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1.
The low-temperature (77 K) emission and excitation chlorophyll fluorescence spectra in thylakoid membranes isolated from pea mutants were investigated. The mutants have modified pigment content, structural organization, different surface electric properties and functions [Dobrikova et al., Photosynth. Res. 65 (2000) 165]. The emission spectra of thylakoid membranes were decomposed into bands belonging to the main pigment protein complexes. By an integration of the areas under them, the changes in the energy distribution between the two photosystems as well as within each one of them were estimated. It was shown that the excitation energy flow to the light harvesting, core antenna and RC complexes of photosystem II increases with the total amount of pigments in the mutants, relative to the that to photosystem I complexes. A reduction of the fluorescence ratio between aggregated trimers of LHC II and its trimeric and monomeric forms with the increase of the pigment content (chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, and lutein) was observed. This implies that the closer packing in the complexes with a higher extent of aggregation regulates the energy distribution to the PS II core antenna and reaction centers complexes. Based on the reduced energy flow to PS II, i.e., the relative increased energy flow to PS I, we hypothesize that aggregation of LHC II switches the energy flow toward LHC I. These results suggest an additive regulatory mechanism, which redistributes the excitation energy between the two photosystems and operates at non-excess light intensities but at reduced pigment content.  相似文献   

2.
The chlorophyll fluorescence and the photosynthetic oxygen evolution (flash-induced oxygen yield patterns and oxygen bursts under continuous irradiation) were investigated in the thylakoid membranes with different stoichiometry and organization of the chlorophyll-protein complexes. Data show that the alteration in the organization of the photosystem II (PS II) super complex, i.e. the amount and the organization of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex (LHCII), which strongly modifies the electric properties of the membranes, influences both the energy redistribution between the two photosystems and the oxygen production reaction. The decrease of surface electric parameters (charge density and dipole moments), associated with increased degree of LHCII oligomerization, correlates with the strong reduction of the energy transfer from PS II to PSI. In the studied pea thylakoid membranes (wild types Borec, Auralia and their mutants Coeruleovireus 2/16, Costata2/133, Chlorotica XV/1422) with enhanced degree of oligomerization of LHCII was observed: (i) an increase of the S(0) populations of PS II in darkness; (ii) an increase of the misses; (iii) an alteration of the decay kinetics of the oxygen bursts under continuous irradiation. There is a strict correlation between the degree of LHCII oligomerization in the investigated pea mutants and the ratio of functionally active PS II alpha to PS II beta centers, while in thylakoid membranes without oligomeric structure of LHCII (Chlorina f2 barley mutant) the PS II alpha centers are not registered.  相似文献   

3.
Chlorophyll fluorescence transients measurements were employed to study the functioning of spinach photosystem II (PS II) core complexes in solution or reconstituted into liposomes. Lipid vesicles were prepared from soybean phospholipids (asolectine) or a mixture of spinach thylakoid lipids. In comparison with intact PS II core complexes comprising two distinct fluorescence phases, designated as O-J and J-P, complete suppression of the latter phase in Mn-depleted samples was observed. An increase of magnitude of the J-P phase in the presence of exogenous MnCl(2) (4 Mn/RC) indicate in favor of partial restoring of oxygen-evolution activity of PS II. The J-P phase observed in PS II in solution was characterized by a lifetime of ~320 ms, while in liposome-reconstituted samples this phase was accelerated up to ~20 ms in case of asolectine and up to ~9 ms in case of a mixture of thylakoid lipids. These data clearly suggest that lipid environment stimulates the steady-state rate of oxygen evolution. The effect of lipids is likely based on keeping the embedded proteins in optimal structure for efficient functioning.  相似文献   

4.
Low-temperature (77K) steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra, room temperature fluorescence and light scattering of thylakoid membranes isolated from pea mutants were studied as a function of Mg2+ concentration. The mutants have modified pigment content and altered structural organization of the pigment-protein complexes, distinct surface electric properties and functions. The analysis of the 77K emission spectra revealed that Mg2+-depletion of the medium caused not only an increased energy flow toward photosystem I in all investigated membranes but also changes in the quenching of the fluorescence, most probably by internal conversion. The results indicated that the macroorganization of the photosynthetic apparatus of mutants at supramolecular level (distribution and segregation of two photosystems in thylakoid membranes) and at supermolecular level (stacking of photosystem II supercomplexes) required different Mg ion concentrations. The data confirmed that the segregation of photosystems and the stacking of thylakoid membranes are two distinct phenomena and elucidated some features of their mechanisms. The segregation is initiated by changes in the lateral microorganization of light harvesting complexes II, their migration (repulsion from photosystem I) and subsequent separation of the two photosystems. Most likely 3D aggregation and formation of macrodomains, containing only photosystem II antenna complexes, play a certain precursory role for the increasing degree of the membrane stacking and the energy coupling between the light harvesting complexes II and the core complexes of photosystem II in the frame of photosystem II supercomplexes.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of lipid phase order of isolated thylakoid membranes on fluorescent characteristics of both photosystems during illumination with high light intensity at 22 degrees C and 4 degrees C was investigated. For artificial modification of membrane fluidity two membrane perturbing agents were applied-cholesterol and benzyl alcohol. 77 K fluorescence emission and excitation spectra of control, cholesterol- and benzyl alcohol-treated thylakoid membranes were analysed in order to determine the high light-induced changes of emission bands attributed to different chlorophyll-protein complexes-F 735, emitted by photosystem I-light-harvesting complex I; and F 685 and F 695, emitted by photosystem II-light-harvesting complex II. Analysis of emission bands showed that high light treatment leads to a decrease of the area of band at 695 nm and a concomitant increase of intensity of the band at 735 nm. The involvement of different pigment pools (chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b) in the energy supply of both photosystems before and after photoinhibitory treatment was estimated on the basis of excitation fluorescence spectra. The dependence of the ratios F 735/F 685 and the band areas at 685 and 695 nm on the illumination time was studied at both temperatures. Data presented indicate that cholesterol incorporation stabilized the intersystem structure in respect to light-induced changes of fluorescence emission of PSI and PSII. It was shown that the effect of fluid properties of thylakoid membranes on the 77 K fluorescence characteristics of main pigment protein complexes of pea thyalkoid membranes depends on the temperature during high light treatment.  相似文献   

6.
In vivo photoinhibition of photosystem I (PS I) was investigated at chilling temperature using the leaves of the chilling-resistant spinach plant treated with an inhibitor of superoxide dismutase, diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC). When spinach leaves were treated with DDC during chilling at 4 degrees C for 12 h with a light intensity of 120 micromol m(-2) s(-1), the activity of PS I and the content of iron-sulfur centers declined to about 50% and 25% of the non-DDC-treated controls, respectively. A native green gel analysis of thylakoid membranes isolated from the DDC-treated leaves resolved a novel chlorophyll-protein complex, which was identified as the light-harvesting complex I (LHC I)-deficient PS I complex when examined by 77 K fluorescence spectroscopy and two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The possible dissociation of LHC I as an early structural change in the PS I complex after DDC-induced photoinhibition of PS I is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
A photosystem (PS) I holocomplex was isolated from Pleurochloris meiringensis Vischer (Xanthophyceae) using sucrose density centrifugation. This complex exhibited a fluorescence emission maximum at 715 nm, which is in accordance with the long wavelength emission of whole cells. The complex was further dissociated into a core complex and a light-harvesting protein (LHC I). The core protein contains mainly Chl a and β-carotene, is 8.25 times enriched in P700 and has its main emission maximum at 715 nm. Therefore, the longest wavelength emission of P. meiringensis is due to the PS I core, which is in contrast to higher plants. The LHC I differs from LHC II with regard to its polypeptide pattern as well as its spectral properties. The arrangement of antennae is discussed in relation to the regulation of energy transfer between the photosystems.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract The short-term adaptation of intact leaves to an increase in light intensity was studied by an analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence and oxygen evolution monitored by photoacoustics. An increase in light intensity led to an oxygen “gush”. This “gush” was followed by a large (up to 120%) biphasic increase in the yield of oxygen evolution characterized by a fast phase (T = 0.5–2 min) and a slow phase (T = 4–20 min). The fast phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to a decrease of fluorescence, whereas the slow phase was accompanied by a parallel fluorescence increase. A comparison of fluorescence parameters with oxygen yield indicates that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to an increase in the antenna size of photosystem II. The slow phase was not inhibited by the uncoupler Nigericin but it was absent in chlorophyll-b-less barley mutants dencient in the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex of photosystem II (LHC II). These experiments indicate that changes in the LHC II mediated energy distribution, which occur in the time-range of several minutes, are involved in the adaptation to changing light intensities. Moreover, electrophoretic analysis of 32P orthophosphate labeled leaf discs adapted to low and high light intensities suggests that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen evolution involves dephosphorylation of the 25 kDa polypeptide of LHC II, by a small extent of 12%. The trigger for the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield does not involve the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool. It was found that in response to the increased light intensity, the plastoquinone pool became more reduced as judged by model calculations. Experiments with the uncoupler Nigericin suggest that the control of the slow phase of adaptation to increased light intensity was also not exerted by the pH gradient across the thylakoid membrane. The similarities between the adaptation to increased light intensity and the state II to state I transition suggest that both adaptation phenomena involve LHC II dephosphorylation possibly triggered by the cytochrome b6/f complex.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract— The short-term adaptation of intact leaves to an increase in light intensity was studied by an analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence and oxygen evolution monitored by photoacoustics. An increase in light intensity led to an oxygen “gush”. This “gush” was followed by a large (up to 120%) biphasic increase in the yield of oxygen evolution characterized by a fast phase (T = 0.5–2 min) and a slow phase (T = 4–20 min). The fast phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to a decrease of fluorescence, whereas the slow phase was accompanied by a parallel fluorescence increase. A comparison of fluorescence parameters with oxygen yield indicates that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield was coupled to an increase in the antenna size of photosystem II. The slow phase was not inhibited by the uncoupler Nigericin but it was absent in chlorophyll-b-less barley mutants deñcient in the light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex of photosystem II (LHC II). These experiments indicate that changes in the LHC II mediated energy distribution, which occur in the time-range of several minutes, are involved in the adaptation to changing light intensities. Moreover, electrophoretic analysis of 32P orthophosphate labeled leaf discs adapted to low and high light intensities suggests that the slow phase of the increase in oxygen evolution involves dephosphorylation of the 25 kDa polypeptide of LHC II, by a small extent of 12%. The trigger for the slow phase of the increase in oxygen yield does not involve the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool. It was found that in response to the increased light intensity, the plastoquinone pool became more reduced as judged by model calculations. Experiments with the uncoupler Nigericin suggest that the control of the slow phase of adaptation to increased light intensity was also not exerted by the pH gradient across the thylakoid membrane. The similarities between the adaptation to increased light intensity and the state II to state I transition suggest that both adaptation phenomena involve LHC II dephosphorylation possibly triggered by the cytochrome b6/f complex.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract— The fluorescence decay kinetics of photosynthetic mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardii which lack photosystem II (PS II), photosystem I (PS I), and both PS II and PS I have been measured. The PS II mutant strain8–36C exhibits fluorescence decay lifetime components of 53, 424 and 2197 ps. The fluorescence decay of a PS I mutant strain12–7 contains two major fluorescence decay components with lifetimes of 152 and 424 ps. The fluorescence decay of mutant strain C2, which lacks both PS II and PS I, is nearly single exponential with a lifetime of 2561 ± 222 ps. In simulations in which it is assumed that wild-type decays are a simple sum of the major decay components of the isolated parts of the photosynthetic unit as measured in the mutants, curves are obtained that fit the wild-type C. reinhardii fluorescence decay data when the absorption cross-sections of PS II and PS I are weighted approximately equally. The 89 ps lifetime component in the wild-type is an average of 53 and 152 ps components arising from excitation transfer to and trapping in PS I and PS II. The single step transfer time in PS I is estimated to be between 100 and 700 fs depending on assumptions about array size. We find that between two and four visits to the PS I reaction center are required before final trapping.  相似文献   

11.
The light-harvesting complexes (LHC) were isolated from the unicellular alga Mantoniella squamata (Prasinophyceae) by sucrose-density centrifugation. Beside the major LHC (II), a photosystem I complex was obtained that could be dissociated into a photosystem I core complex and an associated LHC I. In contrast to other chlorophyll b-containing antennae, both LHC II as well as LHC I were observed to be identical with respect to the following features: the molecular weights, the isoelectric points and the retention behavior on anion-exchange chromatography of the apoproteins, the pigment content and the absorption and fluorescence spectra. We conclude from these results that Mantoniella contains only one homogenous population of LHC, which cooperate with both photosystems not on the basis of specific recognition but on the simple basis of statistical interaction. This is the first report of a chlorophyll b-containing light-harvesting system without any subpopulations: therefore, it is suggested that it arises from a most primitive type of chlorophyll b-containing chloroplast.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract— A comparative study was carried out on the in situ susceptibilities to photoinactivation of the photosystem I (PS I) and II (PS II) complexes of spinach thylakoids treated with efficient type II sensitizers. While the presence of the exogenous sensitizers caused a substantial increase in the extent of photoinactivation of whole chain electron transport, it did not affect PS I activity of thylakoids in light but exerted an enhanced photoinactivating effect only on PS II. The measurements of the action spectrum for the inhibition of PS II activity of the sensitizer-incorporated thylakoids and that for the generation of singlet oxygen (1O2) from them revealed that photosensitized inactivation of PS II is directly related to the photoproduction of 1O2 in thylakoid membranes. The results obtained in the present work clearly demonstrate an exceptional sensitivity of PS II to 1O2, providing circumstantial evidence that high light-induced damage to PS II may result from photosensitization reactions mediated by 1O2, which is not necessarily produced within the PS II complex.  相似文献   

13.
In an attempt to uncover electric field interactions between PS I and PS II during their functioning, fluorescence induction curves were measured on hydroxylamine-treated thylakoids of Chenopodium album under conditions ensuring low and high levels of photogenerated membrane potentials. In parallel experiments with Peperomia metallica chloroplasts, the photocurrents were measured with patch-clamp electrodes and served as indicator of electrogenic activity of thylakoid membranes in continuous light. Inhibition of linear electron flow at PS II donor side by hydroxylamine (0.1 mM) eliminated a slow rise of chlorophyll fluorescence to a peak level and suppressed photoelectrogenesis. Activation of PS I-dependent electron transport using cofactors of either cyclic (phenazine methosulfate) or noncyclic electron transport (reduced TMPD or DCPIP in combination with methyl viologen) restored photoelectrogenesis in hydroxylamine-treated chloroplasts and led to reappearance of slow components in the fluorescence induction curve. Exposure of thylakoids to valinomycin reduced the peak fluorescence in the presence of KCl but not in the absence of KCl. Combined application of valinomycin and nigericin in the presence of KCl exerted stronger suppression of fluorescence than valinomycin alone but was ineffective in the absence of KCl. In samples treated with hydroxylamine and PS I cofactors (DCPIP/ascorbate and methyl viologen), preillumination with a single-turnover flash or a multiturnover pulse shifted the induction curves of both membrane potential and chlorophyll fluorescence to shorter times, which confirms the supposed influence of PS I-generated electrical field on PS II fluorescence. A model is presented that describes modulating effect of the membrane potential on chlorophyll fluorescence and roughly simulates the fluorescence induction curves measured at low and high membrane potentials.  相似文献   

14.
The psal and psaL genes were characterized from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002. The gene organization was different from that reported for other cyanobacteria with psal occurring upstream and being divergently transcribed from the psaL gene. Mutants lacking Psal or PsaL were generated by interposon mutagenesis and characterized physiologically and biochemically. Mutant strains PR6307 (Δpsal?), PR6308 (psal) and PR6309 (psaL?) had doubling times similar to that of the wild type under both high- and low-intensity white light, but all grew more slowly than the wild type in green light. Only monomeric photosystem I (PS I) complexes could be isolated from each mutant strain when Triton X-100 was used to solubilize thylakoid membranes; however, approximately 10% of the PS I complexes from the psal mutants, but not the psaL mutant, could be isolated as trimers when n-do-decyl β-D-maltoside was used. Compositional analyses of the mutant PS I complexes indicate that the presence of PsaL is required for trimer formation or stabilization and that Psal plays a role in stabilizing the binding of both PsaL and PsaM to the PS I complex. Strain PR6309 (psaL?) was capable of performing a state 2 to state 1 transition approximately three times more rapidly than the wild type. Because the monomeric PS I complexes of this mutant should be capable of diffusing more rapidly than trimeric complexes, these data suggest that PS I complexes rather than phycobilisomes might move during state transitions. A “mobile-PS I” model for state transitions that incorporates these ideas is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract— The possible association of photodynamic sensitization with photoinhibition damage to the photosystem II complex (PS II) has been investigated using isolated intact thylakoids from pea leaves. For this study singlet oxygen (1O2), photoproduced by endogenous chromophores that are independent of the function of PS II, was assumed to be the major reactive intermediate involved in the photoinhibition process. When thylakoid samples preincubated with rose bengal were subjected to exposure to relatively weak green light (500–600 nm) under aerobic conditions, PS II was severely damaged. The pattern of the rose bengal-sensitized inhibition of PS II was similar to that of high light-induced damage to PS II: (1) the secondary quinone (QB)-dependent electron transfer through PS II is inactivated much faster than the QB-independent electron flow, (2) PS II activity is lost prior to degradation of the D1 protein, (3) diuron, an herbicide that binds to the QB domain on the D1 protein, prevents D1 degradation, and (4) PS II is damaged to a greater extent by the deuteration of thylakoid suspensions but to a lesser extent by the presence of histidine. Furthermore, it was observed that destroying thylakoid Fe-S centers resulted in a marked reduction of high light-induced PS II damage. These results may suggest that the primary processes of photoinhibition are mediated by 1O2 and that Fe-S centers, which are located in some membrane components, but not in PS II, play an important role in photogenerating the activated oxygen immediately responsible for the initiation of photodamage to PS II.  相似文献   

16.
The changes in structural organization of the major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b–protein complex of photosystem II (LHC II) at the level of trimeric subcomplexes were studied in spinach plants grown under low light conditions (50 μmol quanta m−2 s−1) and then acclimated to elevated irradiances. By monitoring photochemical quenching of fluorescence yield (qP), photosystem II (PS II) functional status was assessed in leaves of plants acclimated to a range of elevated irradiances. Three separate acclimative irradiances were selected for the experiments, reflecting: limiting light conditions (150 μmol quanta m−2 s−1), near to the inflexion point on the irradiance curve conditions (300 μmol quanta m−2 s−1) and an excessive light, causing a moderate stress in the form of down regulation of PS II (450 μmol quanta m−2 s−1). An immunoblot analysis showed that there was a clear decline in an abundance on chlorophyll basis of Lhcb1-3 apoproteins as an acclimative irradiance increased from 50 to 450 μmol quanta m−2 s−1, with Lhcb1 decreasing to a lesser extent than Lhcb2 and Lhcb3 (only at excessive irradiance). When analyzed by non-denaturing isoelectric focusing BBY membrane fragments (PSII-enriched, stacked thylakoid membranes) isolated from low light-grown plants were resolved into nine fractions, seven of which (labelled 3–9) were established by us previously [Jackowski and Pielucha, J. Photochem. Photobiol. B: Biol. 64 (2001) 45] to be LHC II subcomplexes representing mixed populations of closely similar trimers, comprising permutations of Lhcb1 and Lhcb2 (subcomplexes 3–7) or Lhcb1-3 (subcomplexes 8 and 9). A heterogeneity with regard to accumulation behaviour of LHC II subcomplexes in response to elevated irradiances was revealed. The subcomplexes 5 and 6 were accumulating at similar level, regardless of the light irradiance experienced. Another group consisting of the subcomplexes 3 and 4 (the most basic ones) showed a progressive increase in relative abundance with increasing an irradiance intensity whereas the subcomplexes 7–9 (the most acidic ones) exhibited a progressive decline in their relative abundance during an acclimation of spinach plants to elevated irradiances thus they may collectively represent an elevated irradiance-responsive subunit of LHCII.  相似文献   

17.
A photosystem I (PS I) holocomplex was obtained from barley by ultracentrifugation of PS I-enriched stroma lamellae on sucrose gradients. Further solubilization with glycosidic surfactants followed by Deriphat-poly-acrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) fractionated the holocomplex into its core complex (CC I) and individual light-harvesting I (LHC I) pigment-protein subcomplexes. The LHC I contains chlorophyll a, all of the chlorophyll A of PS I and xanthophylls but no carotenes. Sodium dodecylsulfate PAGE analysis of the subcomplexes shows that barley LHC I is composed of at least five apoproteins having sizes between 11 and 24 kDa. Isolation of a 17 kDa LHC Ic component by Deriphat-PAGE shows it to be a photosynthetic pigment-protein. Room-temperature absorption spectra indicate that LHC Ic is enriched in chlorophyll a in comparison to the LHC Ia and Ib components. The LHC Ic apoprotein is shown to be distinct from the subunit III and IV polypeptides of CC I. Analysis of PS I fractions obtained from sucrose gradients as well as from Deriphat-PAGE indicates that in higher plants an oligomeric structure of the PS I entity exists in vitro.  相似文献   

18.
The aquatic higher plant Spirodela oligorrhiza , which contains proplastids when grown in the dark, was used to study light-dependent chloroplast development. Low-temperature (77 K) and room temperature fluorescence were utilized in situ on whole plants to examine plastid development. The dark-grown plants contain two 77 K fluorescence peaks, at 633 nm (F633) and at 657 nm (F657), with F633 dominating. The F657 species represents protochlorophyllide that is bound to protochloro-phyllide oxidoreductase. It was rapidly phototrans-formed to chlorophyllide (within 5 s) via a monomolec-ular reaction. Free protochlorophyllide (F633) was converted to chlorophyllide during a 3 h exposure to light. Photosystem (PS) assembly in Spirodela could be detected 2 h after the plants were first exposed to light, with the PSII reaction center (77 K fluorescence at 684 nm) appearing slightly before the PSI reaction center (77 K fluorescence at 725 nm). After the first reaction centers were formed the antenna complexes were added; the light-harvesting complex (LHC) I of PSI appeared after 8 h, and 47 kDa chlorophyll protein of PSII appeared between 12 h and 24 h. After 30 h of exposure to light, the plants acquired the ability to perform a light state transition, marking the appearance of functional LHCII complexes in the developing chloroplast. Finally, it was found that photosynthetic activity, as measured by room temperature chlorophyll fluorescence, accelerated con-comitantly with detection of the antenna complexes. Therefore, although reaction centers are detected very early during the proplastid to chloroplast conversion, they may have little activity or be unstable until the antennae are present.  相似文献   

19.
Continuing our work toward a system mimicking the electron-transfer steps from manganese to P(680)(+) in photosystem II (PS II), we report a series of ruthenium(II)-manganese(II) complexes that display intramolecular electron transfer from manganese(II) to photooxidized ruthenium(III). The electron-transfer rate constant (k(ET)) values span a large range, 1 x 10(5)-2 x 10(7) s(-1), and we have investigated different factors that are responsible for the variation. The reorganization energies determined experimentally (lambda = 1.5-2.0 eV) are larger than expected for solvent reorganization in complexes of similar size in polar solvents (typically lambda approximately 1.0 eV). This result indicates that the inner reorganization energy is relatively large and, consequently, that at moderate driving force values manganese complexes are not fast donors. Both the type of manganese ligand and the link between the two metals are shown to be of great importance to the electron-transfer rate. In contrast, we show that the quenching of the excited state of the ruthenium(II) moiety by manganese(II) in this series of complexes mainly depends on the distance between the metals. However, by synthetically modifying the sensitizer so that the lowest metal-to-ligand charge transfer state was localized on the nonbridging ruthenium(II) ligands, we could reduce the quenching rate constant in one complex by a factor of 700 without changing the bridging ligand. Still, the manganese(II)-ruthenium(III) electron-transfer rate constant was not reduced. Consequently, the modification resulted in a complex with very favorable properties.  相似文献   

20.
Reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) was interfaced to mass spectrometry (MS) with an electrospray ion (ESI) source for the separation and accurate molecular mass determination of the individual intrinsic membrane proteins that comprise the photosystem II (PS II) major light-harvesting complex (LHC II) and minor (CP24, CP26 and CP29) antenna system, whose molecular masses range between 22,000 and 29,000. PS II is a supramolecular complex intrinsic of the thylacoid membrane, which plays the important role in photosynthesis of capturing solar energy, and transferring it to photochemical reaction centers where energy conversion occurs. The protein components of the PS II major and minor antenna systems were extracted from spinach thylacoid membranes and separated using a butyl-silica column eluted by an acetonitrile gradient in 0.05% (v/v) aqueous trifluoroacetic acid. On-line electrospray MS allowed accurate molecular mass determination and identification of the protein components of PS II major and minor antenna system. The proposed RPLC-ESI-MS method holds several advantages over sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the conventional technique for studying membrane proteins, including a better protein separation, mass accuracy, speed and efficiency.  相似文献   

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