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1.
C Funk  W Vermaas 《Biochemistry》1999,38(29):9397-9404
In the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 five genes were identified with significant sequence similarity to regions of members of the eukaryotic chlorophyll a/b binding gene family (Cab family) and to hliA, a gene coding for a small high-light-induced protein in Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942. Four of these five genes are 174-213 bp in length and code for small proteins predicted to have a single transmembrane helix. The fifth Cab-like gene in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is much longer and codes for a protein of which the N-terminal 80% resemble ferrochelatase but the C-terminal domain has similarity to Cab regions. The small genes were expressed preferentially in the absence of photosystem I, but gene expression was not significantly enhanced at moderately high light intensity. Therefore they were not designated as hli (high-light-induced) as was done for the Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 homolog. Instead, the genes have been named scp, as the corresponding polypeptides of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 are small Cab-like proteins (SCP). The scpA gene, which codes for ferrochelatase with a C-terminal Cab-like extension, was interrupted by the insertion of a kanamycin-resistance cassette between the ferrochelatase and Cab-like gene domains. In the PS I-less background, interruption of scpA was found to lead to increased tolerance to high light intensity and to the requirement of a slightly higher light intensity to drive photosystem II electron transfer, suggestive of decreased light-harvesting efficiency in the absence of the C-terminal extension of ScpA. Immunodetection of ScpC and ScpD indicated that either or both accumulated in PS I-less strains. These proteins were also detected in bands of more than 45 kDa on denaturing gels, raising the possibility that they may occur as stable oligomers. The SCPs represent a new group of cyanobacterial proteins that, in view of their primary structure and response to deletion of photosystem I, are likely to be involved in transient pigment binding.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract The cyanobacteria Fremyella diplosiphon 7601 and Synechocystis 6701 were grown in continuous cultures with monochromatic red light (680 nm). The distribution of light energy over photosystem I and II was determined from changes in PS II fluorescence at 685 nm. In both organisms, wavelengths absorbed primarily by chlorophyll a caused the high fluorescent state of PS II (State 1), while wavelengths absorbed by the phycobilisome led to low PS II fluorescence (State 2). Superimposing continuous light 2 on the excitation light yielded State 2 fluorescence patterns for Synechocystis 6701, while F. diplosiphon 7601 showed fluorescence patterns similar to state 1 → 2 transitions and changes in fluorescence yield were related to the intensity of the background light. Some ecological implications of energy (re)distribution in cyanobacterial photosynthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Global identification of differentially regulated genes in prokaryotes is constrained because the mRNA does not have a 3' polyadenylation extension; this precludes specific separation of mRNA from rRNA and tRNA and synthesis of cDNAs from the entire mRNA population. Knowledge of the entire genome sequence of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 has enabled us to develop a differential display procedure that takes advantage of a short palindromic sequence that is dispersed throughout the Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 genome. This sequence, designated the HIP (highly iterated palindrome) element, occurs in approximately half of the Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 genes but is absent in rRNA and tRNA genes. To determine the feasibility of exploiting the HIP element, alone or in combination with specific primer subsets, for analyzing differential gene expression, we used HIP-based primers to identify light intensity-regulated genes. Several gene fragments, including those encoding ribosomal proteins and phycobiliprotein subunits, were differentially amplified from RNA templates derived from cells grown in low light or exposed to high light for 3 h. One novel finding was that expression of certain genes of the pho regulon, which are under the control of environmental phosphate levels, were markedly elevated in high light. High-light activation of pho regulon genes correlated with elevated growth rates that occur when the cells are transferred from low to high light. These results suggest that in high light, the rate of growth of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 exceeds its capacity to assimilate phosphate, which, in turn, may trigger a phosphate starvation response and activation of the pho regulon.  相似文献   

4.
M Ikeuchi  H Koike  Y Inoue 《FEBS letters》1989,253(1-2):178-182
We recently reported the presence of several low-molecular-mass protein components in the PS II O2-evolving core complex from the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Synechococcus vulcanus [(1989) FEBS Lett. 244, 391-396]. Here we have characterized the three components (4.1, 4.7, 5 kDa) of the same cyanobacterial core complex by N-terminal sequencing. There were two components in the 4.7 kDa region, both having a blocked N-terminus. One has a sequence highly homologous to open reading frame 34 of plant chloroplast DNA (tentatively designated psbM), while the other has a sequence partially homologous to open reading frame 43 of chloroplast DNA (designated psbN), although neither of the two gene products has yet been confirmed in chloroplasts. The cyanobacterial 4.1 kDa protein partially corresponds to the 4.1 kDa nuclear-encoded core component of higher plant PS II. The cyanobacterial 5 kDa component, however, shows a sequence that is unrelated to any other known proteins.  相似文献   

5.
Oxygenic photosynthetic organisms adapt to varying light conditions by changing the distribution of light energy between Photosystem II (PS II) and photosystem I (PS I) during so-called state transitions. To identify the genes involved in this process, we have exploited a simple chlorophyll fluorescence video-imaging technique to screen a library of nuclear mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii for colonies grown on agar plates that are disturbed in their ability to regulate light energy distribution between PS I and PS II. Subsequent modulated fluorescence measurements at room temperature and 77 K fluorescence emission spectra confirmed that 5 mutants (0.025% of total number screened) were defective in state transitions. [32P]orthophosphate phosphorylation experiments in vivo revealed that in one of these mutants, designated stm1, the level of LHC II polypeptide phosphorylation was drastically reduced compared with wild type. Despite WT levels of PS I and PS II, stm1 grew photoautotrophically at reduced rates, compared with WT especially under low light conditions, which is consistent with an important physiological role for state transitions. Our results highlight the feasibility of video imaging in tandem with mutagenesis as a means of identifying the genes involved in controlling state transitions in eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms.  相似文献   

6.
psbG is not a photosystem two gene but may be an ndh gene   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
A gene of the chloroplast genome has been designated the psbG gene on the basis that in maize the gene product is a 24-kDa polypeptide of photosystem two (PS2) (Steinmetz, A. A., Castroviejo, M., Sayre, R. T., and Bogorad, L. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 2485-2488). We have located and sequenced the equivalent gene in wheat (Triticum aestivum) and have raised specific antibodies to the gene product following its expression in Escherichia coli as a beta-galactosidase fusion protein. Using these antibodies, we have investigated the location of the gene product in various thylakoid membrane fractions of pea (Pisum sativum). The gene product of apparent molecular mass 27-28 kDa is severely depleted in PS2-enriched membrane preparations and its distribution between stromal and granal regions of the membrane is distinct to that of the psbC gene product which is known to be a core polypeptide of PS2. We therefore conclude that psbG does not code for a component of PS2 but instead suggest that it is present in a novel protein complex of the thylakoid membrane. On the basis of 1) the conserved overlap between psbG and ndhC, a chloroplast gene which shows significant homology to a mitochondrial gene that codes for a subunit of the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase of mitochondria, and 2) sequence similarity between the psbG gene product and the ndh gene product of E. coli, which codes for a respiratory NADH dehydrogenase, we propose that this ill-defined complex functions as a NADH or NADPH-plastoquinone oxidoreductase.  相似文献   

7.
In the complete annotated genome sequences of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, one can find many putative genes for two-component response regulators that include a helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain. The mRNA level of one of the putative genes, sll1330, was increased by glucose, especially in the presence of light. We successfully disrupted the sll1330 gene by targeted mutagenesis with a spectinomycin resistance cassette. Deltasll1330 could not grow well under light-activated heterotrophic growth conditions. Analyses of the expression of glycolytic genes revealed that the mRNA levels of five glycolytic genes, that is, glk (sll0593), pfkA (sll1196), fbaA (sll0018), gpmB (slr1124), and pk (sll0587), were decreased, and were regulated by Sll1330 under light and glucose-supplemented conditions. The Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 genome each encodes two isozymes for these five glycolytic genes, suggesting that each of the two isozymes is regulated by Sll1330 at the mRNA level.  相似文献   

8.
N K Packham 《FEBS letters》1988,231(2):284-290
Although the amino acid sequence of the 9 kDa (phospho)protein of chloroplasts has been determined, the function of this thylakoid membrane protein in photosynthetic electron transport and the reason for its physiological control remains unclear. In this paper, I briefly review the evidence which indicates that the phosphorylation of the 9 kDa protein results in a partial inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution by increasing the stability of the semiquinone bound to QA the primary, plastoquinone-binding site of photosystem II (PS II). I propose that in its dephosphorylated state, the 9 kDa thylakoid membrane protein may serve PS II to ensure efficient photochemical charge separation by aiding the transfer of reducing equivalents out of the reaction centre to the attendant plastoquinone pool. This function is analogous to that proposed for the H-subunit of the reaction centre of photosynthetic eubacteria. Whether these two proteins have evolved from a common ancestral reaction centre protein is discussed in the light of a comparison of their amino acid sequences and predicted secondary structures.  相似文献   

9.
The structural changes associated to non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria is still a matter of discussion. The role of phycobilisome and/or photosystem mobility in this mechanism is a point of interest to be elucidated. Changes in photosystem II fluorescence induced by different quality of illumination (state transitions) or by strong light were characterized at different temperatures in wild-type and mutant cells, that lacked polyunsaturated fatty acids, of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. The amplitude and the rate of state transitions decreased by lowering temperature in both strains. Our results support the hypothesis that a movement of membrane complexes and/or changes in the oligomerization state of these complexes are involved in the mechanism of state transitions. The quenching induced by strong blue light which was not associated to D1 damage and photoinhibition, did not depend on temperature or on the membrane state. Thus, the mechanism involved in the formation of this type of quenching seems to be unrelated to the movement of membrane complexes. Our results strongly support the idea that the mechanism involved in the fluorescence quenching induced by light 2 is different from that involved in strong blue light induced quenching.  相似文献   

10.
State transitions in cyanobacteria are physiological adaptation mechanisms that change the interaction of the phycobilisomes with the photosystem I and photosystem II core complexes. This mechanism is essential for cyanobacteria at low light intensities. Previous studies of cyanobacteria have identified a gene named rpaC, which appears to be specifically required for state transitions. The gene product of rpaC is very probably a transmembrane protein that is a structural component of the phycobilisome-photosystem II supercomplex. However, the physiological role of RpaC protein is unclear. Here we report the construction of an expression system that enables high production of fusion protein TrxHisTagSTag-RpaC, and describe suitable conditions for purification of this insoluble protein at a yield of 3 mg per 1 dm3 of bacterial culture. Cleavage with HRV 3C protease to remove the TrxHisTagSTag portion resulted in low yields of RpaC-protein (∼ 30 μg/dm3 of bacterial culture), therefore the applicability to structural studies was tested for the fusion protein only. Several preliminary conditions for crystallization of TrxHisTagSTag-RpaC were set up under which microcrystals were obtained. This set of conditions will be a good starting point for optimization in future crystallization experiments. TrxHisTagSTag-RpaC protein may prove useful in biochemical studies where the small size of RpaC protein is limiting the investigation of interactions with significantly larger parts of the photosynthetic apparatus. Furthermore, the purification procedure described here might also be applied to the production and purification of other small membrane proteins for biochemical and structural studies.  相似文献   

11.
State transitions in cyanobacteria are a physiological adaptation mechanism that changes the interaction of the phycobilisomes with the Photosystem I and Photosystem II core complexes. A random mutagenesis study in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 identified a gene named rpaC which appeared to be specifically required for state transitions. rpaC is a conserved cyanobacterial gene which was tentatively suggested to code for a novel signal transduction factor. The predicted gene product is a 9-kDa integral membrane protein. We have further examined the role of rpaC by overexpressing the gene in Synechocystis 6803 and by inactivating the ortholog in a second cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. PCC7942. Unlike the Synechocystis 6803 null mutant, the Synechococcus 7942 null mutant is unable to segregate, indicating that the gene is essential for cell viability in this cyanobacterium. The Synechocystis 6803 overexpressor is also unable to segregate, indicating that the cells can only tolerate a limited gene copy number. The non-segregated Synechococcus 7942 mutant can perform state transitions but shows a perturbed phycobilisome-Photosystem II interaction. Based on these results, we propose that the rpaC gene product controls the stability of the phycobilisome-Photosystem II supercomplex, and is probably a structural component of the complex.  相似文献   

12.
Relative to ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase (FNR) from chloroplasts, the comparable enzyme in cyanobacteria contains an additional 9 kDa domain at its amino-terminus. The domain is homologous to the phycocyanin associated linker polypeptide CpcD of the light harvesting phycobilisome antennae. The phenotypic consequences of the genetic removal of this domain from the petH gene, which encodes FNR, have been studied in Synechocystis PCC 6803. The in frame deletion of 75 residues at the amino-terminus, rendered chloroplast length FNR enzyme with normal functionality in linear photosynthetic electron transfer. Salt shock correlated with increased abundance of petH mRNA in the wild-type and mutant alike. The truncation stopped salt stress-inducible increase of Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron flow. Both photoacoustic determination of the storage of energy from Photosystem I specific far-red light, and the re-reduction kinetics of P700(+), suggest lack of function of the truncated FNR in the plastoquinone-cytochrome b(6)f complex reductase step of the PS I-dependent cyclic electron transfer chain. Independent gold-immunodecoration studies and analysis of FNR distribution through activity staining after native polyacrylamide gelelectrophoresis showed that association of FNR with the thylakoid membranes of Synechocystis PCC 6803 requires the presence of the extended amino-terminal domain of the enzyme. The truncated DeltapetH gene was also transformed into a NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH1) deficient mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6803 (strain M55) (T. Ogawa, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88 (1991) 4275-4279). Phenotypic characterisation of the double mutant supported our conclusion that both the NAD(P)H dehydrogenase complex and FNR contribute independently to the quinone cytochrome b(6)f reductase step in PS I-dependent cyclic electron transfer. The distribution, binding properties and function of FNR in the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 will be discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Acetohydroxyacid isomeroreductase (AHAIR) is the shared second enzyme in the biosynthetic pathways leading to isoleucine and valine. AHAIR is encoded by the ilvC gene in bacteria. A 1,544-bp fragment of genomic DNA containing the ilvC gene was cloned from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, and the complete nucleotide sequence was determined. The identity of the gene was established by comparison of the nucleotide and derived peptide sequences with those of other ilvC genes. The highest degree of sequence similarity was found with the ilvC gene from Rhizobium meliloti. The isolated Synechocystis ilvC gene complemented an Escherichia coli ilvC mutant lacking AHAIR activity. The expressed Synechocystis gene encodes a protein that has a molecular mass of 35.7 kDa and that has AHAIR activity in an in vitro assay. Polyclonal antibodies raised against purified Synechocystis AHAIR produced a single band on a Western blot (immunoblot) of a Synechocystis cell extract and detected the protein in an extract of an E. coli ilvC mutant strain that was transformed with a plasmid containing the Synechocystis ilvC gene. The antibody did not react with an extract of an E. coli ilvC mutant strain that was transformed with a control plasmid lacking the Synechocystis ilvC gene or with an extract of an E. coli IlvC+ control strain.  相似文献   

14.
The whole genome sequence database for Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has revealed the presence of genes encoding class-I (CI) and class-II (CII) fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolases (FBAs) in this organism. Two types of FBA from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were separated by chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose. The activity of the enzyme in the major peak was inhibited by the presence of 25 mM EDTA; however, the activity in the minor peak was not. Therefore, the FBA in the former fractions was designated as CII-FBA, and in the latter designated as CI-FBA. CI-FBA was functionally redundant in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, while no disruptant for the gene encoding CII-FBA was obtained under photoautotrophic conditions. The kinetic parameters of CI- and CII-FBAs purified from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 in the cleavage reaction of FBP were generally similar, except in their reactivity for SBP. The SBP/FBP activity ratio of the CII-FBA was two times higher than that of the CI-FBA.  相似文献   

15.
Analysis of the genome of Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 reveals three open reading frames (slr0851, slr1743, and sll1484) that may code for type 2 NAD(P)H dehydrogenases (NDH-2). The sequence similarity between the translated open reading frames and NDH-2s from other organisms is low, generally not exceeding 30% identity. However, NAD(P)H and flavin adenine dinucleotide binding motifs are conserved in all three putative NDH-2s in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. The three open reading frames were cloned, and deletion constructs were made for each. An expression construct containing one of the three open reading frames, slr1743, was able to functionally complement an Escherichia coli mutant lacking both NDH-1s and NDH-2s. Therefore, slr0851, slr1743, and sll1484 have been designated ndbA, ndbB, and ndbC, respectively. Strains that lacked one or more of the ndb genes were created in wild-type and photosystem (PS) I-less backgrounds. Deletion of ndb genes led to small changes in photoautotrophic growth rates and respiratory activities. Electron transfer rates into the plastoquinone pool in thylakoids in darkness were consistent with the presence of a small amount of NDH-2 activity in thylakoids. No difference was observed between wild-type and the Ndb-less strains in the banding patterns seen on native gels when stained for either NADH or NADPH dehydrogenase activity, indicating that the Ndb proteins do not accumulate to high levels. A striking phenotype of the PS I-less background strains lacking one or more of the NDH-2s is that they were able to grow at high light intensities that were lethal to the control strain but they retained normal PS II activity. We suggest that the Ndb proteins in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803 are redox sensors and that they play a regulatory role responding to the redox state of the plastoquinone pool.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The open reading frames sll1625 and sll0823, which have significant sequence similarity to genes coding for the FeS subunits of succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate reductase, were deleted singly and in combination in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. When the organic acid content in the Deltasll1625 and Deltasll0823 strains was analyzed, a 100-fold decrease in succinate and fumarate concentrations was observed relative to the wild type. A similar analysis for the Deltasll1625 Deltasll0823 strain revealed that 17% of the wild-type succinate levels remained, while only 1 to 2% of the wild-type fumarate levels were present. Addition of 2-oxoglutarate to the growth media of the double mutant strain prior to analysis of organic acids in cells caused succinate to accumulate. This indicates that succinate dehydrogenase activity had been blocked by the deletions and that 2-oxoglutarate can be converted to succinate in vivo in this organism, even though a traditional 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase is lacking. In addition, reduction of the thylakoid plastoquinone pool in darkness in the presence of KCN was up to fivefold slower in the mutants than in the wild type. Moreover, in vitro succinate dehydrogenase activity observed in wild-type membranes is absent from those isolated from the double mutant and reduced in those from the single mutants, further indicating that the sll1625 and sll0823 open reading frames encode subunits of succinate dehydrogenase complexes that are active in the thylakoid membrane of the cyanobacterium.  相似文献   

18.
Phycobilisomes (PBS) are the major light-harvesting, protein-pigment complexes in cyanobacteria and red algae. PBS absorb and transfer light energy to photosystem (PS) II as well as PS I, and the distribution of light energy from PBS to the two photosystems is regulated by light conditions through a mechanism known as state transitions. In this study the quantum efficiency of excitation energy transfer from PBS to PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 was determined, and the results showed that energy transfer from PBS to PS I is extremely efficient. The results further demonstrated that energy transfer from PBS to PS I occurred directly and that efficient energy transfer was dependent upon the allophycocyanin-B alpha subunit, ApcD. In the absence of ApcD, cells were unable to perform state transitions and were trapped in state 1. Action spectra showed that light energy transfer from PBS to PS I was severely impaired in the absence of ApcD. An apcD mutant grew more slowly than the wild type in light preferentially absorbed by phycobiliproteins and was more sensitive to high light intensity. On the other hand, a mutant lacking ApcF, which is required for efficient energy transfer from PBS to PS II, showed greater resistance to high light treatment. Therefore, state transitions in cyanobacteria have two roles: (1) they regulate light energy distribution between the two photosystems; and (2) they help to protect cells from the effects of light energy excess at high light intensities.  相似文献   

19.
Spectral properties, particularly fluorescence spectra and their time-dependent behavior, were investigated for a mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 lacking the 43 kDa chlorophyll-protein (CP43, PsbC). Lack of CP43 was confirmed by a size shift of the corresponding gene and by Western blotting. The CP43-deletion mutant grown under heterotrophic conditions accumulated a small amount of photosystem (PS) II, but virtually no PS II fluorescence was observed. A 686-nm fluorescence band was clearly observed by phycocyanin excitation, coming from the terminal pigments of phycobilisomes. In contrast, no PS I fluorescence was detected by phycocyanin excitation when accumulation of PS II components was not proved by a fluorescence excitation spectrum, indicating that energy transfer to PS I chlorophyll a was mediated by PS II chlorophyll a. Direct connection of phycobilisomes with PS I was not suggested. Based on these fluorescence properties, the energy flow in the CP43-deletion mutant cells is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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