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1.
《Plant science》1986,46(1):5-10
Cyanobacterin, a secondary metabolite produced by the cyanobacterium, Scytonema hofmanni, inhibits the growth of algae and plants. This compound is a potent inhibitor of photosynthetic electron transport and acts at a site in photosystem II (PS II). To further define the site of action of cyanobacterin, the effects of this natural product were investigated in a herbicide-resistant mutant of the cyanobacterium, Anacystis nidulans R2D2-X1. A. nidulans R2D2-X1 was reported to grow and maintain photosynthetic electron transport in the presence of 20 μM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and 6.0 μM atrazine. Resistance was attributed to an altered 32 kDa (quinone-binding, QB) protein [6]. In the presence of Hill electron acceptors, K3Fe(CN)6 and dichlorophenol-indophenol (DCPIP), spheroplasts of A. nidulans R2D2-X1 were inhibited by cyanobacterin at the same concentration as wild type spheroblasts. Under these same conditions, spheroplasts of the mutant maintained their resistance to DCMU. Similar results were obtained with isolated thylakoid membranes. In contrast, silicomolybdate reduction, which is resistant to DCMU inhibition, was very sensitive to cyanobacterin. We conclude that cyanobacterin inhibits electron transport in PS II at a unique site which is different from that of DCMU.  相似文献   

2.
Cyanobacterin is a secondary metabolite produced by the cyanobacterium, Scytonema hofmanni. Highly purified cyanobacterin was found to inhibit the growth of many cyanobacteria at a minimum effective dose of 2 g/ml (4.6 M). The antibiotic had no effect on eubacteria including the photosynthetic Rhodospirillum rubrum. The site of action of cyanobacterin was further investigated in the unicellular cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. Electron micrographs of antibiotic-treated Synechococcus cells indicated that cyanobacterin affects thylakoid membrane structure. The antibiotic also inhibited light-dependent oxygen evolution in Synechococcus cells and in spheroplasts. These data support our conclusion that cyanobacterin specifically inhibits photosynthetic electron transport. This activity is similar to herbicides such as 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea (DCMU). The anhydro analog of cyanobacterin had no biological activity.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - DCPIP dichlorophenolindophenol  相似文献   

3.
C Jegersch?ld  I Virgin  S Styring 《Biochemistry》1990,29(26):6179-6186
Strong illumination of oxygen-evolving organisms inhibits the electron transport through photosystem II (photoinhibition). In addition the illumination leads to a rapid turnover of the D1 protein in the reaction center of photosystem II. In this study the light-dependent degradation of the D1 reaction center protein and the light-dependent inhibition of electron-transport reactions have been studied in thylakoid membranes in which the oxygen evolution has been reversibly inhibited by Cl- depletion. The results show that Cl(-)-depleted thylakoid membranes are very vulnerable to damage induced by illumination. Both the D1 protein and the inhibition of the oxygen evolution are 15-20 times more sensitive to illumination than in control thylakoid membranes. The presence, during the illumination, of the herbicide 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) prevented both the light-dependent degradation of the D1 protein and the inhibition of the electron transport. The protection exerted by DCMU is seen only in Cl(-)-depleted thylakoid membranes. These observations lead to the proposal that continuous illumination of Cl(-)-depleted thylakoid membranes generates anomalously long-lived, highly oxidizing radicals on the oxidizing side of photosystem II, which are responsible for the light-induced protein damage and inhibition. The presence of DCMU during the illumination prevents the formation of these radicals, which explains the protective effects of the herbicide. It is also observed that in Cl(-)-depleted thylakoid membranes, oxygen evolution (measured after the readdition of Cl-) is inhibited before electron transfer from diphenylcarbazide to dichlorophenolindophenol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Abstract The natural product cyanobacterin has been shown to be toxic to most cyanobacteria at a concentration of approx. 5 μM. We demonstrate here that cyanobacterin will also inhibit the growth of most eukaryotic algae at a similar concentration. Some algae, such as Euglena gracilis , are resistant because they are able to maintain themselves by heterotrophic nutrition. Others, such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii , can apparently induce a detoxification mechanism to maintain photosynthesis in the presence of low concentrations of the inhibitor. Non-photosynthetic microorganisms are not affected by cyanobacterin.  相似文献   

5.
Techniques are described for the isolation of plastid thylakoid membranes from light-grown and dark-grown cells of Euglena gracilis var. bacillaris, and from mutants affecting plastid development. These membranes, which have minimal contamination with other cell fractions, are localized in sucrose gradients by using the thylakoid membrane sulfolipid as a specific marker. The plastid thylakoid membrane polypeptides isolated from these membranes were separated on SDS polyacrylamide gels and yielded patterns containing 30-40 polypeptides. Light-grown strain Z gave patterns identical with bacillaris. Since the plastid thylakoid polypeptide patterns obtained from dark-grown wild-type cells and from a bleached mutant W3BUL in which plastid DNA is undetectable are identical, it appears that the proplastid thylakoid polypeptides of wild-type cannot be coded in plastid DNA and are probably coded in nuclear DNA. The plastid thylakoid polypeptide patterns obtained from various dark-grown mutants, making large but abnormal chloroplasts, show a correlation between the amount of chlorophyll formed and the amount of a plastid thylakoid polypeptide thought to be associated wtth one of the pigment-protein light-harvesting complexes. Treatment with SAN 9789 (4-chloro-5-(methylamino)-2(alpha, alpha, alpha,-trifluoro-m-tolyl)-3-(2H(pyridazinone) known to block carotenoid synthesis at the level of phytoene, causes a progressive loss of all plastid thylakoid polypeptides during growth in darkness and results in the establishment of a new, lowere steady-state level of sulfolipid. At least ten of the plastid thylakoid polypeptides become labeled when isolated chloroplasts are supplied with radioactive amono acids; of these six are undectable in W3BUL and are, therefore, candidates for coding by plastid DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Cyanobacterin, a secondary metabolite produced by the cysnobacterium, Scytonema hofmanni, inhibits electron transport at a site in photosystem II. It was previously shown that a DCMU-resistant mutant of A. nidulans R2 was still susceptible to cyanobacterin (Gleason et al., Plant Science, 46 (1986) 5–10). Apparently, cyanobacterin acts at a site different from that of DCMU and similar PS II inhibitors. To confirm this conclusion, a cyanobacterin-resistant strain of A. nidulans R2 was produced by nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis and selected by growth in the presence of 4.7 μM cyanobacterin. Hill activity in mutant thylakoids was compared to that of the wild type membranes in the presence of ferricyanide and silicomolybdate as electron acceptors. Photosynthetic electron transport in the mutant membranes shows a high degree of resistance to cyanobacterin in both reactions. In contrast, the mutant exhibits the same susceptibility to DCMU inhibition as the wild type R2. Cyanobacterin acts at a unique site, inhibiting electron flow from quinone-A to quinone-B.  相似文献   

7.
Galloway RE  Mets L 《Plant physiology》1982,70(6):1673-1677
A uniparentally inherited 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-resistant mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardii, Dr2, which has a resistance mechanism of the type defined as `primary,' has been isolated. In vitro Hill reactions catalyzed by isolated thylakoid membranes reveal a reduced apparent affinity of the thylakoids for DCMU. These changes in membrane properties quantitatively account for the resistance of mutant Dr2 to herbicide inhibition of growth. The properties of this mutant show that all of the Hill reaction-inhibiting DCMU binding sites are under identical genetic control. Mutant Dr2 is a useful new uniparental genetic marker, since it has a novel phenotype and it may be possible to identify its altered gene product. The low cross-resistance of Dr2 to atrazine suggests that there may be considerable flexibility in exploiting induced herbicide resistance of crop plants for improving herbicide specificity.  相似文献   

8.
Dark-grown non-dividing cells of Euglena gracilis Klebs var. bacillaris Cori were exposed to light for up to 72 h and thylakoid membrane fractions were isolated by sedimentation in sucrose step gradients at various stages of development. The membrane-bound coupling factor (CF1)-ATPase activity of these prothylakoids (0 h of light) and developing thylakoid membranes (12 to 72 h of light) was characterized by its cation specificity and sensitivity to inhibitors. The enzyme at all stages of development was activated by Mg2+ and to a lesser extent by Ca2+; Mn2+ was found to activate, as well as or better than Mg2 + at comparable concentrations. The activity of the enzyme was almost completely inhibited by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD; 0.3 mM), but was insensitive to oligomycin, valinomycin and carbonyl cyanide P-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP). Low concentrations of NH4CI gave a slight stimulation of enzyme activity, whereas high concentrations of the uncoupler were inhibitory. The specific activity of the membrane-bound CF,-ATPase was highest in prothylakoid membranes. Specific activity decreased on a thylakoid protein or chlorophyll basis during the first 12 h of development, and achieved a steady state level by 48 h following light induction. Estimates of total CF1-ATPase activity per cell indicate that the time for major synthesis of the enzyme is between 12 and 3d h ol development. These results suggest that following an initial lag period in membrane development lasting about 12 h, there is a formation of CF1-ATPase that accompanies further thylakoid membrane development.  相似文献   

9.
The complete presequences of the nucleus-encoded precursors to two proteins, cytochrome c6 and the 30-kDa protein of the oxygen-evolving complex, that reside in the thylakoid lumen of the chloroplasts of Euglena gracilis are presented. Sorting of these proteins involves translocation across four membranes, the three-membraned chloroplast envelope and the thylakoid membrane. The tripartite presequences show the structure: signal sequence transit sequence signal sequence. Three hydrophobic domains become apparent: two of them correspond to signal sequences for translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane and the thylakoid membrane, respectively, whereas the third constitutes the stop-transfer signal contained in the long stroma-targeting part of the tripartite presequence.  相似文献   

10.
Using sulfolipid to locate plastid thylakoid membranes in gradients from dark-grown resting cells it has been possible to study the plastid thylakoid membrane polypeptides of Euglena gracilis var. bacillaris undergoing light-induced chloroplast development. All plastid thylakoid bands seen in dark-growing wild-type cells and in mutant W3BUL in which plastid DNA is undetectable, are observed to increase in amount during plastid development. Others, which are undetectable in dark-grown wild-type and W3BUL increase greatly during plastid development and appear to be those associated with pigment-protein complexes. The data obtained from experiments where the polypeptides were labeled with 35S during development, either continuously or in pulses, were consistent with these findings. Cycloheximide strongly inhibited the increases in amount in all bands and chloramphenicol or streptomycin produced a lower level of inhibition in all bands indicating tight control of theformation of each plastid membrane constituent by the others. The formation of a polypeptide band of 25 000 molecular weight, thought to be a part of a pigment-protein complex of the thylakoid, and chlorophyll synthesis were inhibited identically by these antibiotics.  相似文献   

11.
Polar lipid trafficking is essential in eukaryotic cells as membranes of lipid assembly are often distinct from final destination membranes. A striking example is the biogenesis of the photosynthetic membranes (thylakoids) in plastids of plants. Lipid biosynthetic enzymes at the endoplasmic reticulum and the inner and outer plastid envelope membranes are involved. This compartmentalization requires extensive lipid trafficking. Mutants of Arabidopsis are available that are disrupted in the incorporation of endoplasmic reticulum-derived lipid precursors into thylakoid lipids. Two proteins affected in two of these mutants, trigalactosyldiacylglycerol 1 (TGD1) and TGD2, encode the permease and substrate binding component, respectively, of a proposed lipid translocator at the inner chloroplast envelope membrane. Here we describe a third protein of Arabidopsis, TGD3, a small ATPase proposed to be part of this translocator. As in the tgd1 and tgd2 mutants, triacylglycerols and trigalactolipids accumulate in a tgd3 mutant carrying a T-DNA insertion just 5' of the TGD3 coding region. The TGD3 protein shows basal ATPase activity and is localized inside the chloroplast beyond the inner chloroplast envelope membrane. Proteins orthologous to TGD1, -2, and -3 are predicted to be present in Gram- bacteria, and the respective genes are organized in operons suggesting a common biochemical role for the gene products. Based on the current analysis, it is hypothesized that TGD3 is the missing ATPase component of a lipid transporter involving TGD1 and TGD2 required for the biosynthesis of ER-derived thylakoid lipids in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

12.
Diethylhydroxylamine, when added to beet spinach thylakoid membranes in the reaction mixture enhanced both photosystem II mediated dichlorophenolindophenol photoreduction and whole chain electron transport supported by methyl viologen. Diethylhydroxylamine supports dichlorophenolindophenol photoreduction when oxygen evolving complex is inactivated by hydroxylamine washings. All the electron transport assays were found to be highly sensitive to diuron, indicating that diethylhydroxylamine donates electrons to the photosystem II before the herbicide binding site. The stimulation of the photochemical activity by diethylhydroxylamine is not solely due to its action as an uncoupler. It was also observed that the action of diethylhydroxylamine was not altered by preincubations of thylakoids in light in the presence of diethylhydroxylamine. Also, thylakoid membranes did not lose their benzoquinone Hill activity by the pre-incubations with diethylhydroxylamine either in light or in dark. Thus, unlike the photosystem II electron donor, hydroxylamine, diethylhydroxylamine was found to donate electrons without the inactivations of oxygen evolving complex. It is suggested that diethylhydroxylamine is a useful electron donor to the photosystem II.  相似文献   

13.
Plant protoporphyrinogen oxidase is of particular interest since it is the last enzyme of the common branch for chlorophyll and heme biosynthetic pathways. In addition, it is the target enzyme for diphenyl ether-type herbicides, such as acifluorfen. Two distinct methods were used to investigate the localization of this enzyme within Percoll-purified spinach chloroplasts. We first assayed the enzymatic activity by spectrofluorimetry and we analyzed the specific binding of the herbicide acifluorfen, using highly purified chloroplast fractions. The results obtained give clear evidence that chloroplast protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity is membrane-bound and is associated with both chloroplast membranes, i.e. envelope and thylakoids. Protoporphyrinogen oxidase specific activity was 7-8 times higher in envelope membranes than in thylakoids, in good agreement with the number of [3H]acifluorfen binding sites in each membrane system: 21 and 3 pmol/mg protein, respectively, in envelope membranes and thylakoids. On a total activity basis, 25% of protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity were associated with envelope membranes. The presence of protoporphyrinogen oxidase in chloroplast envelope membranes provides further evidence for a role of this membrane system in chlorophyll biosynthesis. In contrast, the physiological significance of the enzyme associated with thylakoids is still unknown, but it is possible that thylakoid protoporphyrinogen oxidase could be involved in heme biosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
The binding of the herbicide atrazine to thylakoid membranes is often used to quantify Photosystem II reaction centres. Two atrazine binding sites, with high and low affinities, have been observed on the D1 and D2 polypeptides of Photosystem II, respectively (McCarthy S., Jursinic P. and Stemler A. (1988) Plant Physiol. 86S:46). We have observed that the accessibility of the low-affinity binding sites is variable, being limited in freshly isolated thylakoids or in fresh frozen-thawed thylakoids, but increasing during storage of the membranes on ice. In contrast, the accessibility of the high-affinity binding sites, which are titratable at low concentrations (< 500 nM) of herbicide, is much less variable, although the dissociation constant is greatly influenced by ethanol. We conclude that to quantify Photosystem II reaction centres by atrazine binding, it is sufficient and more reliable to assay only the high-affinity binding sites.  相似文献   

15.
Ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase associates with thylakoid membranes into two pools of different binding strength that are experimentally distinguished on the basis of resistance to removal by washes in low ionic strength media. The nondenaturing zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid is uniquely able to remove the more tightly bound pool of enzyme, without solubilization of major membrane proteins. The reconstitution of reductase onto depleted thylakoid membranes requires available membrane binding sites and cations, in order of effectiveness trivalent greater than divalent greater than monovalent. The hetero/bifunctional 125I-iodinated Denny-Jaffe cross-linking reagent yields a 54-kDa, covalently cross-linked adduct between ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase and a component of the thylakoid membrane. Our results show that the more tightly bound pool of enzyme is associated with the 17.5-kDa reductase-binding protein (Vallejos, R. H., Ceccarelli, E., and Chan, R. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 8048-8051).  相似文献   

16.
Plasma membranes were isolated and separated from thylakoid membranes by discontinuous sucrose density gradient centrifugation of crude membranes prepared by French pressure cell extrusion of lysozyme-treated Anacystis nidulans. Two distinct populations of chlorophyll-free plasma membrane vesicles were obtained exhibiting buoyant densities of 1.087 and 1.100 g/cm3 as opposed to a uniform density of 1.192 g/cm3 for thylakoid membranes. Plasma and thylakoid membranes were characteristically different also with respect to fatty acid and protein composition, cytochrome oxidase activity, and pigment content as analyzed by spectrophotometry, spectrofluorimetry, and high performance liquid chromatography. Apart from carotenoids, chlorophyll a was the only major photosynthetic pigment detected in thylakoid membranes while plasma membranes contained virtually no chlorophyll a but (besides large amounts of carotenoids) protochlorophyllide a and chlorophyllide a as revealed by solvent partition (between n-hexane and acetone or methanol), room and low temperature fluorescence emission and excitation spectra, and analytical separation and identification by high performance liquid chromatography and comparison with authentic standards. The protochlorophyllide in the plasma membrane could be transformed into chlorophyllide in the dark in vitro by incubating the membrane preparation with NADPH; NADP+ effected the reverse transition.  相似文献   

17.
Activity of the natural algicide, cyanobacterin, on angiosperms   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Cyanobacterin is a secondary metabolite produced by the cyanobacterium (blue-green alga) Scytonema hofmanni. The compound had previously been isolated and chemically characterized. It was shown to inhibit the growth of algae at a concentration of approximately 5 micromolar. Cyanobacterin also inhibited the growth of angiosperms, including the aquatic, Lemna, and terrestrial species such as corn and peas. In isolated pea chloroplasts, cyanobacterin inhibited the Hill reaction when p-benzoquinone, K3Fe(CN)6, dichlorophenolindophenol, or silicomolybdate were used as electron acceptors. The concentration needed to inhibit the Hill reaction in photosystem II was generally lower than the concentration of the known photosystem II inhibitor 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea. Cyanobacterin had no effect on electron transport in photosystem I. The data indicate that cyanobacterin inhibits O2 evolving photosynthetic electron transport in all plants and that the most probable site of action is in photosystem II.  相似文献   

18.
The gene encoding a novel extrinsic protein (Psb31) found in Photosystem II (PSII) of a diatom, Chaetoceros gracilis, was cloned and sequenced. The deduced protein contained three characteristic leader sequences targeted for chloroplast endoplasmic reticulum membrane, chloroplast envelope membrane and thylakoid membrane, indicating that Psb31 is encoded in the nuclear genome and constitutes one of the extrinsic proteins located on the lumenal side. Homologous genes were found in a red alga and chromophytic algae but not in other organisms. Genes encoding the other four extrinsic proteins in C. gracilis PSII were also cloned and sequenced, and their leader sequences were characterized and compared. To search for the nearest neighbor relationship between Psb31 and the other PSII components, we crosslinked the PSII particles with the water-soluble carbodiimide, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide, and found that Psb31 directly associates with PSII core components through electrostatic interaction, suggesting that the novel Psb31 protein is one of the extrinsic proteins constituting the functional oxygen-evolving complex of C. gracilis PSII.  相似文献   

19.
In order to distinguish between two photosystem II proteins with apparent molecular weights of about 32 kDa, mild extraction procedures were used to remove several thylakoid membrane components. A 32-kDa protein that stained intensely with Coomassie brilliant blue could be extracted from the thylakoid membranes without removing the 32-kDa herbicide receptor protein, which stained poorly with Coomassie brilliant blue. The nonextracted protein was readily detectable after in vivo polypeptide labeling with [35S]methionine or after in vitro covalent tagging with [14C]azidoatrazine. The procedures used to extract the intensely stained, 32-kDa polypeptide resulted in changes in herbicide-binding characteristics, presumably due to conformational changes in the herbicide-binding environment. Alterations of membrane surface charge by protein phosphorylation also influenced herbicide binding.  相似文献   

20.
Plastid DNA, like bacterial and mitochondrial DNA, is organized into protein–DNA complexes called nucleoids. Plastid nucleoids are believed to be associated with the inner envelope in developing plastids and the thylakoid membranes in mature chloroplasts, but the mechanism for this re-localization is unknown. Here, we present the further characterization of the coiled-coil DNA-binding protein MFP1 as a protein associated with nucleoids and with the thylakoid membranes in mature chloroplasts. MFP1 is located in plastids in both suspension culture cells and leaves and is attached to the thylakoid membranes with its C-terminal DNA-binding domain oriented towards the stroma. It has a major DNA-binding activity in mature Arabidopsis chloroplasts and binds to all tested chloroplast DNA fragments without detectable sequence specificity. Its expression is tightly correlated with the accumulation of thylakoid membranes. Importantly, it is associated in vivo with nucleoids, suggesting a function for MFP1 at the interface between chloroplast nucleoids and the developing thylakoid membrane system.  相似文献   

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