首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The kinetics of the S-state transitions of the oxygen-evolving complex were analyzed in dark-adapted, oxygen-evolving Photosystem-II preparations supplied with the electron acceptor 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone. The kinetics of flash-induced absorbance changes at 350 nm, largely due to the successive S-state transitions S0 → S1, S1 → S2, S2 → S3 and S3 →; S0, confirm the +1, +1, +1, ?3 sequence of manganese oxidation reported earlier (Dekker, J.P., Van Gorkom, H.J., Wensink, J. and Ouwehand, L. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 767, 1–9), and reveal half-times of 30, 110, 350 and 1300 μs, respectively, for these transitions.  相似文献   

2.
3.
4.
Photosystem II particles were prepared from spinach chloroplasts with Triton X-100, and treated with 1.0 M NaCl to remove polypeptides of 24 kDa and 18 kDa and to reduce the photosynthetic oxygen-evolution activity by about half. Oxygen-evolution activity was restored almost to the original level with 10 mM Ca2+, in a similar manner to the rebinding of 24-kDa polypeptide. Other cations such as magnesium, sodium and manganese ions could not restore any oxygen-evolution activity. These observations, together with a kinetic analysis, suggest that Ca2+ can be substituted for the 24-kDa polypeptide in photosynthetic oxygen evolution in Photosystem II particles.  相似文献   

5.
Rita Khanna  S. Rajan  H.S. Gutowsky 《BBA》1983,725(1):10-18
Measurements were made of the water proton relaxation rate (T?12 = R2), electron spin resonance (ESR) six-line signal of ‘free’ Mn2+, and O2-evolution activity in thylakoid membranes from pea leaves. The main results are: (1) Aging of thylakoids at 35°C causes a parallel decrease in O2-evolution activity, in R2 and in the content of bound Mn, suggesting that R2 may be related to the loosely bound Mn involved in O2 evolution. (2) Treatment of thylakoids with tetraphenylboron (TPB) at [TPB] > 2 mM produces a 2-fold increase in R2, without release of Mn2+. The titration curve exhibits three sharp end points. The first end point occurs at a [TPB][chlorophyll] of 1.25, at which the O2 evolution is completely inhibited. (3) Treatment of thylakoids with NH2OH also increases R2 by nearly 2-fold, either by the reduction of the higher oxidation states of Mn to Mn2+ and / or by exposing the Mn to solvent protons. Also, progressive release of bound Mn occurs at [NH2OH] ≥ 1 mM as shown by an increase increase in the Mn2+ ESR signal and a decrease in R2. (4) Addition of H2O2 (0.1–1.0%) to thylakoids causes an enhancement of R2 similar to that by NH2OH, but without the release of Mn2+. (5) Heat treatment of thylakoids at 40–50°C releases Mn2+ and increases R2. Conversely, pH values of 7 to 4 release Mn2+ without changing R2 while pH values of 7–9 increase R2 without releasing Mn2+. Thus, both high and low pH values as well as the heat treatment cause structural changes enhancing the relaxivity of the bound Mn or of other paramagnetic species.  相似文献   

6.
Photosynthetic water oxidation by higher plants proceeds as though five intermediates, S0-S4, operate in a cyclic fashion. In this study of the manganese involvement in the process, a low temperature EPR signal is used as an indicator of S-state composition for manganese X-ray absorption K-edge measurements of a spinach Photosystem II preparation. A dramatic change is observed in the edge properties between samples prepared in states S1 and either S2 or S3, establishing a direct relation between the local environment of Mn and the S-state composition. Samples in S2 or S3 exhibit a broadening of the principal absorption peak and a shift to higher energy by as much as 2.5 eV relative to S1 samples. The magnitude of these changes is directly related to the EPR signal intensity induced by illumination. Models are discussed in which these data may be interpreted in terms of a conformation-induced change in Mn ligation and/or oxidation during the S1 to S2 transition.  相似文献   

7.
Mitsue Miyao  Norio Murata 《BBA》1983,725(1):87-93
Treatment with 1 M NaCl almost totally removed two polypeptides of 24 and 18 kDa from the Photosystem II particles of spinach chloroplasts and reduced the oxygen-evolution activity by about half. Both polypeptides were able to rebind to the NaCl-treated particles in a low-salt medium. The rebinding of the 24 kDa polypeptide showed a saturation curve whose maximum level was close to that naturally occurring in the untreated particles. In parallel with the amount of rebound 24 kDa polypeptide, the oxygen-evolution activity was recovered. The 18 kDa polypeptide bound to the NaCl-treated particles without saturation. When the 18 kDa polypeptide was added to the particles previously treated with NaCl and then supplemented with a saturating amount of 24 kDa polypeptide, there appeared, in addition to the binding without saturation, another binding of the 18 kDa polypeptide with saturation to a maximum level close to that naturally occurring in the untreated particles. The 18 kDa polypeptide did not restore the oxygen-evolution activity. These findings suggest that there are specific binding sites; one for the 24 kDa polypeptide located on the Photosystem II particles, and the other for the 18 kDa polypeptide on the 24 kDa polypeptide.  相似文献   

8.
Neil V. Blough  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1984,767(2):377-381
The ability of salts to inhibit the O2-evolution activity of PS II preparations is shown to parallel closely the Hofmeister series, suggesting that inhibition is related to the solubility of the 16, 24 and 33 kDa proteins in these salt solutions. An examination of the effect of salt inactivation on the low temperature multiline EPR signal indicates that the release of either the 16 and 24 kDa proteins, or additionally the 33 kDa protein blocks or greatly reduces the efficiency of the advancement of the water-splitting complex to the S2-state; under some conditions, this inhibition is reversible.  相似文献   

9.
Michael Boska  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1984,765(1):84-87
The risetime of EPR signal IIvf (S IIvf) has been measured in oxygen-evolving Photosystem II particles from spinach chloroplasts at pH 6.0. The EPR signal shows an instrument-limited rise upon induction (t12 ? 3 μs). These data are consistent with a model where the species Z responsible for S IIvf is the immediate electron donor to P-680+ in spinach chloroplasts. A new, faster decay component of S IIvf has also been detected in these experiments.  相似文献   

10.
Deoxycholate was used to solubilize the 16 and 24 kDa polypeptides from spinach thylakoids, resulting in the loss of oxygen evolution. Manganese was retained in the membrane. When the deoxycholate-extracted membranes were subjected to a mild heat treatment, the water-soluble 33 kDa protein was selectively released. Less than one manganese per reaction center was lost on heating but this loss was not correlated to the solubilization of protein. Most of the manganese bound to the membrane remained EPR-undetectable and could be released by 2-amino-2-hydroxymethylpropane-1,3-diol (Tris) or hydroxylamine treatments. This indicates that the manganese involved in oxygen evolution remains in its native binding site despite the loss of the 33 kDa protein. These results contradict the hypothesis that the 33 kDa protein is responsible for manganese binding at the photosynthetic oxygen-evolving site.  相似文献   

11.
After isolated chloroplast thylakoids have been transferred to a medium which is more alkaline than their storage medium, they retain considerable amounts of unequilibrated protons for often longer than 10 min. Essentially all of these protons are released upon uncoupler addition when the thylakoids are osmotically swollen, but only a portion of them when they are in a shrunken state. Osmotic swelling also greatly accelerates the inactivation of the water-oxidizing system enzyme of Photosystem II, and its depletion of functional Cl?, at alkaline pH. Analyses of the mestable proton gradient in terms of stoichiometry, temperature dependence, and effect on fluorescent amine probes, suggest that most of the protons involved are bound and exchange readily with the bulk phases only when the thylakoids are swollen. It is concluded that, in shrunken thylakoids, the water-oxidizing enzymes are buried in special H+-sequestering domains which probably are formed by cavities in the inner surface of the thylakoid membrane. An observed cooperative action of alkaline pH and divalent cations during Cl?-extraction from Photosystem II is interpreted as revealing an involvement of both a negatively charged surface region and positively charged groups in maintaining the functional integrity of the site of water oxidization.  相似文献   

12.
Treatment of Photosystem II particles from spinach chloroplasts with Triton X-100 with 2.6 M urea in the presence of 200 mM NaCl removed 3 polypeptides of 33 kDa, 24 kDa and 18 kDa, but left Mn bound to the particles. The (urea + NaCl)-treated particles could evolve oxygen in 200 mM, but not in 10 mM NaCl. Mn was gradually released with concomitant loss of oxygen-evolution activity in 10 mM NaCl but not in 200 mM Cl?. The NaCl-treated particles, which contained Mn and the 33-kDa polypeptide but not the 24-kDa and 18-kDa polypeptides, did not lose Mn or oxygen-evolution activity in 10 mM NaCl. These observations suggest that the 33-kDa polypeptide maintains the binding of Mn to the oxygen-evolution system and can be functionally replaced by 200 mM Cl?.  相似文献   

13.
The polypeptide composition and membrane structure of a variegated mutant of tobacco have been investigated. The pale green mutant leaf regions contain chloroplasts in which the amount of membrane stacking has been reduced (although not totally eliminated). The mutant membranes are almost totally deficient in Photosystem II when compared to wild-type chloroplast membranes, but still show near-normal levels of Photosystem I activity. The pattern of membrane polypeptides separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows several differences between mutant and wild-type membranes, although the major chlorophyll-protein complexes described in many other plant species are present in both mutant and wild-type samples. Freeze-fracture analysis of the internal structure of these photosynthetic membranes shows that the Photosystem II-deficient membranes lack the characteristic large particle associated with the E fracture face of the thylakoid. These membranes also lack a tetramer-like particle visible on the inner (ES) surface of the membrane. The other characteristics of the photosynthetic membrane, including the small particles observed on the P fracture faces in both stacked and unstacked regions, and the characteristic changes in the background matrix of the E fracture face which accompany thylakoid stacking, are unaltered in the mutant. From these and other observations we conclude that the large (EF and ES) particle represents an amalgam of many components comprising the Photosystem II reaction complex, that the absence of one or more of its components may prevent the structure from assembling, and that in its absence, Photosystem II activity cannot be observed.  相似文献   

14.
The NMR paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (NMR-PRE) produced in the solvent proton resonance by manganese in the S0 and S2 states of the oxygen evolving center (OEC) has been recorded for three Photosystem II (PS II)-enriched preparations: (1) PS II-enriched thylakoid membrane fragments (TMF-2 particles); (2) salt-washed (2M NaCl) TMF-2 particles; and (3) the octylglucopyranoside (OGP)-solubilized PS II complex. The second and third preparations, but not the first, are depleted of the peripheral 17 and 23 kD polypeptides associated with the OEC. It has been proposed that depletion of these polypeptides increases the exposure of OEC manganese to the aqueous phase. The NMR-PRE response measures the quantity (T1m+m)-1, where T1m is the spin relaxation time and m is the mean residence time with respect to chemical exchange reactions of solvent protons in the manganese coordination sphere, and, thus, the NMR-PRE provides a direct measure of the solvent proton chemical exchange rate constant m -1. This study tested whether the 17 and 23 kD polypeptides shield the OEC from the solvent phase and whether their depletion enhances the S2 and S0 NMR-PRE signals by removing a kinetic barrier to the solvent proton chemical exchange reaction. The amplitude of the S2 NMR-PRE signal, measured in its chemical exchange-limited regime (m>T1m), is slightly decreased, rather than increased, in preparations (2) and (3) relative to (1), indicating that removal of the 17 and 23 kD polypeptides slightly slows, rather than accelerates, the rate-limiting steps of the solvent proton chemical exchange reactions. In addition, the lifetime of the S2 state was shortened several-fold in the solubilized PS II complex and in salt-washed TMF-2 membranes relative to untreated TMF-2 control samples. The S0 NMR-PRE signal, which is present in TMF-2 suspensions, was not detected in suspensions of the solubilized PS II complex, even though these samples contained high concentrations of active manganese centers (approximately double those of the TMF-2 control) and exhibited an S2 NMR-PRE signal of comparable amplitude to that of the TMF-2 preparation. These results suggest that the 17 and 23 kD extrinsic polypeptides do not shield the NMR-visible water binding site in the OEC from the aqueous phase, although their removal substantially alters the proton relaxation efficiency by shortening T1m.Abbreviations ADRY acceleration of the deactivation reactions of the water splitting enzyme Y - BBY Photosystem II-enriched membrane fragments prepared by the method of Berthold et al. (1981) - CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone - Chl chlorophyll - DCBQ 2,5-dichlorobenzoquinone - MES morpholinoethanesulfonate - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - OEC oxygen evolving complex - OGP octylglucopyranoside - PRE paramagnetic relaxation enhancement - PS II Photosystem II - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TMF-2 Photosystem II-enriched thylakoid membrane fragments prepared by the method of Radmer et al. (1986) - T1, T2 longitudinal and transverse nuclear spin relaxation times  相似文献   

15.
H.H. Robinson  R.R. Sharp  C.F. Yocum   《BBA》1980,593(2):414-426
Treatments (illumination, chemical oxidation or reduction) which are potentially capable of producing paramagnetic centers in chloroplast thylakoid membranes do not produce enhancements of the proton magnetic relaxivities of these preparations. However, exposure of thylakoid membranes to varying concentrations of hydroxylamine induces a time-dependent increase in relaxivity for which the steady-state magnitude is dependent on hydroxylamine concentration. The appearance of relaxivity is correlated kinetically with inactivation of oxygen-evolving centers; in addition both processes show a threshold effect with respect to hydroxylamine concentration. Kinetic analyses of these hydroxylamine-induced effects suggest that at low (100 μM) and at intermediate (200–500 μM) concentrations, hydroxylamine extraction is partially counteracted by a reverse process that reactivates oxygen-evolving centers in the dark.  相似文献   

16.
Extraction conditions have been found which result in the retention of managanese to the 33–34 kDa protein, first isolated as an apoprotein by Kuwabara and Murata (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1979) Biochim. Biophys Acta 581, 228–236). By maintaining an oxidizing-solution potential, with hydrophilic and lipophilic redox buffers during protein extraction of spinach grana-thylakoid membranes, the 33–34 kDa protein is observed to bind a maximum of 2 Mn/protein which are not released by extended dialysis versus buffer. This manganese is a part of the pool of 4 Mn/Photosystem II normally associated with the oxygen-evolving complex. The mechanism for retention of Mn to the protein during isolation appears to be by suppression of chemical reduction of natively bound, high-valent Mn to the labile Mn(II) oxidation state. This protein is also present in stoichiometric levels in highly active, O2-evolving, detergent-extracted PS-II particles which contain 4–5 Mn/PS II. Conditions which result in the loss of Mn and O2 evolution activity from functional membranes, such as incubation in 1.5 mM NH2OH or in ascorbate plus dithionite, also release Mn from the protein. The protein exists as a monomer of 33 kDa by gel filtration and 34 kDa by gel electrophoresis, with an isoelectric point of 5.1 ± 0.1. The protein exhibits an EPR spectrum only below 12 K which extends over at least 2000 G centered at g = 2 consisting of non-uniformly separated hyperfine transitions with average splitting of 45–55 G. The magnitude of this splitting is nominally one-half the splitting observed in monomeric manganese complexes having O or N donor ligands. This is apparently due to electronic coupling of the two 55Mn nuclei in a presumed binuclear site. Either a ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn2(III,III) site or an antiferromagnetically coupled mixed-valence Mn2(II,III) site are considered as possible oxidation states to account for the EPR spectrum. Qualitatively similar hyperfine structure splittings are observed in ferromagnetically coupled binuclear Mn complexes having even-spin ground states. The extreme temperature dependence suggests the population of low-lying excited spin states such as are present in weakly coupled dimers and higher clusters of Mn ions, or, possibly, from efficient spin relaxation such as occurs in the Mn(III) oxidation state. Either 1.5 mM NH2OH or incubation with reducing agents abolishes the low temperature EPR signal and releases two Mn(II) ions to solution. This is consistent with the presence of Mn(III) in the isolated protein. The intrinsically unstable Mn2(II,III) oxidation state observed in model compounds favors the assignment of the stable protein oxidation state to the Mn2(III,III) formulation. This protein exhibits characteristics consistent with an identification with the long-sought Mn site for photosynthetic O2 evolution. An EPR spectrum having qualitatively similar features is observable in dark-adapted intact, photosynthetic membranes (Dismukes, G.C., Abramowicz, D.A., Ferris, F.K., Mathur, P., Upadrashta, B. and Watnick, P. (1983) in The Oxygen-Evolving System of Plant Photosynthesis (Inoue, Y., ed.), pp. 145–158, Academic Press, Tokyo) and in detergent-extracted, O2-evolving Photosystem-II particles (Abramowicz, D.A., Raab, T.K. and Dismukes, G.C. (1984) Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress on Photosynthesis (Sybesma, C., ed.), Vol. I, pp. 349–354, Martinus Nijhoff/Dr. W. Junk Publishers, The Hague, The Netherlands), thus establishing a direct link with the O2 evolving complex.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Using inside-out thylakoid membranes, it has been shown that the oxidation of water and associated reduction of dichlorophenol indophenol is partially inhibited by low concentrations of cation chelators. This inhibition correlates with a removal of two manganese ions per Photosystem II reaction centre. The chelator-induced inhibition was completely reversed by the addition of low levels of Mn2+ (C12 ≈ 20 μM) and higher levels of Mg2+ and Ca2+ (C12 ≈ 1 mM). Other cations were not effective, indicating that the ability to overcome the inhibition did not involve a general electrostatic screening process. The degree of inhibition by chelators was greater at lower light intensities and after treatment with glutaraldehyde. In the presence of glutaraldehyde the stimulatory effect of Mn2+ was lost, while pretreatment with Mn2+ prevented the glutaraldehyde effect. These results are discussed in terms of conformational changes of the electron donation chains involving cation- (preferentially Mn-) dependent coupling between the oxygen evolving and reaction-centre complexes of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

19.
Treatment with 2.6 M urea of the Photosystem II particles depleted of two polypeptides of 24 kDa and 18 kDa completely released a polypeptide of 33 kDa and eliminated the oxygen-evolution activity. The 33-kDa polypeptide rebound to the urea-treated particles and partially reactivated the oxygen evolution. A quantitative analysis of the rebinding suggests tha there is a specific binding site for the 33-kDa polypeptide on the membrane surface.  相似文献   

20.
A rapid and simple procedure is presented for the purification of chloroplast cytochrome b-559. The method is based on the protocol devised by Garewal and Wasserman (Garewal, H.S. and Wasserman, A.R. (1974) Biochemistry 13, 4063–4071), which we have modified to eliminate the requirement for a lengthy electrophoretic step. Novel features of our method include: the use of oxygen-evolving Photosystem II preparations (Kuwabara, T. and Murata, N. (1982) Plant Cell Physiol. 23, 533–539) as the starting material; isocratic elution of cytochrome b-559 from a DEAE-cellulose column (yielding the protein in a pure state); and a simple column procedure for removal of excess Triton X-100. The procedure has been applied to both spinach and maize (Zea mays L.). Purified cytochromes b-559 from these species have similar optical spectra and mobility during gel electrophoresis under native conditions. Lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of cytochrome b-559 from both spinach and maize reveals a major polypeptide band (apparent molecular mass = 9 kDa), and two minor bands (apparent molecular masses = 10 kDa and 6 kDa).  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号