A novel purification procedure was developed for the isolation of oxygen evolving photosystem 2 (PS2) from Mastigocladus laminosus. The isolation procedure involves dodecyl maltoside extraction followed by column chromatography using anion exchange resins. The isolated PS2 reaction center (RC) was analyzed for its biochemical and biophysical characteristics. Analysis by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that the complex contained five intrinsic membrane proteins (CP 47, CP 43, D1, D2, and cyt b559) and at least three low molecular mass proteins. The complex exhibited high rates of oxygen evolution [333 mmol(O2) kg-1(Chl) s-1] in the presence of 2.5 mM 2,6-dimethylbenzoquinone (DMBQ) as an artificial electron acceptor. The red chlorophyll a absorption peak of this complex was observed at 673.5±0.2 nm. The isolated PS2 core complex was free of photosystem 1 as inferred from its SDS-PAGE and fluorescence spectrum. The electron transfer properties of the Mastigocladus cells and the purified PS2 core complex were further probed by measuring thermoluminescence signals, which indicated the presence of a primary quinone electron acceptor (QA) in the purified PS2 core complex. and V. M. Ramesh ... [et al.].
a1_Photosystem (PS) II particles retaining a high rate of O2 evolution were isolated from the mesophilic filamentous cyanobacterium, Spirulina platensis. To achieve high production of PSII complexes in the cells, irradiance from halogen incandescent lamps was used. Disruption of cells by vibration of glass beads proved to be the most suitable procedure for isolation of thylakoid membranes. The selectivity of detergents for PSII particle preparation rose in the order of Triton X-100 < decyl-β-D-glucopyranoside < dodecyldimethyl-aminooxide < n-heptyl-β-D-thioglucoside < N-dodecyl-N,N-dimethylammonio-3-propane sulphonate < n-octyl-β-thioglycoside < octylglucoside < n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside. The last four detergents yielded extracts, from which pure PSII particles not contaminated by PSI complexes could be obtained by sucrose-gradient centrifugation (20-45%) at the 43% sucrose level. We assumed both the acceptor and donor sides of the isolated n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside (DM) particles to be intact due to high oxygen production by DM particles [1,500 meq(e-) mol-1 (Chl) s-1] achieved in the presence of all artificial acceptors tested. The PSII particle fraction from the sucrose gradient was used with immobilized metal (Cu2+) affinity chromatography (IMAC) for the preparation of the PSII core complex. By washing the column with a MES buffer containing MgCl2 and CaCl2, the phycobiliproteins were stripped off. The PSII core complex was eluted in a buffer containing 1% DM, mannitol, MgCl2, NaCl, CaCl2, and ɛ-aminocaproic acid. SDS-PAGE of the core complex provided pure bands of D1 and D2 proteins and PsbO protein from thylakoid membrane, which were used to raise polyclonal antibodies in rabbits. These antibodies recognized D1 and D2 not only as monomers of 31 and 32 kDa proteins, but also as heterodimers of D1, D2 corresponding to the band of 66 kDa on SDS-PAGE. This was in contrast to antibodies of, a2_synthetic determinants, which reacted only with the monomers of D1 and D2 proteins. These negative reactions against heterodimers of D1, D2 supported the hypothesis that dimeric forms of PSII reaction centre proteins have a C-terminal sequence sterically protected against a reaction with specific antibodies., and E. Šetlíková ... [et al.].
Distinct crystalloids were found in chloroplasts of transgenic Pssu-ipt tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Petit Havana SR1) overproducing endogenous cytokinins. They were present both in rooted (T) and grafted (TC) transgenic plants contrary to control tobacco (C). The fractions enriched by crystalloids were isolated from chloroplasts using a continuous or a discontinuous Percoll gradient. Chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K indicated the presence of aggregates of light-harvesting complex proteins (LHC2) that was not connected to reaction centres of photosystem 2 both in isolated chloroplasts and in the fraction of 80 % Percoll gradient from both types of transgenic tobacco. Further analyses, i.e. pigment contents, polypeptide composition by SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotting support our hypothesis that crystalloids inside chloroplasts of transgenic tobacco are formed by LHC2 aggregates. Treatment with two distinct detergents, chosen with respect to their effects (i.e. β-dodecyl maltoside or Triton X-100), resulted in different degree of disintegration of Chl a/b proteins in transgenic plants compared to the control. Electron microscopic observations and immunogold labelling with specific LHC2 antibodies carried on the resin embedded leaf sections or free suspensions of chloroplasts showed that gold particles were bound preferentially on the outer surface of crystalloids. Three-dimensional reconstruction of chloroplasts and crystalloids proved that paracrystalline structures varied moderately in their size and took up a significant portion of total chloroplast volume. and H. Synková ... [et al.].
Prosopis juliflora is a hardy plant tolerant to drought, salinity, extremes of soil pH, and heavy metal stress. We isolated and characterized a photosystem 2 (PS2) gene PsbR (Pj PsbR) and its promoter. Northern analysis for Pj PsbR in P. juliflora leaves under 25 % polyethylene glycol stress showed steady decrease in transcript level at 12, 24, and 48 h after stress application. Under 90 mM H2O2 stress, transcript level dropped drastically at 12 h, but increased again compared to the control at 24 h. A 1.7 kb fragment upstream the 5' UTR of this gene (putative promoter) was isolated and analyzed in silico. Several putative cis-acting DNA elements were identified in this sequence. and G. Suja, A. Parida.
Two different kinds of oxygen evolving photosystem II (PSII) core complexes were isolated in the present study by solubilization of PSII enriched thylakoid membranes from spinach with the non-ionic detergent 6-O-(N-heptylcarbamoyl)-methyl-α-D-glucopyranoside (Hecameg) under different conditions. The PSII core complex isolated at higher ionic strength was similar to that isolated by using octyl-β-D-glucopyranoside (OGP) and lacked the 23 and 17 kDa extrinsic proteins of the oxygen evolving complex but retained the 22 kDa PsbS protein. Solubilization of the PSII membranes with Hecameg at lower ionic strength allowed the isolation of another PSII complex that retained all the three extrinsic proteins (33, 23 and 17 kDa) of the oxygen evolving complex but was depleted of the 22 kDa PsbS protein. This complex exhibited high rates of oxygen evolution and was found to be more sensitive to DCMU indicating a better structural and functional integrity and may be treated as the minimal functional unit required for PSII photochemistry. The detergent Hecameg is relatively inexpensive and the methodology remains simple since it does not require any chromatography or density gradient ultracentrifugation.
Early light-induced proteins (ELIPs) are nuclear-encoded thylakoid proteins. In the present research, two full-length cDNAs (741 and 815 bp), encoding ELIPs (190 and 175 aa) and their genomic sequences, were isolated from tea leaves, and named CsELIP1 and CsELIP2, respectively. Both the deduced CsELIPs contain a chloroplast transit peptide in the N-terminus and a chlorophyll a/b binding protein motif with three transmembrane helices in the C-terminus. The genomic sequences of the two CsELIPs conform to the three-exon pattern of ELIP genomic sequences of other plant species. However, the identities between two CsELIPs and ACJ09655 from gymnosperm species were higher than all of
ELIP-like proteins identified from other angiosperms. Expression analysis showed that the two CsELIP genes were significantly
up-regulated when the photoinhibition occurred in tea leaves, implying that they might be involved in photoprotection., X. W. Li ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Typical chestnut thylakoid extracts isolated by mechanical disruption of leaf tissues had an equivalent of 0.28 kg m-3 chlorophyll (Chl) which is six times less than in thylakoids obtained from spinach, although Chl content in leaves was only half as small. According to optical microscopy, the vesicles showed a good integrity, exhibiting at 21 °C a high capacity of photon-induced potential membrane generation, which was demonstrated by the almost full 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine fluorescence quenching in a hyper-saline medium containing 150 mM KCl and having osmotic potential of -1.5 MPa. The half-time of the thylakoid potential generation was 11.7 s with the time of dissipation around 8.9 s. In such conditions, spinach thylakoids showed an increased swelling and also differences in the half-time generation which was almost four times faster than was observed in chestnut. However, when spinach thylakoids were incubated in a typical hypo-saline medium without KCl with osmotic potential -0.8 MPa, no additional swelling was observed. Consequently the half-time of potential dissipation was 35 s. Studies with nigericin suggested a chestnut thylakoid ΔpH significantly smaller than that observed in spinach, which was confirmed by the measurements of the ATP driven pumping activity. and J. Gomes-Laranjo ... [et al.].
A strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 expressing the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fused to the C-terminus of the PsaF subunit of PSI has been constructed and used to isolate native PSI complexes employing the GFP-Trap®, an efficient immunoprecipitation system which recognizes the green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its variants. The protein analysis and spectroscopic characterization of the preparation revealed an isolate of trimeric and monomeric PSI complexes, which showed minimal unspecific contamination as demonstrated by comparison with the wild type control. Interestingly, we detected CP43 subunits of PSII and small amounts of PSII core complexes specifically pulled-down with the YFP-PSI, supporting the association of PSII assembly modules and intermediate assembly complexes with PSI, as observed in our previous studies. The results demonstrate that the GFP-Trap® system represents an excellent tool for studies of PSI biogenesis and interconnection of PSI and PSII assembly processes., A. Strašková, J. Knoppová, J. Komenda., and Obsahuje bibliografické odkazy