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1.
The function of the cytochrome b559, a Photosystem II (PS II) reaction center ubiquitous component is not yet known. Cytochrome b559appears in a high (HP) or low (LP) potential form. The HP form is converted into the LP form during aerobic photoinhibition. It has been proposed before that this conversion, assumed to be reversible, ascribes protection against light stress of PS II by redirecting electron flow within PS II thus avoiding charge recombination of the primary radical pair and related oxidative damage. Here, we have used an experimental system allowing to assay the relation between the cytochrome b559redox potential shift, its reversibility and protection against light induced PS II inactivation. Under anaerobic conditions fast reversible photoinactivation of PS II in isolated spinach thylakoids is observed accompanied by monomerisation of PS II. Monomers did not dissociate further into PS II sub-particles and did not migrate out of the grana partitions as observed in aerobic photoinactivation. The anaerobic photoinactivation is accompanied by an increase in the cytochrome b559LP/HP ratio. However, despite recovery of PS II activity and partially of its dimeric form in darkness under aerobic conditions, no reversal of the cytochrome b559redox potential shift accompanied these processes. Re-exposure of reactivated thylakoids having an increased PS II population in the LP form of the cytochrome b559to strong illumination under aerobic conditions, did not result in a measurable protection of PS II as compared to control thylakoids. While it is possible that cytochrome b559may play a protective role against light stress in PS II, the results presented here do not indicate that the increase in the ratio LP/HP form is involved in this process.  相似文献   

2.
A series of experiments have been conducted with isolated reaction centers of photosystem two (PS II) with the aim to elucidate the functional role of cytochrome (Cyt b 559). At pH 6.5 it was found that Cyt b 559 was reversibly photoreduced by red actinic light when Mn2+ was present as an electron donor while at pH 8.5 a photo-oxidation was observed under the same lighting conditions, which was dark reversible in the presence of hydroquinone. These pH dependent light induced changes were measured under anaerobic conditions and correlated with changes in the relative levels of high (HP) and low (LP) potential forms of the cytochrome. At pH 6.5 the cytochrome was mainly in its LP form while at pH 8.5 a significant proportion was converted to the HP form as detected by dark titrations with hydroquinone. This pH dependent difference in the levels of HP and LP Cyt b 559 was also detected when bright white light was used to monitor the level of the LP form using a novel reaction involving direct electron donation from the flavin of glucose oxidase (present in the medium and used together with glucose and catalase as an oxygen trap). The results suggest that PS II directly oxidises and reduces the HP and LP forms, respectively and that the extent of these photo-reactions is dependent on the relative levels of the two forms, which are in turn governed by the pH. This conclusion is interpreted in terms of the model presented previously (Barber J and De Las Rivas J (1993) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 10942–10946) whereby the pH induced effect is considered as a possible mechanism by which interconversion of LP and HP forms of Cyt b 559 is achieved. In agreement with this was the finding that as the extent of photo-oxidisable HPCyt b 559 increases, with increasing pH, the rate of irreversible photo-oxidation of -carotene decreases, a result expected if the HP form protects against donor side photoinhibition.Abbreviations -car -carotene - CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chloro-phenylhydrazone - Chl chlorophyll - Cyt b 559 cytochrome b 559 - HPCyt b 559 high potential form of cytochrome b 559 which is reducible by hydroquinone - LPCyt b 559 low potential form of cytochrome b 559 which is non-reducible by hydroquinone - D1 and D2 products of the psbA and psbD genes, respectively - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll protein complex associated with PS II - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulphonic acid - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - Pheo pheophytin - PQ plastoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA first stable quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB second stable quinone electron acceptor of PS II - RC reaction center - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - SiMo silicomolybdate - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl) amino methane - YZ and YD tyrosine residues 161 in D1 and D2 proteins of the PS II RC which act as secondary electron donors to P680  相似文献   

3.
We report electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies on photosystem II (PSII) from higher plants in five different domains of the thylakoid membrane prepared by sonication and two-phase partitioning. The domains studied were the grana core, the entire grana stack, the grana margins, the stroma lamellae and the purified stromal fraction, Y100. The electron transport properties of both donor and acceptor sides of PSII such as oxygen evolution, cofactors Y D, Q A, the CaMn 4-cluster, and Cytb 559 were investigated. The PSII content was estimated on the basis of oxidized Y D and Q A (-) Fe (2+) signal from the acceptor side vs Chl content (100% in the grana core fraction). It was found to be about 82% in the grana, 59% in the margins, 35% in the stroma and 15% in the Y100 fraction. The most active PSII centers were found in the granal fractions as was estimated from the rates of electron transfer and the S 2 state multiline EPR signal. In the margin and stroma fractions the multiline signal was smaller (40 and 33%, respectively). The S 2 state multiline could not be induced in the Y100 fraction. In addition, the oxidized LP Cytb 559 prevailed in the stromal fractions while the HP form dominated in the grana core. The margins and entire grana fractions have Cytb 559 in both potential forms. These data together with previous analyses indicate that the sequence of activation of the PSII properties can be represented as: PSII content > oxygen evolution > reduced Cytb 559 > dimerization of PSII centers in all fractions of the thylakoid membrane with the gradual increase from stromal fractions via margin to the grana core fraction. The results further support the existence of a PSII activity gradient which reflects lateral movement and photoactivation of PSII centers in the thylakoid membrane. The possible role of the PSII redox components in this process is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Currently available data about bicarbonate (BC) action on the Mn-containing water-oxidizing complex (WOC) of the photosystem II (PSII) were obtained almost solely in vitro, e.g. on subchloroplast membrane fragments enriched with PSII. To investigate the in vivo BC effect on the PSII donor side, we used the method of dark thermoinactivation of intact Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells. Photosynthetic activity of PSII was measured as photoinduced changes in the PSII chlorophyll fluorescence yield and as the rate of photosynthetic oxygen evolution. To exclude a “direct” effect of the absence of BC on the PSII activity, before measurements of the photosynthetic activity, the concentration of BC in all samples was equalized by addition of NaHCO3 to each of them (except for those that contained 5 mM of NaHCO3 during thermoinactivation) to reach the final concentration of 5 mM. This allowed registering only so-called “irreversible” (i.e., not reversible by subsequent addition of BC) effect of the absence of BC during thermoinactivation. It was shown that, if 5 mM NaHCO3 was added to the medium before thermoinactivation, the rate of inactivation of the PSII donor side was lower than in BC-depleted medium 1.5-to 2-fold. The obtained results are interpreted as an indication that BC protects the donor side of PSII against thermoinactivation in vivo, in intact C. reinhardtii cells. This proves the correctness of the earlier proposition that BC is an integral constituent of the Mn-containing water-oxidizing complex of PSII. Published in Russian in Fiziologiya Rastenii, 2007, Vol. 54, No. 3, pp. 342–349. The article was translated by the authors.  相似文献   

5.
Toxic Cu (II) effect on cytochrome b 559 under aerobic photoinhibitory conditions was examined in two different photosystem II (PSII) membrane preparations active in oxygen evolution. The preparations differ in the content of cytochrome b 559 redox potential forms. Difference absorption spectra showed that the presence of Cu (II) induced the oxidation of the high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 in the dark. Addition of hydroquinone reduced the total oxidized high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 present in Cu (II)-treated PSII membranes indicating that no conversion to the low-potential form took place. Spectroscopic determinations of cytochrome b 559 during photoinhibitory treatment showed slower kinetics of Cu (II) effect on cytochrome b 559 in comparison with the rapid loss of oxygen evolution activity in the same conditions. This result indicates that cytochrome b 559 is affected after PSII centres are photoinhibited. The high-potential form was more sensitive to toxic Cu (II) action than the low-potential form under illumination at pH 6.0. The content of the high-potential form of cytochrome b 559 was completely lost; however, the low-potential content was unaffected in these conditions. This loss did not involve cytochrome protein degradation. The results are discussed in terms of different binding properties of the heme iron to the protonated or unprotonated histidine ligand in the high-potential and low-potential forms of cytochrome b 559, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Restoration of a high potential (HP) form of cytochrome b-559 (Cyt b-559) from a low potential (LP) form was the primary process in the reconstitution of O2-evolving center during the photoreactivation of Tris-inactivated chloroplasts. In normal chloroplasts, about 0.5 to 0.7 mol of Cyt b-559 was present in the HP form per 400 chlorophyll molecules. However, the HP form was converted to the LP form when the O2-evolving center was inactivated by 0.8 M alkaline Tris-washing (pH 9.1). The inactivation was reversible and both the Cyt b-559 HP form and the O2-evolving activity were restored by incubating the inactivated chloroplasts with weak light, Mn2+, Ca2+ and an electron donor (photoreactivation). The recovery of the HP form preceded the recovery of O2-evolving activity. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB) did not inhibit the recovery of the HP form. Thus, the recovery of Cyt b-559 HP form was the primary reaction in the photoreactivation, which was stimulated by the light-induced redox reaction of the PS-II core center.Abbreviations ASC ascorbate - BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - Cyt b-559 HP form high potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt b-559 LP form low potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt b-559 VLP form very low potential form of cytochrome b-559 - Cyt f cytochrome f - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethyl-piperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - HQ hydroquinone - SHN chloroplast-preparation medium containing 0.4 M sucrose, 50 mM Hepes-Na (pH 7.8) and 20 mM NaCl - PS-II Photosystem II  相似文献   

7.
Light-induced production of superoxide (O2*-) in spinach PSII (photosystem II) membrane particles was studied using EPR spin-trapping spectroscopy. The presence of exogenous PQs (plastoquinones) with a different side-chain length (PQ-n, n isoprenoid units in the side-chain) enhanced O2*- production in the following order: PQ-1>PQ-2>PQ-9. In PSII membrane particles isolated from the tobacco cyt (cytochrome) b559 mutant which carries a single-point mutation in the beta-subunit and also has a decreased amount of the alpha-subunit, the effect of PQ-1 was less than in the wild-type. The increase in LP (low-potential) cyt b559 content, induced by the incubation of spinach PSII membrane particles at low pH, resulted in a significant increase in O2*- formation in the presence of PQ-1, whereas it had little effect on O2*- production in the absence of PQ-1. The enhancement of O2*- formation induced by PQ-1 was not abolished by DCMU [3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea]. Under anaerobic conditions, dark oxidation of LP cyt b559 increased, as pH was decreased. The presence of molecular oxygen significantly enhanced dark oxidation of LP cyt b559. Based on these findings it is suggested that short-chain PQs stimulate O2*- production via a mechanism that involves electron transfer from Pheo- (pheophytin) to LP cyt b559 and subsequent auto-oxidation of LP cyt b559.  相似文献   

8.
Pavel Pospíšil  Arjun Tiwari 《BBA》2010,1797(4):451-456
The effect of illumination and molecular oxygen on the redox and the redox potential changes of cytochrome b559 (cyt b559) has been studied in Tris-treated spinach photosystem II (PSII) membranes. It has been demonstrated that the illumination of Tris-treated PSII membranes induced the conversion of the intermediate-potential (IP) to the reduced high-potential (HPFe2+) form of cyt b559, whereas the removal of molecular oxygen resulted in the conversion of the IP form to the oxidized high-potential (HPFe3+) form of cyt b559. Light-induced conversion of cyt b559 from the IP to the HP form was completely inhibited above pH 8 or by the modification of histidine ligand that prevents its protonation. Interestingly, no effect of high pH or histidine modification was observed during the conversion of the IP to the HP form of cyt b559 after the removal of molecular oxygen. These results indicate that conversion from the IP to the HP form of cyt b559 proceeds via different mechanisms. Under illumination, conversion of the IP to the HP form of cyt b559 depends primarily on the protonation of the histidine residue, whereas under anaerobic conditions, the conversion of the IP to the HP form of cyt b559 is driven by higher hydrophobicity of the environment around the heme iron resulting from the absence of molecular oxygen.  相似文献   

9.
It is well established that bicarbonate stimulates electron transfer between the primary and secondary electron acceptors, Q(A) and Q(B), in formate-inhibited photosystem II; the non-heme Fe between Q(A) and Q(B) plays an essential role in the bicarbonate binding. Strong evidence of a bicarbonate requirement for the water-oxidizing complex (WOC), both O2 evolving and assembling from apo-WOC and Mn2+, of photosystem II (PSII) preparations has been presented in a number of publications during the last 5 years. The following explanations for the involvement of bicarbonate in the events on the donor side of PSII are considered: (1) bicarbonate serves as an electron donor (alternative to water or as a way of involvement of water molecules in the oxidative reactions) to the Mn-containing O2 center; (2) bicarbonate facilitates reassembly of the WOC from apo-WOC and Mn2+ due to formation of the complexes MnHCO3+ and Mn(HCO3)2 leading to an easier oxidation of Mn2+ with PSII; (3) bicarbonate is an integral component of the WOC essential for its function and stability; it may be considered a direct ligand to the Mn cluster; (4) the WOC is stabilized by bicarbonate through its binding to other components of PSII.  相似文献   

10.
We have found that short chain plastoquinones effectively stimulated photoreduction of the low potential form of cytochrome b(559) and were also active in dark oxidation of this cytochrome under anaerobic conditions in Triton X-100-solubilized photosystem II (PSII) particles. It is also shown that molecular oxygen competes considerably with the prenylquinones in cytochrome b(559) oxidation under aerobic conditions, indicating that both molecular oxygen and plastoquinones could be electron acceptors from cytochrome b(559) in PSII preparations. alpha-Tocopherol quinone was not active in the stimulation of cytochrome photoreduction but efficiently oxidized it in the dark. Both the observed photoreduction and dark oxidation of the cytochrome were not sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea. It was concluded that both quinone-binding sites responsible for the redox changes of cytochrome b(559) are different from either the Q(A) or Q(B) site in PSII and represent new quinone-binding sites in PSII.  相似文献   

11.
This study describes an analysis of different treatments that influence the relative content and the midpoint potential of HP Cyt b559 in PS II membrane fragments from higher plants. Two basically different types of irreversible modification effects are distinguished: the HP form of Cyt b559 is either predominantly affected when the heme group is oxidized ("O-type" effects) or when it is reduced ("R-type" effects). Transformation of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (IP and LP forms) by the "O-type" mechanism is induced by high pH and detergent treatments. In this case the effects consist of a gradual decrease in the relative content of HP Cyt b559 while its midpoint potential remains unaffected. Transformation of HP Cyt b559 via an "R-type" mechanism is caused by a number of exogenous compounds denoted L: herbicides, ADRY reagents and tetraphenylboron. These compounds are postulated to bind to the PS II complex at a quinone binding site designated as Q(C) which interacts with Cyt b559 and is clearly not the Q(B) site. Binding of compounds L to the Q(C) site when HP Cyt b559 is oxidized gives rise to a gradual decrease in the E(m) of HP Cyt b559 with increasing concentration of L (up to 10 K(ox)(L) values) while the relative content of HP Cyt b559 is unaffected. Higher concentrations of compounds L required for their binding to Q(C) site when HP Cyt b559 is reduced (described by K(red)(L)) induce a conversion of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms ("R-type" transformation). Two reaction pathways for transitions of Cyt b559 between the different protein conformations that are responsible for the HP and IP/LP redox forms are proposed and new insights into the functional regulation of Cyt b559 via the Q(C) site are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome b559 (Cyt b559) is a well-known intrinsic component of Photosystem II (PS II) reaction center in all photosynthetic oxygen-evolving organisms, but its physiological role remains unclear. This work reports the response of the two redox forms of Cyt b559 (i.e. the high- (HP) and low-potential (LP) forms) to inhibition of the donor or acceptor side of PS II. The photooxidation of HP Cyt b559 induced by red light at room temperature was pH-dependent under conditions in which electron flow from water was diminished. This photooxidation was observed only at pH values higher than 7.5. However, in the presence of 1 M CCCP, a limited oxidation of HP Cyt b559 was observed at acidic pH, At pH 8.5 and in the presence of the protonophore, this photooxidation of the HP form was accompanied by its partial transformation into the LP form. On the other hand, a partial photoreduction of LP Cyt b559 was induced by red light under aerobic conditions when electron transfer through the primary quinone acceptor QA was impaired by strong irradiation in the presence of DCMU. This photoreduction was enhanced at acidic pH values. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that both photoreduction and photooxidation of Cyt b559 is described under inhibitory conditions using the same kind of membrane preparations. A model accommodating these findings is proposed.Abbreviations CCCP carbonylcyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone - Cyt cytochrome - DCBQ 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU dichlorophenyldimethylurea - E m midpoint redox potential - HP and LP high- and low-potential forms of Cyt b559 - P680 primary donor - IA acceptor side inhibition - ID donor side inhibition - Pheo pheophytin - PS II photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

13.
The water-oxidizing complex (WOC) within photosystem II (PSII) can be reconstituted with synthetic manganese complexes by a process called photoactivation; however, the key factors affecting the efficiency of synthetic manganese complexes in reconstitution of electron transport and oxygen evolution activity in manganese-depleted PSII remain unclear. In the present study, four complexes with different manganese coordination environments were used to reconstitute the WOC, and an interesting relationship was found between the coordination environment of the manganese atom in the complexes and their efficiency in restoring electron transport and oxygen evolution. If Mn(II) is coordinated to nitrogen atoms within the ligand, it can restore significant rates of electron transport and oxygen evolution; however, if the manganese atom is coordinated only to oxygen atoms instead of nitrogen atoms, it has no capability to restore electron transport and oxygen evolution. So, our results demonstrate that the capability of manganese complexes to reconstitute the WOC is mainly determined by the coordination between nitrogen atoms from ligands and the manganese atom. It is suggested from our results that the ligation between the nitrogen atom and the manganese atom within the manganese complex facilitates the photoligation of the manganese atom to histidyl residues on the apo-protein in manganese-depleted PSII during photoactivation.  相似文献   

14.
Spinach photosystem II membranes that had been depleted of the Mn cluster contained four forms of cytochrome (Cyt) b559, namely, high-potential (HP), HP', intermediate-potential (IP) and low-potential (LP) forms that exhibited the redox potentials of +400, +310, +170 and +35 mV, respectively, in potentiometric titration. When the membranes were illuminated with flashing light in the presence of 0.1 mM Mn2+, the IP form was converted to the HP' form by two flashes and then the HP' form was converted to the HP form by an additional flash. The quantum efficiency of the first conversion appeared to be quite high since the conversion was almost complete after two flashes. By contrast, the second conversion proceeded with low quantum efficiency and 40 flashes were required for completion. The effects of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) suggested that the first conversion did not require electron transfer from QA to QB while the second conversion had an absolute requirement for it. It was also suggested that the first conversion involved the reduction of the heme of Cyt b559, probably by QA-, and we propose that direct reduction by QA- induces a shift in the redox potential of the heme. The second conversion was also accompanied by the reduction of heme but it appeared that this conversion did not necessarily involve the reduction. The effects of DCMU on the reduction of heme suggested that the heme became reducible by QB- after the first conversion had been completed. This observation implies that the efficiency of electron transfer from QA to QB increased upon the conversion of the IP form to the HP' form, and we propose that restoration of the high-potential forms of Cyt b559 itself acts to make the acceptor side of photosystem II functional.  相似文献   

15.
Arthrospira maxima is unique among cyanobacteria, growing at alkaline pH (<11) in concentrated (bi)carbonate (1.2 M saturated) and lacking carbonic anhydrases. We investigated dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) roles within PSII of A. maxima cells oximetrically and fluorometrically, monitoring the light reactions on the donor and acceptor sides of PSII. We developed new methods for removing DIC based on a (bi)carbonate chelator and magnesium for (bi)carbonate ionpairing. We established relative affinities of three sites: the water-oxidizing complex (WOC), non-heme iron/QA, and solvent-accessible arginines throughout PSII. Full reversibility is achieved but (bi)carbonate uptake requires light. DIC depletion at the non-heme iron site and solvent-accessible arginines greatly reduces the yield of O2 due to O2 uptake, but accelerates the PSII–WOC cycle, specifically the S2→S3 and S3→S0 transitions. DIC removal from the WOC site abolishes water oxidation and appears to influence free energy stabilization of the WOC from a site between CP43-R357 and Ca2+.  相似文献   

16.
The presence of 1.0 mol/L glycinebetaine during isolation of D1/D2/Cytb559 reaction centre (RC) complexes from photosystem II (PSII) membrane fragments preserved the photochemical activity, monitored as the light-induced reduction of pheophytin and electron transport from diphenylcarbazide to 2.6-dichlorophenol-indophenol.-Glycinebetaine also protected the D1/D2/Cytb559 complexes against strong light-induced damage to the photochemical reactions and the irreversible bleaching of beta-carotene and chlorophyll. The presence of glycinebetaine also enhanced thermotolerance of the D1/D2/Cytb559 complexes isolated in the presence of 1.0 mol/L betaine with an increase in the temperature for 50% inactivation from 29 degrees C to 35 degrees C. The results indicate an increased supramolecular structural stability in the presence of glycinebetaine.  相似文献   

17.
A detailed analysis of the properties of cytochrome b(559) (Cyt b(559)) in photosystem II (PS II) preparations with different degrees of structural complexity is presented. It reveals that (i) D1-D2-Cyt b(559) complexes either in solubilized form or incorporated into liposomes contain only one type of Cyt b(559) with E(m) values of 60 +/- 5 and 100 +/- 10 mV, respectively, at pH 6.8; (ii) in oxygen-evolving solubilized PS II core complexes Cyt b(559) exists predominantly (>85%) as an LP form with an E(m,7) of 125 +/- 10 mV and a minor fraction with an E(m,7) of -150 +/- 15 mV; (iii) in oxygen-evolving PS II membrane fragments three different redox forms are discernible with E(m) values of 390 +/- 15 mV (HP form), 230 +/- 20 mV (IP form), and 105 +/- 25 mV (LP form) and relative amplitudes of 58, 24, and 18%, respectively, at pH 7.3; (iv) the E(m) values are almost pH-independent between pH 6 and 9.5 in all sample types except D1-D2-Cyt b(559) complexes incorporated into liposomes with a slope of -29 mV/pH unit, when the pH increases from 6 to 9.5 (IP and LP form in PS II membrane fragments possibly within a restricted range from pH 6.5 to 8); (v) at pH >8 the HP Cyt b(559) progressively converts to the IP form with increasing pH; (vi) the reduced-minus-oxidized optical difference spectra of Cyt b(559) are very similar in the lambda range of 360-700 nm for all types except for the HP form which exhibits pronounced differences in the Soret band; and (vii) PS II membrane fragments and core complexes are inferred to contain about two Cyt b(559) hemes per PS II. Possible implications of conformational changes near the heme group and spin state transitions of the iron are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
I I Putrenko  S Vasil'ev  D Bruce 《Biochemistry》1999,38(33):10632-10641
The mechanism of flash-induced changes with a periodicity of four in photosystem II (PSII) fluorescence was investigated with the aim of further using fluorescence measurements as an approach to studying the structural and functional organization of the water-oxidizing complex (WOC). The decay of the flash-induced high fluorescence state of PSII was measured with pulse amplitude modulated fluorometry in thylakoids and PSII enriched membrane fragments. Calculated QA- decay was well described by three exponential decay components, reflecting QA- reoxidation with halftimes of 450 and 860 micros, 2 and 7.6 ms, and 111 and 135 ms in thylakoids and PSII membranes, respectively. The effect of modification of the PSII donor side by changing pH or by removal of the extrinsic 17 and 24 kDa proteins on period four oscillations in both maximum fluorescence yield and the relative contribution of QA- reoxidation reactions was compared to flash-induced oxygen yield. The four-step oxidation of the manganese cluster of the WOC was found to be necessary but not sufficient to produce modulation of PSII fluorescence. The capacity of the WOC to generate molecular oxygen was also required to observe a period four in the fluorescence; however, direct quenching by oxygen was not responsible for the modulation. Potential mechanisms responsible for the periodicity of four in both maximum fluorescence yield pattern and flash-dependent changes in proportion of centers with different QA- reoxidation rates are discussed with respect to intrinsic deprotonation events occurring at the WOC.  相似文献   

19.
"Reduced minus oxidized" difference extinction coefficients Deltavarepsilon in the alpha-bands of Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 were determined by using functionally and structurally well-characterized PS II core complexes from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. Values of 25.1+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) and 27.0+/-1.0 mM(-1) cm(-1) were obtained for Cyt b559 and Cyt c550, respectively. Anaerobic redox titrations covering the wide range from -250 up to +450 mV revealed that the heme groups of both Cyt b559 and Cyt c550 exhibit homogenous redox properties in the sample preparation used, with E(m) values at pH 6.5 of 244+/-11 mV and -94+/-21 mV, respectively. No HP form of Cyt b559 could be detected. Experiments performed on PS II membrane fragments of higher plants where the content of the high potential form of Cyt b559 was varied by special treatments (pH, heat) have shown that the alpha-band extinction of Cyt b559 does not depend on the redox form of the heme group. Based on the results of this study the Cyt b559/PSII stoichiometry is inferred to be 1:1 not only in thermophilic cyanobacteria as known from the crystal structure but also in PSII of plants. Possible interrelationships between the structure of the Q(B) site and the microenvironment of the heme group of Cyt b559 are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
This study describes an analysis of different treatments that influence the relative content and the midpoint potential of HP Cyt b559 in PS II membrane fragments from higher plants. Two basically different types of irreversible modification effects are distinguished: the HP form of Cyt b559 is either predominantly affected when the heme group is oxidized (“O-type” effects) or when it is reduced (“R-type” effects). Transformation of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (IP and LP forms) by the “O-type” mechanism is induced by high pH and detergent treatments. In this case the effects consist of a gradual decrease in the relative content of HP Cyt b559 while its midpoint potential remains unaffected. Transformation of HP Cyt b559 via an “R-type” mechanism is caused by a number of exogenous compounds denoted L: herbicides, ADRY reagents and tetraphenylboron. These compounds are postulated to bind to the PS II complex at a quinone binding site designated as QC which interacts with Cyt b559 and is clearly not the QB site. Binding of compounds L to the QC site when HP Cyt b559 is oxidized gives rise to a gradual decrease in the Em of HP Cyt b559 with increasing concentration of L (up to 10 Kox(L) values) while the relative content of HP Cyt b559 is unaffected. Higher concentrations of compounds L required for their binding to QC site when HP Cyt b559 is reduced (described by Kred(L)) induce a conversion of HP Cyt b559 to lower potential redox forms (“R-type” transformation). Two reaction pathways for transitions of Cyt b559 between the different protein conformations that are responsible for the HP and IP/LP redox forms are proposed and new insights into the functional regulation of Cyt b559 via the QC site are discussed.  相似文献   

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