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1.
Photosystem II (PSII) contains different extrinsic proteins required for oxygen evolution among different organisms. Cyanobacterial PSII contains the 33 kDa, 12 kDa proteins and cytochrome (cyt) c-550; red algal PSII contains a 20 kDa protein in addition to the three homologous cyanobacterial proteins; whereas higher plant PSII contains the 33 kDa, 23 kDa and 17 kDa proteins. In order to understand the binding and functional properties of these proteins, we performed cross-reconstitution experiments with combinations of PSII and extrinsic proteins from three different sources: higher plant (spinach), red alga (Cyanidium caldarium) and cyanobacterium (Synechococcus vulcanus). Among all of the extrinsic proteins, the 33 kDa protein is common to all of the organisms and is totally exchangeable in binding to PSII from any of the three organisms. Oxygen evolution of higher plant and red algal PSII was restored to a more or less similar level by binding of any one of the three 33 kDa proteins, whereas oxygen evolution of cyanobacterial PSII was restored to a larger extent with its own 33 kDa protein than with the 33 kDa protein from other sources. In addition to the 33 kDa protein, the red algal 20 kDa, 12 kDa proteins and cyt c-550 were able to bind to cyanobacterial and higher plant PSII, leading to a partial restoration of oxygen evolution in both organisms. The cyanobacterial 12 kDa protein and cyt c-550 partially bound to the red algal PSII, but this binding did not restore oxygen evolution. The higher plant 23 kDa and 17 kDa proteins bound to the cyanobacterial and red algal PSII only through non-specific interactions. Thus, only the red algal extrinsic proteins are partially functional in both the cyanobacterial and higher plant PSII, which implies a possible intermediate position of the red algal PSII during its evolution from cyanobacteria to higher plants.  相似文献   

2.
This minireview presents a summary of information available on the variety and binding properties of extrinsic proteins that form the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II (PSII) of cyanobacteria, red alga, diatom, green alga, euglena, and higher plants. In addition, the structure and function of extrinsic PsbO, PsbV, and PsbU proteins are summarized based on the crystal structure of thermophilic cyanobacterial PSII together with biochemical and genetic studies from various organisms.  相似文献   

3.
The oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PS II) complex of red algae contains four extrinsic proteins of 12 kDa, 20 kDa, 33 kDa and cyt c-550, among which the 20 kDa protein is unique in that it is not found in other organisms. We cloned the gene for the 20-kDa protein from a red alga Cyanidium caldarium. The gene consists of a leader sequence which can be divided into two parts: one for transfer across the plastid envelope and the other for transfer into thylakoid lumen, indicating that the gene is encoded by the nuclear genome. The sequence of the mature 20-kDa protein has low but significant homology with the extrinsic 17-kDa (PsbQ) protein of PS II from green algae Volvox Carteri and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, as well as the PsbQ protein of higher plants and PsbQ-like protein from cyanobacteria. Cross-reconstitution experiments with combinations of the extrinsic proteins and PS IIs from the red alga Cy. caldarium and green alga Ch. reinhardtii showed that the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was functional in place of the green algal 17-kDa protein on binding to the green algal PS II and restoration of oxygen evolution. From these results, we conclude that the 20-kDa protein is the ancestral form of the extrinsic 17-kDa protein in green algal and higher plant PS IIs. This provides an important clue to the evolution of the oxygen-evolving complex from prokaryotic cyanobacteria to eukaryotic higher plants. The gene coding for the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was named psbQ' (prime).  相似文献   

4.
The product of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 gene slr2097 is a 123 amino acid polypeptide chain belonging to the truncated hemoglobin family. Recombinant, ferric heme-reconstituted Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 hemoglobin displays bis-histidine coordination of the iron ion. In addition, this protein is capable of covalently attaching a reactive histidine to the heme 2-vinyl group. The structure of the protein in the low-spin ferric state with intact vinyl substituents was solved by NMR methods. It was found that the structure differs from that of known truncated hemoglobins primarily in the orientation of the E helix, which carries His46 (E10) as the distal ligand to the iron; the length and orientation of the F helix, which carries His70 (F8) as the proximal ligand to the iron; and the H-helix, which carries His117 (H16), the reactive histidine. Regions of enhanced flexibility include the short A helix, the loop connecting the E and F helices, and the last seven residues at the carboxy end. The structural data allowed for the rationalization of physical properties of the cyanobacterial protein, such as fast on-rate for small ligand binding, unstable apoprotein fold, and cross-linking ability. Comparison to the truncated hemoglobin from the green alga Chlamydomonas eugametos also suggested how the endogenous hexacoordination affected the structure.  相似文献   

5.
H Koike  K Mamada  M Ikeuchi  Y Inoue 《FEBS letters》1989,244(2):391-396
The O2-evolving photosystem II core complex was isolated from a thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus vulcanus Copeland. Analysis by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the complex contained at least seven low-molecular-mass proteins in addition to the well characterized CP47 apoprotein, CP43 apoprotein, 33 kDa extrinsic protein, D1 protein, D2 protein and large subunit of cytochrome b-559. The separation of these low-molecular-mass proteins were very similar between cyanobacterial and higher plant PS II. N-terminal sequences of the 6.5 kDa and 3.9 kDa proteins of cyanobacterial core complex were determined after blotting to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane. The sequence of the 6.5 kDa protein showed high homology with an internal sequence of plant psbH gene product, so-called 10 kDa phosphoprotein, but did not conserve the Thr residue which is specifically phosphorylated in plants. The sequence of the 3.9 kDa protein corresponded to the K protein of higher plants (mature form of psbK gene product). These results indicate that the products of both psbH and psbK genes are present in cyanobacterial PS II as well as being associated with the O2-evolving core complex.  相似文献   

6.
Distribution of photosystem II (PSII) extrinsic proteins was examined using antibodies raised against various extrinsic proteins from different sources. The results showed that a glaucophyte (Cyanophora paradoxa) having the most primitive plastids contained the cyanobacterial-type extrinsic proteins (PsbO, PsbV, PsbU), and the primitive red algae (Cyanidium caldarium) contained the red algal-type extrinsic proteins (PsO, PsbQ', PsbV, PsbU), whereas a prasinophyte (Pyraminonas parkeae), which is one of the most primitive green algae, contained the green algal-type ones (PsbO, PsbP, PsbQ). These suggest that the extrinsic proteins had been diverged into cyanobacterial-, red algal- and green algal-types during early phases of evolution after a primary endosymbiosis. This study also showed that a haptophyte, diatoms and brown algae, which resulted from red algal secondary endosymbiosis, contained the red algal-type, whereas Euglena gracilis resulted from green algal secondary endosymbiosis contained the green algal-type extrinsic proteins, suggesting that the red algal- and green algal-type extrinsic proteins have been retained unchanged in the different lines of organisms following the secondary endosymbiosis. Based on these immunological analyses, together with the current genome data, the evolution of photosynthetic oxygen-evolving PSII was discussed from a view of distribution of the extrinsic proteins, and a new model for the evolution of the PSII extrinsic proteins was proposed.  相似文献   

7.
The ferredoxin was purified from the green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The protein showed typical absorption and circular dichroism spectra of a [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin. When compared with spinach ferredoxin, the C. reinhardtii protein was less effective in the catalysis of NADP+ photoreduction, but its activity was higher in the light activation of C. reinhardtii malate dehydrogenase (NADP). The complete amino acid sequence was determined by automated Edman degradation of the whole protein and of peptides obtained by trypsin and chymotrypsin digestions and by CNBr cleavage. The protein consists of 94 residues, with Tyr at both NH2 and COOH termini. The positions of the four cysteines binding the two iron atoms are similar to those found in other [2Fe-2S] ferredoxins. The primary structure of C. reinhardtii ferredoxin showed a great homology (about 80%) with ferredoxins from two other green algae.  相似文献   

8.
The complete amino acid sequence of the plastocyanin from the green alga Enteromorpha prolifera has been determined by Edman degradation of the intact molecule and fragments produced by enzymatic cleavage of the polypeptide chain with chymotrypsin, Staphylococcus aureus protease, proline-specific endopeptidase, Lys-C endopeptidase and trypsin. The molecule consists of 98 amino acid residues with a calculated relative molecular mass of 10103. The amino acid sequence of E. prolifera plastocyanin shows a high degree of homology with those plastocyanins from other algae and higher plants. In particular, the four residues which are copper ligands in other plastocyanins and in the bacterial electron transport protein azurin (two histidines, one cysteine and one methionine) are conserved. Five out of the six acidic amino acid side-chains which create an 'acidic patch' on the surface of plastocyanin from Populus nigra var. italica [Colman, P. M. et al. (1978) Nature (Lond.) 272, 319-324] are conserved in the amino acid sequence of E. prolifera plastocyanin.  相似文献   

9.
A transposon, designated Tn5469, was isolated from mutant strain FdR1 of the filamentous cyanobacterium Fremyella diplosiphon following its insertion into the rcaC gene. Tn5469 is a 4,904-bp noncomposite transposon with 25-bp near-perfect terminal inverted repeats and has three tandemly arranged, slightly overlapping potential open reading frames (ORFs) encoding proteins of 104.6 kDa (909 residues), 42.5 kDa (375 residues), and 31.9 kDa (272 residues). Insertion of Tn5469 into the rcaC gene in strain FdR1 generated a duplicate 5-bp target sequence. On the basis of amino acid sequence identifies, the largest ORF, designated tnpA, is predicted to encode a composite transposase protein. A 230-residue domain near the amino terminus of the TnpA protein has 15.4% amino acid sequence identity with a corresponding domain for the putative transposase encoded by Lactococcus lactis insertion sequence S1 (ISS1). In addition, the sequence for the carboxyl-terminal 600 residues of the TnpA protein is 20.0% identical to that for the TniA transposase encoded by Tn5090 on Klebsiella aerogenes plasmid R751. The TnpA and TniA proteins contain the D,D(35)E motif characteristic of a recently defined superfamily consisting of bacterial transposases and integrase proteins of eukaryotic retroelements and retrotransposons. The two remaining ORFs on Tn5469 encode proteins of unknown function. Southern blot analysis showed that wild-type F. diplosiphon harbors five genomic copies of Tn5469. In comparison, mutant strain FdR1 harbors an extra genomic copy of Tn5469 which was localized to the inactivated rcaC gene. Among five morphologically distinct cyanobacterial strains examined, none was found to contain genomic sequences homologous to Tn5469.  相似文献   

10.
Cyt c550 and 12 kDa protein are two extrinsic proteins of photosystem II (PSII) found in cyanobacteria and some eukaryotic algae. The binding patterns of these two extrinsic proteins are different between cyanobacterial (Thermosynechococcus vulcanus) and red algal (Cyanidium caldarium) PSIIs [Shen and Inoue (1993) Biochemistry 32: 1825; Enami et al. (1998) Biochemistry 39: 2787]. In order to elucidate the possible causes responsible for these differences, we first cloned the psbV gene encoding Cyt c550 from a red alga, Cyanidium caldarium, which was compared with the homologous sequences from other organisms. Cross-reconstitution experiments were then performed with different combinations of the extrinsic proteins and the cyanobacterial or red algal PSII. (1). Both the cyanobacterial and red algal Cyt c550 bound directly to the cyanobacterial PSII, whereas none of them bound directly to the red algal PSII, indicating that direct binding of Cyt c550 to PSII principally depends on the structure of PSII intrinsic proteins but not that of Cyt c550 itself. (2). Cyt c550 was functionally exchangeable between the red algal and the cyanobacterial PSII, and the red algal 12 kDa protein functionally bound to the cyanobacterial PSII, whereas the cyanobacterial 12 kDa protein did not bind to the red algal PSII. (3). The antibody against the cyanobacterial or red algal 12 kDa protein reacted with its original one but not with the homologous protein from the other organism, whereas the antibody against the red algal Cyt c550 reacted with both cyanobacterial and red algal Cyt c550. These results imply that the structure and function of Cyt c550 have been largely conserved, whereas those of the 12 kDa protein have been changed, in the two organisms studied here.  相似文献   

11.
Currently, there are very little data available regarding the photosynthetic apparatus of red algae. We have analyzed the genes for Photosystem I in the recently sequenced genome of the red alga Galdieria sulphuraria. All subunits that are conserved between plants and cyanobacteria were unambiguously identified in the Galdieria genome: PsaA, PsaB, PsaC, PsaD, PsaE, PsaF, PsaI, PsaJ, PsaK and PsaL. From the plant specific subunits, PsaN and PsaO were identified but the sequence homology was much lower than for the subunits that are present in plants and cyanobacteria. The subunit PsaX, which is specific for thermophilic cyanobacteria, is not present in the Galdieria genome, whereas PsaM is a plastid-encoded protein as in other red algae. The sequences of the core subunits of PSI were further analyzed by mapping of the conserved areas in the crystal structures of cyanobacterial and plant PSI. The structural comparison shows that PSI from the red alga Galdieria may represent a common ancestral structure at the interface between cyanobacterial and plant PSI. Some subunits have a “zwitter” structure that contains structural elements that show similarities with either plant or cyanobacterial PSI. The structure of PsaL, which is responsible for the trimerization of PSI in cyanobacteria, lacks a short helix and the Ca2+ binding site, which are essential for trimer formation indicating that the Galdieria PSI is a monomer. However the sequence homology to plant PsaL is low and lacks strong conservation of the interaction sites with PsaH. Furthermore, the sites for interaction of plant PSI with the LHCI complex are not well conserved between plants and Galdieria, which may indicate that Galdieria may contain a PSI that is evolutionarily much more ancient than PSI from green algae, plants and the current cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

12.
Although the animal cell (Na+ + K+)-ATPase is composed of two polypeptide subunits, alpha and beta, very little is known about the beta subunit. In order to obtain information about the structure of this polypeptide, the beta subunit has been investigated using proteolytic fragmentation, chemical modification of carbohydrate residues, and immunoblot analysis. The sialic acid moieties on the oligosaccharide groups on the beta subunit of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase were labeled with NaB3H4 after oxidation by sodium periodate, or the penultimate galactose residues on the oligosaccharides were similarly labeled after removal of sialic acid with neuraminidase and oxidation by galactose oxidase. All of the carbohydrate residues of the protein are located on regions of the beta subunit that are found on the non-cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. Cleavage of the galactose oxidase-treated, NaB3H4-labeled beta subunit by chymotrypsin at an extracellular site produced labeled fragments of 40 and 18 kDa, indicating multiple glycosylation sites along the polypeptide. Neither the 40 kDa fragment nor the 18 kDa fragment was released from the membrane by chymotrypsin digestion alone, but after cleavage the 40 kDa fragment could be removed from the membrane by treatment with 0.1 M NaOH. This indicates that the 40 kDa fragment does not span the lipid bilayer. The 40 kDa fragment and the 18 kDa fragment are also linked by at least one disulfide bond. The 18 kDa fragment also contains all of the binding sites found on the (Na+ + K+)-ATPase for anti-beta subunit antibodies. Both the 40 kDa fragment and the 18 kDa fragment were also generated using papain or trypsin to cleave the beta subunit. These data indicate that the beta subunit of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase contains multiple sites of glycosylation, that it inserts into the cell membrane near only one end of the polypeptide, and that one region of the polypeptide is particularly sensitive to proteolytic cleavage relative to the rest of the polypeptide.  相似文献   

13.
14.
M Ikeuchi  H Koike  Y Inoue 《FEBS letters》1989,253(1-2):178-182
We recently reported the presence of several low-molecular-mass protein components in the PS II O2-evolving core complex from the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus vulcanus [(1989) FEBS Lett. 244, 391-396]. Here we have characterized the three components (4.1, 4.7, 5 kDa) of the same cyanobacterial core complex by N-terminal sequencing. There were two components in the 4.7 kDa region, both having a blocked N-terminus. One has a sequence highly homologous to open reading frame 34 of plant chloroplast DNA (tentatively designated psbM), while the other has a sequence partially homologous to open reading frame 43 of chloroplast DNA (designated psbN), although neither of the two gene products has yet been confirmed in chloroplasts. The cyanobacterial 4.1 kDa protein partially corresponds to the 4.1 kDa nuclear-encoded core component of higher plant PS II. The cyanobacterial 5 kDa component, however, shows a sequence that is unrelated to any other known proteins.  相似文献   

15.
This work generated many truncated proteins and Glu(385) to Ala (E(385)/A) mutants of the human metalloproteinase and thrombospondin 1 (METH-1 or ADAMTS1) and specific antibodies. METH-1 was an active endopeptidase and both the metalloproteinase and the disintegrin/cysteine-rich domains were required for the proteinase activity. A point mutation at the zinc-binding site (E(385)/A) abolished the catalytic activity. METH-1 protein function may be modulated through proteolytic cleavage at multiple sites. One 135 kDa species had an NH(2)-terminal sequence of L(33)GRPSEEDEE. A species at 115 kDa and some other protein bands began with F(236)VSSHRYV(243), indicating that METH-1 proenzyme might be activated by a proprotein convertase such as furin by cleaving the R(235)-F(236) peptide bond. This cleavage was not an autocatalytic process since the E(385)/A mutants were also processed. Furthermore, a 52 kDa band with an NH(2)-terminal sequence of L(800)KEPLTIQV resulted from the digestion between the first and the second thrombospondin 1-like motifs in the spacer region of the extracellular matrix-binding domains.  相似文献   

16.
Toxin production is an adaptation that allows cyanobacteria in resource-limiting environments to ameliorate the effects of herbivory and competition with other phototrophs. We demonstrate that the cyanobacterial toxins anatoxin-a and microcystin-LR paralyze the motile green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In addition, both purified toxins and cyanobacterial extracellular products containing these toxins cause the alga to settle faster than in nontoxic media. In microcosm experiments, the presence of either the cyanobacterium or its extracellular products induce settling in the alga, similar to the response observed with the addition of both anatoxin-a and microcystin-LR. The cyanobacterial production of paralyzing toxins represents a novel mechanism for phytoplankton settling. This prokaryotic/eukaryotic chemical interaction may create a competitor-free zone for cyanobacteria in lake environments, predicating optimal conditions for a toxic cyanobacterial bloom.  相似文献   

17.
The carboxyl terminus of the CP43 subunit of photosystem II (PSII) in the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus elongatus, was genetically tagged with six consecutive histidine residues to create a metal binding site on the PSII supramolecular complex. The histidine-tagging enabled rapid isolation of an intact cyanobacterial PSII core complex from dodecyl maltoside-solubilized thylakoids by a simple one-step Ni(2+)-affinity column chromatography. The isolated core complex was in a dimeric form with a molecular mass of about 580 kDa, consisting of five major intrinsic membrane proteins (CP47, CP43, D1, D2 and cytochrome b-559), three extrinsic proteins (33 kDa, 12 kDa, and cytochrome c-550), and a few low molecular mass membrane proteins, and evolved oxygen at a rate as high as 3,400 mumol (mg Chl)-1 h-1 at 45 degrees C with ferricyanide as an electron acceptor. The core complex emitted thermoluminescence B2-, B1- and Q-bands arising from S2QB-, S3QB- and S2QA- charge recombinations at respective emission temperatures of 45, 38 and 20 degrees C, all of which were higher by about 15 degrees C as compared with those in mesophilic spinach BBY membranes. These results indicated that the isolated core complex well retained the intact properties of thermoluminescence of thermophilic cyanobacterial cells, the deeper stabilization of PSII charge pairs. The isolated complex was extremely stable in terms of both protein composition and function, exhibiting no release of extrinsic proteins, no proteolytic degradation in any of its subunits, accompanied by only a slight (less than 10%) loss in oxygen evolution, after dark-incubation at 20 degrees C for 8 d. These properties of the thermophilic PSII core complex are highly useful for various types of studies on PSII.  相似文献   

18.
The nucleotide sequence of the gene coding for the F0F1-ATPase gamma-subunit (atpC) from the transformable cyanobacterium Synchocystis 6083 has been determined. The deduced translation product consists of 314 amino acid residues and is highly homologous (72% identical residues) to the sequences of other cyanobacterial gamma-subunits. The Synechocystis 6803 sequence is also homologous to the chloroplast gamma-sequence. Like in the other cyanobacterial subunits, only the first of the 3 cysteine residues, which are involved in energy-linked functions of the gamma-subunit in spinach chloroplasts, is conserved in Synechocystis 6803.  相似文献   

19.
Irreversible binding of T-even bacteriophages to Escherichia coli is mediated by the short tail fibres, which serve as inextensible stays during DNA injection. Short tail fibres are exceptionally stable elongated trimers of gene product 12 (gp12), a 56 kDa protein. The N-terminal region of gp12 is important for phage attachment, the central region forms a long shaft, while a C-terminal globular region is implicated in binding to the bacterial lipopolysaccharide core. When gp12 was treated with stoichiometric amounts of trypsin or chymotrypsin at 37 degrees C, an N-terminally shortened fragment of 52 kDa resulted. If the protein was incubated at 56 degrees C before trypsin treatment at 37 degrees C, we obtained a stable trimeric fragment of 3 x 33 kDa lacking residues from both the N- and C-termini. Apparently, the protein unfolds partially at 56 degrees C, thereby exposing protease-sensitive sites in the C-terminal region and extra sites in the N-terminal region. Well-diffracting crystals of this fragment could be grown. Our results indicate that gp12 carries a stable central region, consisting of the C-terminal part of the shaft and the attached N-terminal half of the globular region. Implications for structure determination of the gp12 protein and its folding are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The seven serotypes of botulinum neurotoxin (BoNTs) are zinc metalloproteases that cleave and inactivate proteins critical for neurotransmission. The synaptosomal protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25) is cleaved by BoNTs A, C, and E, while vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) is the substrate for BoNTs B, D, F, and G. BoNTs not only are medically useful drugs but also are potential bioterrorist and biowarfare threat agents. Because BoNT protease activity is required for toxicity, inhibitors of that activity might be effective for antibotulinum therapy. To expedite inhibitor discovery, we constructed a hybrid gene encoding (from the N terminus to the C terminus, with respect to the expressed product) green fluorescent protein, then a SNAP-25 fragment encompassing residues Met-127 to Gly-206, and then VAMP residues Met-1 to Lys-94. Cysteine was added as the C terminus. The expressed product, which contained the protease cleavage sites for all seven botulinum serotypes, was purified and coupled covalently through the C-terminal sulfhydryl group to maleimide-activated 96-well plates. The substrate was readily cleaved by BoNTs A, B, D, E, and F. Using this assay and an automated 96-well pipettor, we screened 528 natural product extracts for inhibitors of BoNT A, B, and E protease activities. Serotype-specific inhibition was found in 30 extracts, while 5 others inhibited two serotypes.  相似文献   

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