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1.
Dvorah Ish-Shalom  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(3):498-507
The polypeptide pattern, chlorophyll-protein complexes, fluorescence emission spectra and light intensity required for saturation of electron flow via Photosystem (PS) II and PS I in a pale-green photoautotrophic mutant, y-lp, were compared to those of the parent strain, Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1 cells. The mutant exhibits a 686 nm fluorescence yield at 25°C and 77 K 2–6-fold higher than that of the parent strain cells, and is deficient in thylakoid polypeptides 14, 17.2, 18 and 22 according to the nomenclature of Chua (Chua, N.-H. (1980) Methods Enzymol. 60C, 434–446). All chlorophyll-protein complexes ascribed to PS II and the CP I complex were present in both type of cells. However, a chlorophyll-protein complex CP Ia containing — in the parent strain — the 66–68 kDa polypeptides of CP I and the four above-mentioned polypeptides, was absent in the mutant. It was previously reported that a chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, obtained from C. reinhardii contains five polypeptides, namely, 14, 15, 17.2, 18 and 22 (Wollman, F.A. and Bennoun, P. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 352–360). A CP O-like complex was present also in the mutant y-lp cells but it contains only one polypeptide, 15. Energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not impaired in the mutant, although a 4-fold higher light intensity was required for the saturation of PS I electron flow in the y-lp cells as compared with the parent strain. No difference was found in the light saturation curves for PS II activity between the mutant and parent strain cells. Based on these and additional data (Gershoni, J.M., Shochat, S., Malkin, S. and Ohad, I. (1982) Plant Physiol. 70, 637–644), it is concluded that the chlorophyll-protein complexes of PS I in Chlamydomonas comprise a reaction center-core antenna complex containing the 66–68 kDa polypeptides (CP I), a connecting antenna consisting of four polypeptides (14, 17.2, 18 and 22), and a light-harvesting antenna containing one polypeptide, 15. These appear to be organized as a complex, CP Ia. The interconnecting antenna is deficient in the y-lp mutant and thus the CP Ia complex is unstable and energy is not transferred from CP O to CP I. The effective cross-section of PS I antenna is thus reduced and a high fluorescence is emitted at 686 nm.  相似文献   

2.
Trypsin digestion of photosynthetic membranes isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves eliminates the cation stimulation of chlorophyll fluorescence. High concentrations of cations protect the fluorescence yield against trypsin digestion, and the cation specificity for this protection closely resembles that required for the stimulation of fluorescence by cations. Trypsin digestion reverses cation-induced thylakoid stacking, and the time course of this effect seems to parallel that of the reversal of cation fluorescence. High concentrations of cations protect thylakoid stacking and cation-stimulated fluorescence alike. The cation stimulation of photosytem II photochemistry remains intact after trypsinization has reversed both cation-induced thylakoid stacking and fluorescence yield. It is concluded that cation-stimulated fluorescence yield, and not the cation stimulation of photosystem II photochemistry, is associated with thylakoid membrane stacking.  相似文献   

3.
《BBA》1986,851(2):322-326
We have used trivalent lanthanide metal cations in the buffering media of pea chloroplasts to probe the stacking arrangement of thylakoid membranes and the spatial distribution of chlorophyll-protein complexes of Photosystems I and II. Measurements of steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra of pea chloroplasts at room temperature demonstrate that, within this tripositive valency group, the extent of membrane appression is a function of hydrated metal ionic radius. These results are in agreement with a recent investigation using monovalent and divalent metal cations (Karukstis, K.K. and Sauer, K. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 806, 374–389). In addition, the lanthanide cation concentration effective in producing the maximum chlorophyll fluorescence intensity upon grana formation is dependent on hydrated ionic size. The current investigation supports the proposed hypothesis that cation screening ability defines the extent of intermembrane separation as well as the extent of lateral distribution of chlorophyll-protein complexes.  相似文献   

4.
Chloroplast membranes contain a light-harvesting pigment-protein complex (LHC) which binds chlorophylls a and b. A mild trypsin digestion of intact thylakoid membranes has been utilized to specifically alter the apparent molecular weights of polypeptides of this complex. The modified membrane preparations were analyzed for altered functional and structural properties. Cation-induced changes in room temperature fluorescence intensity and low temperature chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra, and cation regulation of the quantum yield of photosystem I and II partial reactions at limiting light were lost following the trypsin-induced alteration of the LHC. Electron microscopy revealed that cations can neither maintain nor promote grana stacking in membranes which have been subjected to mild trypsin treatment. Freeze-fracture analysis of these membranes showed no significant differences in particle density or average particle size of membrane subunits on the EF fracture face; structural features of the modified lamellae were comparable to membranes which had been unstacked in a “low salt” buffer. Digitonin digestion of trypsin-treated membranes in the presence of cations followed by differential centrifugation resulted in a subchloroplast fractionation pattern similar to that observed when control chloroplasts were detergent treated in cation-free medium. We conclude that: (a) the initial action of trypsin at the thylakoid membrane surface of pea chloroplasts was the specific alteration of the LHC polypeptides, (b) the segment of the LHC polypeptides which was altered by trypsin is necessary for cation-mediated grana stacking and cation regulation of membrane subunit distribution, and (c) cation regulation of excitation energy distribution between photosystem I and II involves the participation of polypeptide segments of the LHC which are exposed at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

5.
The disorganization of grana in spinach chloroplasts and their reconstitution has been studied by varying their ionic environment. Dissociation in low-salt media and reconstitution by added cations (monovalent or divalent) was correlated with the formation in high yield of light or heavy subchloroplast membrane fractions, respectively, produced after digitonin treatment of chloroplasts. The formation of heavy subchloroplast fractions was dependent on cation concentration and reached a plateau at 0.1 m monovalent cation or 0.002 m divalent cation. The cation reconstituted fractions recovered the composition and activities of the respective fractions obtained from control chloroplasts. Cation addition to light subchloroplast fractions isolated from low-salt agranal chloroplasts after digitonin disruption also produced heavy fractions. Divalent cations were more effective than monovalent. The heavy fractions produced were enriched in Chlorophyll b and photosystem II activity while the light fractions were enriched in Chlorophyll a and photosystem I activity. The mechanism by which cations induce formation of heavy subchloroplast fractions is not osmotic. Upon reconstitution, stacking of thylakoids seems to occur at specific membrane binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
Francis-Andr  Wollman  Pierre Bennoun 《BBA》1982,680(3):352-360
A new chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, was isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardii using lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis run at 4°C. A similar complex is recovered using Triton/digitonin solubilization of thylakoid membranes of the F54-14 mutant lacking in CP I and ATPase. CP O is enriched in long-wavelength chlorophyll a and contains five polypeptides (27.5, 27, 25, 23 and 19 kDa). Its 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum peaks at 705 nm while CP II have an emission maximum at 682 and 720 nm, respectively. Comparison of the polypeptide pattern of the wild type and AC40 mutant of C. reinhardii shows that the five CP O polypeptides are specifically lacking in the mutant. Although the 77 K emission originating from the Photosystem (PS) I pigments is lower in the mutant than in the wild type, the two spectra show the same peaks at 686, 694 and 717 nm. However, comparison of the 77 K emission spectrum of the F14 mutant lacking in CP I with that of the double mutant AC40-14 lacking in CP I and CP O shows the absence in the latter of the large emission band peaking at 707 nm. The 707 nm emission is thought to arise from some PS I antennae and is quenched in the wild type by the presence of PS I traps located in CP I. We conclude that CP O is a part of the PS I antenna in C. reinhardii which controls the 707 nm fluorescence emission.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract Comparative studies on the low temperature fluorescence emission of whole cells, purified chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes and on patterns noted in sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) for chlorophyll-protein complexes and chloroplast membrane polypeptides of Scenedesmus obliquus with several distinct mutant classes has allowed further correlation between the fluorescence emission bands seen at 77K and the known chlorophyll-protein complexes. In mutants deficient in photosystem II (PS-II; total loss of the reducing side) the fluorescence emission spectra showed only two peaks, i.e., 686 and 718 nm, but in the wild type, in mutants lacking the oxidizing side of PS-II and in phenotypes missing the CP-a1 complex (and P-700 activity) all three emission bands at 686, 696 and 718 nm were present. In a mutant lacking the light-harvesting CP-a/b complex the emission peak at 686 nm was strongly reduced and the longer wavelength emissions predominated. Gel electrophoresis studies showed that the PS-II (reducing side) mutants lacked the polypeptides of apparent molecular weight 54 and 51 kilodaltons and the chlorophyll-protein complex, CP-aII, of apparent molecular weight 32 kilodaltons. Contrarily, the loss of the oxidizing side of PS-II did not result in any alteration of these components. Genetic deletion of CP-a1 did not alter significantly the long wavelength emission even though the isolated CP-a1 shows the low temperature-dependent long wavelength emission comparable to that seen in the whole cell. It was deduced that remaining PS-I antennae chlorophylls must account for the emission seen at 718 nm. The absence of the CP-a/b complex and the strong simultaneous decrease of the 686 nm emission strengthens the concept that this complex is the primary emitter of fluorescence at room temperature. Its absence facilitated the detection of the CP-aII complex in SDS-PAGE and enhanced the in vivo fluorescence by the two photosystems. Parallel experiments with two mutants which green and develop, one to the wild-type and the other to the CP-a/b deficient phenotype, provided additional evidence for the source of the low temperature emission bands.  相似文献   

8.
Summary A mutant of C. reinhardtii was isolated which displays an abnormal fluorescence yield of chlorophyll in vivo. This mutant is deficient specifically in Photosystem I activity, and it contains only 10–15% of the normal amount of the chlorophyll-protein complex CP1 in its thylakoid membranes. Genetic analysis shows that the mutation is inherited in a uniparental manner.This is the first report of a cytoplasmic mutation in c. reinhardtii affecting a thylakoid membrane polypeptide whose function in the photosynthetic process is well established.  相似文献   

9.
A Mg2+-induced decrease of the rate of photosystem I (PS I) electron transport (DCIPH2 → methyl viologen) in thylakoids under saturated light intensities has been reported earlier (S. Bose, J. E. Mullet, G. E. Hoch, and C. J. Arntzen, 1981, Photobiochem. Photobiophys.2, 45–52). A similar effect is observed with Na+, although the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was higher by about two orders of magnitude. The cation effect was gradually abolished as the thylakoids were aged by incubation at 30 °C for 6 h. The loss of cation effect on PS I electron transport rate during aging was parallel to the corresponding loss of cation effect on thylakoid stacking. The cation concentration required for thylakoid stacking and the degree of inhibition as a function of cation concentration correlated strongly with the degree of thylakoid stacking. These observations indicated that the inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport by cations is a consequence of cation-induced stacking of thylakoid membranes. The observed inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport is discussed in terms of two hypotheses: (i) a fraction (20–30%) of the PS I complexes is trapped in the appressed region of grana and becomes unavailable to the electron donor (DCIPH2) and (ii) the membrane structure is altered by the cations in such a manner that the rate constant of electron donation by the donor to the electron transport chain in the thylakoid is decreased.  相似文献   

10.
用紫外光处理野生型莱菌衣藻(Chlamydomonas reinhardtii)CC-125得到突变体CC-1047。电泳检测证明:突变型衣藻CC-1047缺失了绝大部分色素蛋白复合体I(CPI)。进而详细地研究了CPI的部分缺失对突变型衣藻的光物理和光化学反应的影响。野生型衣藻的低温荧光峰有两个,分别在691nm和717nm左右;突变型CC-1047的低温荧光峰只有一个,在709nm左右,且荧光强度增加了3-4倍。709nm的峰被认为是光系统I捕光天线色素所发出的。在突变体中出现的这个峰,说明天线色素吸收的光能未能传递到光系统I的反应中心,再进行电荷分离;而是以荧光的形式也发生了改变,野生型和突变型的荧光在开启作用光后都很快上升,但随后野生型的逐渐下降,而突变型CC-1047的基本上不下降;与野生型相比,突变型衣藻CC-1047的光系统I反应中心色系P700的氧化还原活性降低80%以上,表明突变型衣藻细胞内与PSI相关的电子传递已不能正常运转。  相似文献   

11.
Using analytical polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of detergent extracts of Scenedesmus chloroplast fragments, we have shown that the electrophoresis pattern of Bishop's mutant 8 (which lacks a functional Photoreaction I) differs from the pattern shown by the wild-type and mutant II. Gels from mutant 8 extracts do not show a band corresponding to the chlorophyll-protein-detergent complex I nor is a corresponding protein band present. Thus chlorophyll-protein-detergent complex I reflects solubilization of a real and essential chlorophyll-protein complex of System I of photosynthesis, and lack of a functional System I in this mutant is due to absence of this chlorophyll-protein complex. This implies that at least this chlorophyll-protein complex is required for photosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
G.F.W. Searle  J. Barber 《BBA》1979,545(3):508-518
The amphipathic fluorescence probe, 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has been used to investigate the surface electrical properties of chloroplast thylakoid membranes. The fluorescence yield of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate in aqueous solution increases on addition of hypotonically shocked chloroplast, and the emission maximum shifts towards the blue to 440 nm, although the emission spectrum is somewhat distorted by chloroplast pigment absorption.The intensity of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is further increased on adding salts to the membrane suspension, and changes of >100% are routinely observed. Similar observations have also been made with soya bean phospholipid (azolectin) liposomes. The magnitude of the fluorescence increase is dependent on membrane concentration, being more pronounced at high surface area/suspending volume ratios. The effect of salt addition appears to be that of shielding the fixed negative charges on the membrane surface, thus increasing the fraction of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate molecules at the surface, where the 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has a higher fluorescence yield than in free aqueous solution. This concept is supported by the fact that the effectiveness of salts in increasing 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is as predicted by classical electrical double layer theory: governed mainly by the charge carried by the cation with an order of effectiveness C3+ > C2+ > C+, and not by the chemical nature of the cation or by the nature of its co-ion.It has been argued that the chlorophyll fluorescence yield, controlled by the cation composition of the suspending medium follows the total diffusible positive charge density at the thylakoid membrane surface (Barber, J., Mills, J. and Love, A. (1977) Febs. Lett. 74, 174–181). Although the cation induced 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yield changes show similar characteristics, there are also distinct differences between the two phenomena particularly when cations are added to chloroplasts initially suspended in a virtually cation-free medium. Therefore it is concluded that although both 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yields are governed by the electrical properties of the thylakoid membrane surface, the mechanism controlling their cation sensitivity is not the same.  相似文献   

13.
The stability of chlorophyll-protein complexes of photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) was investigated by chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence spectroscopy, absorption spectra and native green gel separation system during flag leaf senescence of two rice varieties (IIyou 129 and Shanyou 63) grown under outdoor conditions. During leaf senescence, photosynthetic CO(2) assimilation rate, carboxylase activity of Rubisco, chlorophyll and carotenoids contents, and the chlorophyll a/b ratio decreased significantly. The 77 K Chl fluorescence emission spectra of thylakoid membranes from mature leaves had two peaks at around 685 and 735 nm emitting mainly from PSII and PSI, respectively. The total Chl fluorescence yields of PSI and PSII decreased significantly with senescence progressing. However, the decrease in the Chl fluorescence yield of PSI was greater than in the yield of PSII, suggesting that the rate of degradation in chlorophyll-protein complexes of PSI was greater than in chlorophyll-protein complexes of PSII. The fluorescence yields for all chlorophyll-protein complexes decreased significantly with leaf senescence in two rice varieties but the extents of their decrease were significantly different. The greatest decrease in the Chl fluorescence yield was in PSI core, followed by LHCI, CP47, CP43, and LHCII. These results indicate that the rate of degradation for each chlorophyll-protein complex was different and the order for the stability of chlorophyll-protein complexes during leaf senescence was: LHCII>CP43>CP47>LHCI>PSI core, which was partly supported by the green gel electrophoresis of the chlorophyll-protein complexes.  相似文献   

14.
The Chl-protein complexes of three maize (Zea mays L.) mutants and one barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutant were analyzed using low temperature Chl fluorescence emissions spectroscopy and LDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The maize mutants hcf-3, hcf-19, and hcf-114 all exhibited a high Chl fluorescence (hcf) phenotype indicating a disruption of the energy transfer within the photosynthetic apparatus. The mutations in each of these maize mutants affects Photosystem II. The barley mutant analyzed was the well characterized Chl b-less mutant chlorina-f2, which did not exhibit the hcf phenotype. Chlorina-f2 was used because no complete Chl b-less mutant of maize is available. Analysis of hcf-3, hcf-19, and hcf-114 revealed that in the absence of CP43, LHC II can still transfer excitation energy to CP47. These results suggest that in mutant membranes LHC II can interact with CP47 as well as CP43. This functional interaction of LHC II with CP47 may only occur in the absence of CP43, however, it is possible that LHC II is positioned in the thylakoid membranes in a manner which allows association with both CP43 and CP47.Abbreviations hcf high chlorophyll fluorescence - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - LHC II light-harvesting complex of Photosystem II - LHC I light-harvesting complex of Photosystem I - CPIa chlorophyll-protein complex consisting of LHC I and the PS I core complex - CPI chlorophyll-protein complex consisting of the PS I core complex - CP47 47 kDa chlorophyll-protein of the Photosystem II core - CP43 43 kDa chlorophyll-protein of the Photosystem II core - CP29 29 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - CP26 26 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - CP24 24 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - fp free pigments  相似文献   

15.
We have investigated the structure of the photosynthetic membrane in a mutant of barley known to lack a chlorophyll-binding protein. This protein is thought to channel excitation energy to photosystem II, and is known as the "light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex." Extensive stacking of thylakoids into grana occurs in both mutant and wild-type chloroplasts. Examination of membrane internal structure by freeze-fracturing indicates that only slight differences exist between the fracture faces of mutant and wild-type membranes. These differences are slight reductions in the size of particles visible on the EFs fracture face, and in the number of particles seen on the PFs fracture face. No differences can be detected between mutant and wild-type on the etched out surface of the membrane. In contrast, tetrameric particles visible on the etched inner surface of wild-type thylakoids are extremely difficult to recognize on similar surfaces of the mutant. These particles can be recognized on inner surfaces of the mutant membranes when they are organized into regular lattices, but these lattices show a much closer particle-to-particle spacing than similar lattices in wild-type membranes. Although several interpretations of these data are possible, these observations are consistent with the proposal that the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of photosystem II is bound to the tetramer (which is visible on the EFs face as a single particle) near the inner surface of the membrane. The large tetramer, which other studies have shown to span the thylakoid membrane, may represent an assembly of protein, lipid, and pigment comprising all the elements of the photosystem II reaction. A scheme is presented which illustrates one possibility for the light reaction across the photosynthetic membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Y. Yamamoto  J. Barber 《BBA》1981,637(2):224-230
The degree of chlorophyll fluorescence polarization (p) at 740 nm was measured at room temperature for pea chloroplasts subjected to various conditions. (1) In agreement with previous published observations, p decreased when the Photosystem (PS) II traps were closed by illumination in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. (2) Under these conditions, the magnitude of p was also sensitive to the presence of salts. Under conditions when ‘spillover’ of the excitation energy from PS II to PS I was low, p was also low, being consistent with increased migration of energy between the PS II light-harvesting chlorophylls. In contrast, when spillover was at a maximum p increased. (3) The change in p in the presence of salts was dependent on the concentration and valency of the cations in such a way as to suggest the changes were mediated through electrostatic forces. The dependency of p on ionic composition of the experimental medium was closely related to the associated changes in fluorescence yield. (4) Membrane stacking, caused by lowering pH of the chloroplast suspension, did not induce a significant change in p, suggesting that this pH-induced process is different from the membrane stacking brought about by manipulating the salt levels. (5) Incubation of thylakoids with ATP induces light-dependent phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complexes, and regulates excitation energy transfer between PS I and PS II (Bennett, J., Steinback, K.R. and Arntzen, C.J. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77, 5253–5257). Under conditions which bring about this phosphorylation it was found that p increased to a value indicative of spillover.  相似文献   

17.
The extraction of chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes from thylakoids by the detergent octyl glucoside is strongly affected by pretreatment of the thylakoids with trypsin or cations. In these experiments, washed thylakoids were incubated in the presence of 0.5 μm to 5 mm Mg2+, pelleted, and extracted with octyl glucoside (30 mm). Increasing amounts of Mg2+ depressed extractability of all CP complexes, but especially the chlorophyll a + b-containing light-harvesting complex (LHC). This cation effect is observed with other cations which promote thylakoid stacking (5 mm Mn2+ or Ca2+, 50 mm Na+). However, the effect is not merely due to stacking, since low concentrations of Mg2+ (0.5 μmto 0.5 mm) have a marked effect on extractability but have no effect on light scattering (OD 550 nm), an indicator of stacking. Furthermore, trypsin treatment of thylakoids stacked with 5 mm Mg2+ caused a significant reversal of stacking, but had little effect on extractability. Trypsin treatment of unstacked membranes resulted in increased extractability of all CP complexes, but especially of the LHC. Cation-treated membranes are also significantly different from those “stacked” at pH 4.5. While the latter do show decreased extractability, there is no change in the chlorophyll ab ratio of the extract, and the membranes cannot be “unstacked” with trypsin. We conclude that octyl glucoside extractability reflects the lateral interaction of CP complexes with each other and with other components in the same plane of the membrane. It is clear that divalent cations have several effects on thylakoid membranes, not all of which are due to their ability to promote stacking.  相似文献   

18.
A good correlation exists between the extent of thylakoid aggregation (grana reconstitution) and the increase in the chlorophyll a fluorescence yield (FDCMU; DCMU = 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethyl urea) caused by the addition of monovalent or divalent cations to low-salt disorganized (agranal) chloroplasts. The extent of grana stacking was monitored by the yield of heavy subchloroplast fractions after digitonin disruption of chloroplasts. A good correlation of the cation effect on both parameters was also found in light subchloroplast fractions (10,000g supernatants) obtained from sonicated “low-salt” Tricine-suspended pea chloroplasts. Addition of cations to the agranal protochloroplasts of etiolated pea or bean leaves exposed to periodic light-dark cycles, suspended in low-salt Tricine buffer, does not affect formation of heavy subchloroplast fractions, nor does it affect their chlorophyll a fluorescence yield level (FDCMU). The cation effect on the increase of the chlorophyll a fluorescence yield level seems to be due to the cation-induced thylakoid structural changes leading to grana stacking.  相似文献   

19.
A photosystem II core complex from spinach exhibiting high rates of electron transport was obtained rapidly and in high yield by treatment of a Tris-extracted, O2-evolving photosystem II preparation with the detergent dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside. The core complex was essentially free of light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein and photosystem I polypeptides, and was highly enriched in the polypeptides associated with the photosystem II reaction center (45 and 49 kDa), cytochrome b559, and three polypeptides in the region 32-34 kDa. The photosystem II core complex contained two chlorophyll-proteins which had a slightly higher apparent molecular mass than CPa-1 and CPa-2. Additionally, a high-molecular-mass chlorophyll-protein complex termed CPa* was observed, which exhibited a low fluorescence yield when illuminated with ultraviolet light. This observation suggests that CPa* contains a functionally efficient quencher of chlorophyll fluorescence, possibly P680.  相似文献   

20.
We studied the capacity of the thylakoid membrane to form grana stacks in the presence of cations, monovalent or divalent, added to N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]glycine “low-salt” disorganized plastids during their greening. Grana stacking was monitored by the yield of heavy subchloroplast fractions separated by differential centrifugation after digitonin disruption of plastids (J. H. Argyroudi-Akoyunoglou, 1976, Arch. Biochem. Biophys., 176, 267–274). Primary thylakoids of the agranal protochloroplasts formed in periodic light do not show the cation-induced stacking capacity of the mature green chloroplast thylakoids. Similarly, the cation effect saturates at lower cation concentrations in mature chloroplasts than in plastids of the early stages of greening. The capacity for cation-induced stacking and for saturation of the effect at low cation concentrations appears gradually after exposure to continuous light and parallel to the appearance of chlorophyll b and the polypeptides of the 25,000–30,000 molecular weight range of lipid-free thylakoids, probably derived from the chlorophyll b-rich chlorophyll protein Complex II. The thylakoid peripheral stroma proteins ribulosediphosphate carboxylase and the coupling factor protein are not involved in the cation-induced stacking, since their removal (H. Strotmann, H. Hesse, and K. Edelmann, 1973, Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 314, 202–210) does not affect the thylakoid aggregation.  相似文献   

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