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1.
G. Renger  B. Hanssum  H. Gleiter  H. Koike  Y. Inoue 《BBA》1988,936(3):435-446
The interaction of exogenous quinones with the Photosystem II (PS II) acceptor side has been analyzed by measurements of flash-induced 320 nm absorption changes, transient flash-induced variable fluorescence changes, thermoluminescence emission and oxygen yield in dark-adapted thylakoids and PS II membrane fragments. Two classes of 1,4-benzoquinones were shown to give rise to remarkably different reaction patterns. (A) Phenyl-p-benzoquinone (Ph-p-BQ) -type compounds give rise to a marked binary oscillation of the initial amplitudes of 320 nm absorption changes induced by a flash train in dark-adapted PS II membrane fragments and a retardation of the decay kinetics of the flash-induced variable fluorescence. The electron transfer reactions to these type of quinones are severely inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). (B) In the presence of tribromotoluquinone (TBTQ) a different oscillation pattern of the 320 nm absorption changes is observed characterized by a marked relaxation after the first flash in the 5 ms domain. This relaxation is insensitive to 10 μM DCMU. Likewise the decay of the flash-induced variable fluorescence in TBTQ-treated samples is much less sensitive to DCMU than in control. The thermoluminescence emission exhibits an oscillation in samples incubated for 5 min with TBTQ before addition of 30 μM DCMU. Under the same conditions a significant flash-induced oxygen evolution is observed only after the third and fourth flash, respectively, whereas in the presence of TBTQ alone a normal oscillation pattern is observed. The different functional patterns of PS II caused by the two types of classes of exogenous quinones are interpreted by their binding properties: a noncovalent association with the QB-site of Ph-p-BQ-type quinones versus a tight (covalent?) binding in the vicinity of QA (possibly also at the QB-site) in the case of halogenated 1,4-benzoquinones. The mechanistic implications of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
We have compared the fluidity of thylakoid membranes with the membrane present in a Triton X-100-derived, oxygen-evolving Photosystem II (PS II) preparation using two different spin labels. Data obtained with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpipiridine-N-oxyl (TEMPO) shows that the PS II preparation contains less fluid membrane than the thylakoid. The TEMPO partition parameter (f) is about 2.5-times greater for the thylakoids at 6 mg chlorophyll/ml than for the PS II preparation at the same chlorophyll concentration. Similarly, the rotational correlation time, τ, of TEMPO residing in the membrane of the PS II preparation is about 2-times longer than the τ for TEMPO in the thylakoid membrane. A spin label which partitions more completely into the bilayer, 2-heptyl-2-hexyl-5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-N-oxyl (7N14), indicates a much greater fluidity in the thylakoid membrane than the membrane of the PS II preparation. The PS II preparation appears to have a hydrocarbon phase which approaches the rigid limit of EPR detectable motion. These results are discussed in terms of possible lipid depletion in the PS II preparation and in terms of lateral heterogeneity of hydrocarbon fluidity in the thylakoid membrane caused by the lateral heterogeneity in protein components.  相似文献   

3.
Inside-out spinach thylakoid vesicles can be isolated by aqueous polymer two-phase partition following mechanical disruption of spinach chloroplast lamellae (Andersson, B and Åkerlund, H.-E. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 503, 462–472) and a mechanism for their formation has been experimentally supported (Andersson B., Sundby, C. and Albertsson, P.-Å. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 599, 391–402). Upon disruption, inside-out vesicles may form under stacking conditions, e.g., in 5 mM MgCl2 or 150 mM NaCl, while disruption under destacking conditions, i.e., low concentrations of monovalent cations, gives only right-side-out vesicles. This study deals with the sidedness stability of the isolated inside-out thylakoid vesicles when stored or disrupted by sonication in various ionic environments. The sidedness of thylakoid vesicles was determined by their partition behaviour in an aqueous polymer phase system, direction of proton translocation and aggregation response (stacking) upon addition of MgCl2. The results show that no spontaneous change from everted to normal sidedness occurs upon storage of the inside-out thylakoids. In contrast, sonication of these vesicles under destacking conditions (5 mM NaCl) results in a nearly complete transformation to right-side-out orientation. Also, in the presence of 5 mM MgCl2 or 150 mM NaCl, sonication induced a change in sidedness of the inside-out vesicles but to a lesser extent. The stabilizing effect on the everted sidedness by cations was shown to be a result of preventing vesicle fragmentation by maintaining internal thylakoid appresions rather than by influencing the membrane curvature during resealing. Once released from an appressed state by overcoming the stacking forces, an opened thylakoid membrane shows an absolute preference for turning right-side-out in all media tested. These results strongly support the proposed formation mechanism, in which pairs of neighbouring grana membranes after disruption reseal with each other promoted by their close proximity. Since the inside-out vesicles derive from the grana appressions, their transformation back to normal sidedness exposes the outer membrane surface of appressed thylakoids. This region of the thylakoid membrane is normally hidden in the grana appressions and removal of grana leads concomitantly to lateral intermixing with non-appressed thylakoid components. Thus the current isolation of right-sided vesicles derived from the grana appressions should be a new tool for studies on the molecular organization of the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Ravi Danielsson 《BBA》2004,1608(1):53-61
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was used to quantify Photosystem I (PSI) and PSII in vesicles originating from a series of well-defined but different domains of the thylakoid membrane in spinach prepared by non-detergent techniques. Thylakoids from spinach were fragmented by sonication and separated by aqueous polymer two-phase partitioning into vesicles originating from grana and stroma lamellae. The grana vesicles were further sonicated and separated into two vesicle preparations originating from the grana margins and the appressed domains of grana (the grana core), respectively. PSI and PSII were determined in the same samples from the maximal size of the EPR signal from P700+ and YD, respectively. The following PSI/PSII ratios were found: thylakoids, 1.13; grana vesicles, 0.43; grana core, 0.25; grana margins, 1.28; stroma lamellae 3.10. In a sub-fraction of the stroma lamellae, denoted Y-100, PSI was highly enriched and the PSI/PSII ratio was 13. The antenna size of the respective photosystems was calculated from the experimental data and the assumption that a PSII center in the stroma lamellae (PSIIβ) has an antenna size of 100 Chl. This gave the following results: PSI in grana margins (PSIα) 300, PSI (PSIβ) in stroma lamellae 214, PSII in grana core (PSIIα) 280. The results suggest that PSI in grana margins have two additional light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) trimers per reaction center compared to PSI in stroma lamellae, and that PSII in grana has four LHCII trimers per monomer compared to PSII in stroma lamellae. Calculation of the total chlorophyll associated with PSI and PSII, respectively, suggests that more chlorophyll (about 10%) is associated with PSI than with PSII.  相似文献   

5.
Photosystem II activity of oxygen-evolving membranes can be quantified by their capacity to do charge separation or their capacity to transport electrons. In this study using flash excitation of saturating intensity, charge separation is measured by absorption changes in the ultraviolet region of the spectra associated with primary-quinone reduction, and electron transport is measured by oxygen flash yield. These methods are applied to thylakoids and three different types of Photosystem II particles. In thylakoids electron-transport activity is 75–85% of charge separation activity. In Photosystem II particles this percentage is 60–70%, except for the BBY type (Berthold, D.A., Babcock, G.T. and Yocum, C.F. (1981) FEBS Lett. 135, 231–234), in which it is only 29%. These estimates of non-functional oxygen-evolving centers agree within experimental error, except for the BBY particle, with the quantum requirement for oxygen evolution measured under light-limited conditions. These reaction centers that are non-functional in oxygen evolution occur during sample preparation and are not a result of inhibition by ferricyanide or quinone acceptor systems. In thylakoids on the first flash, absorption changes at 325 nm do not show significant contributions from oxygen evolution S-state transitions. In the presence of ferricyanide the absorption change at 325 nm does have a significant contribution from Q400 in thylakoids, but considerably less in Photosystem II particles.  相似文献   

6.
The electroluminescence induced by external electric fields in blebs prepared from chloroplasts consists of two kinetically different phases, rapid (R) and slow (S), which were shown to be linked to Photosystem I (PS I) and Photosystem II (PS II) activities, respectively (Symons, M., Korenstein, R. and Malkin, S. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 806, 305–310). In this report we describe conditions involving heat treatment of broken chloroplasts, which make it possible to observe R phase electroluminescence essentially devoid of any contribution by the S phase. This allowed the precise measurement of the emission spectrum of PS I electroluminescence. The emission spectrum of PS II electroluminescence was obtained using regular broken chloroplasts, which show only S-type emission. The latter emission spectrum is identical to the one obtained for ordinary prompt fluorescence, peaking at 685 nm with a bandwidth of about 25 nm. The PS I emission spectrum is symmetric around 705 nm and is much broader, about 60 nm.  相似文献   

7.
Thylakoid membranes were treated by potato lipolytic acyl hydrolase, phospholipases A2 from pancreas and snake venom, and by phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus under various conditions. The changes in the uncoupled rates of electron transport through Photosystem I (PS I) and in lipid composition were followed during these treatments. Pancreatic phospholipase A2 which destroyed all phospholipids in thylakoid membranes stimulated the NADP+ reduction supported by reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. This stimulation concerned only the dark but not the light reactions of this pathway. The main site of action of pancreatic phospholipase A2 may be located on the donor side of PS I; the hydrolysis of phospholipids at this site caused an increased ability of reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol and ascorbate alone to feed electrons into PS I. A second site may be located on the acceptor side of PS I, probably between the primary acceptor and the ferredoxin system. When thylakoid membranes were first preincubated with or without lipolytic acyl hydrolase at 30°C (pH 8), the NADP+ photoreduction was inhibited whilst the methyl viologen-mediated O2 uptake was stimulated. A subsequent addition of pancreatic phospholipase A2 (which had the same hydrolysis rates for phosphatidylglycerol but not for phosphatidylcholine) further stimulated the O2 uptake and restored NADP+ photoreduction. The extent of this stimulation, which depended on the presence of lipolytic acyl hydrolase, was ascribed partly to the hydrolysis of the phospholipids and partly to the generation of their lyso derivatives but not to the release of free fatty acids. On the contrary, phospholipase C which destroyed only phosphatidylcholine failed to restore this activity. It is suggested that phosphatidylglycerol is the only phospholipid associated with thylakoid membrane structures supporting PS I activities and that this lipid may play a physiological role in the regulation of these activities.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Pierre Stif  Paul Mathis  Tore Vnngrd 《BBA》1984,767(3):404-414
Electron transport has been studied by flash absorption and EPR spectroscopies at 10–30 K in Photosystem I particles prepared with digitonin under different redox conditions. In the presence of ascorbate, an irreversible charge separation is progressively induced at 10 K between P-700 and iron-sulfur center A by successive laser flashes, up to a maximum which corresponds to about two-thirds of the reaction centers. In these centers, heterogeneity of the rate for center A reduction is also shown. In the other third of reaction centers, the charge separation is reversible and relaxes with a t1/2 ≈ 120 μs. When the iron-sulfur centers A and B are prereduced, the 120 μs relaxation becomes the dominant process (70–80% of the reaction centers), while a slow component (t1/2 = 50–400 ms) reflecting the recombination between P-700+ and center X occurs in a minority of reaction centers (10–15%). Flash absorption and EPR experiments show that the partner of P-700+ in the 120 μs recombination is neither X nor a chlorophyll but more probably the acceptor A1 as defined by Bonnerjea and Evans (Bonnerjea, J. and Evans, M.C.W. (1982) FEBS Lett. 148, 313–316). The role of center X in low-temperature electron flow is also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
A pH decrease in chloroplast suspension in media of low salt concentration was observed when a salt was added at pH values higher than 4.4, while at lower pH values a pH increase was observed. The salt-induced pH changes depended on the valence and concentration of cations of added salts at neutral pH values (higher than 4.4) and on those of anions at acidic pH values (lower than 4.4). The order of effectiveness was trivalent > divalent > monovalent. The pH value change by salt addition was affected by the presence of ionic detergents depending on the sign of their charges. These characteristics agreed with those expected from the Gouy-Chapman theory on diffuse electrical double layers. The results were interpreted in terms of the changes in surface potential, surface pH and the ionization of surface groups which result in the release (or binding) of H+ to (or from) the outer medium.The analysis of the data of KCl-induced pH change suggests that the change in the surface charge density of thylakoid membranes depends mainly on the ionization of carboxyl groups, which is determined by the surface pH. When the carboxyl groups are fully dissociated, the surface charge density reaches ?1.0 ± 0.1 · 10?3 elementary charge/square Å.Dependence of the estimated surface potential on the bulk pH was similar to that of electrophoretic mobility of thylakoid membrane vesicles.  相似文献   

11.
Removal of 23 and 17 kDa water-soluble polypeptides from PS II membranes causes a marked decrease in oxygen-evolution activity, exposes the oxidizing side of PS II to exogenous reductants (Ghanotakis, D.F., Babcock, G.T. and Yocum, C.F. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 765, 388–398) and alters a high-affinity binding site for Ca2+ in the oxygen-evolving complex (Ghanotakis, D.F., Topper, J.N., Babcock, G.T. and Yocum, C.F. (1984) FEBS Lett. 170, 169–173). We have examined further the state of the functional Mn complex in PS II membranes from which the 17 and 23 kDa species have been removed by high-salt treatment. These membranes contain a structurally altered Mn complex which is sensitive to destruction by low concentrations of NH2OH which cannot, in native PS II membranes, cause extraction of functional Mn. In addition to NH2OH, a wide range of other small (H2O2, NH2NH2, Fe2+) and bulky (benzidine, hydroquinone) electron donors extract Mn (up to 80%) from the polypeptide-depleted PS II preparations. This extraction is due to reduction of the functional Mn complex since light, which would generate higher oxidation states within the Mn complex, prevents Mn release by reductants. Release of Mn by reductants does not extract the 33 kDa water-soluble protein implicated in Mn binding to the oxidizing side of PS II, although the protein can be partially or totally extracted from Mn-depleted preparations by exposure to high ionic strength or to high (0.8 M) concentrations of Tris. We view our results as evidence for a shield around the Mn complex of the oxygen-evolving complex comprised of the 33 kDa polypeptide along with the 23 and 17 kDa proteins and tightly bound Ca2+.  相似文献   

12.
Bertil Andersson  Jan M. Anderson   《BBA》1980,593(2):427-440
The lateral distribution of the main chlorophyll-protein complexes between appressed and non-appressed thylakoid membranes has been studied. The reaction centre complexes of Photosystems I and II and the light-harvesting complex have been resolved by an SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic method which permits most of the chlorophyll to remain protein-bound.

The analyses were applied to subchloroplast fractions shown to be derived from different thylakoid regions. Stroma thylakoids were separated from grana stacks by centrifugation following chloroplast disruption by press treatment or digitonin. Vesicles derived from the grana partitions were isolated by aqueous polymer two-phase partition. A substantial depletion in the amount of Photosystem I chlorophyll-protein complex and an enrichment in the Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex occurred in the appressed grana partition region. The high enrichment in this fraction compared to grana stack fractions derived from press or digitonin treatments, suggests that the grana Photosystem I is restricted mainly to the non-appressed grana end membranes and margins, and that the grana partitions possess mainly Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex.

In contrast, stroma thylakoids are highly enriched in the Photosystem I reaction centre complex. They possess also some 10–20% of the total Photosystem II reaction centre complex and the light-harvesting complex.

The ratio of light-harvesting complex to Photosystem II reaction centre complex is rather constant in all subchloroplast fractions suggesting a close association between these complexes. This was not so for the ratio of light-harvesting complex and the Photosystem I reaction centre complex.

The lateral heterogeneity in the distribution of the photosystems between appressed and non-appressed membranes must have a profound impact on current understanding of both the distribution of excitation energy and photosynthetic electron transport between the photosystems.  相似文献   


13.
The kinetics of LHCP phosphorylation and associated changes in photosystem cross-section and energy ‘spill-over’ from PS II to PS I have been examined in isolated spinach chloroplasts. During an initial phosphorylation period of 3–6 min, in the presence of saturating concentrations of Mg2+, the increase in PS I and decrease in PS II cross-section are largely completed, as judged by both measurements of the steady-state redox state of Q and fluorescence yield changes. This corresponds to a period of rapid 32P incorporation into the low-molecular weight LHCP polypeptide. Subsequent to this initial 3–6-min period there is substantial further phosphorylation of both LHCP polypeptides, which is not accompanied by significant changes in photosystem cross-section, even after the chloroplasts had been unstacked with extensive mixing of PS I and PS II by Mg-removal. It is suggested that there exists a specific ‘mobile’ population of LHCP molecules which is rapidly phosphorylated and which may be enriched in the low-molecular-weight polypeptide. In addition, measurements of the kinetics of the ‘spill-over’ changes upon either Mg2+ addition or removal indicate that the continued phosphorylation of LHCP is able to increase the ‘spill-over’ process under favourable ionic conditions.  相似文献   

14.
The quenching of Photosystem II (PS II) chlorophyll fluorescence by oxidised plastoquinone has been used in an attempt to determine their relative distribution in the partition zone and stroma-exposed thylakoid membranes. Thus, the PS II-plastoquinone interaction was determined in stacked (2.5 mM MgCl2) and largely unstacked (0.25 mM MgCl2) membranes. A method to correct for spillover or other quenching changes at the different MgCl2 concentrations, which would compete with the plastoquinone-induced quenching, was devised utilising the quinone dibromothymoquinone. This compound is demonstrated to behave as an ideal (theoretically) PS II quencher at both high and low MgCl2 concentrations, which indicates that it distributes itself homogeneously between partition zone and stroma-exposed membrane regions. In passing from the stacked to the unstacked configuration, the PS II-plastoquinone interaction decreases less than the PS II-dibromothymoquinone interaction. This is interpreted to mean that plastoquinone is present in both the partition zone and stroma-exposed membranes, with somewhat higher concentrations in the stroma-exposed membranes. Thus, plastoquinone is well placed to transport reducing equivalents from the partition zones to the stroma-exposed membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Wim F.J. Vermaas  Charles J. Arntzen   《BBA》1983,725(3):483-491
We have analyzed the binding of synthetic quinones and herbicides which inhibit electron transport at the acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) of the photosynthetic electron-transport chain in thylakoid membranes. These data show that quinones and PS II-directed herbicides compete for binding to a common binding environment within a PS II region which functions as the Q / PQ oxidoreductase. We observed that (1) synthetic quinones cause a parallel inhibition of electron transport and [14C]herbicide displacement, and (2) herbicide binding is affected both by the fully oxidized and fully reduced form of a quinone. Quinone function and inhibitor binding were also investigated in thylakoids isolated from triazine-resistant weed biotypes. We conclude the following. (1) The affinity of the secondary accepting quinone, B, is decreased in resistant thylakoids. (2) The observation that the equilibrium concentration of reduced Q after transferring one electron to the acceptor side of PS II is increased in resistant as compared to susceptible chloroplasts may be explained both by a decrease in the affinity of PQ for the herbicide / quinone binding environment, and by a decrease of the midpont redox potential of the B / B couple. (3) The binding environment regulating quinone and herbicide affinity may be divided roughly into two domains; we suggest that the domain regulating quinone head-group binding is little changed in resistant membranes, whereas the domain-regulating quinone side-group binding (and atrazine) is altered. This results in increased inhibitory activity of tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone and phenolic herbicides, which are hypothesized to utilize the quinone head-group domain. The two domains appear to be spatially overlapping because efficient atrazine displacement by tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone is observed.  相似文献   

16.
A. Melis  A.P.G.M. Thielen 《BBA》1980,589(2):275-286
In the present study we used three types of Nicotiana tabacum, cv John William's Broad Leaf (the wild type and two mutants, the yellow-green Su/su and the yellow Su/su var. Aurea) in order to correlate functional properties of Photosystem II and Photosystem I with the structural organization of their chloroplasts. The effective absorption cross-section of Photosystem II and Photosystem I centers was measured by means of the rate constant of their photoconversion under light-limiting conditions. In agreement with earlier results (Okabe, K., Schmid, G.H. and Straub, J. (1977) Plant Physiol. 60, 150–156) the photosynthetic unit size for both System II and System I in the two mutants was considerably smaller as compared to the wild type. We observed biphasic kinetics in the photoconversion of System II in all three types of N. tabacum. However, the photoconversion of System I occurred with monophasic and exponential kinetics. Under our experimental conditions, the effective cross-section of Photosystem I was comparable to that of the fast System II component (α centers). The relative amplitude of the slow System II component (β centers) varied between 30% in the wild type to 70% in the Su/su var. Aurea mutant. The increased fraction of β centers is correlated with the decreased fraction of appressed photosynthetic membranes in the chloroplasts of the two mutants. As a working hypothesis, it is suggested that β centers are located on photosynthetic membranes directly exposed to the stroma medium.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Lowering the pH of the incubation medium to pH 5.4 leads to grana formation morphologically similar to that induced by metal cations. The same phenomenon is observed in EDTA-washed chloroplasts, indicating that it is not due in part to electrostatic ‘masking’ by residual cations associated with the membranes. Digitonin fractionation studies have indicated that the distribution of the major chlorophyll-protein complexes between granal and stromal membrane regions is similar at pH 5.4 in the absence of Mg2+, and at pH 7.4 in the presence of Mg2+. Chlorophyll fluorescence induction studies have indicated that the primary photochemistry of Photosystem II (PS II) is stimulated by lowering the pH to 5.4, just as it is upon metal cation addition at higher pH values. The failure to observe such an increase at pH 5.4 by measuring electron transport to ferricyanide is attributed to a combination of an inhibition by this pH of electron transport at a site after Q reduction and an increase in the number of PS II centres detached from the plastoquinone pool. We conclude that the stacked configuration of chloroplast membranes leads to increased PS II primary photochemistry, which is most simply explained in terms of a redistribution of excitation energy towards PS II.  相似文献   

19.
Thylakoid membrane protein phosphorylation affects photochemical reactions of Photosystem II. Incubation of thylakoids in the light with ATP leads to: (1) an increase in the amplitude of three components (4–6, 25–45 and 280–300 μs) of delayed light emission after a single flash without any change in their kinetics; (2) a reduction of the flash-dependent binary oscillations of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield associated with electron transfer from the primary quinone acceptor, Q, to the secondary quinone acceptor, B; (3) an increase in the B?B ratio resulting from an increase in stability of the semiquinone anion during dark adaptation; and (4) no change in the redox state of the plastoquinone pool as determined by flash-induced photooxidation of the Photosystem I reaction center, P-700. All the above observations are reversible upon dephosphorylation of the thylakoid membranes. These data are explained by a protein phosphorylation-induced stabilization of the bound semiquinone anion, B?. It is proposed that this increased stability may be due to an alteration in the accessibility of an endogenous reductant to B, or to an increase in dissipative cycling of charge around Photosystem II.  相似文献   

20.
6-Azido-5-decyl-2,3-dimethoxy-p-benzoquinone (6-azido-Q0C10) was found to replace the native plastoquinone at B (the second stable electron acceptor to Photosystem II (PS II)). The 6-azido-Q10C10 would accept electrons from the primary electron-accepting quinone, Q, thus allowing electron transport through PS II to the plastoquinone pool in thylakoids. The synthetic azidoquinone also competes with the PS II herbicides ioxynil and atrazine for binding. This observation strongly favors the hypothesis that PS II herbicides block electron transport by replacing the native quinone which acts as the second electron carrier on the reducing side of PS II (termed B). Covalent linkage of 6-azido-Q0C10 to its binding environment by ultraviolet irradiation greatly reduces herbicide-binding affinity but does not lead to a loss in herbicide-binding sites. We take this as evidence that covalent attachment of 6-azido-Q0C10 allows some freedom of quinone head-group movement such that the herbicides can enter the binding site. This indicates that the protein determinants which regulate quinone and herbicide binding are very closely related, but not identical. A compound somewhat related to 6-azido-Q0C10 is 2-azido-3-methoxy-5-geranyl-6-methyl-p-benzoquinone (2-azido-Q2). This compound was found to be an ineffective competitor with respect to herbicide binding. Thus, interactions with protein-binding determinants are highly dependent on the molecular structure of quinones. The 2-azido-Q2 was an inhibitor of electron flow in the intersystem portion of the chain.  相似文献   

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