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American Society of Plant Physiologists
A Role for PsbZ in the Core Complex of Photosystem IIneckardt{at}aspp.org Photosynthesis in oxygen-evolving organisms is driven by electron transport through the photochemical reaction centers photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII), two large protein complexes located in the chloroplast thy-lakoid membrane. PSI and PSII each contain an array of light-harvesting antenna pigments that absorb light energy and transfer it to a reaction center core complex, where electron transport drives the conversion of energy into the stable chemical products NADPH and ATP. PSII absorbs predominantly red light and produces a strong oxidant that extracts electrons from water and releases oxygen (the water-splitting reaction of photosynthesis) and a reductant that transfers electrons on to PSI. PSI absorbs predominantly far-red light plus electrons from PSII to produce a strong reductant capable of reducing NADP+ to NADPH. Light-driven ATP synthesis (photophosphorylation) is tightly coupled to electron transport through PSII and PSI and occurs within an ATP synthase complex embedded in the thylakoid membrane. Two other major complexes involved in photosynthetic energy conversion are cytochrome b6f, which controls the shuttle of electrons from PSII to PSI via the mobile electron carriers plastoquinone and plastocyanin, and LHCII, a light-harvesting protein complex that functions as an auxiliary antenna for PSII and also appears to influence energy distribution between PSI and PSII.
Most of the proteins of these complexes, which together make up the photosynthetic apparatus, are encoded by the chloroplast genome. On the basis of the high degree of conservation of structure and composition of photosystems in all organisms examined to date, it is thought that all photosystems evolved from a single ancestor. In fact, there is a high degree of conservation among most of the
Suguira (1992) TARGETED INACTIVATION OF ycf9
Chloroplast transformation is possible via recombination between plastid genome sequences and homologous sequences that flank a gene expression cassette (which produces "transplastomic" plants), in contrast to nuclear transformation, in which an uncontrolled number of foreign gene copies are integrated into the genome at random sites. Thus far, most plastid transformations have been performed in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and tobacco. Technical limitations have hindered plastid transformation in other systems, although progress in recent years holds promise for routine application in other higher plant species, and the technique has been used successfully in rice (Heifetz, 2000
Targeted gene inactivation via chloroplast transformation has been used to characterize the function of several of the ycf genes in Chlamydomonas and tobacco. Thus, ycf6 (Hager et al., 1999
Previous research on this gene has yielded ambiguous results. Because plant cells contain numerous chloroplasts, and thus numerous copies of the chloroplast genome, it can be difficult to obtain transplastomic plants that are homoplasmic for foreign transgenes. Mäenpää et al. (2000) Swiatek et al. show quite convincingly that PsbZ is in fact a genuine subunit of PSII. Evidence is presented from both Chlamydomonas and tobacco, using specific antibodies against PsbZ on thylakoid fractions from wild-type psbZ-deficient mutant preparations as well as preparations from various other mutants lacking other components of the photosynthetic apparatus. Thus, PsbZ was found to comigrate precisely with PSII core subunits in wild-type Chlamydomonas and was present in mutants lacking PSI, ATP synthase, chlorophyll a/b antenna proteins, or the cytochrome b6f complex but was absent in other mutants lacking PSII cores. It was also found to be associated with PSII core fractions from wild-type tobacco plants, but it was missing from PSII core fractions from the psbZ-deficient mutant tobacco.
One of the great strengths of this study is the use of the two different systems, Chlamydomonas and tobacco, to investigate protein function. Somewhat different experiments were performed in each system, depending on the availability of mutants and techniques that were applicable to each, yet the results were in good agreement, making the conclusions far more robust than if only one of the systems had been used. This is perhaps a particularly important point in this case, because others had obtained somewhat different results concerning the function of ycf9 (Mäenpää et al., 2000 PSII SUBUNIT ORGANIZATION
PSII is made up of at least 17 subunits, most of which are embedded within the thylakoid membrane: the reaction center proteins D1 (PsbA) and D2 (PsbD); the chlorophyll-containing antennae CP47 (PsbB) and CP43 (PsbC); the cytochrome b559
PSII probably exists as a dimer in higher plants and algae (Santini et al., 1994 Swiatek et al. present evidence that the PsbZ protein is involved in maintaining the stability of PSII-LHCII supercomplexes. After membrane solubilization with an appropriate detergent, sucrose gradient sedimentation results in the separation of PSII core subunits into several different fractions corresponding to PSII-LHCII supercomplexes, PSII dimers, or PSII monomers. PSII-LHCII supercomplexes were readily identified from wild-type tobacco preparations but were completely absent in preparations from the psbZ-deficient mutant. Mutant preparations also failed to accumulate other PSII- and LHCII-associated proteins at the positions of PSII supercomplexes.
It is known that interactions between the PSII core and the LHCII antenna are controlled by phosphorylation (Allen, 1992
Swiatek et al. present strong evidence that PsbZ is associated with the PSII core. In light of the previous results of Ruf et al. (2000)
PsbZ AND NONPHOTOCHEMICAL QUENCHING
Figure 1 shows PsbZ lying adjacent to the CP26 subunit, which is a minor antenna subunit of LHCII. The positioning is based on the location of unidentified PSII subunits from Zouni et al. (2001)
In the xanthophyll cycle, zeaxanthin is formed from deepoxidation of violaxanthin via the intermediate antheraxanthin in a reaction catalyzed by a deepoxidase, and an epoxidase catalyzes the reconversion of zeaxanthin to antheraxanthin and violaxanthin. There is strong evidence that zeaxanthin functions in the dissipation of excess excitation energy, which protects the photosynthetic apparatus from the damaging effects of photoinhibition by preventing the accumulation of toxic reactive oxygen species. Demmig-Adams (1990) Swiatek et al. found that psbZ-deficient tobacco plants showed a greatly reduced capacity for NPQ under adverse growth conditions such as increased light intensity and/or decreased temperature. The mutant plants also showed a dramatically altered xanthophyll cycle, as measured by HPLC analysis of various pigments, including violaxanthin, zeaxanthin, and antheraxanthin. When transferred from dim light to high light, wild-type plants showed an increase in the proportion of zeaxanthin from 4 to 33% of total xanthophylls, followed by a rapid decrease to 14% after a 10-min dark recovery period. In contrast, zeaxanthin content in the psbZ-deficient plants increased from 5 to 63% when transferred from dim light to high light and did not recover appreciably when subsequently placed in darkness for 10 min. The total xanthophyll pool also was significantly higher in the mutant plants relative to the wild type. Nonetheless, the mutant plants apparently were unable to use zeaxanthin as a photoprotectant as effectively as did the wild-type plants, as shown by a reduced capacity for NPQ and greater photoinhibition under stress conditions.
Horton (1996) References Allen, J.F. (1992). Protein phosphorylation in regulation of photosynthesis. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1098, 275335.[Medline] Boekema, E., van Roon, H., Calkoen, F., Bassi, R., and Dekker, J. (1999). Multiple types of association of photosystem II and its light-harvesting antenna in partially solubilized photosystem II membranes. Biochemistry 38, 22332239.[CrossRef][Medline] Demmig-Adams, B. (1990). Carotenoids and photoprotection in plants: A role for the xanthophyll zeaxanthin. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1020, 124.[CrossRef] Hager, M., Biehler, K., Illerhaus, J., Ruf, S., and Bock, R. (1999). Targeted inactivation of the smallest plastid genome-encoded open reading frame reveals a novel and essential subunit of the cytochrome b6f complex. EMBO J. 18, 58345842.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hallic, R.B., and Bairoch, A. (1994). Proposal for the naming of chloroplast genes. III. Nomenclature for open reading frames encoded in chloroplast genomes. Plant Mol. Biol. Rep. 12, S29S30. Harrer, R., Bassi, R., Testi, M.-G., and Shaefer, C. (1998). Nearest-neighbor analysis of a photosystem II complex from Marchantia polymorpha L. (liverwort), which contains reaction center and antenna proteins. Eur. J. Biochem. 255, 196205.[Web of Science][Medline] Heifetz, P.B. (2000). Genetic engineering of the chloroplast. Biochimie 82, 655666.[Medline] Horton, P. (1996). Nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. In Light as Energy Source and Information Carrier in Plant Physiology, R.C. Jennings, G. Zucchelli, F. Ghetti, and G. Colombetti, eds (New York: Plenum Press), pp. 99112. Kühlbrandt, W., Wang, D.N., and Fujiyoshi, Y. (1994). Atomic model of plant light-harvesting complex by electron crystallography. Nature 367, 614621.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mäenpää, P., Gonzalez, E.B., Chen, L., Khan, M.S., Gray, J.C., and Aro, E.-M. (2000). The ycf9 (orf 62) gene in the plant chloroplast genome encodes a hydrophobic protein of stromal thylakoid membranes. J. Exp. Bot. 51, 375382.
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Shi, L.-X., Lorkovíc, Z.J., Oelmüller, R., and Schröder, W.P. (2000). The low molecular mass PsbW protein is involved in the stabilization of the dimeric photosystem II complex in Arabidopsis thaliana. J. Biol. Chem. 275, 3794537950. Suguira, M. (1992). The chloroplast genome. Plant Mol. Biol. 19, 149168.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Swiatek, M., Kuras, R., Sokolenko, A., Higgs, D., Olive, J., Cinque, G., Müller, B., Eichacker, L.A., Stern, D.B., Bassi, R., Herrmann, R.G., and Wollman, F.-A. (2001). The chloroplast gene ycf9 encodes a photosystem II core subunit, PsbZ, that participates in photosystem II supramolecular architecture. Plant Cell 13, 13471367. Takahashi, Y., Rahire, M., Breyton, C., Popot, J.L., Joliot, P., and Rochaix, J.D. (1996). The chloroplast ycf7 (petL) open reading frame of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii encodes a small functionally important subunit of the cytochrome b6f complex. EMBO J. 15, 34983506.[Web of Science][Medline] Zouni, A., Witt, H.-T., Kern, J., Fromme, P., Krauss, N., Saenger, W., and Orth, P. (2001). Crystal structure of photosystem II from Synechococcus elongatus at 3.8 Å resolution. Nature 409, 739743.[CrossRef][Medline] This article has been cited by other articles:
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