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1.
Photosystem I (PSI) is the most efficient bioenergetic nanomachine in nature and one of the largest membrane protein complexes known. It is composed of 18 protein subunits that bind more than 200 co‐factors and prosthetic groups. While the structure and function of PSI have been studied in great detail, very little is known about the PSI assembly process. In this work, we have characterized a PSI assembly intermediate in tobacco plants, which we named PSI*. We found PSI* to contain only a specific subset of the core subunits of PSI. PSI* is particularly abundant in young leaves where active thylakoid biogenesis takes place. Moreover, PSI* was found to overaccumulate in PsaF‐deficient mutant plants, and we show that re‐initiation of PsaF synthesis promotes the maturation of PSI* into PSI. The attachment of antenna proteins to PSI also requires the transition from PSI* to mature PSI. Our data could provide a biochemical entry point into the challenging investigation of PSI biogenesis and allow us to improve the model for the assembly pathway of PSI in thylakoid membranes of vascular plants.  相似文献   

2.
Although progress has been made in determining the structure and understanding the function of photosystem I (PSI), the PSI assembly process remains poorly understood. PsaC is an essential subunit of PSI and participates in the transfer of electrons to ferredoxin. However, how PsaC is assembled during accumulation of the PSI complex is unknown. In the present study, we showed that Pyg7 localized to the stromal thylakoid and associated with the PSI complex. We also showed that Pyg7 interacted with PsaC. Furthermore, we found that the PSI assembly process was blocked following formation of the PsaAB heterodimer in the pyg7 mutant. In addition, the analyses of PSI stability in Pyg7RNAi plants showed that Pyg7 is involved in maintaining the assembled PSI complex under excess‐light conditions. Moreover, we demonstrated that decreased Pyg7 content resulted in decreased efficiency of PSI assembly in Pyg7RNAi plants. These findings suggest that the role of Pyg7 in PSI biogenesis has evolved as an essential assembly factor by interacting with PsaC in Arabidopsis, in addition to being a stability factor for PSI as seen in Synechocystis.  相似文献   

3.
The Ycf37 protein has been suggested to be involved in the biogenesis and/or stability of the cyanobacterial photosystem I (PSI) [A. Wilde, K. Lünser, F. Ossenbühl, J. Nickelsen, T. Börner, Characterization of the cyanobacterial ycf37: mutation decreases the photosystem I content, Biochem. J. 357 (2001) 211-216]. With Ycf37 specific antibodies, we analyzed the localization of Ycf37 within the thylakoid membranes of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Inspection of a sucrose gradient profile indicated that small amounts of Ycf37 co-fractionated with monomeric photosynthetic complexes, but not with trimeric PSI. Isolating 3xFLAG epitope-tagged Ycf37 by affinity-tag purification rendered several PSI subunits that specifically co-precipitated with this protein. Blue-native PAGE newly revealed two monomeric PSI complexes (PSI and PSI*) in wild-type thylakoids. The lower amount of PsaK present in PSI* may explain its higher electrophoretic mobility. PSI* was more prominent in high-light grown cells and interestingly proved absent in the Δycf37 mutant. PSI* appeared again when the mutant was complemented in trans with the wild-type ycf37 gene. In the Δycf37 mutant the amount of trimeric PSI complexes was reduced to about 70% of the wild-type level with no significant changes in photochemical activity and subunit composition of the remaining photosystems. Our results indicate that Ycf37 plays a specific role in the preservation of PSI* and the biogenesis of PSI trimers.  相似文献   

4.
The ability of photosynthetic organisms to use the sun's light as a sole source of energy sustains life on our planet. Photosystems I (PSI) and II (PSII) are large, multi-subunit, pigment–protein complexes that enable photosynthesis, but this intriguing process remains to be explained fully. Currently, crystal structures of these complexes are available for thermophilic prokaryotic cyanobacteria. The mega-Dalton trimeric PSI complex from thermophilic cyanobacterium, Thermosynechococcus elongatus, was solved at 2.5?Å resolution with X-ray crystallography. That structure revealed the positions of 12 protein subunits (PsaA-F, PsaI-M, and PsaX) and 127 cofactors.Although mesophilic organisms perform most of the world's photosynthesis, no well-resolved trimeric structure of a mesophilic organism exists. Our research model for a mesophilic cyanobacterium was Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. This study aimed to obtain well-resolved crystal structures of [1] a monomeric PSI with all subunits, [2] a trimeric PSI with a reduced number of subunits, and [3] the full, trimeric wild-type PSI complex. We only partially succeeded with the first two structures, but we successfully produced the trimeric PSI structure at 2.5?Å resolution. This structure was comparable to that of the thermophilic species, but we provided more detail. The PSI trimeric supercomplex consisted of 33 protein subunits, 72 carotenoids, 285 chlorophyll a molecules, 51 lipids, 9 iron-sulfur clusters, 6 plastoquinones, 6 putative calcium ions, and over 870 water molecules.This study showed that the structure of the PSI in Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 differed from previously described PSI structures. These findings have broadened our understanding of PSI structure.  相似文献   

5.
The photosystem I (PSI) complex consisting of reaction center (RC) subunits, several peripheral subunits and many co-factors, is present in the thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. The assembly of RC subunits (PsaA/B) that bind electron transfer co-factors and antenna pigments is an intricate process, and is mediated by several auxiliary factors such as Ycf3, Y3IP1/CGL59, Ycf4 and Ycf37/PYG7/CGL71. However, their precise molecular mechanisms in RC assembly remain to be addressed. Here we purified four PSI auxiliary factors by affinity chromatography, and characterized co-purified PSI assembly intermediates. We suggest that Ycf3 assists the initial assembly of newly synthesized PsaA/B subunits into an RC subcomplex, while Y3IP1 may be involved in transferring the RC subcomplex from Ycf3 to the Ycf4 module that stabilizes it. CGL71 may form an oligomer that transiently interacts with the PSI RC subcomplex, physically protecting it under oxic conditions until association with the peripheral PSI subunits occurs. Together, our results reveal the interplay among four auxiliary factors required for the stepwise assembly of the PSI RC.  相似文献   

6.
State transitions represent a photoacclimation process that regulates the light‐driven photosynthetic reactions in response to changes in light quality/quantity. It balances the excitation between photosystem I (PSI) and II (PSII) by shuttling LHCII, the main light‐harvesting complex of green algae and plants, between them. This process is particularly important in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in which it is suggested to induce a large reorganization in the thylakoid membrane. Phosphorylation has been shown to be necessary for state transitions and the LHCII kinase has been identified. However, the consequences of state transitions on the structural organization and the functionality of the photosystems have not yet been elucidated. This situation is mainly because the purification of the supercomplexes has proved to be particularly difficult, thus preventing structural and functional studies. Here, we have purified and analysed PSI and PSII supercomplexes of C. reinhardtii in states 1 and 2, and have studied them using biochemical, spectroscopic and structural methods. It is shown that PSI in state 2 is able to bind two LHCII trimers that contain all four LHCII types, and one monomer, most likely CP29, in addition to its nine Lhcas. This structure is the largest PSI complex ever observed, having an antenna size of 340 Chls/P700. Moreover, all PSI‐bound Lhcs are efficient in transferring energy to PSI. A projection map at 20 Å resolution reveals the structural organization of the complex. Surprisingly, only LHCII type I, II and IV are phosphorylated when associated with PSI, while LHCII type III and CP29 are not, but CP29 is phosphorylated when associated with PSII in state2.  相似文献   

7.
The biological conversion of light energy into chemical energy is performed by a flexible photosynthetic machinery located in the thylakoid membranes. Photosystems I and II (PSI and PSII) are the two complexes able to harvest light. PSI is the last complex of the electron transport chain and is composed of multiple subunits: the proteins building the catalytic core complex that are well conserved between oxygenic photosynthetic organisms, and, in green organisms, the membrane light‐harvesting complexes (Lhc) necessary to increase light absorption. In plants, four Lhca proteins (Lhca1–4) make up the antenna system of PSI, which can be further extended to optimize photosynthesis by reversible binding of LHCII, the main antenna complex of photosystem II. Here, we used biochemistry and electron microscopy in Arabidopsis to reveal a previously unknown supercomplex of PSI with LHCII that contains an additional Lhca1–a4 dimer bound on the PsaB–PsaI–PsaH side of the complex. This finding contradicts recent structural studies suggesting that the presence of an Lhca dimer at this position is an exclusive feature of algal PSI. We discuss the features of the additional Lhca dimer in the large plant PSI–LHCII supercomplex and the differences with the algal PSI. Our work provides further insights into the intricate structural plasticity of photosystems.  相似文献   

8.
Photosystem biogenesis in the thylakoid membrane is a highly complicated process that requires the coordinated assembly of nucleus-encoded and chloroplast-encoded protein subunits as well as the insertion of hundreds of cofactors, such as chromophores (chlorophylls, carotenoids) and iron-sulfur clusters. The molecular details of the assembly process and the identity and functions of the auxiliary factors involved in it are only poorly understood. In this work, we have characterized the chloroplast genome-encoded ycf4 (for hypothetical chloroplast reading frame no. 4) gene, previously shown to encode a protein involved in photosystem I (PSI) biogenesis in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Using stable transformation of the chloroplast genome, we have generated ycf4 knockout plants in the higher plant tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Although these mutants are severely affected in their photosynthetic performance, they are capable of photoautotrophic growth, demonstrating that, different from Chlamydomonas, the ycf4 gene product is not essential for photosynthesis. We further show that ycf4 knockout plants are specifically deficient in PSI accumulation. Unaltered expression of plastid-encoded PSI genes and biochemical analyses suggest a posttranslational action of the Ycf4 protein in the PSI assembly process. With increasing leaf age, the contents of Ycf4 and Y3IP1, another auxiliary factor involved in PSI assembly, decrease strongly, whereas PSI contents remain constant, suggesting that PSI is highly stable and that its biogenesis is restricted to young leaves.  相似文献   

9.
Lucinski R  Schmid VH  Jansson S  Klimmek F 《FEBS letters》2006,580(27):6485-6488
In the outer antenna (LHCI) of higher plant photosystem I (PSI) four abundantly expressed light-harvesting protein of photosystem I (Lhca)-type proteins are organized in two heterodimeric domains (Lhca1/Lhca4 and Lhca2/Lhca3). Our cross-linking studies on PSI-LHCI preparations from wildtype Arabidopsis and pea plants indicate an exclusive interaction of the rarely expressed Lhca5 light-harvesting protein with LHCI in the Lhca2/Lhca3-site. In PSI particles with an altered LHCI composition Lhca5 assembles in the Lhca1/Lhca4 site, partly as a homodimer. This flexibility indicates a binding-competitive model for the LHCI assembly in plants regulated by molecular interactions of the Lhca proteins with the PSI core.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Molecular aspects of photosystem I   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Photosystem I (PSI) in higher plants consists of 17 polypeptide subunits. Cofactors are chlorophyll a and b , β-carotene, phylloquinone and iron-sulfur clusters. Eight subunits are specific for higher plants while the remaining ones are also present in cyanobacteria. Two 80-kDa subunits (PSI-A and -B) constitute the major part of PSI and bind most of the pigments and electron donors and acceptors. The 9-kDa PSI-C carries the remaining electron acceptors which are [4Fe-4S] iron sulfur clusters. PSI-D, -E and -H have importance for integrity and function at the stromal face of PSI while PSI-F has importance for function at the lumenal face. PSI-N is localized at the lumenal side, but its function is unknown. Four subunits are light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b -binding proteins. The remaining subunits are integral membrane proteins with poorly understood function. Subunit interactions have been studied in reconstitution experiments and by cross-linking studies. Based on these data, it is concluded that iron-sulfur cluster FB is proximal to FX and that FA is the terminal acceptor in PSI. Similarities between PSI and the reaction center from green sulfur bacteria are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Removal of the peripheral subunits PSI-C, -D and -E from the photosystem I (PSI) complex of barley requires a urea treatment much harsher than required to remove the similar subunits from cyanobacterial PSI. The resulting PSI barley core was reconstituted by addition of the E. coli expressed subunits PSI-C and -D, and PSI-E isolated from barley. Western blotting, flash photolysis and NADP+ photoreduction measurements demonstrated complete and specific removal of the three subunits from the core and efficient reconstitution of the complex after addition of PSI-C, -D and -E. Flash photolysis reveals that PSI-D is essential for binding of functional PSI-C to the PSI core. An N-terminally truncated barley PSI-D lacking 24 amino acid residues and thus being without the N-terminal extension characteristic for higher plant PSI-D proteins reconstitutes the PSI core to 50% of the level obtained with intact PSI-D as demonstrated by flash photolysis and NADP+ photoreduction measurements. Cyanobacterial PSI-D is functionally equivalent to truncated barley PSI-D with respect to its activity to reconstitute the PSI core. This shows that the N-terminal extension of plant PSI-D plays a key role in binding PSI-C to the core. The plant-specific N-terminus of PSI-D is hypothesized to execute its function through interaction with a plant-specific PSI subunit, possibly PSI-H. An anchoring function of the N-terminus of PSI-D would also explain the harsh treatment needed to obtain a plant PSI core. PSI-E is important for efficient NADP+ reduction but does not influence electron transfer to iron-sulphur centres A/B nor binding of PSI-C. The enhancing effect of PSI-E on NADP+ reduction is independent of the presence of the N-terminus of PSI-D.  相似文献   

13.
The interaction of divalent cations with biomembranes is important for a number of biological processes. In this study, the regulatory effect of Ca2+ on the interaction between plant spinach photosystem I (PSI) particles and negatively charged lipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG) was investigated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. It was found that in the absence of CaCl2, PG causes an increase in alpha-helix and a decrease in disordered conformations of protein secondary structures of PSI, the beta-sheet and turns being almost unaffected. Meanwhile, the same effect also enhances the excitonic interactions relating to Chl a and Chl b from the PSI core complex and external antenna light-harvesting complex (LHCI). By contrast, in the presence of CaCl2, PG hardly interferes with the structure of the proteins' skeleton of PSI, but it can depress the excitonic interactions for Chl b of LHCI and for PSI core complex Chl a at (-) 433.5 nm of the CD signal which is accompanied by a blue shift of its peak. It is most likely that the neutralization of the phosphate groups in the PSI-PG complex and the negative surface charges of PSI, and partial dehydration in the vicinity of the ester CO region of the PG polar head group by the Ca-ions modify the interaction between PSI and PG, thereby inducing molecular reorganization of protein and pigments within both the external antenna LHCI and PSI core complex in proteoliposomes.  相似文献   

14.
In Arabidopsis, the chloroplast NADH‐dehydrogenase‐like (NDH) complex is sandwiched between two copies of photosystem I (PSI) supercomplex, consisting of a PSI core and four light‐harvesting complex I (LHCI) proteins (PSI‐LHCI) to form the NDH–PSI supercomplex. Two minor LHCI proteins, Lhca5 and Lhca6, contribute to the interaction of each PSI–LHCI copy with the NDH complex. Here, large‐pore blue‐native gel electrophoresis revealed that, in addition to this complex, there were at least two types of higher‐order association of more LHCI copies with the NDH complex. In single‐particle images, this higher‐order association of PSI–LHCI preferentially occurs at the left side of the NDH complex when viewed from the stromal side, placing subcomplex A at the top (Yadav et al., Biochim. Biophys. Acta ‐ Bioenerg., 1858, 2017, 12). The association was impaired in the lhca6 mutant but not in the lhca5 mutant, suggesting that the left copy of PSI–LHCI was linked to the NDH complex via Lhca6. From an analysis of subunit compositions of the NDH–PSI supercomplex in lhca5 and lhca6 mutants, we propose that Lhca6 substitutes for Lhca2 in the left copy of PSI–LHCI, whereas Lhca5 substitutes for Lhca4 in the right copy. In the lhca2 mutant, Lhca3 was specifically stabilized in the NDH–PSI supercomplex through heterodimer formation with Lhca6. In the left copy of PSI–LHCI, subcomplex B, Lhca6 and NdhD likely formed the core of the supercomplex interaction. In contrast, a larger protein complex, including at least subcomplexes B and L and NdhB, was needed to form the contact site with Lhca5 in the right copy of PSI–LHCI.  相似文献   

15.
Light regulation of photosystem I (PSI) biogenesis was studied in a unicellular green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. When Chlamydomonas cells were transferred from darkness to the light, mRNAs for both nuclear- and chloroplast-encoded PSI subunits were induced in concert. This light induction was inhibited by photosynthetic electron transport (PET) inhibitors, 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6 isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, but not by an uncoupler, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone. This indicated that PET plays a pivotal role in the light induction of PSI subunit mRNAs, but that photophosphorylation is not necessary. When we irradiated the Chlamydomonas cells with PSI-light (695 nm) or PSII-light (644 nm), which makes the plastoquinone pool oxidative and reductive, respectively, PSII-light caused the accumulation of PSI proteins more abundantly than did PSI-light. However, there was no difference for the PSI subunit mRNA levels between these light sources. From these results, we conclude that PET plays dual roles in the regulation of PSI biogenesis in Chlamydomonas: when cells are illuminated, PET first induces the PSI subunit mRNAs irrespective of the redox state of the intersystem electron carriers, and then their redox state fine-tunes PSI biogenesis at translational and/or post-translational steps to fulfil the chromatic adaptation.  相似文献   

16.
The functioning of alternative routes of photosynthetic electron transport was analyzed from the kinetics of dark reduction of P700+ , an oxidized primary donor of PSI, in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves irradiated by white light of various intensities. Redox changes of P700 were monitored as absorbance changes at 830 nm using PAM 101 specialized device. Irradiation of dark-adapted leaves caused a gradual P700+ accumulation, and the steady-state level of oxidized P700 increased with intensity of actinic light. The kinetics of P700+ dark reduction after a pulse of strong actinic light, assayed from the absorbance changes at 830 nm, was fitted by a single exponential term with a halftime of 10–12 ms. Two slower components were observed in the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction after leaf irradiation by attenuated actinic light. The contribution of slow components to P700+ reduction increased with the decrease in actinic light intensity. Two slow components characterized by halftimes similar to those observed after leaf irradiation by weak white light were found in the kinetics of dark reduction of P700+ oxidized in leaves with far-red light specifically absorbed by PSI. The treatment of leaves with methyl viologen, an artificial PSI electron acceptor, significantly accelerated the accumulation of P700+ under light. At the same time, the presence of methyl viologen, which inhibits ferredoxin-dependent electron transport around PSI, did not affect three components of the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction obtained after irradiations with various actinic light intensities. It was concluded that some part of PSI reaction centers was not reduced by electron transfer from PSII under weak or moderate intensities of actinic light. In this population of PSI centers, P700+ was reduced via alternative electron transport routes. Insensitivity of the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction to methyl viologen evidences that the input of electrons to PSI from the reductants (NADPH or NADH) localized in the chloroplast stroma was effective under those light conditions.Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 1, 2005, pp. 5–11.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Bukhov, Egorova.  相似文献   

17.
Etiolated bean plants were grown in intermittent light with dark intervals of shorter or longer duration, to modulate the rate of chlorophyll accumulation, relative to that of the other thylakoid components formed. We thus produced conditions under which chlorophyll becomes more or less a limiting factor. We then tested whether LHC complexes can be incorporated in the thylakoid. It was found that an equal amount of chlorophyll, formed under the same total irradiation received, may be used for the stabilization of few and large-in-size PS units containing LHC components (short dark-interval intermittent light), or for the stabilization of many and small-in-size PS units with no LHC components (long dark-interval intermittent light). The size of the PS units diminishes as the dark-interval duration is increased, with no further change after 98 minutes. The PSII/cytf ratio remains constant throughout development in intermittent light and equal to that of mature chloroplasts (PSII/cytf = 1) except in the case of very long dark-interval regimes, where about half PSII units per cytf are present. The PSII/PSI ratio was found to be correlated with the PSII unit size (the larger the size, the lower the ratio). The number of PSI units operating on the same electron transfer chain varied depending on the size of the PSII unit (the larger the PSII unit size, the more the PSI units per chain). The results suggest that it is not the chlorophyll content per se which regulates the stabilization of LHC in developing thylakoids and consequently the size of the PS units, but rather the rate by which it is accumulated, relative to that of the other thylakoid components.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - CL Continuous light - CPa the reaction center complex of PSII - CPI the reaction center complex of PSI - CPIa Chlorophyll protein complex containing the CPI and the light harvesting complex of PSI - fr w fresh weight - LDC Light dark cycles - LHC-I Light-harvesting complex of PSI - LHC-II Light harvesting complex of PSII - PS photosystem - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II  相似文献   

18.
《FEBS letters》2014,588(9):1832-1838
Mammalian complex I is composed of fourteen highly conserved core subunits and additional thirty subunits acquired in the course of evolution. At present, the function of the majority of these supernumerary subunits is poorly understood. In this work, we have studied NDUFA3, NDUFA5 and NDUFA12 supernumerary subunits to gain insight into their role in CI activity and biogenesis. Using human cell lines in which the expression of these subunits was knocked down with miRNAs, we showed that they are necessary for the formation of a functional holoenzyme. Analysis of the assembly intermediates in mitochondria depleted for these subunits further suggested that they are required for assembly and/or stability of the electron transferring Q module in the peripheral arm of the CI.  相似文献   

19.
The intricate assembly of photosystem I (PSI), a large multiprotein complex in the thylakoid membrane, depends on auxiliary protein factors. One of the essential assembly factors for PSI is encoded by ycf3 (hypothetical chloroplast reading frame number 3) in the chloroplast genome of algae and higher plants. To identify novel factors involved in PSI assembly, we constructed an epitope-tagged version of ycf3 from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and introduced it into the tobacco chloroplast genome by genetic transformation. Immunoaffinity purification of Ycf3 complexes from the transplastomic plants identified a novel nucleus-encoded thylakoid protein, Y3IP1 (for Ycf3-interacting protein 1), that specifically interacts with the Ycf3 protein. Subsequent reverse genetics analysis of Y3IP1 function in tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana revealed that knockdown of Y3IP1 leads to a specific deficiency in PSI but does not result in loss of Ycf3. Our data indicate that Y3IP1 represents a novel factor for PSI biogenesis that cooperates with the plastid genome-encoded Ycf3 in the assembly of stable PSI units in the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

20.
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