization, Biochemistry 40 (2001) 9265-9281]. We conclude that the nature of the axial ligand to PD1 is not an important determinant of the redox and spectroscopic properties of P680 in T. elongatus.  相似文献   

17.
In Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 the D1 protein of Photosystem II is encoded by a multigene family; psbAI encodes Form I of D1 whereas both psbAII and psbAIII encode Form II. The psbA genes are differentially regulated in response to changes in light intensity, such that psbAI expression and Form I predominate at standard light intensity, whereas psbAII and psbAIII are induced at high light intensity, causing insertion of Form II into the thylakoids. The present study addressed whether high-light induced Form II is important for Synechococcus cells during adaptation to high light intensity. Wild-type Synechococcus, and mutants which produce only Form I (R2S2C3) or only Form II (R2K1), were co-cultured at standard light (130 E · m–2 · s–1) and then shifted to high light (750 E·m–2·s–1). Measurement of the proportion of each cell type at various time intervals revealed that the growth of R2S2C3, which has psbAII and psbAIII inactive, and thus lacks Form II, is transiently impaired upon shift to high light. Both mutants R2S2C3 and R2K1 maintained normal levels of psbA messages and D1 protein under standard and high light through an unknown mechanism that compensates for the inactive psbA genes. Thus, the impairment of R2S2C3 at high light is not due to a deficiency of D1 protein, but results from lack of Form II. We discounted the influence of possible secondary mutations by re-creating the psbA-inactivated mutants and testing the newly isolated strains. We conclude that Form II of D1 is intrinsically important for Synechococcus cells during a critical transition period after exposure to high light intensities.  相似文献   

18.
The psbA gene, which encodes a major photosystem II protein (protein II or D1), is a marker for the presence of phototrophic organisms in water communities. We have pioneered the use of this marker for studying the diversity of phototrophic microflora of freshwater invertebrates. The object of the study is the microbial associations accompanying the endemic Baikal sponge Baikalospongia intermedia and the surrounding aquatic microbial community. Analysis of the psbA gene sequences in the examined microbiomes demonstrates the presence of various phototrophic groups, such as Cyanobacteria, Chlorophyta, Heterokonta, Haptophyta, and Ochrophyta algae, as well as cyanophages. A total of 35 unique psbA gene sequences have been distinguished in the microbial communities of the endemic sponge B. intermedia and 32 unique sequences in the water community surrounding the sponge. These data demonstrate the involvement of sponge symbiotic communities in the accumulation of primary production and carbon cycle in the Lake Baikal ecosystem.  相似文献   

19.
Cyanobacteria, contrary to higher plants, have a small psbA gene family encoding the reaction centre D1 protein subunit of photosystem II, the first macromolecular pigment-protein complex of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Modulation of expression of multiple psbA genes in the family allows cyanobacteria to adapt to changing environmental conditions. To date, two different strategies for regulation of the psbA genes have emerged. One, characterized in Synechocystis PCC6803 and Gloeobacter violaceus PCC7421 involves the increased expression of one type of D1 protein to cope with the increased rate of damage. The other strategy, in Synechococcus PCC7942 and Anabaena PCC7120, is to replace the existing D1 with a new D1 form for the duration of the stress. However, most of the psbA gene families characterized to date contain also a divergent, apparently silent psbA gene of unknown function. This gene, present in Synechocystis, Anabaena and Thermosynechococcus elongatus BP-1 was not induced by any stress condition applied so far. Our data shows a reversible induction of the divergent psbA gene during the onset of argon-induced microaerobic conditions in Synechocystis, Anabaena and Thermosynechococcus elongatus. The unitary functional response of three unrelated cyanobacterial species, namely the induction of the expression of the divergent psbA gene as a reaction to the same environmental cue, indicates that these genes and the protein they encode are part of a specific cellular response to microaerobic conditions. There are no specific primary structure similarities between the different microaerobic inducible D1 forms, designated as D1′. Only three amino acid residues are consistently conserved in D1′. These modifications are: G80 to A, F158 to L and T286 to L. In silico mutation of the published D1 structure from Thermosynechococcus did not reveal major modifications. The point by point effects of the mutations on the local environment of the PSII structure are also discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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