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1.
Protein modulase and ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase are soluble proteins that have been suggested to catalyze the light-dependent modulation of enzyme activity in the stromal compartment of the chloroplast. Protein modulase is active in vitro without additional ferredoxin and thioredoxin, whereas ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase requires additional ferredoxin and thioredoxin. We hypothesize that protein modulase is a complex protein composed of ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase, ferredoxin, and thioredoxin. In reconstituted chloroplast systems, antiserum directed against ferredoxin, at concentrations sufficient to inhibit the photoreduction of NADP, had no effect on light modulation. Antiserum directed against thioredoxin gave variable results: one batch of polyclonal antibodies inhibited light modulation, another was stimulatory, and another was without effect. These results suggest that the ferredoxin and thioredoxin active in light modulation are not free in solution. Furthermore, molecular sieve chromatography of stromal proteins results in the elution of four species that catalyze light modulation. Based on whether or not ferredoxin and/or thioredoxin must be added for activity, these four species have been tentatively identified as protein modulase, a complex of ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase and ferredoxin, a complex of ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin, and ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase. That is, the four correspond to all the possible combinations of ferredoxin, ferredoxin/thioredoxin reductase, and thioredoxin. We suggest that buffer ionic strength affects the interactions among these proteins and in part determines the fate of the protein modulase complex in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
Initially linked to photosynthesis, regulation by change in the redox state of thiol groups (S-S<-- -->2SH) is now known to occur throughout biology. Thus, in addition to serving important structural and catalytic functions, it is recognized that, in many cases, disulphide bonds can be broken and reformed for regulation. Several systems, each linking a hydrogen donor to an intermediary disulphide protein, act to effect changes that alter the activity of target proteins by change in the thiol redox state. Pertinent to the present discussion is the chloroplast ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, comprised of photoreduced ferredoxin, a thioredoxin, and the enzyme ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase, that occur in the stroma. In this system, thioredoxin links the activity of enzymes to light: those enzymes functional in biosynthesis are reductively activated by light via thioredoxin (S-S-->2SH), whereas counterparts acting in degradation are deactivated under illumination conditions and are oxidatively activated in the dark (2SH-->S-S). Recent research has uncovered a new paradigm in which an immunophilin, FKBP13, and potentially other enzymes of the chloroplast thylakoid lumen are oxidatively activated in the light (2SH-->S-S). The present review provides a perspective on this recent work.  相似文献   

3.
The [2Fe-2S] soluble ferredoxin from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was mutated by site directed mutagenesis, using PCR and the expression plasmid pET-Fd as a template. The recombinant mutated proteins were purified to homogeneity and tested in the activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase, a light dependent reaction in which ferredoxin thioredoxin reductase (FTR) and thioredoxin are involved. The mutation of residue Glu-91 (E92 in spinach, E94 in Anabaena) alone, either to Gln (E91Q) or to Lys (E91K), was found to completely abolish the reaction of the enzyme light activation. On the other hand, the mutants (E92Q) or (E92K) were as efficient as the wild type ferredoxin in this reaction whereas the double mutants (E91Q/E92Q) or (E91K/E92K) had no activity. In addition, a triple mutant (D25A/E28Q/E29Q) was also found to be inactive for this redox dependent light activation. All these mutations had much weaker effects on the ferredoxin/ferredoxin NADP reductase interaction as measured by the cytochrome c reduction assay. These results indicate that there is a recognition site for FTR in the C terminus part of ferredoxin, but also that a core of negatively charged residues in the α1 helix of ferredoxin might be important in the general process of light activation.  相似文献   

4.
The chloroplast ATP synthase is known to be regulated by redox modulation of a disulfide bridge on the γ‐subunit through the ferredoxin–thioredoxin regulatory system. We show that a second enzyme, the recently identified chloroplast NADPH thioredoxin reductase C (NTRC), plays a role specifically at low irradiance. Arabidopsis mutants lacking NTRC (ntrc) displayed a striking photosynthetic phenotype in which feedback regulation of the light reactions was strongly activated at low light, but returned to wild‐type levels as irradiance was increased. This effect was caused by an altered redox state of the γ‐subunit under low, but not high, light. The low light‐specific decrease in ATP synthase activity in ntrc resulted in a buildup of the thylakoid proton motive force with subsequent activation of non‐photochemical quenching and downregulation of linear electron flow. We conclude that NTRC provides redox modulation at low light using the relatively oxidizing substrate NADPH, whereas the canonical ferredoxin–thioredoxin system can take over at higher light, when reduced ferredoxin can accumulate. Based on these results, we reassess previous models for ATP synthase regulation and propose that NTRC is most likely regulated by light. We also find that ntrc is highly sensitive to rapidly changing light intensities that probably do not involve the chloroplast ATP synthase, implicating this system in multiple photosynthetic processes, particularly under fluctuating environmental conditions.  相似文献   

5.
A heterogeneous photochemical electron relay system was constructed, mimicking the chloroplast electron transport reaction in order to activate the NADP-malate dehydrogenase in light. The photocatalyst acridine orange or proflavin sensitized EDTA-dependent reduction of ferredoxin. In a complete system, consisting of a dye donor couple, ferredoxin, thioredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase, light activation of purified NADP-MDH was observed in vitro. The chloroplast mediated redox activation of enzyme essentially required ferredoxin, while heterogeneous photochemical mediated activation of enzyme need not require ferredoxin. The heterogeneus photochemical system activated NADP-MDH by eight fold similar to chloroplasts mediated ferredoxin dependent redox activation but was not affected by the presence of disalicylinden propanediamine-1, 2-disulphonic acid while there was complete inhibition of chloroplasts mediated activation of NADP-MDH in presence of this inhibitor. These observations suggest that a thiol mediator is essential for reductive activation of NADP-MDH and ferredoxin is not required for photochemical activation.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism by which the ferredoxin-thioredoxin system activates the target enzyme, NADP-malate dehydrogenase, was investigated by analyzing the sulfhydryl status of individual protein components with [14C]iodoacetate and monobromobimane. The data indicate that ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase (FTR)--an iron-sulfur enzyme present in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms--is the first member of a thiol chain that links light to enzyme regulation. FTR possesses a catalytically active dithiol group localized on the 13 kDa (similar) subunit, that occurs in all species investigated and accepts reducing equivalents from photoreduced ferredoxin and transfers them stoichiometrically to the disulfide form of thioredoxin m. The reduced thioredoxin m, in turn, reduces NADP-malate dehydrogenase, thereby converting it from an inactive (S-S) to an active (SH) form. The means by which FTR is able to combine electrons (from photoreduced ferredoxin) with protons (from the medium) to reduce its active disulfide group remains to be determined.  相似文献   

7.
Results obtained with isolated intact chloroplasts maintained aerobically under light and dark conditions confirm earlier findings with reconstituted enzyme assays and indicate that the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system functions as a light-mediated regulatory thiol chain. The results were obtained by application of a newly devised procedure in which a membrane-permeable thiol labeling reagent, monobromobimane (mBBr), reacts with sulfhydryl groups and renders the derivatized protein fluorescent. The mBBr-labeled protein in question is isolated individually from chloroplasts by immunoprecipitation and its thiol redox status is determined quantitatively by combining sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorescence measurements. The findings indicate that each member of the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system containing a catalytically active thiol group is reduced in isolated intact chloroplasts after a 2-min illumination. The extents of reduction were FTR, 38%; thioredoxin m, 75% (11-kDa form) and 87% (13-kDa form); thioredoxin f, 95%. Reduction of each of these components was negligible both in the dark and when chloroplasts were transferred from light to dark conditions. The target enzyme, NADP-malate dehydrogenase, also underwent net reduction in illuminated intact chloroplasts. Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase showed increased mBBr labeling under these conditions, but due to interfering gamma globulin proteins it was not possible to determine whether this was a result of net reduction as is known to take place in reconstituted assays. Related experiments demonstrated that mBBr, as well as N-ethylmaleimide, stabilized photoactivated NADP-malate dehydrogenase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase so that they remained active in the dark. By contrast, phosphoribulokinase, another thioredoxin-linked enzyme, was immediately deactivated following mBBr addition. These latter results provide new information on the relation between the regulatory and active sites of these enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
The role of the ferredoxin:thioredoxin system in the reversible light activation of chloroplast enzymes by thiol-disulfide interchange with thioredoxins is now well established. Recent fruitful collaboration between biochemists and structural biologists, reflected by the shared authorship of the paper, allowed to solve the structures of all of the components of the system, including several target enzymes, thus providing a structural basis for the elucidation of the activation mechanism at a molecular level. In the present Review, these structural data are analyzed in conjunction with the information that was obtained previously through biochemical and site-directed mutagenesis approaches. The unique 4Fe-4S cluster enzyme ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (FTR) uses photosynthetically reduced ferredoxin as an electron donor to reduce the disulfide bridge of different thioredoxin isoforms. Thioredoxins in turn reduce regulatory disulfides of various target enzymes. This process triggers conformational changes on these enzymes, allowing them to reach optimal activity. No common activation mechanism can be put forward for these enzymes, as every thioredoxin-regulated protein undergoes specific structural modifications. It is thus important to solve the structures of the individual target enzymes in order to fully understand the molecular mechanism of the redox regulation of each of them.  相似文献   

9.
A heterogeneous photochemical electron relay system was constructed, mimicking the chloroplast electron transport reaction, in order to activate fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase in light. The photocatalyst acridine orange or proflavin sensitizes EDTA dependent reduction of ferredoxin. In a complete system, consisting of a dye-donor couple, ferredoxin, thioredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase, light activation of purified spinach fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase was observed in vitro. The ferredoxin was not essential for activation of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase using heterogeneous photochemical system while chloroplasts mediated redox activation essentially required ferredoxin. The heterogeneous photochemical system activated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase by about 6 fold similar to chloroplasts mediated ferredoxin dependent redox activation. These observations suggest that a thiol mediator is essential for the reductive activation of carboxylating enzymes of photosynthesis. The mechanism of activation is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase is an essential enzyme of the light dependent regulatory system in oxygenic photosynthesis. It is composed of two dissimilar subunits and contains a 4Fe-4S cluster and a redox-active disulfide bridge. Artificial electron donors of redox potentials below –300 mV are capable of reducing the disulfide bridge. Based on our results we speculate that a group of more negative potential than the disulfide bridge is the first acceptor of the electrons in FTR. The chemical reduction of FTR has been used successfully for the detection of the enzyme during its purification.Abbreviation FBPase fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase - FTR ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase - MV methyl viologen Dedicated to Prof. D.I. Arnon.  相似文献   

11.
A newly found form of chloroplast phosphoribulokinase (designated the “regulatory form”) required reduced thioredoxin for activity. A second form of the enzyme (the “nonregulatory form”) was not appreciably affected by thioredoxin. The thioredoxin required for activation of the regulatory enzyme could be reduced (i) photochemically by chloroplast membranes that were supplemented with ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase or (ii) chemically in the dark with the sulfhydryl reagent dithiothreitol. Following activation by reduced thioredoxin, phosphoribulokinase was deactivated by the soluble chloroplast oxidants dehydroascorbate and oxidized glutathione. The results suggest that the regulatory form of phosphoribulokinase resembles fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase in its mode of regulation by the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system.  相似文献   

12.
Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves was resolved into three forms by diethyl-aminoethyl(DEAE)-cellulose chromatography. Two forms were found in isolated chloroplasts, and the third form (the major component) was located outside of the chloroplasts. One of the chloroplast forms of the enzyme (designated the regulatory form) was activated by reduced thioredoxin. Neither the other chloroplast form nor the extra-chloroplast form showed a response to thioredoxin. After further purification by hydroxyapatite column chromatography and gel filtration, the regulatory form of chloroplast PAL was stimulated approximately 3-fold by thioredoxin reduced either photochemically by chloroplast membranes, via ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase, or chemically by dithiothreitol. Once activated, the enzyme required an added oxidant for deactivation. Physiological oxidants-oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and dehydroascorbate-as well as nonphysiological oxidants-sodium tetrathionate and diamide-were effective in deactivation. The results indicate that chloroplast PAL is regulated by light via the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system in a manner similar to that described for regulatory enzymes of CO2 assimilation. The extra-chloroplast form of the enzyme, by contrast, appears to be regulated by light via the earlier-described phytochrome-linked system.  相似文献   

13.
The biochemical properties of the ferredoxin/thioredoxin transduction pathway regulating the activity of key carbon-fixation enzymes through post-translational modifications are well characterized but little is known about the regulation of the different genes. In the present study, we investigated in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii the regulation of the expression of ferredoxin, thioredoxin m, ferredoxin-NADP reductase, phosphoribulokinase, as well as that of cytosolic thioredoxin h, the function of which is still largely unknown. The effects of light, the circadian clock and active cell division were investigated by northern blotting. The five genes were found to be regulated by light and the circadian clock but with different kinetics and amplitudes. This leads for the first time to the proposal that an extra-chloroplastic thioredoxin is possibly implicated in light and/or circadian-related processes. An interplay between several light-transduction pathways in controlling the expression of the genes is suggested by the expression studies and the theoretical analysis of the promoters. Received: 2 December 1998 / Accepted: 19 March 1999  相似文献   

14.
NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase of spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts was activated by thioredoxin that was reduced either photochemically with ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase or chemically with dithiothreitol. The activation process that was observed with the soluble protein fraction from chloroplasts and with the purified regulatory form of the enzyme was slow relative to the rate of catalysis. The NAD-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase activity that is also present in chloroplasts and in the purified enzyme preparation was not affected by reduced thioredoxin.

When activated by dithiothreitol-reduced thioredoxin, the regulatory form of NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase was partly deactivated by oxidized glutathione. The enzyme activated by photochemically reduced thioredoxin was not appreciably affected by oxidized glutathione. The results suggest that although it resembles other regulatory enzymes in its requirements for light-dependent activation by the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase differs in its mode of deactivation and in its capacity for activation by enzyme effectors independently of thioredoxin.

  相似文献   

15.
Thioredoxins (TRXs) mediate light‐dependent activation of primary photosynthetic reactions in plant chloroplasts by reducing disulphide bridges in redox‐regulated enzymes. Of the two plastid TRX systems, the ferredoxin‐TRX system consists of ferredoxin‐thioredoxin reductase (FTR) and multiple TRXs, while the NADPH‐dependent thioredoxin reductase (NTRC) contains a complete TRX system in a single polypeptide. Using Arabidopsis plants overexpressing or lacking a functional NTRC, we have investigated the redundancy and interaction between the NTRC and Fd‐TRX systems in regulation of photosynthesis in vivo. Overexpression of NTRC raised the CO2 fixation rate and lowered non‐photochemical quenching and acceptor side limitation of PSI in low light conditions by enhancing the activation of chloroplast ATP synthase and TRX‐regulated enzymes in Calvin–Benson cycle (CBC). Overexpression of NTRC with an inactivated NTR or TRX domain partly recovered the phenotype of knockout plants, suggesting crosstalk between the plastid TRX systems. NTRC interacted in planta with fructose‐1,6‐bisphosphatase, phosphoribulokinase and CF1γ subunit of the ATP synthase and with several chloroplast TRXs. These findings indicate that NTRC‐mediated regulation of the CBC and ATP synthesis occurs both directly and through interaction with the ferredoxin‐TRX system and is crucial when availability of light is limiting photosynthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Enzymes that are regulated by the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system in chloroplasts — fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase), sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase purified from two different types of photosynthetic prokaryotes (cyanobacteria, purple sulfur bacteria) and tested for a response to thioredoxins. Each of the enzymes from the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum, an oxygenic organism known to contain the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, was activated by thioredoxins that had been reduced either chemically by dithiothreitol or photochemically by reduced ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Like their chloroplast counterparts, N. muscorum FBPase and SBPase were activated preferentially by reduced thioredoxin f. SBPase was also partially activated by thioredoxin m. PRK, which was present in two regulatory forms in N. muscorum, was activated similarly by thioredoxins f and m. Despite sharing the capacity for regulation by thioredoxins, the cyanobacterial FBPase and SBPase target enzymes differed antigenically from their chloroplast counterparts. The corresponding enzymes from Chromatium vinosum, an anoxygenic photosynthetic purple bacterium found recently to contain the NADP/thioredoxin sytem, differed from both those of cyanobacteria and chloroplasts in showing no response to reduced thioredoxin. Instead, C. vinosum FBPase, SBPase, and PRK activities were regulated by a metabolite effector, 5-AMP. The evidence is in accord with the conclusion that thioredoxins function in regulating the reductive pentose phosphate cycle in oxygenic prokaryotes (cyanobacteria) that contain the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, but not in anoxygenic prokaryotes (photosynthetic purple bacteria) that contain the NADP/thioredoxin system. In organisms of the latter type, enzyme effectors seem to play a dominant role in regulating photosynthetic carbon dioxide assimilation.  相似文献   

17.
Thioredoxin and related proteins in procaryotes   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Thioredoxin is a small (Mr 12,000) ubiquitous redox protein with the conserved active site structure: -Trp-Cys-Gly-Pro-Cys-. The oxidized form (Trx-S2) contains a disulfide bridge which is reduced by NADPH and thioredoxin reductase; the reduced form [Trx(SH)2] is a powerful protein disulfide oxidoreductase. Thioredoxins have been characterized in a wide variety of prokaryotic cells, and generally show about 50% amino acid homology to Escherichia coli thioredoxin with a known three-dimensional structure. In vitro Trx-(SH)2 serves as a hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase, an essential enzyme in DNA synthesis, and for enzymes reducing sulfate or methionine sulfoxide. E. coli Trx-(SH)2 is essential for phage T7 DNA replication as a subunit of T7 DNA polymerase and also for assembly of the filamentous phages f1 and M13 perhaps through its localization at the cellular plasma membrane. Some photosynthetic organisms reduce Trx-S2 by light and ferredoxin; Trx-(SH)2 is used as a disulfide reductase to regulate the activity of enzymes by thiol redox control. Thioredoxin-negative mutants (trxA) of E. coli are viable making the precise cellular physiological functions of thioredoxin unknown. Another small E. coli protein, glutaredoxin, enables GSH to be hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase or PAPS reductase. Further experiments with molecular genetic techniques are required to define the relative roles of the thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems in intracellular redox reactions.  相似文献   

18.
Cell-free preparations of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, Kalanchoë daigremontiana, were analyzed for thioredoxins and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Three distinct forms of thioredoxin were identified in Kalanchoë leaves, two of which specifically activated fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (designated f1 and f2) and a third which activated NADP-malate dehydrogenase (thioredoxin m). The apparent molecular weight of both forms of thioredoxin f was 11,000 and that of thioredoxin m was 10,000. In parallel studies, ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase were purified from Kalanchoë leaf preparations. Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase was similar to that of C3 and C4 plants in molecular weight (31,000) and immunological cross-reactivity. Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase exhibited an affinity for ferredoxin as demonstrated by its binding to an immobilized ferredoxin affinity column. The purified components of the Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin system could be recombined to function in the photoregulation of chloroplast enzymes. The data suggest that the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system plays a role in enzyme regulation of all higher plants irrespective of whether they show C3, C4, or CAM photosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Chloroplast thioredoxin m from the green alga Chlamydomomas reinhardtii is very efficiently reduced in vitro and in vivo in the presence of photoreduced ferredoxin and a ferredoxin dependent ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Once reduced, thioredoxin m has the capability to quickly activate the NADP malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) a regulatory enzyme involved in an energy-dependent assimilation of carbon dioxide in C4 plants. This activation is the result of the reduction of two disulfide bridges by thioredoxin m, that are located at the N- and C-terminii of the NADP malate dehydrogenase. The molecular structure of thioredoxin m was solved using NMR and compared to other known thioredoxins. Thioredoxin m belongs to the prokaryotic type of thioredoxin, which is divergent from the eukaryotic-type thioredoxins also represented in plants by the h (cytosolic) and f (chloroplastic) types of thioredoxins. The dynamics of the molecule have been assessed using (15)N relaxation data and are found to correlate well with regions of disorder found in the calculated NMR ensemble. The results obtained provide a novel basis to interpret the thioredoxin dependence of the activation of chloroplast NADP-malate dehydrogenase. The specific catalytic mechanism that takes place in the active site of thioredoxins is also discussed on the basis of the recent new understanding and especially in the light of the dual general acid-base catalysis exerted on the two cysteines of the redox active site. It is proposed that the two cysteines of the redox active site may insulate each other from solvent attack by specific packing of invariable hydrophobic amino acids.  相似文献   

20.
The reactivity of human thioredoxin (HTR) was tested in several reactions. HTR was as efficient as E. coli or plant and algal thioredoxins when assayed with E. coli ribonucleotide reductase or for the reduction of insulin. On the other hand, HTR was poorly reduced by NADPH and the E. coli flavoenzyme NADPH thioredoxin reductase as monitored in the DTNB reduction test. When reduced with dithiothreitol (DTT), HTR was much less efficient than thioredoxin m and thioredoxin f, the respective specific thioredoxins for the chloroplast enzymes NADP-malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH) and fructose 1,6 bisphosphatase (FBPase). Finally, HTR could be used in the photoactivation of NADP-MDH although less efficiently than thioredoxin m, proving nevertheless that it can be reduced by the iron sulfur enzyme ferredoxin thioredoxin reductase in the presence of photoreduced ferredoxin. Based on sequence comparisons, it was expected that HTR would display a reactivity similar to chloroplast thioredoxin f rather than to thioredoxin m. However the observed behavior of FTR did not exactly fit this prediction. The results are discussed in relation to the structural data available for the proteins.  相似文献   

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