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1.
Several cDNA clones encoding subunit XI of photosystem I reaction center (PSI-L) have been isolated from two gt11 expression libraries based on polyadenylated RNA of spinach seedlings illuminated for 4 and 16 h, respectively. The precursor polypeptide made from these recombinant DNAs in vitro can be efficiently imported into isolated spinach chloroplasts. It is correctly processed to the size of the authentic polypeptide and integrates into the photosystem I assembly. The 834 nucleotide sequence of the longest cDNA insert encodes a precursor polypeptide of 24 kDa (216 residues) and a mature protein of probably 18.8 kDa (169 residues). Hydropathy analysis suggests that the polypeptide contains two transmembrane segments. The protein appears to originate in a single-copy gene in spinach and to be decoded from RNA species of ca. 900 bases.  相似文献   

2.
We have quantified the lateral distribution of 12 thylakoid proteins of Spirodela oligorrhiza by immunoblot analysis of detergent-derived granal and stromal lamellae. The immunological, ultrastructural, cytochemical, and biophysical measurements each indicated the expected overall separation of photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI) components; however, certain proteins were not completely localized to one lamellar fraction. The apoproteins of the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex, subunit 1 of PSI and the components of the PSII reaction center (the 32 kilodalton, D2, and cytochrome b559 proteins) were dually located between granal and stromal lamellae. Proteins associated exclusively with one of the membrane types were: in granal lamellae, the 43 and 51 kilodalton PSII proteins, and in stromal lamellae, the α and β subunits of the proton ATPase.  相似文献   

3.
A full-length cDNA clone encoding the PSI-F subunit of barley photosystem I has been isolated and sequenced. The open reading frame encodes a precursor polypeptide with a deduced molecular mass of 24837 Da. The barley PSI-F precursor contains a bipartite presequence with characteristics similar to the presequences of proteins destined to the thylakoid lumen. In vitro import studies demonstrate that an in vitro synthesized precursor is transported across the chloroplast envelope and directed to the thylakoid membrane, where it accumulates in a protease-resistant form. Incubation of the precursor with a chloroplast stromal extract results in processing to a form intermediate in size between the precursor and mature forms. Hydrophobicity analysis of the barley PSI-F protein reveals a hydrophobic region predicted to be a membrane spanning -helix. The hydrophobic nature of PSI-F combined with a bipartite presequence is unusual. We postulate that the second domain in the bipartite presequence of the PSI-F precursor proteins is required to ensure the proper orientation of PSI-F in the thylakoid membrane. The expression of the PsaF gene is light-induced similar to other barley photosystem I genes.Abbreviations 16K 23K and 33K proteins, the 16 kDa, 23 kDa and 33 kDa subunits of the photosystem II oxygen-evolving complex - PSI-N and PSI-F photosystem I subunit N and F - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

4.
5.
Treatment of lyophilized thylakoid membranes of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. with n-heptane for 6 h resulted in marked changes in the pattern of photosystem I reaction center complexes resolved by sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. CP1-a, which consists of two large subunits and three small subunits, was a major chlorophyll-containing band resolved from the lyophilized thylakoid membranes, whereas the heptane-extracted membranes produced mainly CP1-e which totally lacks the small subunits. Electron transport from the primary donor P700 to the secondary acceptor P430 was not affected by the heptane-extraction of the membranes. The heptane-treatment removed 97% of -carotene present in the membranes, whereas all chlorophyll a, a major part of xanthophylls, more than a half of phylloquinone and one third of plastoquinone remained unextracted. The data suggest that -carotene has an important structural effect to stabilize the subunit organization of photosystem I reaction center complexes but is not essential for the early photochemical events of photosystem I.Abbreviations SDS sodium dodecylsulfate - PS photosystem  相似文献   

6.
Work using a full-length cDNA clone has revealed that the plastid-located glutamine synthetase (GS) of Phaseolus vulgaris is encoded by a single nuclear gene. Nucleotide sequencing has shown that this cDNA is more closely related to a cDNA encoding the plastidic GS of Pisum sativum than to cDNAs encoding three different cytosolic GS subunits of P. vulgaris. The plastid GS subunits are initially synthesized as higher M r (47000) precursors containing an N-terminal presequence of about 50 amino acids which is structurally similar to the presequences of other nuclear-encoded chloroplast proteins. The precursor has been synthesized in vitro and is imported by isolated pea chloroplasts and processed to two polypeptides of the same size as native P. vulgaris chloroplast GS subunits (M r 42000). Experiments with fusion proteins show that the N-terminal 68 amino acids of this precursor allow the cytosolic GS subunit also to be imported and processed by isolated chloroplasts. Polyadenylated mRNA specifically related to the plastidic GS gene is most highly abundant in chloroplast-containing organs (leaves and stems) but is also detectable in roots and nodules.  相似文献   

7.
During senescence of primary bean leaves (Phaseolus vulgaris), there are differential changes in the rates at which thylakoid proteins are synthesized. In particular, synthesis of the 32 kD herbicide-binding protein continues throughout senescence, whereas formation of the and subunits of ATPase, the 68 kD photosystem I reaction center polypeptide, cytochrome f, cytochrome b6 and the structural apoprotein of the lightharvesting chlorophyll protein complex (LHCP) declines. Pulse-chase experiments with intact leaves indicated rapid degradation of the 32 kD protein, which is consistent with its known rapid rate of turnover. This degradation was light-dependent and inhibited by DCMU, and the kinetics of degradation were similar for young and senescent membranes. In Coomassie-stained gels, the 68 kD reaction center polypeptide of photosystem I, the and subunits of ATPase and the LHCP were the dominant proteins for all ages of membranes. Western blot analysis indicated that cytochrome f and cytochrome b6 are selectively depleted during senescence. The data have been interpreted as indicating that translational disruptions in both the cytoplasmic and chloroplastic compartments may contribute to the decline in photosynthetic electron transport in the senescing leaf.  相似文献   

8.
H S Shepherd  G Ledoigt  S H Howell 《Cell》1983,32(1):99-107
Light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP) synthesis is highly regulated during the cell cycle in light-dark synchronized C. reinhardi cells. LHCPs are a family of cytoplasmically synthesized proteins which are imported into the chloroplast. LHCPs are derived from at least two precursor proteins (32 kd and 30 kd) that are synthesized in vitro and immunoprecipitated by antiserum against chlorophyll-protein complex II proteins. A DNA copy of the mRNA encoding a 32 kd LHCP precursor was cloned from cDNA synthesized from poly(A) RNA obtained from mid-light-phase synchronous cells. Using cloned cDNA (pHS16) as a hybridization probe, we found that a single 1.2 kb RNA complementary to pHS16 accumulates in a wave-like manner during the mid-light phase of the 12 hr light-12 hr dark cycle and correlates with the pattern of chlorophyll synthesis. Light, during the light phase in the light-dark cycle, is required for accumulation of this RNA.  相似文献   

9.
It is well known that two photosystems, I and II, are needed to transfer electrons from H2O to NADP+ in oxygenic photosynthesis. Each photosystem consists of several components: (a) the light-harvesting antenna (L-HA) system, (b) the reaction center (RC) complex, and (c) the polypeptides and other co-factors involved in electron and proton transport. First, we present a mini review on the heterogeneity which has been identified with the electron acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) including (a) L-HA system: the PS II and PS II units, (b) RC complex containing electron acceptor Q1 or Q2; and (c) electron acceptor complex: QA (having two different redox potentials QL and QH) and QB (QB-type; Q'B type; and non-QB type); additional components such as iron (Q-400), U (Em,7=–450 mV) and Q-318 (or Aq) are also mentioned. Furthermore, we summarize the current ideas on the so-called inactive (those that transfer electrons to the plastoquinone pool rather slowly) and active reaction centers. Second, we discuss the bearing of the first section on the ratio of the PS II reaction center (RC-II) and the PS I reaction center (RC-I). Third, we review recent results that relate the inactive and active RC-II, obtained by the use of quinones DMQ and DCBQ, with the fluorescence transient at room temperature and in heated spinach and soybean thylakoids. These data show that inactive RC-II can be easily monitored by the OID phase of fluorescence transient and that heating converts active into inactive centers.Abbreviations DCBQ 2,5 or 2,6 dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DMQ dimethylquinone - QA primary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - QB secondary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - IODP successive fluorescence levels during time course of chlorophyll a fluorescence: O for origin, I for inflection, D for dip or plateau, and P for peak  相似文献   

10.
The 23 kDa polypeptide of the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II has been extracted from pea photosystem II particles by washing with 1 M NaCl and purified by anion-exchange chromatography. The N-terminal amino acid sequence has been determined and specific antisera have been raised in rabbits and used to screen a pea-leaf cDNA library in gt11. Determination of the nucleotide sequence of two clones provided the nucleotide sequence for the full 23 kDa polypeptide. The deduced amino acid sequence showed it to code for a mature protein of 186 amino acid residues with an N-terminal presequence of 73 amino acid residues showing a high degree of conservation with previously reported 23 kDa sequences from spinach and Chlamydomonas. Southern blots of genomic DNA from pea probed with the labelled cDNA gave rise to only one band suggesting that the protein is encoded by a single gene. Northern blots of RNA extracted from various organs indicated a message of approximately 1.1 kb, in good agreement with the size of the cDNA, in all chlorophyll-containing tissues. Western blots of protein extracted from the same organs indicated that the 23 kDa polypeptide was present in all major organs of the plant except the roots.Abbreviations bis-Tris bis (2-hydroxyethyl) imino-tris (hydroxymethyl)-methane - pfu plaque-forming units  相似文献   

11.
12.
Pure and active oxygen-evolving PS II core particles containing 35 Chl per reaction center were isolated with 75% yield from spinach PS II membrane fragments by incubation with n-dodecyl--D-maltoside and a rapid one step anion-exchange separation. By Triton X-100 treatment on the column these particles could be converted with 55% yield to pure and active PS II reaction center particles, which contained 6 Chl per reaction center.Abbreviations Bis-Tris bis[2-hydroxyethyl]imino-tris[hydroxymethyl]methane - Chl chlorophyll - CP29 Chl a/b protein of 29 kDa - Cyt b 559 cytochrome b 559 - DCBQ 2,5-dichloro-p-benzo-quinone - LHC II light-harvesting complex II, predominant Chl a/b protein - MES 2-[N-Morpholino]ethanesulfonic acid - Pheo pheophytin - PS H photosystem II - QA bound plastoquinone, serving as the secondary electron acceptor in PS II (after Pheo) - SDS sodiumdodecylsulfate  相似文献   

13.
The linear, four-step oxidation of water to molecular oxygen by photosystem II requires cooperation between redox reactions driven by light and a set of redox reactions involving the S-states within the oxygen-evolving complex. The oxygenevolving complex is a highly ordered structure in which a number of polypeptides interact with one another to provide the appropriate environment for productive binding of cofactors such as manganese, chloride and calcium, as well as for productive electron transfer within the photoact. A number of recent advances in the knowledge of the polypeptide structure of photosystem II has revealed a correlation between primary photochemical events and a core complex of five hydrophobic polypeptides which provide binding sites for chlorophyll a, pheophytin a, the reaction center chlorophyll (P680), and its immediate donor, denoted Z. Although the core complex of photosystem II is photochemically active, it does not possess the capacity to evolve oxygen. A second set of polypeptides, which are water-soluble, have been discovered to be associated with photosystem II; these polypeptides are now proposed to be the structural elements of a special domain which promotes the activities of the loosely-bound cofactors (manganese, chloride, calcium) that participate in oxygen evolution activity. Two of these proteins (whose molecular weights are 23 and 17 kDa) can be released from photosystem II without concurrent loss of functional manganese; studies on these proteins and on the membranes from which they have been removed indicate that the 23 and 17 kDa species from part of the structure which promotes retention of chloride and calcium within the oxygen-evolving complex. A third water-soluble polypeptide of molecular weight 33 kDa is held to the photosystem II core complex by a series of forces which in some circumstances may include ligation to manganese. The 33 kDa protein has been studied in some detail and appears to promote the formation of the environment which is required for optimal participation by manganese in the oxygen evolving reaction. This minireview describes the polypeptides of photosystem II, places an emphasis on the current state of knowledge concerning these species, and discusses current areas of uncertainty concerning these important polypeptides.Abbreviations A 23187 ionophore that exchanges divalent cations with H+ - Chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - DCPIP dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC diphenylcarbazide - EGTA ethyleneglycoltetraacetic acid - P680 the chlorophyll a reaction center of photosystem II - pheo pheophytin - PQ plastoquinone - PS photosystem - QA and QB primary and secondary plastoquinone electron acceptors of photosystem II - Sn (n=0, 1, 2, 3, 4) charge accumulating state of the oxygen evolving system - Signals IIvf, IIf and IIs epr-detectable free radicals associated with the oxidizing side of photosystem II - Z primary electron donor to the photosystem II reaction center The survey of literature for this review ended in September, 1984.  相似文献   

14.
The time course for the observation of intact chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes during barley chloroplast development was measured by mild sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The procedure required extraction of thylakoid membranes with sodium bromide to remove extrinsic proteins. During the early stages of greening, the proteins extracted with sodium bromide included polypeptides from the cell nucleus that associate with developing thylakoid membranes during isolation and interfere with the separation of CP complexes by electrophoresis. Photosystem I CP complexes were observed before the photosystem II and light-harvesting CP complexes during the initial stages of barley chloroplast development. Photosystem I activity was observed before the photosystem I CP complex was detected whereas photosystem II activity coincided with the appearance of the CP complex associated with photosystem II. Throughout chloroplast development, the percentage of the total chlorophyll associated with photosystem I remained constant whereas the amount of chlorophyll associated with photosystem II and the light-harvesting complex increased. The CP composition of thylakoid membranes from the early stages of greening was difficult to quantitate because a large amount of chlorophyll was released from the CP complexes during detergent extraction. As chloroplast development proceeded, a decrease was observed in the amount of chlorophyll released from the CP complexes by detergent action. The decrease suggested that the CP complexes were stabilized during the later stages of development.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CP chlorophyll-protein - CPI P700 chlorophyll-a protein complex of photosystem I - CPa electrophoretic band that contains the photosystem II reaction center complexes and a variable amount of the photosystem I light-harvesting complex - CP A/B the major light-harvesting complex associated with photosystem II - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DPC diphenyl carbazide - MV methyl viologen - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TEMED N,N,N,N-tetramethylethylenediamine - TMPD N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine Cooperative investigations of the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, and the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleigh, NC 27695-7601. Paper No. 9949 of the Journal Series of the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleight, NC 27695-7601.  相似文献   

15.
A cDNA clone for the extrinsic 30 kDa protein (OEC30) of photosystem II in Euglena gracilis Z was isolated and characterized. The open reading frame of the cDNA encoded a polypeptide of 338 amino acids, which consisted of a long presequence of 93 amino acids and a mature polypeptide of 245 amino acids. Two hydrophobic domains were identified in the presequence, in contrast to the presence of a single hydrophobic domain in the presequence of the corresponding proteins from higher plants. At the N- and C-terminal regions, respectively, of the presequence, a signal-peptide-like sequence and a thylakoid-transfer domain were identified. The presence of a long and unique presequence in the precursor to OEC30 is probably related to the complexity of the intracellular processes required for the synthesis and/or transport of the protein in Euglena.Abbreviations ER endoplasmic reticulum - cDNA complementary DNA - SSU small subunit; Rubisco, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - Rubico, ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll protein of photosystem II - PS II photosystem II - OEC30 the extrinsic 30 kDa protein of photosystem II in Euglena - PCR polymerase chain reaction - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - TE a solution containing 10 mM Tris-HCl and 1 mM EDTA pH 8.0 - SSPE a solution containing 0.15 M NaCl, 10 mM NaH2PO4 and 1 mM EDTA pH 7.4 - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PVDF poly(vinylidene difluoride)  相似文献   

16.
17.
The extrinsic 33 kDa polypeptide of the water-oxidizing complex has been extracted from pea photosystem II particles by washing with alkaline-Tris and purified by ion-exchange chromatography. The N-terminal amino acid sequence has been determined, and specific antisera have been raised in rabbits and used to screen a pea leaf cDNA library in gt11. Determination of the nucleotide sequence of positive clones revealed an essentially full-length cDNA for the 33 kDa polypeptide, the deduced amino acid sequence showing it to code for a mature protein of 248 amino acids with an N-terminal transit peptide of 81 amino acids. The protein showed a high degree of conservation with previously reported sequences for the 33 kDa protein from other species and the sequence contained a putative Ca2+-binding site with homology to mammalian intestinal calcium-binding proteins. Northern analysis of total pea RNA indicated a message of approximately 1.4 kb, in good agreement with the size of the cDNA obtained at 1.3 kbp. Southern blots of genomic DNA probed with the labelled cDNA give rise to several bands suggesting that the 33 kDa polypeptide is coded by a multi-gene family.Abbreviations ATZ - anilinothiazolinone - DITC - p-phenylenediisothiocyanate - PTH - phenylthiohydantoin - TFA - trifluoroacetic acid - Tris - tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane - bis-Tris - bis (2-hydroxyethyl) imino-tris (hydroxymethyl)-methane - p.f.u. - plaque-forming units  相似文献   

18.
Casein kinase II is thought to play an essential role in the control of cell division and differentiation in all eukaryotes. Through complementation of a defective casein kinase II catalytic subunit gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we isolated an Arabidopsis thaliana casein kinase II regulatory subunit homologue, CKB1. A second regulatory subunit was identified by low-stringency hybridization with CKB1.Casein kinase II from S. cerevisiae is composed of two catalytic () and two regulatory () subunits. Simultaneous disruption of the genes for the and subunits, CKA1 and CKA2, respectively, is lethal. Strain YDH8 has disruptions of CKA1 and CKA2; its viability depends on a temperature-sensitive allele of CKA2, cka2–8, carried on a centromeric plasmid. We screened an A. thaliana cDNA library, whose inserts are under the control of the galactose-inducible GAL10 promoter, for cDNAs which enabled YDH8 cells to grow at the restrictive temperature. One cDNA, CKB1, was isolated by this screen which had homology to cDNAs of casein kinase II subunits. A second cDNA, CKB2, was isolated by hybridization and was also able to suppress the YDH8 mutant phenotype.The proteins encoded by CKB1 and CKB2 are 80% identical. The carboxy-terminal two thirds of both proteins is ca. 54% identical to the regulatory subunits of casein kinase II from other species. The amino termini are unrelated to any other known proteins. CKB1 and CKB2 lack the conserved autophosphorylation site characteristic of animal subunits, but have potential casein kinase II phosphorylation sites in the same region. Suppression of the cka1 cka2–8 mutant phenotype occurs by interaction of CKB1 with the defective, cka2–8-encoded, catalytic subunit. Cells with disruptions in CKA1 and CKA2 are not rescued by expression of CKB1.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The photosynthetic bacteria are at the forefront of the study of many aspects of photosynthesis, including photopigment biosynthesis, photosynthetic-membrane assembly, light-harvesting, and reaction center photochemistry. The facultative growth of some photosynthetic bacteria, their simple photosystems, and their ease of genetic manipulation have all contributed to advances in these areas. Amongst these bacteria, the purple non-sulfur bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides has emerged as, arguably, the leading contender for a model system in which to integrate the studies of all the different aspects of the assembly and function of the photosynthetic apparatus. Many of the genes encoding photosynthesis-related proteins are known to be clustered within a small region of the genome in this organism. As a further aid to studying the assembly and function of the photosystem of Rb. sphaeroides, the DNA sequence for a genomic segment containing this photosynthesis gene cluster (PGC) has been assembled from previous EMBL submissions and formerly unpublished data. The Rb. sphaeroides PGC is 40.7 kb in length and consists of 38 open reading frames encoding the reaction center H, L and M subunits, the and polypeptides of the light-harvesting I (B875) complex, and the enzymes of bacteriochlorophyll and carotenoid biosynthesis. PGCs are a feature of gene organization in several photosynthetic bacteria, and the similarities between the clusters of Rb. sphaeroides and Rb. capsulatus have been apparent for some time. Here we present the first comprehensive analysis of the PGC of Rb. sphaeroides, as well as a comparison with that of Rb. capsulatus.  相似文献   

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