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1.
Storf S  Stauber EJ  Hippler M  Schmid VH 《Biochemistry》2004,43(28):9214-9224
Until now, more genes of the light-harvesting antenna of higher-plant photosystem I (PSI) than proteins have been described. To improve our understanding of the composition of light-harvesting complex I (LHCI) of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum), we combined one- and two-dimensional (1-D and 2-D, respectively) gel electrophoresis with immunoblotting and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Separation of PSI with high-resolution 1-D gels allowed separation of five bands attributed to proteins of LHCI. Immunoblotting with monospecific antibodies and MS/MS analysis enabled the correct assignment of the four prominent bands to light-harvesting proteins Lhca1-4. The fifth band was recognized by only the Lhca1 antibody. Immunodetection as well as mass spectrometric analysis revealed that these protein bands contain not only the eponymous protein but also other Lhca proteins, indicating a heterogeneous protein composition of Lhca bands. Additionally, highly sensitive MS/MS allowed detection of a second Lhca4 isoform and of Lhca5. These proteins had not been described before on the protein level in higher plants. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed an even more diverse composition of individual Lhca proteins than was apparent from 1-D gels. For each of the four prominent Lhca proteins, four to five isoforms with different isoelectric points could be identified. In the case of Lhca1, Lhca4, and Lhca3, additional isoforms with slightly differing molecular masses were identified. Thus, we were able to detect four to ten isoforms of each individual Lhca protein in PSI. Reasons for the origin of Lhca heterogeneity are discussed. The observed variety of Lhca proteins and their isoforms is of particular interest in the context of the recently published crystal structure of photosystem I from pea, which showed the presence of only four Lhca proteins per photosystem I. These findings indicate that several populations of photosystem I that differ in their Lhca composition may exist.  相似文献   

2.
Kargul J  Barber J 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(6):1056-1068
In order to carry out photosynthesis, plants and algae rely on the co-operative interaction of two photosystems: photosystem I and photosystem II. For maximum efficiency, each photosystem should absorb the same amount of light. To achieve this, plants and green algae have a mobile pool of chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins that can switch between being light-harvesting antenna for photosystem I or photosystem II, in order to maintain an optimal excitation balance. This switch, termed state transitions, involves the reversible phosphorylation of the mobile chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins, which is regulated by the redox state of the plastoquinone-mediating electron transfer between photosystem I and photosystem II. In this review, we will present the data supporting the function of redox-dependent phosphorylation of the major and minor chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins by the specific thylakoid-bound kinases (Stt7, STN7, TAKs) providing a molecular switch for the structural remodelling of the light-harvesting complexes during state transitions. We will also overview the latest X-ray crystallographic and electron microscopy-derived models for structural re-arrangement of the light-harvesting antenna during State 1-to-State 2 transition, in which the minor chlorophyll a/b-binding protein, CP29, and the mobile light-harvesting complex II trimer detach from the light-harvesting complex II-photosystem II supercomplex and associate with the photosystem I core in the vicinity of the PsaH/L/O/P domain.  相似文献   

3.
We report a structural characterization by electron microscopy and image analysis of a supramolecular complex consisting of photosystem I and light-harvesting complex I from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The complex is a monomer, has longest dimensions of 21.3 and 18.2 nm in projection, and is significantly larger than the corresponding complex in spinach. Comparison with photosystem I complexes from other organisms suggests that the complex contains about 14 light-harvesting proteins, two or three of which bind at the side of the PSI-H subunit. We suggest that special light-harvesting I proteins play a role in the binding of phosphorylated light-harvesting complex II in state 2.  相似文献   

4.
Solubilization of thylakoid membranes of Cyclotella cryptica with dodecyl-beta maltoside followed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation or deriphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis resulted in the isolation of pigment protein complexes. These complexes were characterized by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western immunoblotting using antisera against fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins and the reaction center protein D2 of photosystem II. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation yielded four bands. Band 1 consisted of free pigments with minor amounts of fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins. Bands 2, 3, and 4 represented a major fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding protein fraction, photosystem II, and photosystem I, respectively. Deriphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gave rise to five bands, representing photosystem I, photosystem II, two fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding protein complexes, and a band mostly consisting of free pigments. In the Western immunoblotting experiments, the specific association of two fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins, Fcp2 and Fcp4, to the photosystems could be demonstrated. In vivo experiments using antibodies against phosphothreonine residues and in vitro studies using [gamma-32P]ATP showed that fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c binding-proteins of 22 kDa became phosphorylated.  相似文献   

5.
The composition and structural organization of thylakoid membranes of a low chlorophyll mutant of Beta vulgaris was investigated using spectroscopic, kinetic and electrophoretic techniques. The data obtained were compared with those of a standard F1 hybrid of the same species. The mutant was depleted in chlorophyll b relative to the hybrid and it had a higher photosystem II/photosystem I reaction center (Q/P700) ratio and a smaller functional chlorophyll antenna size. Analysis of thylakoid membranes by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the mutant lacked a portion of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex but was enriched in the photosystem II reaction center chlorophyll protein complex. Comparison of functional antenna sizes and of photosystem stoichiometries determined electrophoretically were in good agreement with those determined spectroscopically. Both approaches indicated that about 30% of the total chlorophyll was associated with photosystem I and about 70% with photosystem II. A greater proportion of photosystem IIβ was detected in the mutant. The results suggest that a higher photosystem II to photosystem I ratio in the sugar beet mutant has apparently compensated for the smaller photosystem II chlorophyll light-harvesting antenna in its chloroplasts. Moreover, a lack of chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex correlates with the abundance of photosystem IIβ. It is proposed that a developmental relationship exists between the two types of photosystem II where photosystem IIβ is a precursor form of photosystem IIα occurring prior to the addition of the chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex and grana formation.  相似文献   

6.
P Jahns  W Junge 《Biochemistry》1992,31(32):7390-7397
Thylakoid membranes were isolated from pea seedlings grown under intermittent light (2-min light/118-min dark cycles). These preparations differed from controls (thylakoids from plants grown under 16-h light/8-h dark cycles) in the following respects: 15 times smaller chlorophyll/protein ratio, 10 times greater chlorophyll a/b ratio, absence of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding proteins, and 2-3-fold greater ratio of photosystem II over photosystem I. In addition we found the following: (1) Electrogenic electron transfer around cytochrome b6/f under flashing light was greatly enhanced, probably as a consequence of the greater photosystem II/photosystem I ratio. (2) The rate of proton uptake from the medium at the acceptor side of photosystem II was enhanced, probably by unshielding of the quinone binding domain. (3) The N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide sensitivity of the proton-pumping activity of photosystem II was absent, which was consistent with the attribution of a N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-induced protonic short circuit to chlorophyll a/b binding proteins. (4) The sensitivity of oxygen evolution under continuous light to variations of pH or the concentration of Ca2+ was altered. Chlorophyll a/b binding proteins serve as light-harvesting antennas. We found in addition that they modulated the activity of water oxidation and, in particular, the proteolytic reactions around photosystem II.  相似文献   

7.
The CD3 mutant of wheat is a chlorophyll(Chlo-deficient mutant the phenotype of which depends upon the accumulation of the light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complex in leaves in response to the intensity of illumination. In the present studies, the rates of synthesis and/or uptake, and degradation of the light-harvesting Chl apoprotein in chloroplasts of wild-type wheat ( Triticum aestivum L. selection ND 496) and CD3 wheat leaf segments were examined in response to two different intensities of illumination. We were interested particularly in the 21. 23 kDa proteins of the light-harvesting Chl a/b complex of photosystem I (LHCI) and the 25. 27. 29 kDa proteins of the light-harvesting Chl a/b complex of photosystem II (LHCII). The accumulation of [35S]-Met into the light-harvesting Chl protein of CD3 wheat chloroplasts was impaired by a high but not by a low light fluence. The levels of radiolabel in the supernatant fractions of leaf tissue homogenates from the wild-type and CD3 wheats were not significantly different over time, suggesting that the cellular uptake of [35S]-Met was not limiting in the mutant. The high fluence did not enhance the degradation of light-harvesting Chl protein from CD3 wheat thylakoids. Our data indicate an impairment in the light-harvesting Chl protein synthesis/membrane uptake system in CD3 wheat leaves under high fluence. A recovery in levels of the inner LHCPII, but not of LHCPI, was observed in the Chl-deficient wheat mutant after a prolonged (4 days) exposure to high fluence. Under low fluence, LHCP was added to both photosystem II (PSH) and photosystem I (PSI) but only that added to PSI remained in thylakoids after seedlings were switched to high fluence.  相似文献   

8.
Excitation spectra of chlorophyll a fluorescence in chloroplasts from spinach and barley were measured at 4.2 K. The spectra showed about the same resolution as the corresponding absorption spectra. Excitation spectra for long-wave chlorophyll a emission (738 or 733 nm) indicate that the main absorption maximum of the photosystem (PS) I complex is at 680 nm, with minor bands at longer wavelengths. From the corresponding excitation spectra it was concluded that the emission bands at 686 and 695 nm both originate from the PS II complex. The main absorption bands of this complex were at 676 and 684 nm. The PS I and PS II excitation spectra both showed a contribution by the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab protein(s), but direct energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not observed at 4 K. Omission of Mg2+ from the suspension favored energy transfer from the light-harvesting protein to PS I. Excitation spectra of a chlorophyll b-less mutant of barley showed an average efficiency of 50–60% for energy transfer from β-carotene to chlorophyll a in the PS I and in the PS II complexes.  相似文献   

9.
A new potential light-harvesting protein, named Lhca5, was recently detected in higher plants. Because of the low amount of Lhca5 in thylakoid membranes, the isolation of a native Lhca5 pigment-protein complex has not been achieved to date. Therefore, we used in vitro reconstitution to analyze whether Lhca5 binds pigments and is actually an additional light-harvesting protein. By this approach we could demonstrate that Lhca5 binds pigments in a unique stoichiometry. Analyses of pigment requirements for light-harvesting complex formation by Lhca5 revealed that chlorophyll b is the only indispensable pigment. Fluorescence measurements showed that ligated chlorophylls and carotenoids are arranged in a way that allows directed energy transfer within the light-harvesting complex. Reconstitutions of Lhca5 together with other Lhca proteins resulted in the formation of heterodimers with Lhca1. This result demonstrates that Lhca5 is indeed a protein belonging to the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I. The properties of Lhca5 are compared with those of previously characterized Lhca proteins, and the consequences of an additional Lhca protein for the composition of the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I are discussed in view of the recently published photosystem I structure of the pea.  相似文献   

10.
Antenna systems of plants and green algae are made up of pigment-protein complexes belonging to the light-harvesting complex (LHC) multigene family. LHCs increase the light-harvesting cross-section of photosystems I and II and catalyze photoprotective reactions that prevent light-induced damage in an oxygenic environment. The genome of the moss Physcomitrella patens contains two genes encoding LHCb9, a new antenna protein that bears an overall sequence similarity to photosystem II antenna proteins but carries a specific motif typical of photosystem I antenna proteins. This consists of the presence of an asparagine residue as a ligand for Chl 603 (A5) chromophore rather than a histidine, the common ligand in all other LHCbs. Asparagine as a Chl 603 (A5) ligand generates red-shifted spectral forms associated with photosystem I rather than with photosystem II, suggesting that in P. patens, the energy landscape of photosystem II might be different with respect to that of most green algae and plants. In this work, we show that the in vitro refolded LHCb9-pigment complexes carry a red-shifted fluorescence emission peak, different from all other known photosystem II antenna proteins. By using a specific antibody, we localized LHCb9 within PSII supercomplexes in the thylakoid membranes. This is the first report of red-shifted spectral forms in a PSII antenna system, suggesting that this biophysical feature might have a special role either in optimization of light use efficiency or in photoprotection in the specific environmental conditions experienced by this moss.  相似文献   

11.
Chlorophyll-proteins of the photosystem II antenna system   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The chlorophyll-protein complexes of purified maize photosystem II membranes were separated by a new mild gel electrophoresis system under conditions which maintained all of the major chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHCII) in the oligomeric form. This enabled the resolution of three chlorophyll a/b-proteins in the 26-31-kDa region which are normally obscured by monomeric LHCII. All chlorophyll a/b-proteins had unique polypeptide compositions and characteristic spectral properties. One of them (CP26) has not previously been described, and another (CP24) appeared to be identical to the connecting antenna of photosystem I (LHCI-680). Both CP24 and CP29 from maize had at least one epitope in common with the light-harvesting antennae of photosystem I, as shown by cross-reactivity with a monoclonal antibody raised against LHCI from barley thylakoids. A complex designated Chla.P2, which was capable of electron transport from diphenylcarbazide to 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, was isolated by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis. It lacked CP43, which therefore can be excluded as an essential component of the photosystem II reaction center core. Fractionation of octyl glucoside-solubilized photosystem II membranes in the presence and absence of Mg2+ enabled the isolation of the Chla . P2 complex and revealed the existence of a light-harvesting complex consisting of CP29, CP26, and CP24. This complex and the major light-harvesting system (LHCII) are postulated to transfer excitation energy independently to the photosystem II reaction center via CP43.  相似文献   

12.
Maize seedlings, treated with the herbicide norflurazon to produce a deficiency in carotenoid pigments, were grown in low-fluence-rate light. Under these conditions, which induced chlorophyll biosynthesis while minimizing photooxidation, carotenoid-deficient seedlings showed identical patterns of chloroplast protein accumulation compared with normal seedlings. Carotenoid pigments thus play no direct role in regulating the accumulation of chloroplast proteins. When shifted to high-fluence-rate light, chlorophyll was rapidly photooxidized in carotenoid-deficient seedlings. Chloroplast proteins showed varying degrees of sensitivity to photooxidation. The P-700 apoprotein of photosystem I was rapidly degraded. Most stromal and thylakoid proteins either decreased progressively in photooxidative conditions or appeared to be unaffected. The relative quantity of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of photosystem II increased significantly in the first few hours of high-fluence-rate light. It then appeared to be only minimally affected 18 hours after complete photooxidation of chlorophyll.  相似文献   

13.
Summary iserum against two polypeptides of the major fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex of the diatomPhaeodactylum tricornutum and heterologous antiserum against purified photosystem I particles of maize were used to localize these two complexes on the thylakoid membranes ofP. tricornutum. As in many chromophyte algae, the thylakoids are loosely appressed and organized into extended bands of three, giving a ratio of 21 for appressed versus non-appressed membranes. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that the fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex, which is believed to be associated with photosystem II, was equally distributed on the appressed and non-appressed thylakoid membranes. Photosystem I was also found on both types of membranes, but was slightly more concentrated on the two outer non-appressed membranes of each band. Similarly, photosystem I activity, as measured by the photooxidation of 3,3-diaminobenzidine, was higher in the outer thylakoids than in the central thylakoid of each band. We conclude that the thylakoids of diatoms differ from those of green algae and higher plants in their macromolecular organization as well as in their morphological arrangement.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - DAB 3,3-diaminobenzidine - FCPC fucoxanthin-chlorophylla/c light-harvesting complex - LHC light-harvesting complex - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PS photosystem  相似文献   

14.
The light-harvesting proteins (Lhca) of photosystem I (PSI) from four monocot and five dicot species were extracted from plant material, separated by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and subsequently identified on the basis of their intact molecular masses upon on-line hyphenation with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Although their migration behavior in gel electrophoresis was very similar, the elution times among the four antenna types in reversed-phase-HPLC differed significantly, even more than those observed for the light-harvesting proteins of photosystem II. Identification of proteins is based on the good agreement between the measured intact molecular masses and the values calculated on the basis of their nucleotide-derived amino acid sequences, which makes the intact molecular masses applicable as intact mass tags. These values match excellently for Arabidopsis, most probably because of the availability of high-quality DNA sequence data. In all species examined, the four antennae eluted in the same order, namely Lhca1 > Lhca3 > Lhca4 > Lhca2. These characteristic patterns enabled an unequivocal assignment of the proteins in preparations from different species. Interestingly, in all species examined, Lhca1 and Lhca2 were present in two or three isoforms. A fifth antenna protein, corresponding to the Lhca6 gene, was found in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). However PSI showed a lower heterogeneity than photosystem II. In most plant species, Lhca2 and Lhca4 proteins are the most abundant PSI antenna proteins. The HPLC method used in this study was found to be highly reproducible, and the chromatograms may serve as a highly confident fingerprint for comparison within a single and among different species for future studies of the PSI antenna.  相似文献   

15.
We report a structural characterization by electron microscopy of green plant photosystem I solubilized by the mild detergent n-dodecyl-alpha-D-maltoside. It is shown by immunoblotting that the isolated complexes contain all photosystem I core proteins and all peripheral light-harvesting proteins. The electron microscopic analysis is based on a large data set of 14 000 negatively stained single-particle projections and reveals that most of the complexes are oval-shaped monomers. The monomers have a tendency to associate into artificial dimers, trimers, and tetramers in which the monomers are oppositely oriented. Classification of the dimeric complexes suggests that some of the monomers lack a part of the peripheral antenna. On the basis of a comparison with projections from trimeric photosystem I complexes from cyanobacteria, we conclude that light-harvesting complex I only binds to the core complex at the side of the photosystem I F/J subunits and does not cause structural hindrances for the type of trimerization observed in cyanobacterial photosystem I.  相似文献   

16.
Diverse light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) have been found in photosynthetic microalgae that originated from secondary endosymbiosis involving primary red algae. However, the associations between LHCs and photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) in these microalgae are not fully understood. Eustigmatophyta is a red algal lineage that appears to have a unique organization in its photosynthetic machinery, consisting of only chlorophyll a and carotenoids that are atypical compared with other closely related groups. In this study, the supramolecular organization of pigment–protein complexes in the eustigmatophyte alga, Nannochloropsis granulata was investigated using Clear Native (CN) PAGE coupled with two-dimensional (2D) SDS-PAGE. Our results showed two slowly migrating green bands that corresponded to PSII supercomplexes, which consisted of reaction centers and LHCs. These green bands were also characterized as PSII complexes by their low temperature fluorescence emission spectra. The protein subunits of the PSII–LHC resolved by 2D CN/SDS-PAGE were analyzed by mass spectrometry, and four different LHC proteins were identified. Phylogenetic analysis of the identified LHC protein sequences revealed that they belonged to four different Lhc groups; (1) stress-related Lhcx proteins, (2) fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding Lhcf proteins, (3) red-shifted Chromera light-harvesting proteins (Red-CLH), and (4) Lhcr proteins, which are commonly found in organisms possessing red algal plastids. This is the first report showing evidence of a pigment–protein supercomplex consisting of PSII and LHCs, and to identify PSII-associated LHC proteins in Nannochloropsis.  相似文献   

17.
The carotenoid zeaxanthin has been implicated in a nonradiative dissipation of excess excitation energy. To determine its site of action, we have examined the location of zeaxanthin within the thylakoid membrane components. Five pigment-protein complexes were isolated with little loss of pigments: photosystem I (PSI); core complex (CC) I, the core of PSI; CC II, the core of photosystem II (PSII); light-harvesting complex (LHC) IIb, a trimer of the major light-harvesting protein of PSII; and LHC IIa, c, and d, a complex of the monomeric minor light-harvesting proteins of PSII. Zeaxanthin was found predominantly in the LHC complexes. Lesser amounts were present in the CCs possibly because these contained some extraneous LHC polypeptides. The LHC IIb trimer and the monomeric LHC II a, c, and d pigment-proteins from dark-adapted plants each contained, in addition to lutein and neoxanthin, one violaxanthin molecule but little antheraxanthin and no zeaxanthin. Following illumination, each complex had a reduced violaxanthin content, but now more antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin were present. PSI had little or no neoxanthin. The pigment content of LHC I was deduced by subtracting the pigment content of CC I from that of PSI. Our best estimate for the carotenoid content of a LHC IIb trimer from dark-adapted plants is one violaxanthin, two neoxanthins, six luteins, and 0.03 mol of antheraxanthin per mol trimer. The xanthophyll cycle occurs mainly or exclusively within the light-harvesting antennae of both photosystems.  相似文献   

18.
The time course for the observation of intact chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes during barley chloroplast development was measured by mild sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The procedure required extraction of thylakoid membranes with sodium bromide to remove extrinsic proteins. During the early stages of greening, the proteins extracted with sodium bromide included polypeptides from the cell nucleus that associate with developing thylakoid membranes during isolation and interfere with the separation of CP complexes by electrophoresis. Photosystem I CP complexes were observed before the photosystem II and light-harvesting CP complexes during the initial stages of barley chloroplast development. Photosystem I activity was observed before the photosystem I CP complex was detected whereas photosystem II activity coincided with the appearance of the CP complex associated with photosystem II. Throughout chloroplast development, the percentage of the total chlorophyll associated with photosystem I remained constant whereas the amount of chlorophyll associated with photosystem II and the light-harvesting complex increased. The CP composition of thylakoid membranes from the early stages of greening was difficult to quantitate because a large amount of chlorophyll was released from the CP complexes during detergent extraction. As chloroplast development proceeded, a decrease was observed in the amount of chlorophyll released from the CP complexes by detergent action. The decrease suggested that the CP complexes were stabilized during the later stages of development.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CP chlorophyll-protein - CPI P700 chlorophyll-a protein complex of photosystem I - CPa electrophoretic band that contains the photosystem II reaction center complexes and a variable amount of the photosystem I light-harvesting complex - CP A/B the major light-harvesting complex associated with photosystem II - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DPC diphenyl carbazide - MV methyl viologen - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TEMED N,N,N,N-tetramethylethylenediamine - TMPD N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine Cooperative investigations of the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, and the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleigh, NC 27695-7601. Paper No. 9949 of the Journal Series of the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service, Raleight, NC 27695-7601.  相似文献   

19.
The chloroplast Albino3 (Alb3) protein is a chloroplast homolog of the mitochondrial Oxa1p and YidC proteins of Escherichia coli, which are essential components for integrating membrane proteins. In vitro studies in vascular plants have revealed that Alb3 is required for the integration of the light-harvesting complex protein into the thylakoid membrane. Here, we show that the gene affected in the ac29 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is Alb3.1. The availability of the ac29 mutant has allowed us to examine the function of Alb3.1 in vivo. The loss of Alb3.1 has two major effects. First, the amount of light-harvesting complex from photosystem II (LHCII) and photosystem I (LHCI) is reduced >10-fold, and total chlorophyll represents only 30% of wild-type levels. Second, the amount of photosystem II is diminished 2-fold in light-grown cells and nearly 10-fold in dark-grown cells. The accumulation of photosystem I, the cytochrome b(6)f complex, and ATP synthase is not affected in the ac29 mutant. Mild solubilization of thylakoid membranes reveals that Alb3 forms two distinct complexes, a lower molecular mass complex of a size similar to LHC and a high molecular mass complex. A homolog of Alb3.1, Alb3.2, is present in Chlamydomonas, with 37% sequence identity and 57% sequence similarity. Based on the phenotype of ac29, these two genes appear to have mostly nonredundant functions.  相似文献   

20.
Accessory light-harvesting complexes (LHCFs) were isolated from the brown alga Laminaria saccharina. Complexes specifically associated with photosystem I or II are identical with each other with respect to molecular mass, isoelectric point and behavior on anion-exchange chromatography or non-denaturing isoelectric focusing. The purified complexes also have similar pigment composition and spectroscopic properties. It is concluded that LHC antennae associated with photosystem I or II cannot be distinguished biochemically. After screening of genomic and cDNA libraries produced from L. saccharina sporophytes, six lhcf genes were isolated. Sequence analysis of these lhcf genes showed a high level of homology between the encoded polypeptides. Comparisons with coding sequences of lhcf genes from Macrocystis pyrifera and expressed sequence tags from Laminaria digitata (two other Laminariales) indicated that these proteins are probably very similar in all brown algae. Another feature common to the lhcf genes characterized was the presence of an intron in the coding region corresponding to the plastid-targeting presequence. The sequence similarity extended to the 5' and 3' UTRs of several genes. In spite of the common origin of the chloroplasts, no light-regulating elements involved in the expression of the genes encoding the higher-plant light-harvesting proteins has been found in the UTRs.  相似文献   

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