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1.
Photochemical activities of six different P700-chlorophyll a-proteins (CP1-a, -b1, -b2, -c, -d, and -e) separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis from digitonin particles of a thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. were examined. CP1-a, -b1, -b2, and -c contain the competent reaction center of photosystem 1: They were highly active in photooxidation of cytochrome c-553, the physiological electron donor to P700 in the organism, with methyl viologen as electron acceptor and showed flash-induced absorption changes indicating the charge separation between P700 and the secondary electron acceptors, P430 and A2. The cytochrome photooxidation and P430 and A2 photoresponses were significantly suppressed in CP1-d. CP1-e which lacks P430 and A2 was least active in the cytochrome photooxidation. A1, the primary electron acceptor of P700, is present in CP1-e as well as in other CP1 complexes. Comparison of the results with the polypeptide composition of CP1 complexes (Y. Takahashi, H. Koike, and S. Katoh, 1982, Arch. Biochem. Biophys.219, 209–218). indicates that CP1-c which contains four polypeptides with molecular weights of 62,000, 60,000, 14,000, and 10,000 represents the functional core of the photosystem 1 reaction center. P700, A1, and antenna chlorophyll are associated with 62,000- and 60,000-dalton polypeptides, whereas 14,000- and 10,000-dalton polypeptides are assumed to carry P430 and A2. The 13,000-dalton polypeptide which is associated with CP1-a, -b1, and -b2 is not required for the functioning of the reaction center.  相似文献   

2.
A chlorophyll-protein was isolated from a Synechococcus P700-chlorophyll a-protein complex free from small subunits (CP1-e) by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after treatment with 2% 2-mercaptoethanol and 2% SDS. In contrast to CP1-e which, when electrophoresed under denaturating conditions, showed two polypeptide bands of 62 and 60 kDa, the chlorophyll-protein contained only the 60-kDa polypeptide and hence is called CP60. The yield of CP60 was maximal with 1-2% SDS and 2-4% sulfhydryl reagents because the chlorophyll-protein was denatured at higher concentrations of the reagents. The absorption spectrum of CP60, which retained more than half of the chlorophyll alpha molecules originally associated with the 60-kDa subunit of the photosystem I reaction center complex, showed a red band maximum at 672 nm and a small absorption band around 700 nm at liquid nitrogen temperature. CP60 emitted a fluorescence band at 717 to 725 nm at 77 degrees K. The temperature dependence of the far red band of CP60 was essentially the same as that of CP1-e between 77 and 273 degrees K. No photoresponse of P700 was detected in CP60. The results suggest that the two polypeptides resolved by SDS-gel electrophoresis from CP1-e are apoproteins of two distinct chlorophyll-proteins and that CP60 represents a chlorophyll-bearing 60-kDa subunit functioning as an intrinsic antenna protein of the photosystem I reaction center complex. It will also be shown that the temperature dependence of the far red fluorescence band is not related to the photosystem I photochemistry.  相似文献   

3.
The iron, quinone and carotenoid contents of five P700-chlorophyll a-protein complexes having different subunit structures (CP1-a,-b,-c,-d and-e) from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. were determined. CP1-a,-b,-c and-d that commonly have four polypeptides of 62,000, 60,000, 14,000 and 10,000 dalton contained 10–14 iron atoms per P700, whereas CP1-e that lacks the two small polypeptides was totally devoid of iron. All CP1 complexes contained vitamin K1 at the molar ratio of vitamin K1 to P700 of about 2 except CP1-e that had only 0.4 vitamin K1 per P700. No plastoquinone was detected in five CP1 complexes. Out of four major carotenoids, -carotene, zeaxanthin, caloxanthin, and myxoxanthophyll, present in the thylakoid membranes, only -carotene was found in isolated CP1 complexes; all CP1 complexes contained about 10 -carotene molecules per P700. The flourescence excitation spectrum showed that -carotene serves as an efficient antenna of photosystem I. It is concluded that all iron atoms and a larger fraction of vitamin K1 molecules present in the photosystem I reaction center complex are associated with the 14,000 and 10,000 dalton polypeptides, whereas -carotene exclusively binds to the large polypeptides which carry the functional and antenna chlorophyll a. The possible functions of iron and vitamin K1 as electron carriers and of -carotene as the accessary pigment and a photoprotectant in the photosystem I complexes are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The chlorophyll-protein complexes of the thylakoid membrane from Prochlorothrix hollandica were identified following electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions. Five complexes, CP1-CP5, were resolved and these green bands were analyzed by spectroscopic and immunological methods. CP1 contains the photosystem I (PSI) reaction center, as this complex quenched fluorescence at room temperature, and had a 77 K fluorescence emission peak at 717 nm. CP4 contains the major chlorophyll-a-binding proteins of the photosystem II (PSII) core, because this complex contained polypeptides which cross-reacted to antibodies raised against Chlamydomonas PSII proteins 5 and 6. Furthermore, fluorescence excitation studies at 77 K indicated that only a Chl a is bound to CP4. Complexes CP2, CP3 and CP5 contained functionally bound Chl a and b as judged by absorption spectroscopy at 20 degrees C and fluorescence excitation spectra at 77 K. CP2, CP3 and CP5 all contain polypeptides of 30-33 kDa which are immunologically distinct from the LHC-II complex of higher plant thylakoids.  相似文献   

5.
Francis-Andr  Wollman  Pierre Bennoun 《BBA》1982,680(3):352-360
A new chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, was isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardii using lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis run at 4°C. A similar complex is recovered using Triton/digitonin solubilization of thylakoid membranes of the F54-14 mutant lacking in CP I and ATPase. CP O is enriched in long-wavelength chlorophyll a and contains five polypeptides (27.5, 27, 25, 23 and 19 kDa). Its 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum peaks at 705 nm while CP II have an emission maximum at 682 and 720 nm, respectively. Comparison of the polypeptide pattern of the wild type and AC40 mutant of C. reinhardii shows that the five CP O polypeptides are specifically lacking in the mutant. Although the 77 K emission originating from the Photosystem (PS) I pigments is lower in the mutant than in the wild type, the two spectra show the same peaks at 686, 694 and 717 nm. However, comparison of the 77 K emission spectrum of the F14 mutant lacking in CP I with that of the double mutant AC40-14 lacking in CP I and CP O shows the absence in the latter of the large emission band peaking at 707 nm. The 707 nm emission is thought to arise from some PS I antennae and is quenched in the wild type by the presence of PS I traps located in CP I. We conclude that CP O is a part of the PS I antenna in C. reinhardii which controls the 707 nm fluorescence emission.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
《BBA》1985,807(1):74-80
Photochemical and chemical properties of two Photosystem II reaction center complexes isolated from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. were examined. (1) The intact reaction center complexes contain each one of photoreducible pheophytin, secondary electron acceptor (QA) and cytochrome b-559 per 32–46 chlorophyll a molecules. (2) The reaction center complexes which lack the chlorophyll-binding 40 kDa polypeptide (CP2-b) showed photoaccumulation of reduced pheophytin and photoreduction of QA, indicating that the complexes can carry out not only the primary-charge separation, but also the stabilization of the separated charges. The contents of pheophytin, QA and cytochrome b-559 were, however, considerably reduced in CP2-b. (3) The two complexes contained very small amounts of manganese. (4) CP2-b was partially deprived of the small polypeptides: the ratios of the peak areas (corrected for molecular weight) of the 47/40/31 plus 28/9 kDa polypeptide bands resolved in sodium dodecyl sulfate gels after electrophoresis under denaturating conditions were approx. 1:1:2:2 in the intact complexes and 1:0:0.4:1 in CP2-b. The results were discussed in terms of the functional molecular organization of the Photosystem II reaction center complexes.  相似文献   

8.
We have identified a new minor chlorophyll a/b-protein complex in the thylakoid membranes of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.), which migrates as a green band below CPII on mildly denaturing polyacrylamide gels. This complex, designated CP24, was isolated from octyl glucoside/sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilized spinach grana membrane fractions by preparative gel electrophoresis and has been characterized as to its spectral properties and polypeptide composition. CP24 has a room temperature absorption maximum at 668 nanometers, a chlorophyll a/b ratio between 0.8 and 1.2, and contains three or four polypeptides between 20 and 23 kilodaltons. CP24 was also identified in grana membrane preparations from peas (Pisum sativum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare). We postulate that CP24 functions as a linker component in photosystem II, acting to orient the photosystem II light harvesting components to ensure efficient energy transfer to the reaction center.  相似文献   

9.
In green plant-like photosynthesis, oxygen evolution is catalyzed by a thylakoid membrane-bound protein complex, photosystem II. Cytochrome b559, a protein component of the reaction center of this complex, is absent in a genetically engineered mutant of the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis 6803 [Pakrasi, H.B., Williams, J.G.K., and Arntzen, C.J. (1988). EMBO J. 7, 325-332]. In this mutant, the genes psbE and psbF, encoding cytochrome b559, were deleted by targeted mutagenesis. Two other protein components, D1 and D2 of the photosystem II reaction center, are also absent in this mutant. However, two chlorophyll-binding proteins, CP47 and CP43, as well as a manganese-stabilizing extrinsic protein component of photosystem II are stably assembled in the thylakoids of this mutant. Thus, this deletion mutation destabilizes the reaction center of photosystem II only. The mutant also lacks a fluorescence maximum peak at 695 nm (at 77 K) even though the CP47 protein, considered to be the origin of this fluorescence peak, is present in this mutant. We propose that the fluorescence at 695 nm originates from an interaction between the reaction center of photosystem II and CP47. The deletion mutant shows the absence of variable fluorescence at room temperature, indicating that its photosystem II complex is photochemically inactive. Also, photoreduction of QA, the primary acceptor quinone in photosystem II, could not be detected in the mutant. We conclude that cytochrome b559 plays at least an essential structural role in the reaction center of photosystem II.  相似文献   

10.
Three chlorophyll-protein complexes (CP I, CP III, CP IV) were electrophoretically separated from thylakoids of the eukaryotic red alga Porphyridium cruentum. CP I contained the primary photochemical reaction center of photosystem I as judged by its light-induced reversible absorbance change at 700 nanometers, by its fluorescence emission maximum at 720 nanometers (−196°C), and by the molecular weight of its apoprotein (68,000 daltons). CP III and CP IV appeared to belong with photosystem II as suggested by the absence of light-reversible absorbance at 700 nanometers, by their fluorescence maximum at 690 nanometers (−196°C), and by the presence of a chlorophyll-binding polypeptide with a molecular weight of about 52,000 daltons. CP IV when completely denatured had two additional polypeptides of about 40,000 and 48,000 daltons. All three chlorophyll-protein complexes contained carotenoids: the chlorophyll/carotenoid molar ratio of 15:1 for CP I, and 20:1 for CP III and CP IV. The thylakoid membranes of P. cruentum contained four cytochromes, detected by heme-dependent peroxidase activity, but there was no observed association with the electrophoretically separated chlorophyll-protein complexes.  相似文献   

11.
Dvorah Ish-Shalom  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(3):498-507
The polypeptide pattern, chlorophyll-protein complexes, fluorescence emission spectra and light intensity required for saturation of electron flow via Photosystem (PS) II and PS I in a pale-green photoautotrophic mutant, y-lp, were compared to those of the parent strain, Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1 cells. The mutant exhibits a 686 nm fluorescence yield at 25°C and 77 K 2–6-fold higher than that of the parent strain cells, and is deficient in thylakoid polypeptides 14, 17.2, 18 and 22 according to the nomenclature of Chua (Chua, N.-H. (1980) Methods Enzymol. 60C, 434–446). All chlorophyll-protein complexes ascribed to PS II and the CP I complex were present in both type of cells. However, a chlorophyll-protein complex CP Ia containing — in the parent strain — the 66–68 kDa polypeptides of CP I and the four above-mentioned polypeptides, was absent in the mutant. It was previously reported that a chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, obtained from C. reinhardii contains five polypeptides, namely, 14, 15, 17.2, 18 and 22 (Wollman, F.A. and Bennoun, P. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 352–360). A CP O-like complex was present also in the mutant y-lp cells but it contains only one polypeptide, 15. Energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not impaired in the mutant, although a 4-fold higher light intensity was required for the saturation of PS I electron flow in the y-lp cells as compared with the parent strain. No difference was found in the light saturation curves for PS II activity between the mutant and parent strain cells. Based on these and additional data (Gershoni, J.M., Shochat, S., Malkin, S. and Ohad, I. (1982) Plant Physiol. 70, 637–644), it is concluded that the chlorophyll-protein complexes of PS I in Chlamydomonas comprise a reaction center-core antenna complex containing the 66–68 kDa polypeptides (CP I), a connecting antenna consisting of four polypeptides (14, 17.2, 18 and 22), and a light-harvesting antenna containing one polypeptide, 15. These appear to be organized as a complex, CP Ia. The interconnecting antenna is deficient in the y-lp mutant and thus the CP Ia complex is unstable and energy is not transferred from CP O to CP I. The effective cross-section of PS I antenna is thus reduced and a high fluorescence is emitted at 686 nm.  相似文献   

12.
Chloroplasts of the CD3 wheat mutant were deficient primarily in chlorophyll of light harvesting pigment proteins (LHPP) 1 and 2 and CP1a. The reduced level of protein associated with chlorophyll of LHPP1 and LHPP2 and the reduced level of low molecular weight polypeptides between 23 and 29 kilodaltons confirmed that the CD3 mutant was deficient in the LHPP complex. The high fluorescence emission ratio at 740 (F740) to 686 nanometers (F686) observed from chloroplasts of normal wheat following light induced phosphorylation of the LHPP complex was not noted from mutant chloroplasts. The long wavelength peak fluorescence emission (F740) was shifted to a shorter wavelength peak (F725) and was reduced in intensity compared to that of normal wheat thylakoids. The ratio of variable fluorescence to maximum fluorescence, a measure of PSII photochemical efficiency, was the same for the normal wheat and mutant leaves. The ratios of uncoupled photosystem I/photosystem II electron transport rates for mutant and normal wheat chloroplasts were similar at saturating light suggesting that absorbed excitation energy was distributed to the two photosystem reaction centers of the mutant in a similar manner as in the normal wheat. Proteins of the LHPP complex were differentially phosphorylated by action of a membrane protein kinase when both normal wheat and CD3 mutant thylakoids were irradiated without an electron transport chain acceptor. Even though the F740/F686 ratio was low in mutant thylakoids, the phosphorylation of the 27-kilodalton LHPP polypeptide was consistent with the mutant being in a state II condition. The data gave rise to the suggestion that the F740/F686 ratio might not indicate excitation energy distribution to the two photosystems in the mutant.  相似文献   

13.
A photosystem I (PS-I) preparation from barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) containing the reaction center protein P700-chlorophyll a-protein 1 (CP1) and smaller polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 18, 16, 14, 9.5, 9, 4, and 1.5 kDa has been analyzed with respect to subunit stoichiometry. CP1 contains two homologous subunits with approximate masses of 82 kDa. CP1 and the smaller polypeptides were isolated, and the amino acid composition of each component and of the PS-I preparation was determined. Based on the amino acid composition data and the determined ability of each isolated polypeptide to bind Coomassie Brilliant Blue, the PS-I complex is shown to contain 1 mol of each of the homologous 82-kDa polypeptides as well as 1 mol of the 18-, 16-, 9.5-, and 9-kDa polypeptides for each mol of P700. The total polypeptide mass of the PS-I complex is 209 kDa excluding tryptophan and approximately 220 kDa including tryptophan. The two 82-kDa subunits present/P700 provide cysteine residues for binding only one Fe-S center. In conjunction with the earlier reported binding of four iron and four acid-labile sulfides to CP1/P700 (H?j, P. B., Svendsen, I., Scheller, H. V., and M?ller, B. L. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 12676-12684), this demonstrates the center X is a [4Fe-4S] cluster and eliminates the possibility of center X being composed of two [2Fe-2S] clusters.  相似文献   

14.
Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis of unheated, detergent-solubilized thylakoid membranes of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii gives two chlorophyll-protein complexes. Chlorophyll-protein complex I (CP I) is the blue-green in color and can be dissociated by heat into "free" chlorophyll and a constituent polypeptide (polypeptide 2; mol wt 66,000). Similar experiments with spinach and Chinese cabbage show that the higher plant CP I contains an equivalent polypeptide but of slightly lower molecular weight (64,000). Both polypeptide 2 and its counterpart in spinach are soluble in a 2:1 (vol/vol) mixture of chloroform-methanol. Chemical analysis reveals that C. reinhardtii CP I has a chlorophyll a to b weight ratio of about 5 and that it contains approximately 5% of the total chlorophyll and 8-9% of the total protein of the thylakoid membranes. Thus, it can be calculated that each constituent polypeptide chain is associated with eight to nine chlorophyll molecules. Attempts to measure the molecular weight of CP I by calibrated SDS gels were unsuccessul since the complex migrates anomalously in such gels. Two Mendelian mutants of C. reinhardtii, F1 and F14, which lack P700 but have normal photosystem I activity, do not contain CP I or the 66,000-dalton polypeptide in their thylakoid membranes. Our results suggest that CP I is essential for photosystem I reaction center activity and that P700 may be associated with the 66,000-dalton polypeptide.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract Comparative studies on the low temperature fluorescence emission of whole cells, purified chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes and on patterns noted in sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) for chlorophyll-protein complexes and chloroplast membrane polypeptides of Scenedesmus obliquus with several distinct mutant classes has allowed further correlation between the fluorescence emission bands seen at 77K and the known chlorophyll-protein complexes. In mutants deficient in photosystem II (PS-II; total loss of the reducing side) the fluorescence emission spectra showed only two peaks, i.e., 686 and 718 nm, but in the wild type, in mutants lacking the oxidizing side of PS-II and in phenotypes missing the CP-a1 complex (and P-700 activity) all three emission bands at 686, 696 and 718 nm were present. In a mutant lacking the light-harvesting CP-a/b complex the emission peak at 686 nm was strongly reduced and the longer wavelength emissions predominated. Gel electrophoresis studies showed that the PS-II (reducing side) mutants lacked the polypeptides of apparent molecular weight 54 and 51 kilodaltons and the chlorophyll-protein complex, CP-aII, of apparent molecular weight 32 kilodaltons. Contrarily, the loss of the oxidizing side of PS-II did not result in any alteration of these components. Genetic deletion of CP-a1 did not alter significantly the long wavelength emission even though the isolated CP-a1 shows the low temperature-dependent long wavelength emission comparable to that seen in the whole cell. It was deduced that remaining PS-I antennae chlorophylls must account for the emission seen at 718 nm. The absence of the CP-a/b complex and the strong simultaneous decrease of the 686 nm emission strengthens the concept that this complex is the primary emitter of fluorescence at room temperature. Its absence facilitated the detection of the CP-aII complex in SDS-PAGE and enhanced the in vivo fluorescence by the two photosystems. Parallel experiments with two mutants which green and develop, one to the wild-type and the other to the CP-a/b deficient phenotype, provided additional evidence for the source of the low temperature emission bands.  相似文献   

16.
Polypeptides of the three major chlorophyll a + b protein complexes were detected in a chlorophyll-b-less barley mutant (chlorina f2) using immunological techniques. Antibodies to CP Ia, a photosystem I complex containing both the reaction center (CP I) and the chlorophyll a + b antenna (LHCI), detected substantial amounts of LHCI polypeptides in mutant thylakoids. Some polypeptides of the two photosystem-II-associated chlorophyll a + b complexes, CP 29 and LHCII, were also detected using antibodies raised against these complexes. The CP 29 apoprotein and the minor 25-kDa polypeptide of LHCII were present in amounts that could be seen by Coomassie blue staining. In contrast, the two major polypeptides of LHCII were greatly diminished in amount, and one of them may be completely absent. These data suggest that the absence of chlorophyll b may have differing effects on the synthesis, processing or turnover of the various chlorophyll a + b binding polypeptides. They also show that these polypeptides can be inserted into thylakoids in the absence of Chl b, and that significant amounts of some of them are accumulated in the mutant thylakoids.  相似文献   

17.
《BBA》1987,892(1):99-107
The orientation of the pigments in the Photosystem II core particle isolated from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. has been investigated by linear dichroism spectroscopy at 10 K of macroscopically oriented samples. The absorbance (A), linear dichroism (LD) and LD/A spectra are remarkably similar to those previously reported for a core complex isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 850 (1986) 156–161). The spectra of the Synechococcus core particle are compared to the corresponding spectra obtained on its two main constituent chlorophyll-protein complexes CP2-b (photochemically active) and CP2-c (photochemically inactive). The various features seen in the spectra of the core particle appear well segregated into the spectra of one or the other of the two subparticles without significant loss of orientation of the pigments. The orientation of the chlorophyll macrocycles, with the Y and X optical axis preferentially parallel and perpendicular to the plane of largest cross-section of the particle, respectively, is very similar in the two subparticles. CP2-b contains mainly the beta-carotene pool absorbing around 505 and 470 nm, which is oriented close to the membrane plane, while CP2-c contains the beta-carotene pool absorbing around 495 and 465 nm and oriented closer to the normal to the membrane plane. A shoulder at 682 nm in the absorbance and linear dichroism spectra of the core complex is fully segregated in the spectra of CP2-c, thus excluding the possibility that this spectral feature could be assigned to the primary donor of PS II. A negative linear dichroism component peaking around 691 nm (LD 691) in the core particle is mainly segregated in CP2-b together with the photoactive pheophytin acceptor molecule responsible for the 544 nm positive linear dichroism signal (LD 544). While the ratio of the amplitudes LD 691/LD 544 is approximately the same for the core particle and for the CP2-b complex, the amplitude of LD 691 is significantly reduced in CP2-b compared to the core particle.  相似文献   

18.
Photosystem II (PS II) is a photosynthetic reaction center found in higher plants which has the unique ability to evolve oxygen from water. Several groups have formed two-dimensional PS II crystals or have isolated PS II complexes and studied them by electron microscopy and image analysis. The majority of these specimens have not been well characterized biochemically and have yielded relatively low resolution two-dimensional projection maps with a variety of unit cell sizes. We report the characterization of the polypeptide and lipid content of tubular crystals of PS II. The crystals contain the reaction center core polypeptides D1, D2, cytochrome b559, as well as the chlorophyll- binding polypeptides (CP) CP47, CP43, CP29, CP26, CP24, and CP22. The lipid composition was similar to the lipids found in the stacked portion of thylakoids. We also report a 2.0-nm resolution projection map determined by electron microscopy and image analysis of frozen, hydrated PS II crystals. This projection map includes information on the portion of the complex buried in the lipid bilayer. The unit cell is a dimer with unit vectors of 17.0 and 11.4 nm separated by an angle of 106.6 degrees. In addition, Fab fragments against D1 and cytochrome b559 were used to localize those two polypeptides, and thus the reaction center, within the PS II complex. The results indicate that D1 and cytochrome b559 are found within one of the heaviest densities of the monomeric unit.  相似文献   

19.
Here we present cryoelectron crystallographic analysis of an isolated dimeric oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II (at a resolution of approximately 0.9 nm), revealing that the D1-D2 reaction center (RC) proteins are centrally located between the chlorophyll-binding proteins, CP43 and CP47. This conclusion supports the hypothesis that photosystems I and II have similar structural features and share a common evolutionary origin. Additional density connecting the two halves of the dimer, which was not observed in a recently described CP47-RC complex that did not include CP43, may be attributed to the small subunits that are involved in regulating secondary electron transfer, such as PsbH. These subunits are possibly also required for stabilization of the dimeric photosystem II complex. This complex, containing at least 29 transmembrane helices in its asymmetric unit, represents one of the largest membrane protein complexes studied at this resolution.  相似文献   

20.
Three thylakoid complexes were isolated by deoxycholate preparative electrophoresis. The protein composition of each fraction was analyzed by SDS analytical electrophoresis. No protein of the PS 1 enriched fraction (fraction 1) was found in the PS 2 enriched fraction (fraction 2) and inversely. The antenna complex (fraction 3) did not have any contamination by proteins of fraction 1 or fraction 2. Fraction 1 was mainly composed of the CP1, the reaction center complex of the PS1, and by low molecular weight proteins, previously found in other PS 1 preparations. Tentative assignments of these proteins are presented; among them are iron sulfur proteins. After analytical SDS electrophoresis of fraction 2, the reaction center complex was dissociated. Nevertheless three proteins of 50 kD, 42 kD and 35 kD were assigned to this complex. Fraction 2 contained also the three cytochromes of the thylakoid membranes: cyt f, cyt b6, cyt b559. Fraction 3 was exclusively composed of one protein pigment complex, CP2.Abbreviations SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - PS 1 photosystem 1 - PS 2 photosystem 2 - CP1, CP2 protein pigment complexes isolated by SDS electrophoresis - cyt cytochromes - P700 primary electron donor of PS 1 - P680 primary electron donor of PS 2 - DOC deoxycholate - Q primary plastoquinone electron acceptor - CF coupling factor  相似文献   

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