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First published online April 8, 2008; 10.1105/tpc.107.055830 The Plant Cell 20:1029-1039 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists Thylakoid Membrane Remodeling during State Transitions in Arabidopsis[W]
a Department of Biological Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel 1 Address correspondence to vlad.brumfeld{at}weizmann.ac.il or ziv.reich{at}weizmann.ac.il.
Adaptability of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms to fluctuations in light spectral composition and intensity is conferred by state transitions, short-term regulatory processes that enable the photosynthetic apparatus to rapidly adjust to variations in light quality. In green algae and higher plants, these processes are accompanied by reversible structural rearrangements in the thylakoid membranes. We studied these structural changes in the thylakoid membranes of Arabidopsis thaliana chloroplasts using atomic force microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and confocal imaging. Based on our results and on the recently determined three-dimensional structure of higher-plant thylakoids trapped in one of the two major light-adapted states, we propose a model for the transitions in membrane architecture. The model suggests that reorganization of the membranes involves fission and fusion events that occur at the interface between the appressed (granal) and nonappressed (stroma lamellar) domains of the thylakoid membranes. Vertical and lateral displacements of the grana layers presumably follow these localized events, eventually leading to macroscopic rearrangements of the entire membrane network.
The two photosystems that mediate electron transport in oxygenic photosynthesis are connected electrically in series. However, they have different absorption characteristics and exciton trapping efficiencies, necessitating a means to balance electron flow between them under varying light conditions. In vivo, this tuning ability is provided by rapid-response adaptation processes called state transitions. In the so-called state I, which is observed in darkness or under light conditions favorable for photosystem I (PSI), the light-harvesting antenna complex II (LHCII) is associated primarily with photosystem II (PSII). If light changes such that PSII is excited preferentially (state II), a fraction of LHCII becomes phosphorylated by dedicated kinase(s). Activation of the latter is driven by the intersystem electron mediator, cytochrome b6f, and is governed by the redox state of the plastoquinone pool, which becomes more reduced under conditions that favor state II. The phosphorylated fraction of LHCII then dissociates from PSII and binds to PSI, thus increasing the latter's ability to harvest light at the expense of the former. Reversal of light conditions back to state I results in inactivation of the kinase(s), and the LHCII antennae become dephosphorylated by constitutively active phosphatases. Subsequently, the (dephosphorylated) LHCII complexes reassociate with PSII, restoring its original capacity to absorb light (Allen, 1992a
In higher plants and other chloroplast-bearing organisms whose thylakoid membranes are differentiated into grana and stroma lamellar domains, the movement of LHCII between granal-localized PSII and stroma lamellar-residing PSI is expected to lead to structural changes in the grana because LHCII is a major stabilizer of appressed granal domains (Anderson, 1999
The issue of shape transitions of thylakoid membranes is further complicated by a recent work showing that the granum-stroma assembly of higher-plant chloroplasts is highly interconnected (Shimoni et al., 2005
In this work, we combined several microscopic techniques to study the morphological changes that occur in thylakoid membranes of higher plant chloroplasts during state transitions. We found that the rearrangements in membrane architecture occurring during the transitions are large scale, involving both granal and stroma lamellar domains. Remodeling of the membranes during state I
Due to the inherent structural complexity of the chloroplast thylakoid membranes, we used a number of high-resolution imaging methods for our analyses. Imaging of thylakoids by two of these, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and scanning electron microscopy, which are surface imaging techniques, required that the two envelope membranes of the chloroplast be removed. Therefore, in all studies we used de-enveloped chloroplasts whose thylakoid network is structurally intact and photochemically active (Casazza et al., 2001 pmax, measured for the samples, was 0.68 ± 0.02, close to the value measured in intact leaves (Maxwell and Johnson, 2000
State I–adapted thylakoids isolated from dark-adapted plants were used either directly or after exposure to 100 µmol photons·m–2·s–1 of PSI-specific light (
Adaptation of the thylakoids to the two states was also assessed by chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. Low-temperature (77K) fluorescence showed that thylakoids adapted to state I gave rise to spectra in which PSI and PSII contribute roughly equally to the emitted fluorescence (Figure 1B, solid line). As expected, when state II was induced, PSI fluorescence (730 nm) increased markedly (Figure 1B, dashed line), indicative of the redistribution of excitation energy between the two PSs due to association of LHCII with PSI. State transitions were also monitored at room temperature by pulse amplitude modulation fluorescence measurements (see Supplemental Figure 1 online). For the isolated thylakoids used in this study, transition to state II was accompanied by 20% decrease of Fm. As expected, no significant change of Fm in the absence of ATP was observed. Figure 2 shows AFM images of de-enveloped chloroplasts adapted to state I (Figure 2A) or state II (Figure 2B). In this and following structural analyses, state II was induced by exposure to 30 µmol photons·m–2·s–1 for 30 min or to 1 mM duroquinol (in the dark). The transition from state I to state II was accompanied by a substantial increase in chloroplasts' diameter concomitant with a significant decrease in height (Table 1 ), resulting in a gain in ellipticity or, more appropriately, in oblateness. On a smaller scale, the transition between the two states caused the grana (which appear as bright spots in the topographs) to become less defined (cf. Figures 2C and 2E with 2D and 2F). The latter effect was particularly apparent in thylakoids that were induced to undergo transition to state II by duroquinol (Figure 2F), in correlation with the extent of LHCII phosphorylation (Figure 1A). Subjecting state I–adapted chloroplasts to PSII-specific light in the absence of ATP had no detectable effect on their morphology (Figure 2E, Table 1).
The surface topography of the thylakoids was also studied by scanning electron microscopy. As evident from the AFM images, the transition from state I to state II led to an increase in the chloroplasts' base area (Figures 3A and 3B , Table 1). The micrographs also revealed that the transition was accompanied by a considerable loss of granum structure, consistent with unstacking and disassembly of the grana during the process (Figures 3C and 3D). Grana that could still be discerned over the thylakoid surface in state II were smaller, with the area of their end membranes averaging at (141 ± 4) x 103 nm2 compared with (207 ± 7) x 103 nm2 in state I (Table 1). Induction of state II by duroquinol caused massive disassembly of the grana, which precluded analysis of their size. It has been shown that light-induced conformational changes in LHCII limit the accessibility of the kinase to the phosphorylation sites, either directly or by promoting aggregation of LHCII complexes (Zer et al., 2003
The above results indicate that the transitions between the two chromatic states of the thylakoid membranes are accompanied by large-scale changes in network architecture. However, the analyses used are surface techniques and thus cannot provide information on the underlying rearrangements in granum and stroma lamellar structure. To follow the changes occurring within the chloroplast volume during the transitions, thylakoids were subjected to cross-sectional analysis by transmission electron microscopy. Dark-adapted de-enveloped chloroplasts were examined first, allowing for comparison with the structure we determined by electron tomography for chloroplasts within leaves at the same illumination conditions (Shimoni et al., 2005 4 nm (Shimoni et al., 2005
Upon transition to state II, the thylakoid membranes underwent substantial structural rearrangements, both on small and large scales. The small-scale rearrangments were mostly concentrated in the grana and involved various alterations in granum shape and connectivity. Specifically, the grana unstacked and transformed into loose, disordered structures that formed diffuse boundaries with the flanking stroma lamellae (Figures 4C and 4D), contrasting with the ordered, compact morphology observed in dark-adapted thylakoids. These structural rearrangements were accompanied by a decrease in the average number of layers in the stacks from 6 to 4 and by a marked swelling of the grana thylakoid lumen from 25 to 26 nm to 31 to 32 nm (Table 2). Underlying the alterations in granum structure were two processes, the first of which was separation of adjacent layers in the stacks. Such separation, which often involved large distances (i.e., up to a few tens of nanometers) led to unstacking of the grana (Figure 4D) and caused fragmentation of granum bodies into smaller-sized granal domains (Figure 4E). The second process involved displacement of layers outside the granum body, resulting in staggered, disordered morphologies (Figure 4F) and the emergence of hybrid structures that appeared halfway between granal and stromal thylakoids (Figure 4G). Importantly, none of the aforementioned processes could have taken place without breakage of some of the lateral and/or vertical connections that link the layers in the granum-stroma assembly in state I.
The extensive reorganization of the grana was accompanied by macroscopic changes in the thylakoid network. Owing to the partial disassembly of the granum-stroma assemblies, the network became less ordered and had lost its characteristic, highly differentiated morphology. It also underwent a significant expansion, in agreement with the results obtained from the AFM and scanning electron microscopy analyses, which showed a significant increase in network diameter following the transition to state II (cf. Figures 4C and 4A). Another prominent change in the network relates to the apparent stiffness of the membranes. In state II, the thylakoid membranes were frequently observed to adopt undulating morphologies, resulting in a distinctive wavy appearance (Figures 4C and 4H). This apparent increase in deformability may reflect a loss of interlayer attractions and/or enhanced (ionic) screening of surface charges, following the decrease in LHCII density due to its migration to the stroma lamellae. The latter may also disrupt interactions between the luminal domains of granal proteins, such as the PsbP and PsbQ subunits of PSII, which were proposed to attract the opposite faces of the granum layers toward each other (Dekker and Boekema, 2005
To complement the AFM and electron microscopy analyses, which were performed on fixed specimen, we used confocal microscopy to follow the rearrangements in membrane organization in native-hydrated, unfixed de-enveloped chloroplasts. Here, we took advantage of the fact that the fluorescence emitted by thylakoid membranes at room temperature originates predominantly from PSII (Govindjee, 1995
Low-temperature fluorescence measurements (Figure 1B) indicate that the transitions between state I and state II, as assayed in our preparations, are largely reversible. Thus, we set out to determine whether this reversibility is also valid for the structural changes that accompany the transitions. For this, de-enveloped chloroplasts were either dark-adapted or trapped in state I and then induced to undergo two consecutive transitions, first to state II, and then back to state I. Here, state I was induced by subjecting the thylakoids to PSI-specific light in the presence of PSI electron acceptors in the medium (ferredoxin and NADP+). This ensured that the LHCII kinase(s) are deactivated at the beginning of the cycle as well as at the onset of the second transition (state II state I). In these experiments, we also included gramicidin D to prevent endogenous ATP production during the transitions. However, control experiments in the absence of this uncoupler gave rise to identical results.
In the first set of experiments, we followed the entire sequence of structural changes during the transitions in de-enveloped chloroplasts in real time by confocal microscopy (Figure 5E; see Supplemental Figure 2 online). The setup devised for this experiment is described in Methods. Dark-adapted thylakoids were induced to undergo transition to state II and then to state I and imaged throughout. The images clearly show the gradual disappearance of the bright spots that represent the granal domains during the transition to state II and their reappearance during the subsequent transition to state I. However, recovery of the granal domains was not complete. Notably, spreading of the fluorescent signal during the transition from state I to state II continued for
The second set of experiments employed scanning electron microscopy. Similar to the results obtained by confocal microscopy, the images, recorded at the three stages of the experiments (Figures 6A to 6C),
revealed that the transitions were largely, but not fully, reversible. The grana regained their structure in
The primary physiological driving force for the segregation of higher-plant thylakoid membranes into granal and stroma lamellar domains is unknown (for recent reviews, see Chow et al., 2005
Several studies showed that isolated thylakoids undergo massive reorganization when subjected to low-salt solutions (see Izawa and Good, 1966
In contrast with the above, other studies have shown that the structural alterations that occur in thylakoid membranes during light-induced state transitions are quite limited (see Drepper et al., 1993
Traditionally, the structure of the granum-stroma assembly, which constitutes the basic unit of higher-plant thylakoid networks, is thought to be stabilized by multiple interactions and forces. These include van der Waals forces, dipole–dipole interactions, entropic forces, as well as steric hindrances and short- and long-range lipid-mediated interactions that govern the lateral segregation of protein complexes within the membranes (reviewed in Barber, 1982
This study has two key observations, the first of which is that the structural rearrangements in chloroplast thylakoid membranes during state transitions, albeit not reaching the extent observed upon salt-induced membrane unstacking, are large scale. These include macroscopic changes in the shape of the thylakoid network, an increase in membrane deformability, as well as unstacking and fragmentation of the grana, which resulted in partial loss of granum structure. The alterations in membrane architecture were largely reversible and are qualitatively similar to those reported for thylakoid membranes of algal (Phaeocystis antartica) cells exposed to low and high levels of light (Moisan et al., 2006
The second observation is that, topologically, the aforementioned alterations of the thylakoid network require that some of the lateral and/or vertical connections that stabilize the granum-stroma assembly be broken. Figure 7 shows a model we propose for the rearrangement of the assembly during the transition from state I to state II; generally, the back-transition is taken to be a reversal of this process. We assume that phosphorylation of LHCII is initiated at regions near the grana-stroma interface. The subsequent migration of the phosphorylated antennae to the stroma lamellae disrupts the attractive interactions between neighboring layers at the margins, causing adjacent layers to retract from each other at the edges of the granum. It also leads to local changes in the highly curved regions that constitute the grana margins. Curved membrane domains are known to be sites where fission and fusion processes occur and require a specific lipid and/or protein composition (see Dekker and Boekema, 2005
Following the aforementioned localized events, the grana undergo additional rearrangements that eventually lead to remodeling of the entire membrane network. These rearrangements likely commence at the grana and include retraction of neighboring layers along the granum axis, as well as rotational and/or lateral movements that displace some of the layers out of the granum body. The outcome of these translational and rotational movements is unstacking and fragmentation of the grana, which consequently appear staggered and distorted. The displacement of layers out of the granum body also gives rise to the hybrid lamellae that possess features of both stromal and granal thylakoids observed in state II–adapted networks. The alterations in granum structure then propagate throughout the entire lamellar system, bringing about global changes in network dimensions and appearance. The pathways by which these macroscopic changes proceed are unknown, but we believe that they reflect relaxations of strains induced in the stroma lamellar sheets by the movements of grana layers, to which they are connected. As indicated in Figure 5E, these relaxations are relatively slow, taking
Breakage of the lateral and/or vertical connections of the layers in the grana, during state I
Plants Arabidopsis thaliana (ecotype Columbia-0) was used in all experiments. Plants were grown in a commercial potting mixture (Hummert International) at 20°C, with a 16/8 h light/dark period, and were dark-adapted overnight before use.
Preparation of De-Enveloped Chloroplasts
The photochemical activity of the de-enveloped chloroplasts was evaluated by measuring the maximal photochemical yield of PSII,
Induction and Validation of State Transitions
Validation of state transitions was assessed by low-temperature and room-temperature chlorophyll fluorescence measurements and by monitoring the phosphorylation levels of LHCII. Low-temperature emission spectra of thylakoid membrane suspensions, excited at 480 nm, were recorded in liquid nitrogen (77K) using an SLM-Aminco 8100 spectrofluorometer. Room-temperature fluorescence measurements were performed using a pulse amplitude modulation fluorometer (Walz). Phosphorylation of the LHCII proteins, Lhcb1 and Lhcb2, was assayed by protein gel blotting as described (Rintamaki et al., 1997
Earlier works on pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts indicated that LHCII phosphorylation in the presence of Mg2+ concentrations below 5 mM may lead to membrane unstacking, which is not solely due to antennae migration from granal to stroma lamellar domains (Horton and Black, 1983
AFM
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Transmission Electron Microscopy
Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy
Image Processing and Statistical Analysis
Supplemental Data
We thank Eyal Tamary for his help in the confocal imaging experiments. This research was supported by grants from the Henry Legrain Foundation (E.S.), from the Avron-Even-Ari Minerva Center for Photosynthesis Research (I.O.), and from the Israel Science Foundation and the Avron-Wilstätter Minerva Center for Photosynthesis Research (Z.R.).
The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantcell.org) is: Ziv Reich (ziv.reich{at}weizmann.ac.il).
[W] Online version contains Web-only data. www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.107.055830 Received September 25, 2007; Revision received March 12, 2008. accepted March 20, 2008.
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