首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 modulates photosynthetic function by transiently replacing the constitutive D1 photosystem II protein, D1:1, with an alternate form, D1:2, to help counteract photoinhibition under excess light. We show that a temperature drop from 37 to 25 degrees C also drives D1:1/D1:2 exchange under constant, moderate light. Chilling or light-induced D1 exchange results from rapid loss of psbAI message coding for D1:1 and accumulation of psbAII and psbAIII messages coding for D1:2. During chilling, a large pool of a novel form, D1:2*, transiently accumulates, distinguishable from normal D1 by an increase in apparent molecular mass. D1:2* is not phosphorylated and is probably a functionally inactive, incompletely processed precursor. After acclimation to 25 degrees C, D1:2* disappears and D1:1 again predominates, although substantial D1:2 remains. Partial inhibition of electron transport under constant, moderate light also triggers the D1 exchange process. These treatments all increase excitation pressure on photosystem II relative to electron transport. Therefore, information from photosynthetic electron transport regulates D1 exchange without any requirement for a change in light intensity or quality, possibly via a redox sensing mechanism proximal to photosystem II.  相似文献   

2.
3.
An electron spin-echo envelope modulation study [Tang, X.-S., Diner, B. A., Larsen, B. S., Gilchrist, M. L., Jr., Lorigan, G. A., and Britt, R. D. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 704-708] and a recent Fourier transform infrared study [Noguchi, T., Inoue, Y., and Tang, X.-S. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 10187-10195], both conducted with [(15)N]histidine-labeled photosystem II particles, show that at least one histidine residue coordinates the O(2)-evolving Mn cluster in photosystem II. Evidence obtained from site-directed mutagenesis studies suggests that one of these residues may be His332 of the D1 polypeptide. The mutation D1-H332E is of particular interest because cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 that contain this mutation evolve no O(2) but appear to assemble Mn clusters in nearly all photosystem II reaction centers [Chu, H.-A., Nguyen, A. P. , and Debus, R. J. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 5859-5882]. Photosystem II particles isolated from the Synechocystis D1-H332E mutant are characterized in this study. Intact D1-H332E photosystem II particles exhibit an altered S(2) state multiline EPR signal that has more hyperfine lines and narrower splittings than the S(2) state multiline EPR signal observed in wild-type PSII particles. However, the quantum yield for oxidizing the S(1) state Mn cluster is very low, corresponding to an 8000-fold slowing of the rate of Mn oxidation by Y(Z)(*), and the temperature threshold for forming the S(2) state is approximately 100 K higher than in wild-type PSII preparations. Furthermore, the D1-H332E PSII particles are unable to advance beyond the Y(Z)(*)S(2) state, as shown by the accumulation of a narrow "split" EPR signal under multiple turnover conditions. In Mn-depleted photosystem II particles, charge recombination between Q(A)(*)(-) and Y(Z)(*) in D1-H332E is accelerated in comparison to wild-type, showing that the mutation alters the redox properties of Y(Z) in addition to those of the Mn cluster. These results are consistent with D1-His332 being located near the Mn-Y(Z) complex and perhaps ligating Mn.  相似文献   

4.
A carboxylate group of D1-Glu-189 in photosystem II has been proposed to serve as a direct ligand for the manganese cluster. Here we constructed a mutant that eliminates the carboxylate by replacing D1-Glu-189 with Gln in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, and we examined the resulting effects on the structural and functional properties of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II. The E189Q mutant grew photoautotrophically, and isolated photosystem II core particles evolved oxygen at approximately 70% of the rate of control wild-type particles. The E189Q OEC showed typical S(2) state electron spin resonance signals, and the spin center distance between the S(2) state manganese cluster and the Y(D) (D2-Tyr-160), detected by electron-electron double resonance spectroscopy, was not affected by this mutation. However, the redox potential of the E189Q OEC was considerably lower than that of the control OEC, as revealed by the elevated peak temperature of the S(2) state thermoluminescence bands. The mutation resulted in specific changes to bands ascribed to the putative carboxylate ligands for the manganese cluster and to a few carbonyl bands in mid-frequency (1800 to 1100 cm(-1)) S(2)/S(1) Fourier transform infrared difference spectrum. Notably, the low frequency (650 to 350 cm(-1)) S(2)/S(1) Fourier transform infrared difference spectrum was also uniquely changed by this mutation in the frequencies for the manganese cluster core vibrations. These results suggested that the carboxylate group of D1-Glu-189 ligates the manganese ion, which is influenced by the redox change of the oxidizable manganese ion upon the S(1) to S(2) transition.  相似文献   

5.
Vavilin DV  Vermaas WF 《Biochemistry》2000,39(48):14831-14838
The lumenal CD-loop region of the D2 protein of photosystem II contains residues that interact with the primary electron donor P680 and the redox active tyrosyl residue Y(D). Photosystem II properties were studied in a number of photoautotrophic mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, most of which carried combinatorial mutations in residues 164-170, 179-186, or 187-194 of the D2 protein. To facilitate characterization of photosystem II properties in the mutants, the CD-loop mutations were introduced into a photosystem I-less background. According to variable fluorescence decay measurements in DCMU-treated cells, charge recombination of Q(A)(-) with the donor side was faster in the majority of mutants (t(1/2) = 45-140 ms) than in the control (t(1/2) = 180 ms). However, in one mutant (named C7-3), the decay of Q(A)(-) was 2 times slower than in the control (t(1/2) = 360 ms). The decay half-time of each mutant correlated with the yield of the Q-band of thermoluminescence (TL) emitted due to S(2)Q(A)(-) charge recombination. The C7-3 mutant had the highest TL intensity, whereas no Q-band was detected in the mutants with fast Q(A)(-) decay (t(1/2) = 45-50 ms). The correlated changes in the rate of recombination and in TL yield in these strains suggest the existence of a nonradiative pathway of charge recombination between Q(A)(-) and the donor side. This may involve direct electron transfer from Q(A)(-) to P680(+) in a way not leading to formation of excited chlorophyll. Many mutations in the CD-loop appear to increase the equilibrium P680(+) concentration during the lifetime of the S(2)Q(A)(-) state, for example, by making the midpoint potential of the P680(+)/P680 redox couple more negative. The nonradiative charge recombination pathway involves a low activation energy and is less temperature-dependent than the formation of excited P680 that leads to TL emission. Therefore, during the TL measurements in these mutants, the S(2)Q(A)(-) state can recombine nonradiatively before temperatures are reached at which radiative charge recombination becomes feasible. The results presented here highlight the presence of two charge recombination pathways and the importance of the CD-loop of the D2 protein in determination of the energy gap between the P680(+)S(1) and P680S(2) states.  相似文献   

6.
Using in vivo thermoluminescence, we examined the effects of growth irradiance and growth temperature on charge recombination events in photosystem II reaction centres of the model green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We report that growth at increasing irradiance at either 29 or 15 degrees C resulted in comparable downward shifts in the temperature peak maxima (T(M)) for S2QB- charge pair recombination events, with minimal changes in S2QA- recombination events. This indicates that such growth conditions decrease the activation energy required for S2QB- charge pair recombination events with no concomitant change in the activation energy for S2QA- recombination events. This resulted in a decrease in the DeltaT(M) between S2QA- and S2QB- recombination events, which was reversible when shifting cells from low to high irradiance and back to low irradiance at 29 degrees C. We interpret these results to indicate that the redox potential of QB was modulated independently of QA, which consequently narrowed the redox potential gap between QA and QB in photosystem II reaction centres. Since a decrease in the DeltaT(M) between S2QA- and S2QB- recombination events correlated with growth at increasing excitation pressure, we conclude that acclimation to growth under high excitation pressure narrows the redox potential gap between QA and QB in photosystem II reaction centres, enhancing the probability for reaction center quenching in C. reinhardtii. We discuss the molecular basis for the modulation of the redox state of QB, and suggest that the potential for reaction center quenching complements antenna quenching via the xanthophyll cycle in the photoprotection of C. reinhardtii from excess light.  相似文献   

7.
Exposure of control (non-hardened) Arabidopsis leaves for 2 h at high irradiance at 5 degrees C resulted in a 55% decrease in photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency as indicated by F(v)/F(m). In contrast, cold-acclimated leaves exposed to the same conditions showed only a 22% decrease in F(v)/F(m). Thermoluminescence was used to assess the possible role(s) of PSII recombination events in this differential resistance to photoinhibition. Thermoluminescence measurements of PSII revealed that S(2)Q(A)(-) recombination was shifted to higher temperatures, whereas the characteristic temperature of the S(2)Q(B)(-) recombination was shifted to lower temperatures in cold-acclimated plants. These shifts in recombination temperatures indicate higher activation energy for the S(2)Q(A)(-) redox pair and lower activation energy for the S(2)Q(B)(-) redox pair. This results in an increase in the free-energy gap between P680(+)Q(A)(-) and P680(+)Pheo(-) and a narrowing of the free energy gap between primary and secondary electron-accepting quinones in PSII electron acceptors. We propose that these effects result in an increased population of reduced primary electron-accepting quinone in PSII, facilitating non-radiative P680(+)Q(A)(-) radical pair recombination. Enhanced reaction center quenching was confirmed using in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence-quenching analysis. The enhanced dissipation of excess light energy within the reaction center of PSII, in part, accounts for the observed increase in resistance to high-light stress in cold-acclimated Arabidopsis plants.  相似文献   

8.
Synechocystis PCC 6803 mutants expressing either the "low light" (D1:1) or the "high light" (D1:2) form of the Photosystem II (PSII) D1 protein from Synechococcus PCC 7942 were constructed and characterized with respect to properties of PSII and sensitivity to visible and UV-B radiation. The AI and AIII mutants (containing only the D1:1 and D1:2 forms, respectively) exhibited very similar PSII characteristics as the control strain and they differed only in the accelerated decay kinetics of flash-induced variable fluorescence measured in the presence of DCMU. However, the mutants showed increased sensitivity to photodamage induced by visible and UV-B radiation, with higher loss of PSII activity in the AI than in the AIII strain. Thus, the difference between strains containing D1:1 and D1:2 found previously in Synechococcus 7942 is maintained after transfer of corresponding psbA genes into Synechocystis 6803 and is directly related to the coding region of these genes. The higher light sensitivity of the AI mutant is caused partly by the higher rate of photodamage and partly by the less efficient PSII repair.  相似文献   

9.
The lumenal CD loop region of the D2 protein of photosystem II contains residues that interact with a reaction center chlorophyll and the redox-active Tyr(D). Using combinatorial mutagenesis, photoautotrophic mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been generated with multiple amino acid changes in this region. The CD loop mutations were transferred into a photosystem I-less Synechocystis strain to facilitate characterization of photosystem II properties in the mutants. Most of the combinatorial photosystem I-less mutants obtained had a high yield of variable fluorescence, F(V). However, in three mutants, which shared a replacement of Phe181 by Trp, the F(V) yield was dramatically reduced although a high rate of oxygen evolution was maintained. A site-directed F181W D2 mutant shared similar properties. Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence measurements revealed that in the combinatorial F181W mutants the fluorescence lifetimes in closed and open photosystem II centers were essentially identical and were similar to the fluorescence lifetime in open centers of the control strain. These results are explained by quenching of variable fluorescence in the mutants by charge separation between Trp181 and excited reaction center chlorophyll. This reaction competes efficiently with fluorescence and nonradiative decay in closed photosystem II centers, where the lifetime of the excitation in the chlorophyll antenna is long. Thermodynamic considerations favor the formation of oxidized tryptophan and reduced chlorophyll in the quenching reaction, presumably followed by charge recombination. A possible role of tryptophan-chlorophyll charge separation in the mechanism of energy-dependent quenching of excitations in photosynthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Photoinhibition of photosynthesis and growth responses at diffrent light levels (10, 120 and 250 μmol m−2 s−1) were studied in psbA gene mutants R2S2C3 ( psbAI gene present) and R2K1 ( psbAIIIpsbAIII genes present) of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp . PCC 7942 ( Anacystis nidulans R2). Mutant R2K1 (possessing form II of the D1 protein of photosystem II) was much more resistant to photoinhibition than the mutant R2S2C3 (possessing form I of the D1 protein). At moderate inhibitory light levels (100 to 300 μmol m−2 s−1) this was largely ascribed to an increased rsistance of the photosystem II reaction cetres possessing form II of the D1 protein. However, at higher light levels the higher resistance mutant R2K1 was assigned to a higher rate of photosystem II repair, i.e. turnover of the D1 protein. Moreover, our results support the hypothesis that photoinhibition of photosystem II and photoinhibitory induced quenching are due to separate processes. Results from growth experiments show that the R2K1 mutant has a slower growth rate than the R2S2C3 mutant but shows an increased survival under high light stress conditions. It is hypothesized that high resistance to photoinhibition, though allowing a better survival under high light, is not advantageous for optimal growth.  相似文献   

11.
The Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 strain carrying a missense mutation in the peptide-binding domain of DnaK3, one of the essential dnaK gene products, revealed temperature-sensitive growth. We also isolated suppressor mutants of this strain. One of the suppressors was mapped in the ribosomal protein gene rpl24 (syc1876), which encodes the 50S ribosomal protein L24. Subcellular localization of three DnaK proteins was determined, and the results indicated that a quantity of DnaK3 was dislocated from membrane-bound polysomes when dnaK3 temperature-sensitive mutant was incubated at non-permissive temperatures. Furthermore, we examined the photosystem II reaction center protein D1 and detected a translational intermediate polypeptide in membrane-bound polysome fractions prepared from dnaK3 temperature-sensitive cells grown at high temperature. These characteristic features of DnaK3 localizations and detection of D1 protein intermediate were not observed in the suppressor mutant even at high temperatures.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of the histidine axial ligand to the PD1 chlorophyll of photosystem II on the redox potential and spectroscopic properties of the primary electron donor, P680, was investigated in mutant oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) complexes purified from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. To achieve this aim, a mutagenesis system was developed in which the psbA1 and psbA2 genes encoding D1 were deleted from a His-tagged CP43 strain (to generate strain WT*) and mutations D1-H198A and D1-H198Q were introduced into the remaining psbA3 gene. The O2-evolving activity of His-tagged PSII isolated from WT* was found to be significantly higher than that measured from His-tagged PSII isolated from WT in which psbA1 is expected to be the dominantly expressed form. PSII purified from both the D1-H198A and D1-H198Q mutants exhibited oxygen-evolving activity as high as that from WT*. Surprisingly, a variety of kinetic and spectroscopic measurements revealed that the D1-H198A and D1-H198Q mutations had little effect on the redox and spectroscopic properties of P680, in contrast to the earlier results from the analysis of the equivalent mutants constructed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 [B.A. Diner, E. Schlodder, P.J. Nixon, W.J. Coleman, F. Rappaport, J. Lavergne, W.F. Vermaas, D.A. Chisholm, Site-directed mutations at D1-His198 and D2-His197 of photosystem II in Synechocystis PCC 6803: sites of primary charge separation and cation and triplet stabilization, Biochemistry 40 (2001) 9265-9281]. We conclude that the nature of the axial ligand to PD1 is not an important determinant of the redox and spectroscopic properties of P680 in T. elongatus.  相似文献   

13.
Localization of membrane proteins in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 was determined by transmission electron microscopy utilizing immunocytochemistry with cells prepared by freeze-substitution. This preparation procedure maintained cellular morphology and permitted detection of cellular antigens with high sensitivity and low background. Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 is a unicellular cyanobacterium with thylakoids organized in concentric layers toward the periphery of the cell. Cytochrome oxidase was localized almost entirely in the cytoplasmic membrane, whereas a carotenoprotein (P35) was shown to be a cell wall component. The major photosystem II (PSII) proteins (D1, D2 CP43, and CP47) were localized throughout the thylakoids. Proteins of the Cyt b6/f complex were found to have a similar distribution. Thylakoid luminal proteins, such as the Mn-stabilizing protein, were located primarily in the thylakoid, but a small, reproducible fraction was found in the outer compartment. The photosystem I (PSI) reaction center proteins and the ATP synthase proteins were found associated mostly with the outermost thylakoid and with the cytoplasmic membrane. These results indicated that the photosynthetic apparatus is not evenly distributed throughout the thylakoids. Rather, there is a radial asymmetry such that much of the PSI and the ATPase synthase is located in the outermost thylakoid. The relationship of this structure to the photosynthetic mechanism is discussed. It is suggested that the photosystems are separated because of kinetic differences between PSII and PSI, as hypothesized by H.-W. Trissl and C. Wilhelm (Trends Biochem Sci [1993] 18:415-419).  相似文献   

14.
The antenna proteins in photosystem II (PSII) not only promote energy transfer to the photosynthetic reaction center (RC) but provide also an efficient cation sink to re-reduce chlorophyll a if the electron transfer (ET) from the Mn-cluster is inhibited. Using the newest PSII dimer crystal structure (3.0 A resolution), in which 11 beta-carotene molecules (Car) and 14 lipids are visible in the PSII monomer, we calculated the redox potentials (Em) of one-electron oxidation for all Car (Em(Car)) by solving the Poisson-Boltzmann equation. In each PSII monomer, the D1 protein harbors a previously unlocated Car (CarD1) in van der Waals contact with the chlorin ring of ChlZ(D1). Each CarD1 in the PSII dimer complex is located in the interface between the D1 and CP47 subunits, together with another four Car of the other PSII monomer and several lipid molecules. The proximity of Car bridging between CarD1 and plastoquinone/Q(A) may imply a direct charge recombination of Car+Q(A)-. The calculated Em(CarD1) and Em(ChlZ(D1)) are, respectively, 83 and 126 mV higher than Em(CarD2) and Em(ChlZ(D2)), which could explain why CarD2+ and ChlZ(D2)+ are observed rather than the corresponding CarD1+ and ChlZ(D1)+.  相似文献   

15.
In dark-adapted plants and algae, chlorophyll a fluorescence induction peaks within 1s after irradiation due to well documented photochemical and non-photochemical processes. Here we show that the much slower fluorescence rise in cyanobacteria (the so-called "S to M rise" in tens of seconds) is due to state 2 to state 1 transition. This has been demonstrated in particular for Synechocystis PCC6803, using its RpaC(-) mutant (locked in state 1) and its wild-type cells kept in hyperosmotic suspension (locked in state 2). In both cases, the inhibition of state changes correlates with the disappearance of the S to M fluorescence rise, confirming its assignment to the state 2 to state 1 transition. The general physiological relevance of the SM rise is supported by its occurrence in several cyanobacterial strains: Synechococcus (PCC 7942, WH 5701) and diazotrophic single cell cyanobacterium (Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142). We also show here that the SM fluorescence rise, and also the state transition changes are less prominent in filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. (PCC 7120) and absent in phycobilisome-less cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus PCC 9511. Surprisingly, it is also absent in the phycobiliprotein rod containing Acaryochloris marina (MBIC 11017). All these results show that the S to M fluorescence rise reflects state 2 to state 1 transition in cyanobacteria with phycobilisomes formed by rods and core parts. We show that the pronounced SM fluorescence rise may reflect a protective mechanism for excess energy dissipation in those cyanobacteria (e.g. in Synechococcus PCC 7942) that are less efficient in other protective mechanisms, such as blue light induced non-photochemical quenching. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

16.
Oxidative stress inhibits the repair of photodamaged photosystem II (PSII). This inhibition is due initially to the suppression, by reactive oxygen species (ROS), of the synthesis de novo of proteins that are required for the repair of PSII, such as the D1 protein, at the level of translational elongation. To investigate in vitro the mechanisms whereby ROS inhibit translational elongation, we developed a translation system in vitro from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The synthesis of the D1 protein in vitro was inhibited by exogenous H2O2. However, the addition of reduced forms of elongation factor G (EF-G), which is known to be particularly sensitive to oxidation, was able to reverse the inhibition of translation. By contrast, the oxidized forms of EF-G failed to restore translational activity. Furthermore, the overexpression of EF-G of Synechocystis in another cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 increased the tolerance of cells to H2O2 in terms of protein synthesis. These observations suggest that EF-G might be the primary target, within the translational machinery, of inhibition by ROS.  相似文献   

17.
Site-directed mutations were introduced to replace D1-His198 and D2-His197 of the D1 and D2 polypeptides, respectively, of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center of Synechocystis PCC 6803. These residues coordinate chlorophylls P(A) and P(B) which are homologous to the special pair Bchlorophylls of the bacterial reaction centers that are coordinated respectively by histidines L-173 and M-200 (202). P(A) and P(B) together serve as the primary electron donor, P, in purple bacterial reaction centers. In PS II, the site-directed mutations at D1 His198 affect the P(+)--P-absorbance difference spectrum. The bleaching maximum in the Soret region (in WT at 433 nm) is blue-shifted by as much as 3 nm. In the D1 His198Gln mutant, a similar displacement to the blue is observed for the bleaching maximum in the Q(y) region (672.5 nm in WT at 80 K), whereas features attributed to a band shift centered at 681 nm are not altered. In the Y(Z*)--Y(Z)-difference spectrum, the band shift of a reaction center chlorophyll centered in WT at 433--434 nm is shifted by 2--3 nm to the blue in the D1-His198Gln mutant. The D1-His198Gln mutation has little effect on the optical difference spectrum, (3)P--(1)P, of the reaction center triplet formed by P(+)Pheo(-) charge recombination (bleaching at 681--684 nm), measured at 5--80 K, but becomes visible as a pronounced shoulder at 669 nm at temperatures > or =150 K. Measurements of the kinetics of oxidized donor--Q(A)(-) charge recombination and of the reduction of P(+) by redox active tyrosine, Y(Z), indicate that the reduction potential of the redox couple P(+)/P can be appreciably modulated both positively and negatively by ligand replacement at D1-198 but somewhat less so at D2-197. On the basis of these observations and others in the literature, we propose that the monomeric accessory chlorophyll, B(A), is a long-wavelength trap located at 684 nm at 5 K. B(A)* initiates primary charge separation at low temperature, a function that is increasingly shared with P(A)* in an activated process as the temperature rises. Charge separation from B(A)* would be potentially very fast and form P(A)(+)B(A)(-) and/or B(A)(+)Pheo(-) as observed in bacterial reaction centers upon direct excitation of B(A) (van Brederode, M. E., et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. 96, 2054--2059). The cation, generated upon primary charge separation in PSII, is stabilized at all temperatures primarily on P(A), the absorbance spectrum of which is displaced to the blue by the mutations. In WT, the cation is proposed to be shared to a minor extent (approximately 20%) with P(B), the contribution of which can be modulated up or down by mutation. The band shift at 681 nm, observed in the P(+)-P difference spectrum, is attributed to an electrochromic effect of P(A)(+) on neighboring B(A). Because of its low-energy singlet and therefore triplet state, the reaction center triplet state is stabilized on B(A) at < or =80 K but can be shared with P(A) at >80 K in a thermally activated process.  相似文献   

18.
Phosphatidylglycerol (PG), a ubiquitous constituent of thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts and cyanobacteria, is demonstrated to be essential for the functionality of plastoquinone electron acceptor Q(B) in the photosystem II reaction center of oxygenic photosynthesis. Growth of the pgsA mutant cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 that are defective in phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase and are incapable of synthesizing PG, in a medium without PG, resulted in a 90% decrease in PG content and a 50% loss of photosynthetic oxygen-evolving activity as reported [Hagio, M., Gombos, Z., Várkonyi, Z., Masamoto, K., Sato, N., Tsuzuki, M., and Wada, H. (2000) Plant Physiol. 124, 795-804]. We have studied each step of the electron transport in photosystem II of the pgsA mutant to clarify the functional site of PG. Accumulation of Q(A)(-) was indicated by the fast rise of chlorophyll fluorescence yield under continuous and flash illumination. Oxidation of Q(A)(-) by Q(B) plastoquinone was shown to become slow, and Q(A)(-) reoxidation required a few seconds when measured by double flash fluorescence measurements. Thermoluminescence measurements further indicated the accumulation of the S(2)Q(A)(-) state but not of the S(2)Q(B)(-) state following the PG deprivation. These results suggest that the function of Q(B) plastoquinone was inactivated by the PG deprivation. We assume that PG is an indispensable component of the photosystem II reaction center complex to maintain the structural integrity of the Q(B)-binding site. These findings provide the first clear identification of a specific functional site of PG in the photosynthetic reaction center.  相似文献   

19.
The study of turnover of two distinct forms of the photosystem II (PSII) D1 protein in cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 showed that the 'high-light' form D1:2 is degraded significantly faster at 500 microE m(-2) s(-1) as compared with 50 microE m(-2) s(-1) while the degradation rates of the 'low-light' form D1:1 under low and high irradiance are not substantially different. Consequently, the D1:1 turnover does not match photoinactivation of PSII under increased irradiance and therefore the cells containing this D1 form exhibit a decrease in the PSII activity. Monitoring of the content of each D1 form during a recovery from growth-temperature photoinhibition showed a good correlation between the synthesis of D1:2 and restoration of the PSII activity. In contrast, when photoinhibitory treatment was conducted at low temperature, a fast recovery was not accompanied by the D1:2 accumulation. The data suggest that photoinactivation at growth temperature results in a modification of PSII that inhibits insertion of D1:1 and, therefore, for restoration of the photochemical activity in the photoinactivated PSII complexes the D1:2 synthesis is needed. This may represent the primary reason for the requirement of psbAII/psbAIII expression under increased irradiance.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号