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1.
Photosystem I (PS I) mediates electron-transfer from plastocyanin to ferredoxin via a photochemically active chlorophyll dimer (P700), a monomeric chlorophyll electron acceptor (A0), a phylloquinone (A1), and three [4Fe-4S] clusters (FX/A/B). The sequence of electron-transfer events between the iron-sulfur cluster, FX, and ferredoxin is presently unclear. Owing to the presence of a 2-fold symmetry in the PsaC protein to which the iron-sulfur clusters F(A) and F(B) are bound, the spatial arrangement of these cofactors with respect to the C2-axis of symmetry in PS I is uncertain as well. An unequivocal determination of the spatial arrangement of the iron-sulfur clusters FA and FB within the protein is necessary to unravel the complete electron-transport chain in PS I. In the present study, we generate EPR signals from charge-separated spin pairs (P700+-FredX/A/B) in PS I and characterize them by progressive microwave power saturation measurements to determine the arrangement of the iron-sulfur clusters FX/A/B relative to P700. The microwave power at half saturation (P1/2) of P700+ is greater when both FA and FB are reduced in untreated PS I than when only FA is reduced in mercury-treated PS I. The experimental P1/2 values are compared to values calculated by using P700-FA/B crystallographic distances and assuming that either FA or FB is closer to P700+. On the basis of this comparison of experimental and theoretical values of spin relaxation enhancement effects on P700+ in P700+ [4Fe-4S]- charge-separated pairs, we find that iron-sulfur cluster FA is in closer proximity to P700 than the FB cluster.  相似文献   

2.
Putidamonooxin, the oxygenase of a 4-methoxybenzoate monooxygenase enzyme system, catalyzes the oxidative O-demethylation of the substrate 4-methoxybenzoate in conjunction with the NADH:putidamonooxin oxidoreductase. Putidamonooxin is a conjugated iron-sulfur protein which needs iron ions as cofactors for its enzymatic activity. Putiamonooxin was isolated from Pseudomonas putida, which was grown on a 57Fe-enriched culture medium. Thus putidamonooxin was enriched in vivo with 57Fe up to about 80%. During our M?ssbauer study of putidamonooxin a number of parameters have been varied: (a) the oxidation state of putidamonooxin (oxidized, reduced and aerobically reoxidized); (b) the substrate bound to putidamonooxin (4-methoxybenzoate, benzoate, 4-tert-butylbenzoate); (c) the temperature between 2.7 K and 245 K; (d) the applied magnetic field between 0 and 0.1 T and (e) the amount of iron cofactor. From our M?ssbauer results it is obvious that the iron-sulfur centers of putidamonooxin are [2 Fe-2S] clusters similar to those of the plant-type ferredoxins. Further, we have evidence for the existence of iron ions (one per [2 Fe-2S] cluster), which serve as cofactors for the dioxygen activation, functioning as the dioxygen binding site and mediating the electron flow from the [2 Fe-2S] cluster to dioxygen.  相似文献   

3.
The midpoint redox potentials (E(m)) of all cofactors in photosystem I from Synechococcus elongatus as well as of the iron-sulfur (Fe(4)S(4)) clusters in two soluble ferredoxins from Azotobacter vinelandii and Clostridium acidiurici were calculated within the framework of a semi-continuum dielectric approach. The widely used treatment of proteins as uniform media with single dielectric permittivity is oversimplified, particularly, because permanent charges are considered both as a source for intraprotein electric field and as a part of dielectric polarizability. Our approach overcomes this inconsistency by using two dielectric constants: optical epsilon(o)=2.5 for permanent charges pre-existing in crystal structure, and static epsilon(s) for newly formed charges. We also take into account a substantial dielectric heterogeneity of photosystem I revealed by photoelectric measurements and a liquid junction potential correction for E(m) values of relevant redox cofactors measured in aprotic solvents. We show that calculations based on a single permittivity have the discrepancy with experimental data larger than 0.7 V, whereas E(m) values calculated within our approach fall in the range of experimental estimates. The electrostatic analysis combined with quantum chemistry calculations shows that (i) the energy decrease upon chlorophyll dimerization is essential for the downhill mode of primary charge separation between the special pair P(700) and the primary acceptor A(0); (ii) the primary donor is apparently P(700) but not a pair of accessory chlorophylls; (iii) the electron transfer from the A branch quinone Q(A) to the iron-sulfur cluster F(X) is most probably downhill, whereas that from the B branch quinone Q(B) to F(X) is essentially downhill.  相似文献   

4.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from bovine heart mitochondria is a highly complicated, energy transducing, membrane-bound enzyme. It contains 46 different subunits and nine redox cofactors: a noncovalently bound flavin mononucleotide and eight iron-sulfur clusters. The mechanism of complex I is not known. Mechanistic studies using the bovine enzyme, a model for human complex I, have been precluded by the difficulty of preparing complex I which is pure, monodisperse, and fully catalytically active. Here, we describe and characterize a preparation of bovine complex I which fulfills all of these criteria. The catalytic activity is strongly dependent on the phospholipid content of the preparation, and three classes of phospholipid interactions with complex I have been identified. First, complex I contains tightly bound cardiolipin. Cardiolipin may be required for the structural integrity of the complex or play a functional role. Second, the catalytic activity is determined by the amounts of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) which are bound to the complex. They are more weakly bound than cardiolipin, exchange with PC and PE in solution, and can substitute for one another. However, their nontransitory loss leads to irreversible functional impairment. Third, phospholipids are also required in the assay buffer for the purified enzyme to exhibit its full activity. It is likely that they are required for solubilization and presentation of the hydrophobic ubiquinone substrate.  相似文献   

5.
Iron-sulfur clusters are ubiquitous in biological systems, facilitating functions such as electron transfer (rubredoxins, ferredoxins, rieske centres), isomerization (aconitase) and small molecule activation such as dinitrogen reduction (nitrogenases). Of global importance and recently particular interest, is the iron-sulfur-containing iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) cluster that achieves the biological reduction of dinitrogen under mild conditions. This biologically unique cluster has proved difficult to investigate due to its extreme air sensitivity and the instability of the cluster's structural integrity, outside the protective protein matrix. Here, we report a model iron-sulfur cluster (Roussins black salt (NH(4))[Fe(4)S(3)(NO)(7)]) that has been used to achieve the first example of a metal cluster (guest) embedded within a pseudo-protein, cyclodextrin (host). The product formed is supramolecular, that is, it contained no covalent bonds and was stabilized by predominantly entropy effects. Formation of a 1 : 1 complex between the host and the guest was established for the iron-sulfur cluster with either seven- or eight-membered cyclodextrins (beta- or gamma-cyclodextrin). A range of techniques was used to characterize the new complexes in both the solid and solution states. Electrospray mass spectra indicated the presence of parent ions of the host-guest complexes and electrochemistry was also used to define the redox behavior of the complexes. The iron-sulfur clusters were significantly more stable in the presence of the host cyclodextrin, as revealed by a negative shift for the reduction potential for the host-guest product. Using the beta-cyclodextrin as host, the reduction potential of the iron-sulfur cluster shifted more negative by 60 mV; the effect was even more dramatic for the larger gamma-cyclodextrin where the reduction potential for the cluster was shifted by 90 mV more negative than the 'unbound' [Fe(4)S(3)(NO)(7)]- cluster. This is the first example of a metal cluster, stabilized as a supramolecular complex in a 'host' environment outside of a covalently bonded protein matrix. Creating such stable environments for metal cofactors or clusters that otherwise spontaneously degrade or are catalytically inactive outside the protein matrix could have enormous practical value. Specific implications for the development of extrusion methods for FeMoco from nitrogenase are enormous, with previously difficult, high-energy molecular transformations, such as dinitrogen to ammonia, now more realistically accessible.  相似文献   

6.
Metal centres play an important structural role in maintaining the native conformation of a protein. Here we use biophysical methods to investigate what is the relative contribution of iron-sulfur clusters in respect to ionic interactions in a thermophilic di-cluster ferredoxin model. Changes in protonation affect both the stability and the conformational dynamics of the protein fold. In the pH 5.5-8 interval, the protein has a high melting temperature (T(m) approximately 120 degrees C), which decreases towards pH extremes. Acidification triggers events in two steps: down to the isoelectric point (pH 3.5) the Fe-S clusters remain unchanged, the secondary structure content increases and the single Trp becomes more solvent shielded, denoting a more compact fold. Further acidification down to pH 2 sets off exposure of the hydrophobic core and Fe-S cluster disintegration, yielding a molten globule state. The relative stabilising contribution of the clusters becomes evident when stabilising ionic interactions are switched off as a result of poising the protein at pH 3.5, at an overall null charge: under these conditions, the Fe-S clusters disassemble at T(m)=72 degrees C, whereas the protein unfolds at T(m)=52 degrees C. Overall, this ferredoxin denotes a considerable structural plasticity around its native conformation, a property which appears to depend more on the integrity of its metal clusters rather than on the status of its stabilising electrostatic interactions. The latter however play a relevant role in determining the protein thermal stability.  相似文献   

7.
Limited proteolysis of solubilized beef heart mitochondrial complex III with trypsin yields a product previously identified as fragment V" (González-Halphen, D., Lindorfer, M. A., and Capaldi, R. A. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 7021-7031). In this work, fragment V" was generated by trypsin treatment of both the intact complex III and the purified Rieske iron-sulfur protein. Thus, in its bound or isolated form, the same sites of subunit V are sensitive to protease action. Fragment V" was a soluble protein that retained its iron-sulfur moiety. It was purified by exclusion from a hydrophobic phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B column followed by gel filtration. In contrast to the pure, intact subunit V, fragment V" did not reconstitute oxidoreductase activity when combined with complex III devoid of subunit V. However, a 20-amino acid synthetic peptide carrying the sequence between amino acids Lys33 and Lys52 of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein competed with intact subunit V in reconstitution assays. The results obtained suggest that the iron-sulfur protein binds to complex III by hydrophobic protein-protein interactions, and that a nontransmembrane 18-amino acid amphipathic stretch accounts for the association of this subunit to the rest of the complex.  相似文献   

8.
Mitochondria decay with age from oxidative damage and loss of protective mechanisms. Resistance, repair, and replacement mechanisms are essential for mitochondrial preservation and maintenance. Iron plays an essential role in the maintenance of mitochondria, through its two major functional forms: heme and iron-sulfur clusters. Both iron-based cofactors are formed and utilized in the mitochondria and then distributed throughout the cell. This is an important function of mitochondria that is not directly related to the production of ATP. Heme and iron-sulfur clusters are important for the normal assembly and for the optimal activity of the electron transfer complexes. Loss of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV), integrity of mtDNA, and function can result from abnormal homeostasis of iron. We review the physiological role of iron-sulfur clusters and heme in the integrity of the mitochondria and the generation of oxidants.  相似文献   

9.
Succinate dehydrogenase is a conserved membrane-bound enzyme consisting of two nonidentical subunits: a flavo iron-sulfur protein (Fp) subunit, containing a covalently bound flavin, and an iron-sulfur protein (Ip) subunit. Bacillus subtilis succinate dehydrogenase in wild type bacteria and 12 well characterized succinate dehydrogenase-defective mutants were examined by low temperature EPR spectroscopy to characterize the enzyme and study subunit location and biosynthesis of its iron-sulfur clusters. The wild type B. subtilis enzyme contains iron-sulfur clusters which are analogous to clusters S-1 and S-3 of bovine heart succinate dehydrogenase but with slightly different EPR characteristics. Spins from cluster S-2 were not detectable as in the case of the intact form of bovine heart succinate dehydrogenase. However, dithionite reduction of the B. subtilis enzyme greatly enhanced spin relaxation of the ferredoxin-type cluster S-1, indicating the presence of the cluster S-2. Iron-sulfur cluster S-1 was found to be assembled in soluble succinate dehydrogenase subunits in the cytoplasm, but only if full-length Fp polypeptides and relatively large fragments of Ip polypeptides were present. Cluster S-1 was not detected in mutants with soluble mutated Fp polypeptides or in a mutant totally lacking Ip subunit polypeptide. Iron-sulfur clusters S-1, S-2, and S-3 were assembled also when the covalently bound flavin in the Fp subunit was absent. Clusters S-1 and S-3 in the membrane-bound flavin-deficient succinate dehydrogenase were not reduced by succinate but could be reduced by electron transfer from NADH dehydrogenase via the menaquinone pool.  相似文献   

10.
The structural features of volatile anesthetic binding sites on proteins are being examined with the use of a defined model system consisting of a four-alpha-helix bundle scaffold with a hydrophobic core. Previous work has suggested that introducing a cavity into the hydrophobic core improves anesthetic binding affinity. The more polarizable methionine side chain was substituted for a leucine, in an attempt to enhance the dispersion forces between the ligand and the protein. The resulting bundle variant has an improved affinity (K(d) = 0.20 +/- 0.01 mM) for halothane binding, compared with the leucine-containing bundle (K(d) = 0.69 +/- 0.06 mM). Photoaffinity labeling with (14)C-halothane reveals preferential labeling of the W15 residue in both peptides, supporting the view that fluorescence quenching by bound anesthetic reports both the binding energetics and the location of the ligand in the hydrophobic core. The rates of amide hydrogen exchange were similar for the two bundles, suggesting that differences in binding affinity were not due to changes in protein stability. Binding of halothane to both four-alpha-helix bundle proteins stabilized the native folded conformations. Molecular dynamics simulations of the bundles illustrate the existence of the hydrophobic core, containing both W15 residues. These results suggest that in addition to packing defects, enhanced dispersion forces may be important in providing higher affinity anesthetic binding sites. Alternatively, the effect of the methionine substitution on halothane binding energetics may reflect either improved access to the binding site or allosteric optimization of the dimensions of the binding pocket. Finally, preferential stabilization of folded protein conformations may represent a fundamental mechanism of inhaled anesthetic action.  相似文献   

11.
Earlier work demonstrated that a water-soluble four-helix bundle protein designed with a cavity in its nonpolar core is capable of binding the volatile anesthetic halothane with near-physiological affinity (0.7 mM Kd). To create a more relevant, model membrane protein receptor for studying the physicochemical specificity of anesthetic binding, we have synthesized a new protein that builds on the anesthetic-binding, hydrophilic four-helix bundle and incorporates a hydrophobic domain capable of ion-channel activity, resulting in an amphiphilic four-helix bundle that forms stable monolayers at the air/water interface. The affinity of the cavity within the core of the bundle for volatile anesthetic binding is decreased by a factor of 4-3.1 mM Kd as compared to its water-soluble counterpart. Nevertheless, the absence of the cavity within the otherwise identical amphiphilic peptide significantly decreases its affinity for halothane similar to its water-soluble counterpart. Specular x-ray reflectivity shows that the amphiphilic protein orients vectorially in Langmuir monolayers at higher surface pressure with its long axis perpendicular to the interface, and that it possesses a length consistent with its design. This provides a successful starting template for probing the nature of the anesthetic-peptide interaction, as well as a potential model system in structure/function correlation for understanding the anesthetic binding mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian glutaredoxin 3 (Grx3/PICOT) is an essential protein involved in the regulation of signal transduction, for instance during immune cell activation and development of cardiac hypertrophy, presumably in response to redox signals. This function requires the sensing of such stresses by a hitherto unknown mechanism. Here, we characterized Grx3/PICOT as iron-sulfur protein. The protein binds two bridging [2Fe-2S] clusters in a homodimeric complex with the active site cysteinyl residues of its two monothiol glutaredoxin domains and glutathione bound non-covalently to the Grx domains. Co-immunoprecipitation of 55-iron with Grx3/PICOT from Jurkat cells suggested the presence of these cofactors under physiological conditions. The [2Fe-2S]2+ clusters were not redox active, instead they were lost upon treatment of the holo protein with ferricyanide or S-nitroso glutathione. This redox-induced dissociation of the Grx3/PICOT holo complex may be a mechanism of Grx3/PICOT activation in response to reactive oxygen and nitrogen species.  相似文献   

13.
IscA is a key member of the iron-sulfur cluster assembly machinery found in bacteria and eukaryotes, but the mechanism of its function in the biogenesis of iron-sulfur cluster remains elusive. In this paper, we demonstrate that Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans IscA is a [4Fe-4S] cluster binding protein, and it can bind iron in the presence of DTT with an apparent iron association constant of 4·1020 M?1. The iron binding in IscA can be promoted by oxygen through oxidizing ferrous iron to ferric iron. Furthermore, we show that the iron bound form of IscA can be converted to iron-sulfur cluster bound form in the presence of IscS and L-cysteine in vitro. Substitution of the invariant cysteine residues Cys35, Cys99, or Cys101 in IscA abolishes the iron binding activity of the protein; the IscA mutants that fail to bind iron are unable to assemble the iron-sulfur clusters. Further studies indicate that the iron-loaded IscA could act as an iron donor for the assembly of iron-sulfur clusters in the scaffold protein IscU in vitro. Taken together, these findings suggest that A. ferrooxidans IscA is not only an iron-sulfur protein, but also an iron binding protein that can act as an iron donor for biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters.  相似文献   

14.
Increasing evidence suggests that sulfur in ubiquitous iron-sulfur clusters is derived from L-cysteine via cysteine desulfurases. In Escherichia coli, the major cysteine desulfurase activity for biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters has been attributed to IscS. The gene that encodes IscS is a member of an operon iscSUA, which also encodes two highly conserved proteins: IscU and IscA. Previous studies suggested that both IscU and IscA may act as the iron-sulfur cluster assembly scaffold proteins. However, recent evidence indicated that IscA is an iron-binding protein that can provide iron for the iron-sulfur cluster assembly in IscU (Ding, H., Harrison, K., and Lu, J. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 30432-30437). To further elucidate the function of IscA in biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters, we evaluate the iron-sulfur cluster binding activity of IscA and IscU under physiologically relevant conditions. When equal amounts of IscA and IscU are incubated with an equivalent amount of ferrous iron in the presence of IscS, L-cysteine and dithiothreitol, iron-sulfur clusters are assembled in IscU, but not in IscA, suggesting that IscU is a preferred iron-sulfur cluster assembly scaffold protein. In contrast, when equal amounts of IscA and IscU are incubated with an equivalent amount of ferrous iron in the presence of IscS and dithiothreitol but without L-cysteine, nearly all iron is bound to IscA. The iron binding in IscA appears to prevent the formation of the biologically inaccessible ferric hydroxide under aerobic conditions. Subsequent addition of L-cysteine efficiently mobilizes the iron center in IscA and transfers the iron for the iron-sulfur cluster assembly in IscU. The results suggest an intriguing interplay between IscA and IscU in which IscA acts as an iron chaperon that recruits "free" iron and delivers the iron for biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters in IscU under aerobic conditions.  相似文献   

15.
The 75-kDa subunit of complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) from bovine heart mitochondria is its largest subunit and is a component of the iron-sulfur (IP) fragment of the enzyme. It is encoded in nuclear DNA and is imported into the organelle. Protein sequences have been determined at the N-terminus of the intact protein and on fragments generated by partial cleavage with cyanogen bromide and with Staphylococcus aureus protease V8. Parts of these data have been used to design two mixtures of oligonucleotides 17 bases long, containing 192 and 256 different sequences, which have been synthesized and used as hybridization probes for identification of cognate cDNA clones. Two different but overlapping clones have been isolated, and the sequences of the cloned DNAs have been determined. Together they code for a precursor of the 75-kDa subunit of complex I. The mature protein is 704 amino acids in length, has a calculated molecular mass of 75,961 daltons, and contains no segments of sequence that could be folded into hydrophobic alpha-helixes of sufficient length to span the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. Its precursor has an N-terminal extension of 23 amino acids to specify its import into the mitochondrion from the cytoplasm. Seventeen cysteine residues are dispersed throughout the 75-kDa subunit; some of them are close to each other in the sequence in three separate groups and, by analogy with other iron-sulfur proteins, could be involved in iron-sulfur clusters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Type I reaction centers (RCs) are multisubunit chlorophyll-protein complexes that function in photosynthetic organisms to convert photons to Gibbs free energy. The unique feature of Type I RCs is the presence of iron-sulfur clusters as electron transfer cofactors. Photosystem I (PS I) of oxygenic phototrophs is the best-studied Type I RC. It is comprised of an interpolypeptide [4Fe-4S] cluster, F(X), that bridges the PsaA and PsaB subunits, and two terminal [4Fe-4S] clusters, F(A) and F(B), that are bound to the PsaC subunit. In this review, we provide an update on the structure and function of the bound iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs. The first new development in this area is the identification of F(A) as the cluster proximal to F(X) and the resolution of the electron transfer sequence as F(X)-->F(A)-->F(B)-->soluble ferredoxin. The second new development is the determination of the three-dimensional NMR solution structure of unbound PsaC and localization of the equal- and mixed-valence pairs in F(A)(-) and F(B)(-). We provide a survey of the EPR properties and spectra of the iron-sulfur clusters in Type I RCs of cyanobacteria, green sulfur bacteria, and heliobacteria, and we summarize new information about the kinetics of back-reactions involving the iron-sulfur clusters.  相似文献   

17.
Iron-sulfur (Fe/S) clusters are important cofactors of numerous proteins involved in electron transfer, metabolic and regulatory processes. In eukaryotic cells, known Fe/S proteins are located within mitochondria, the nucleus and the cytosol. Over the past years the molecular basis of Fe/S cluster synthesis and incorporation into apoproteins in a living cell has started to become elucidated. Biogenesis of these simple inorganic cofactors is surprisingly complex and, in eukaryotes such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is accomplished by three distinct proteinaceous machineries. The "iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) assembly machinery" of mitochondria was inherited from the bacterial ancestor of mitochondria. ISC components are conserved in eukaryotes from yeast to man. The key principle of biosynthesis is the assembly of the Fe/S cluster on a scaffold protein before it is transferred to target apoproteins. Cytosolic and nuclear Fe/S protein maturation also requires the function of the mitochondrial ISC assembly system. It is believed that mitochondria contribute a still unknown compound to biogenesis outside the organelle. This compound is exported by the mitochondrial "ISC export machinery" and utilised by the "cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly (CIA) machinery". Components of these two latter systems are also highly conserved in eukaryotes. Defects in the mitochondrial ISC assembly and export systems, but not in the CIA machinery have a strong impact on cellular iron uptake and intracellular iron distribution showing that mitochondria are crucial for both cellular Fe/S protein assembly and iron homeostasis.  相似文献   

18.
The photosynthetic reaction centre (RC) is central to the conversion of solar energy into chemical energy and is a model for bio-mimetic engineering approaches to this end. We describe bio-engineering of a Photosystem II (PSII) RC inspired peptide model, building on our earlier studies. A non-photosynthetic haem containing bacterioferritin (BFR) from Escherichia coli that expresses as a homodimer was used as a protein scaffold, incorporating redox-active cofactors mimicking those of PSII. Desirable properties include: a di-nuclear metal binding site which provides ligands for bivalent metals, a hydrophobic pocket at the dimer interface which can bind a photosensitive porphyrin and presence of tyrosine residues proximal to the bound cofactors, which can be utilised as efficient electron-tunnelling intermediates.  相似文献   

19.
Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential cofactors of proteins with a wide range of biological functions. A dedicated cytosolic Fe-S cluster assembly (CIA) system is required to assemble Fe-S clusters into cytosolic and nuclear proteins. Here, we show that the mammalian nucleotide excision repair protein homolog MMS19 can simultaneously bind probable cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly protein CIAO1 and Fe-S proteins, confirming that MMS19 is a central protein of the CIA machinery that brings Fe-S cluster donor proteins and the receiving apoproteins into proximity. In addition, we show that mitotic spindle-associated MMXD complex subunit MIP18 also interacts with both CIAO1 and Fe-S proteins. Specifically, it binds the Fe-S cluster coordinating regions in Fe-S proteins. Furthermore, we show that ADP/ATP translocase 2 (ANT2) interacts with Fe-S apoproteins and MMS19 in the CIA complex but not with the individual proteins. Together, these results elucidate the composition and interactions within the late CIA complex.  相似文献   

20.
Photosystem I (PS I) is a multisubunit membrane protein complex consisting of 11 to 14 different subunits. In addition, several cofactors, such as chlorophylls, phylloquinones, carotenoids and iron-sulfur clusters are bound by this complex. We now have a detailed understanding of the structural basics, yet we know very little about the molecular details of the assembly process that finally yields functional PS I. Moreover, not much is known about the molecular dynamics of PS I in the thylakoid membrane or its regulated degradation. These areas have become the focus of recent work and first results have emerged. In this minireview we describe the latest findings in this fascinating and rapidly evolving field.  相似文献   

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