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1.
Chimaeric mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been generated carrying part or all of the spinach psbB gene, encoding CP47 (one of the chlorophyll-binding core antenna proteins in Photosystem II). The mutant in which the entire psbB gene had been replaced by the homologous gene from spinach was an obligate photoheterotroph and lacked Photosystem II complexes in its thylakoid membranes. However, this strain could be transformed with plasmids carrying selected regions of Synechocystis psbB to give rise to photoautotrophs with a chimaeric spinach/cyanobacterial CP47 protein. This process involved heterologous recombination in the cyanobacterium between psbB sequences from spinach and Synechocystis 6803; which was found to be reasonably effective in Synechocystis. Also other approaches were used that can produce a broad spectrum of chimaeric mutants in a single experiment. Functional characterization of the chimaeric photoautotrophic mutants indicated that if a decrease in the photoautotrophic growth rates was observed, this was correlated with a decrease in the number of Photosystem II reaction centers (on a chlorophyll basis) in the thylakoid membrane and with a decrease in oxygen evolution rates. Remaining Photosystem II reaction centers in these chimaeric mutants appeared to function rather normally, but thermoluminescence and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements provided evidence for a destabilization of QB . This illustrates the sensitivity of the functional properties of the PS II reaction center to mild perturbations in a neighboring protein.Abbreviations diuron 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fv variable chlorophyll a fluorescence - HEPES N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N-(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - (k)bp (kilo)base pairs - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - QB secondary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

2.
Summary Affinity purified, polyclonal antibodies raised against the Photosystem II 33 kDa manganese-stabilizing polypeptide of the spinach oxygen-evolving complex were used to isolate the gene encoding the homologous protein from Synechocystis 6803. Comparison of the amino acid sequence deduced from the Synechocystis psb1 nucleotide sequence with recently published sequences of spinach and pea confirms the homology indicated by antigenic crossreactivity and shows that the cyanobacterial and higher plant sequences are 43% identical and 63% conserved. Regions of identity, varying in length from 1 to 10 consecutive residues, are distributed throughout the protein. The 28 residues at the amino terminus of the psb1 gene product, characteristic of prokaryotic signal peptides, show homology with the carboxyl-terminal third of the transit sequences of pea and spinach and are most likely needed for the transport of the manganese-stabilizing protein across the thylakoid membrane to its destination of the lumen. Synechocystis mutants which contain a kanamycin resistance gene cassette inserted into the coding region for the 32 kDa polypeptide were constructed. These mutants contain no detectable 32 kDa polypeptide, do not evolve oxygen, and are incapable of photoautotrophic growth.  相似文献   

3.
A mutant strain of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC (Pasteur Culture Collection) 6803 has been developed in which psbB, the gene coding for the chlorophyl a-binding protein CP47 in Photosystem II (PSII), has been deleted. This deletion mutant can be used for the reintroduction of modified psbB into the cyanobacterium. To study the role of a large hydrophilic region in CP47, presumably located on the lumenal side of the thylakoid membrane between the fifth and sixth membrane-spanning regions, specific deletions have been introduced in psbB coding for regions within this domain. One psbB mutation leads to deletion of Gly-351 to Thr-365 in CP47, another psbB mutation was targeted towards deletion of Arg-384 to Val-392 in this protein. The deletion from Gly-351 to Thr-365 results in a loss of PSII activity and of photoautotrophic growth of the mutant, but the deletion between Arg-384 and Val-392 retains PSII activity and the ability to grow photoautotrophically. The mutant strain with the deletion from Gly-351 to Thr-365 does not assemble a stable PSII reaction center complex in its thylakoid membranes, and exhibits diminished levels of CP47 and of the reaction center proteins D1 and D2. In contrast to the Arg-384 to Val-392 portion of this domain, the region between Gly-351 and Thr-365 appears essential for the normal structure and function of photosystem II.  相似文献   

4.
The nucleotide sequence for the Photosystem II gene psbC has been determined for the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803. The gene overlaps the last 50 bases of the psbD gene, and both genes are transcribed in the same direction, but read in different frames. This arrangement is identical to that found in all chloroplast genomes for which psbC has been sequenced. The Synechocystis nucleotide sequence is 70% homologous to the tobacco gene and the predicted amino acid sequence shows 85% homology. A possible alternative translation start site for psbC has been conserved between seven plant sequences and the cyanobacterial sequence. The hydropathy plot for the cyanobacterial protein is very similar to plots determined for six plant species. Pairs of histidines that may play a role in binding chlorophyll are conserved between the cyanobacterial and plant amino acid sequences.  相似文献   

5.
The photosynthetic apparatus of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6714 cells grown chemoheterotrophically (dark with glucose as a carbon source) and photoautotrophically (light in a mineral medium) were compared. Dark-grown cells show a decrease in phycocyanin content and an even greater decrease in chlorophyll content with respect to light-grown cells. Analysis of fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K and at 20 °C, of dark- and light-grown cells, and of phycobilisomes isolated from both types of cells, indicated that in darkness the phycobiliproteins were assembled in functional phycobilisomes (PBS). The dark synthesized PBS, however, were unable to transfer their excitation energy to PS II chlorophyll. Upon illumination of dark-grown cells, recovery of photosynthetic activity, pigment content and energy transfer between PBS and PS II was achieved in 24–48 h according to various steps. For O2 evolution the initial step was independent of protein synthesis, but the later steps needed de novo synthesis. Concerning recovery of PBS to PS II energy transfer, light seems to be necessary, but neither PS II functioning nor de novo protein synthesis were required. Similarly, light, rather than functional PS II, was important for the recovery of an efficient energy transfer in nitrate-starved cells upon readdition of nitrate. In addition, it has been shown that normal phycobilisomes could accumulate in a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 mutant deficient in Photosystem II activity.Abbreviations APC allophycocyanin - CAP chloroamphenicol - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - CP-47 chlorophyll-binding Photosystem II protein of 47 kDa - EF exoplasmic face - PBS phycobilisome - PC phycocyanin - PS Photosystem  相似文献   

6.
We isolated a 38 kDa ssDNA-binding protein from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 6301 and determined its N-terminal amino acid sequence. A genomic clone encoding the 38 kDa protein was isolated by using a degenerate oligonucleotide probe based on the amino acid sequence. The nucleotide sequence and predicted amino acid sequence revealed that the 38 kDa protein is 306 amino acids long and homologous to the nuclear-encoded 370 amino acid chloroplast ribosomal protein CS1 of spinach (48% identity), therefore identifying it as ribosomal protein (r-protein) S1. Cyanobacterial and chloroplast S1 proteins differ in size from Escherichia coli r-protein S1 (557 amino acids). This provides an additional evidence that cyanobacteria are closely related to chloroplasts. The Synechococcus gene rps1 encoding S1 is located 1.1 kb downstream from psbB, which encodes the photosystem 11 P680 chlorophyll a apoprotein. An open reading frame encoding a potential protein of 168 amino acids is present between psbB and rps1 and its deduced amino acid sequence is similar to that of E. coli hypothetical 17.2 kDa protein. Northern blot analysis showed that rps1 is transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA.  相似文献   

7.
The three main polyamines putrescine (Put), spermidine (Spd) and spermine (Spm) were characterized by HPLC in intact spinach leaf cells, intact chloroplasts, thylakoid membranes, Photosystem II membranes, the light-harvesting complex and the PS II complex. All contain the three polyamines in various ratios; the HPLC polyamine profiles of highly resolved PS II species (a Photosystem II core and the rection center) suggest an enrichment in the polyamine Spm.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - LHC light-harvesting complex - PS II Photosystem II - PS II-RC Photosystem II reaction center - Put putrescine - Spd spermidine - Spm spermine - 10%S-core D1-D2-Cyt b559-47 kD-43 kD complex  相似文献   

8.
Cells of the psbH deletion mutant IC7 of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 grown in the absence of glucose contain strongly reduced levels of chlorophyll when compared with cells grown in the presence of glucose, or compared with wild-type (WT) cells. Low-temperature fluorescence emission spectra revealed decreased content of both active PS II (Photosystem II) and PS I (Photosystem I) complexes. Analysis of thylakoid membrane complexes of IC7 by native electrophoresis showed a similar set of chlorophyll–proteins, namely a PS II core complex and trimeric and monomeric PS II complexes, as in WT. However, in contrast to WT, the 35S-methionine protein labeling pattern of the mutant exhibited no preferential labeling of the D1 protein in the PS II core complexes, and the labeled D1 and D2 proteins accumulated predominantly in the PS II reaction center lacking CP47. The results show that in autotrophically grown cells of the psbH deletion mutant, selective D1 turnover is inhibited and synthesis of CP47 becomes a limiting step in the PS II assembly.  相似文献   

9.
An immunological survey of C3, C4 and C3-C4-intermediate Flaveria species showed that subunit III (PsaF) of the photosystem I reaction center (PSI-RC) is present in all these species. This was confirmed by the isolation of the gene encoding the PSI-RC subunit III (PsaF) from Flaveria trinervia, the first psaF gene to be isolated from a C4 plant. The deduced amino acid sequence showed a high degree of similarity to the corresponding protein of spinach which is a C3 species. A region of 17 hydrophobic amino acids in the C-terminal part of the F. trinervia protein was found to be especially conserved in all PsaF proteins studied so far (cyanobacteria and Chlamydomonas).Abbreviations PSI-RC Photosystem I reaction center - cTPs chloroplast-targeted-proteins - chl chlorophyll - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

10.
We isolated a 38 kDa ssDNA-binding protein from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 6301 and determined its N-terminal amino acid sequence. A genomic clone encoding the 38 kDa protein was isolated by using a degenerate oligonucleotide probe based on the amino acid sequence. The nucleotide sequence and predicted amino acid sequence revealed that the 38 kDa protein is 306 amino acids long and homologous to the nuclear-encoded 370 amino acid chloroplast ribosomal protein CS1 of spinach (48% identity), therefore identifying it as ribosomal protein (r-protein) S1. Cyanobacterial and chloroplast S1 proteins differ in size from Escherichia coli r-protein S1 (557 amino acids). This provides an additional evidence that cyanobacteria are closely related to chloroplasts. The Synechococcus gene rps1 encoding S1 is located 1.1 kb downstream from psbB, which encodes the photosystem 11 P680 chlorophyll a apoprotein. An open reading frame encoding a potential protein of 168 amino acids is present between psbB and rps1 and its deduced amino acid sequence is similar to that of E. coli hypothetical 17.2 kDa protein. Northern blot analysis showed that rps1 is transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA.  相似文献   

11.
The psbX gene (sml0002) coding for a 4.1 kDa protein in Photosystem II of plants and cyanobacteria was deleted in both wild type and in a Photosystem I-less mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Polymerase chain reaction and sequencing analysis showed that the mutants had completely segregated. Deletion of the PsbX protein does not seem to influence growth rate, electron transport or water oxidation ability. Whereas a high light induction of the psbX mRNA could be observed in wild type, deletion of the gene did not lead to high light sensibility. Light saturation measurements and 77K fluorescence measurements indicated a minor disconnection of the antenna in the deletion mutant. Furthermore, fluorescence induction measurements as well as immuno-staining of the D1 protein showed that the amount of Photosystem II complexes in the mutants was reduced by 30%. Therefore, PsbX does not seem to be necessary for the Photosystem II electron transport, but directly or indirectly involved in the regulation of the amount of functionally active Photosystem II centres in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.  相似文献   

12.
Pheophytin and chlorophyll extracted from oxygen-evolving photosystem II particles, chloroplast thylakoids and cyanobacterial cells were separated by column chromatography with DEAE-Toyopearl, and quantitatively determined by spectrophotometry. The molecular ratio of chlorophyll a+b to pheophytin a was about 100 in spinach photosystem II particles and about 140 in spinach thylakoids. Using flash spectrophotometry of P680 and measurement of flash-induced oxygen yield, the molecular ratio of the chlorophyll to the photochemical reaction center II was determined to be about 200 in the photosystem II particles. These findings suggest that the stoichiometry in photosystem II particles is one reaction center II and two pheophytin a molecules per about 200 chlorophyll molecules. The same stoichiometry for pheophytin to the reaction center II was obtained in the cyanobacteria, Anacystis nidulans and Synechocystis PCC 6714. A quantitative determination of pheophytin a and the electron donor P700 in stroma thylakoids from pokeweed suggests that photosystem I does not contain pheophytin.Dedicated to Prof. L.N.M. Duysens on the occasion of his retirement.  相似文献   

13.
In order to understand the mechanism of photodamage induced by solar radiation under natural conditions, we studied the interaction of visible and ultraviolet-B light in the inactivation and repair of the Photosystem II complex by using oxygen evolution and flash-induced chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. In isolated spinach thylakoids and Synechocystis 6803 cells, in which de novo protein synthesis is blocked by lincomycin, photodamage of Photosystem II by visible and UV-B light is characterized by linear semilogarithmic inactivation curves for both separate and combined illumination protocols. The extent of PS II inactivation obtained after combined illumination can be well simulated by assuming independent damaging events induced by visible and UV-B photons. In intact Synechocystis cells capable of protein repair, simultaneous illumination by visible and UV-B light impairs Photosystem II activity to a smaller extent than expected from the independent damaging events. This protective effect is pronounced at low visible light (130 μE m−2 s−1), but becomes negligible at high intensities (1300 μE m−2 s−1). Exposure of intact Synechocystis 6803 cells to direct sunlight leads to a rapid inactivation of PS II, accompanied by the accumulation of donor side inhibited centers. This phenomenon, which shows the impairment of the manganese cluster of water oxidation was not observed when the ultraviolet components of sunlight were filtered out. We conclude that visible and UV-B photons inactivate PS II via non-interacting mechanisms, which affect different target sites. In intact cells, the two spectral regions do interact, and results in synergistically enhanced protein repair capacity when UV-B radiation is accompanied by low intensity visible light, which provides protection against photodamage. However, this ameliorating effect becomes insignificant at high light intensities characteristic of direct sunlight. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

14.
《BBA》1987,893(2):267-274
The D1-D2-cytochrome b-559 reaction center complex and the 47 kDa antenna chlorophyll protein isolated from spinach Photosystem II were characterized by means of low temperature absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. The low temperature absorption spectrum of the D1-D2-cytochrome b-559 complex showed two bands in the Qy region located at 670 and 680 nm. On the basis of its absorption maximum and orientation the latter component may be attributed at least in part to P-680, the primary electron donor of Photosystem II. The 47 kDa antenna complex showed absorption bands at 660, 668 and 677 nm and a minor component at 690 nm. The latter transition appeared to be associated with the characteristic low temperature 695 nm fluorescence band of Photosystem II. The 695 nm emission band was absent in the D1-D2 complex, which indicates that it does not originate from the reaction center pheophytin, as earlier proposed. The transition dipole responsible for the main fluorescence at 684 nm from this complex had a parallel orientation with respect to the membrane plane in the native structure. The reaction center preparation contains two spectrally distinct carotenoids with different orientations.  相似文献   

15.
A review of the structural properties of the photosystem II chlorophyll binding proteins, CP47 and CP43, is given and a model of the transmembrane helical domains of CP47 has been constructed. The model is based on (i) the amino acid sequence of the spinach protein, (ii) an 8 A three-dimensional electron density map derived from electron crystallography and (iii) the structural homology which the membrane spanning region of CP47 shares with the six N-terminal transmembrane helices of the PsaA/PsaB proteins of photosystem I. Particular emphasis has been placed on the position of chlorophyll molecules assigned in the 8 A three-dimensional map of CP47 (K.-H. Rhee, E.P. Morris, J. Barber, W. Kühlbrandt, Nature 396 (1998) 283-286) relative to histidine residues located in the transmembrane regions of this protein which are likely to form axial ligands for chlorophyll binding. Of the 14 densities assigned to chlorophyll, the model predicted that five have their magnesium ions within 4 A of the imidazole nitrogens of histidine residues. For the remaining seven histidine residues the densities attributed to chlorophylls were within 4-8 A of the imidazole nitrogens and thus too far apart for direct ligation with the magnesium ion within the tetrapyrrole head group. Improved structural resolution and reconsiderations of the orientation of the porphyrin rings will allow further refinement of the model.  相似文献   

16.
Monomeric and trimeric Photosystem I core complexes from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 and LHC-I containing Photosystem I (PS I-200) complexes from spinach have been characterized by steady-state, polarized light spectroscopy at 77 K. The absorption spectra of the monomeric and trimeric core complexes from Synechocystis were remarkably similar, except for the amplitude of a spectral component at long wavelength, which was about twice as large in the trimeric complexes. This spectral component did not contribute significantly to the CD-spectrum. The (77 K) steady-state emission spectra showed prominent peaks at 724 nm (for the Synechocystis core complexes) and at 735 nm (for PS I-200). A comparison of the excitation spectra of the main emission band and the absorption spectra suggested that a significant part of the excitations do not pass the red pigments before being trapped by P-700. Polarized fluorescence excitation spectra of the monomeric and trimeric core complexes revealed a remarkably high anisotropy (0.3) above 705 nm. This suggested one or more of the following possibilities: 1) there is one red-most pigment to which all excitations are directed, 2) there are more red-most pigments but with (almost) parallel orientations, 3) there are more red-most pigments, but they are not connected by energy transfer. The high anisotropy above 705 nm of the trimeric complexes indicated that the long-wavelength pigments on different monomers are not connected by energy transfer. In contrary to the Synechocystis core complexes, the anisotropy spectrum of the LHC I containing complexes from spinach was not constant in the region of the long-wavelength pigments, and decreased significantly below 720 nm, the wavelength where the long-wavelength pigments on the core complexes start to absorb. These results suggested that in spinach the long-wavelength pigments on core and LHC-I are connected by energy transfer and have a non-parallel average Qy(0-0) transitions.Abbreviations PS Photosystem - P Primary donor - Chl chlorophyll - LHC light-harvesting complex - CD circular dichroism - LD linear dichroism - BisTris 2-[bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]-2-hydroxy-methylpropane-1,3-diol - RC reaction center  相似文献   

17.
In order to identify the domain within Photosystem II complexes that functions in the evolution of oxygen, we performed limited proteolysis with lysylendopeptidase of the core complex of Photosystem II which had been depleted of the extrinsic 33-kDa protein (Mn-stabilizing protein). The cleavage sites were estimated from the amino-terminal sequences of the degradation fragments, their apparent molecular masses and amino-acid compositions. Under certain conditions, the D2 protein was cleaved at Lys13; and a chlorophyll a-binding protein, CP 47, was cleaved at Lys227 and Lys389. Another chlorophyll a-binding protein, CP 43, was degraded more rapidly than CP 47. The oxygen-evolving activity and the capacity for rebinding of the 33-kDa protein to the core complex of Photosystem II decreased in parallel, with kinetics very similar to those of the cleavage of CP 47 at Lys389. These observations strongly suggest that the hydrophilic domain around Lys389 of CP 47, which are located on the lumenal side, is important in the binding of the 33-kDa protein and in maintaining the oxygen-evolving activity of the Photosystem II complex.Abbreviations CP 47 and CP 43- intrinsic chlorophyll a-binding proteins with apparent molecular masses of 47 and 43 kDa, respectively - PBQ- phenyl-p-benzoquinone - TLCK- N--p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone  相似文献   

18.
Photosystem II (PS II) particles isolated from spinach in the presence of 10 M CuSO4 contained 1.2 copper/300 Chl that was resistant to EDTA. When CuSO4 was not added during the isolation, PS II particles contained variable amounts of copper resistant to EDTA (0.1–1.1 copper/300 Chl). No correlation was found between copper content and oxygen evolving capacity of the PS II particles. To identify the copper binding protein, we developed a fractionation procedure which included solubilisation of PS II particles followed by precipitation with polyethylene glycol. A 22-fold purification of copper with respect to protein was achieved for a 28 kDa protein. Partial amino acid sequence of a 13 kDa fragment, obtained after V8 (endo Glu-C) protease treatment, showed identity with CP 26 over a 14 amino acid stretch. EPR measurements on the purified protein suggest oxygen and/or nitrogen as ligands for copper but tend to exclude sulfur. We conclude that the 28 kDa apoprotein of CP 26 from spinach binds one copper per molecule of CP 26. A possible function for this copper protein in the xanthophyll cycle is discussed.Abbreviations CP 26 and CP 29 chlorophyll a/b protein complex 26 and 29 - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex of Photosystem II - SB14 sulfobetaine 14 A preliminary report of these results was presented at the IX Int. Congress on Photosynthesis, Nagoya, Japan, 1992.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》1986,850(1):146-155
When the NaCl extract from spinach Photosystem II particles was dialyzed against a low-salt medium, the 18-kDa protein slowly degraded to a fragment of 17 kDa. This observation suggests that a proteinase previously associated with the Photosystem II particles in a latent form was activated by dissociation with NaCl. The 18-kDa protein and the 17-kDa fragment were purified, and their N-terminal amino acid sequences and total amino acid compositions were determined. These results determined 44 amino acid residues at the N-terminal of the 18-kDa protein, and suggest that 12 amino acid residues (mostly hydrophobic) at the N-terminal were lost by the degradation. The 18-kDa protein could rebind to the NaCl-treated and 24-kDa protein-supplemented Photosystem II particles and sustain their oxygen-evolution activity in a low-Cl medium, whereas the 17-kDa fragment had lost these abilities. These observations suggest that the N-terminal region of the 18-kDa protein forms a domain which binds to Photosystem II particles.  相似文献   

20.
Active Photosystem II (PS II) cores were prepared from spinach, pea, Synechocystis PCC 6803, and Thermosynechococcus vulcanus, the latter of which has been structurally determined [Kamiya and Shen (2003) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 100: 98–103]. Electrochromic shifts resulting from QA reduction by 1.7-K illumination were recorded, and the Qx and Qy absorption bands of the redox-active pheophytin a thus identified in the different organisms. The Qx transition is ∼3 nm (100 cm−1) to higher energy in cyanobacteria than in the plants. The predominant Qy shift appears in the range 683–686 nm depending on species, and does not appear to have a systematic shift. Low-temperature absorption, circular dichroism (CD) and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of the chlorophyll Qy region are very similar in spinach and pea, but vary in cyanobacteria. We assigned CP43 and CP47 trap-chlorophyll absorption features in all species, as well as a P680 transition. Each absorption identified has an area of one chlorophyll a. The MCD deficit, introduced previously for spinach as an indicator of P680 activity, occurs in the same spectral region and has the same area in all species, pointing to a robustness of this as a signature for P680. MCD and CD characteristics point towards a significant variance in P680 structure between cyanobacteria, thermophilic cyanobacteria, and higher plants.  相似文献   

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