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Plant Physiol. (1998) 117: 483-490
Stepwise Photoinhibition of Photosystem
II1
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ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Several mutant strains of
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with large deletions in the
D-E loop of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center polypeptide D1
were subjected to high light to investigate the role of this
hydrophilic loop in the photoinhibition cascade of PSII. The tolerance
of PSII to photoinhibition in the autotrophic mutant
R225-F239 (PD),
when oxygen evolution was monitored with 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone and the equal susceptibility
compared with control when monitored with bicarbonate, suggested an
inactivation of the QB-binding niche as the first event in
the photoinhibition cascade in vivo. This step in PD was largely
reversible at low light without the need for protein synthesis. Only
the next event, inactivation of QA reduction, was
irreversible and gave a signal for D1 polypeptide degradation. The
heterotrophic deletion mutants
G240-V249 and
R225-V249 had
severely modified QB pockets, yet exhibited high rates of
2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone-mediated oxygen evolution and
less tolerance to photoinhibition than PD. Moreover, the
protein-synthesis-dependent recovery of PSII from photoinhibition was
impaired in the
G240-V249 and
R225-V249 mutants because of the
effects of the mutations on the expression of the psbA-2 gene. No specific sequences in the D-E loop were found to be essential for high rates of D1 polypeptide degradation.
Prolonged strong irradiation impairs the photochemical
efficiency of all oxygen-evolving photosynthetic organisms. PSII, an intricate thylakoid membrane complex with a light-driven
water-plastoquinone-oxidoreductase activity, is the primary target of
this phenomenon, which is known as photoinhibition (see Prasil et al.,
1992 It is generally agreed that light-induced damage to PSII renders the D1
polypeptide ready for degradation. Detrimental oxidative species
produced by PSII may induce a conformational change in D1, thereby
making it susceptible to proteolysis (see Prasil et al., 1992 Although the mechanism of D1 degradation is not yet known, the D-E loop
of this polypeptide is thought to have an important regulatory role in
the process of D1 polypeptide degradation. The D-E loop not only forms
an essential structural component of the QB
pocket (Trebst, 1986 In the present study the mutants described above were employed to
investigate how the severe modifications of the
QB pocket and consequent perturbations in the
function of the acceptor side of PSII modulate the susceptibility of
PSII to photoinactivation and how they exert their effect on the
subsequent repair process.
Copyright Clearence Center: 0032-0889/98/117/0483/08.
Bacterial Strains and Growth Conditions
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
; Aro et al., 1993
). Despite intense research, the molecular
mechanism of PSII photoinhibition in vivo still remains unclear. On the
basis of in vitro studies, two major pathways have been implicated in
the photodamage of PSII. The acceptor-side photoinhibition, typical
under strong illumination, occurs at the level of the primary quinone
electron acceptor QA, which leaves its site in
the D2 polypeptide after being double reduced (Styring et al., 1990
;
Vass et al., 1992
). Such conditions lead to the recombination of the
primary radical pair P680+
Pheo
and to the formation of chlorophyll
triplets (Vass et al., 1992
). Triplet chlorophyll may then react with
molecular oxygen to produce toxic singlet oxygen, which damages PSII.
The other mechanism, donor-side photoinhibition, takes place when the
donation of electrons to PSII occurs more slowly than their removal to
the acceptor side, leading to the formation of long-lived, highly
oxidizing radicals such as Tyr Z+ and
P680+ (Blubaugh and Cheniae, 1990
;
Jegerschöld et al., 1990
; Bumann and Oesterhelt, 1995
). These
species have the capacity to extract electrons from their surroundings,
causing irreversible damage to PSII. Depending on environmental
conditions, both of these photoinhibition mechanisms have been
implicated in in vivo photoinhibition as well (Wang et al., 1992
; Ohad
et al., 1994
). Studies conducted with intact cells suggest an initial
role for the QB pocket in the induction of PSII
photoinhibition (Kyle et al., 1984
; Kirilovsky et al., 1988
; Ohad et
al., 1990
).
; Aro et
al., 1993
). Restoration of PSII function following photoinhibitory
damage and subsequent degradation of the damaged D1 polypeptide
requires de novo synthesis and the incorporation of a new D1 copy into
the PSII complex (Prasil et al., 1992
; Aro et al., 1993
).
), but also has specific amino acid sequences, the
PEST-like sequence and the putative cleavage region (Greenberg et al.,
1987
), which are postulated to carry information for D1 polypeptide
degradation. We have recently constructed Synechocystis sp.
PCC 6803 mutants with large deletions in the D-E loop of the D1
polypeptide, and have shown that the electron transfer on the acceptor
side of PSII is severely disturbed in these mutants (Mulo et al.,
1997
). The deletion of the PEST-like sequence in the autotrophic strain
PD impaired the QA-to-QB
electron transfer in PSII, whereas deletions in the putative cleavage
region of the D1 polypeptide in CD and PCD also resulted in
perturbation of the quinone-exchange reaction in the
QB pocket, preventing photosynthetic growth (Mulo et al., 1997
).
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
), were constructed as described by Mulo et al. (1997)
. The mutant strains PD,
CD, and PCD were maintained on BG-11 plates supplemented with antibiotics (see Mäenpää et al., 1993
), 5 mM Glc, and 10 µM DCMU to prevent any
selective advantage of possible revertants or secondary mutants. The
only functional psbA gene in all mutants was the mutated
psbA-2, whereas psbA-1 and psbA-3
genes were inactivated by interruption with antibiotic-resistance
cassettes (Mohamed and Jansson, 1989
).
2 s
1 at 32°C. The AR
control, which contains the same antibiotic-resistance cassettes as the
mutants but no mutations in the psbA-2 gene, and the
autotrophic mutant PD were grown as described in
Mäenpää et al. (1993)
, except that 5 mM
Glc was included during growth on the plates. Glc was omitted from the
liquid medium to allow photoautotrophic growth (the growth mode of the
cells did not affect the results obtained). The heterotrophic strains
CD and PCD were grown on plates like those used for AR and PD, but the liquid growth medium was supplemented with 5 mM Glc.
In Vivo High-Light Treatments
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cells were harvested (4500g, 10 min, room temperature) at the logarithmic growth phase and resuspended in BG-11 medium to a final concentration of 10 µg chlorophyll mL
1. The cells were
illuminated at a PPFD of 500, 1000, or 1500 µmol photons
m
2 s
1 as indicated,
using a slide projector as a light source. Temperature was controlled
so as not to exceed 32°C, and aliquots for various measurements were
withdrawn every 15 min. After 60 min of incubation at high light, cells
were transferred back to growth light (40 µmol photons
m
2 s
1) and the recovery
of the cells from photoinhibition was monitored by measuring the
oxygen-evolving capacity after 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 h. In some
experiments, as indicated, the translation inhibitor lincomycin (400 µg mL
1) was added immediately after the
high-light treatment, prior to the transfer of the cells to recovery
conditions.
In Vivo Pulse-Chase Experiments and Determination of D1 Protein Half-Life
In vivo pulse-chase experiments were performed as described previously (Tyystjärvi et al., 1994
1, Amersham)
was added to the cell suspension (10 µg chlorophyll mL
1) to a final concentration of 1.2 µM. The cells were pulse-labeled for 75 min at 1500 µmol photons m
2 s
1,
unlabeled Met (1 mM) was added, and thereafter the cells
were washed and resuspended in fresh BG-11 medium supplemented with 1 mM cold Met. Radioactivity was chased for 0, 15, 30, 45, and 60 min at high light (1500 µmol photons
m
2 s
1).
) by using 12%
SDS-polyacrylamide gels including 4 M urea (Laemmli, 1970
).
Solubilized membranes containing 2 µg of chlorophyll were loaded into
each well. After electrophoresis, gels were treated with Amplify
(Amersham), dried, and exposed to radiographic film. Fluorograms were
scanned with a laser densitometer, and the half-life of the D1
polypeptide was determined by fitting the data to the first-order
equation.
In Vivo Measurement of Oxygen Evolution
Oxygen evolution was measured under saturating red light with a Clark-type oxygen electrode (Hansatech, Kings Lynn, UK) at 32°C with a slide projector as the light source. Before measurements, 1 mL of cell suspension corresponding to 10 µg chlorophyll mL
1 was harvested and resuspended in fresh
BG-11 medium. Either 0.5 mM DCBQ or 1.0 mM DMBQ
was used as the artificial electron acceptor, and 0.25 mM
ferricyanide was added to keep the quinones in oxidized form. The
light-saturated rate of oxygen evolution was also measured by
supplementing the growth medium with 0.6 mM bicarbonate.
Isolation of RNA and Northern Blotting
Cell samples were collected after 0, 15, 30, 45, and 60 min of high-light treatment (1500 µmol photons m
2
s
1), and the total RNA was isolated using the
hot phenol method in the presence of 60 mM EDTA and 0.5%
SDS (Sherrer and Darnell, 1962Chlorophyll Determination
The chlorophyll a content of the cell suspensions and isolated membranes was determined according to the methods of Bennett and Bogorad (1973)| |
RESULTS |
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|
|
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Oxygen Evolution Rates and Inhibition of Electron Transport by DCMU in the Mutant Strains
The D-E loop deletion mutants of the D1 polypeptide, PD, CD, and PCD, showed striking differences in the oxygen-evolving capacity with various electron acceptors (Table I). The autotrophic PD and control AR strains, as well as the heterotrophic strains CD and PCD, were all capable of electron transfer from water to DCBQ, which has been suggested to accept electrons directly from QA (Graan and Ort, 1986
|
Susceptibility of PSII to Photoinhibition in the D-E Loop- Deletion Strains of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803
Upon illumination at a PPFD of 1500 µmol photons m
2 s
1, the autotrophic
PEST-deletion strain PD was much more resistant to photoinhibition of
PSII than the control strain AR or the heterotrophic strains CD and PCD
when assayed with DCBQ after the high-light treatment (Fig.
1A). Light treatment at 1000 µmol
photons m
2 s
1 resulted
in an even more drastic difference between AR and PD; more than 80% of
activity was lost in AR, indicating that the PPFD of 1000 µmol
m
2 s
1 was still strong
enough to induce severe inactivation of PSII oxygen evolution,
whereas only a 30% loss was observed in PD after 60 min of
illumination (Fig. 1B). To exclude the possibility that the PD cells
with low PSII activity were already partially photoinactivated during
the growth period at 40 µmol photons m
2
s
1, both AR and PD cells were grown at much
lower light intensity, below 10 µmol photons
m
2 s
1, and no variance
to the results above was observed (data not shown).
|
Recovery from Photoinhibition
2 s
1 (as did the
control strain AR [Fig. 1A]), were somewhat more resistant to
photoinhibition than AR under a PPFD of 1000 µmol m
2 s
1, but were still
clearly more susceptible than PD (Fig. 1B). Notably, however, when PSII
activity was measured with DMBQ (Fig. 1C) or bicarbonate (Fig.
2B) as the electron acceptor, the mutants
were as susceptible to photoinhibition as AR. Unlike the mutant
strains, no significant differences were detected in the susceptibility of the AR cells to photoinhibition whether DCBQ or DMBQ was used as the
artificial quinone electron acceptor to monitor the progress of
photoinhibition (Fig. 1, B and C).

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Figure 2.
Recovery of PSII from photoinhibition.
Protein-synthesis-independent (A and B) and protein-synthesis-dependent
(C) restoration of PSII oxygen evolution in
Synechocystis PCC 6803 strains after photoinhibitory
illumination. Results are means of three independent experiments from
different cell cultures and bars denote SE. A, AR (
) and
PD (
) cells were illuminated at 1000 µmol photons m
2
s
1 for 60 min (PI) in the absence of lincomycin. The
subsequent recovery of oxygen evolution was followed in the presence of
lincomycin at 40 µmol photons m
2 s
1 and
was monitored with DCBQ as the electron acceptor. B, The AR (
) and
PD (
) cells were illuminated at 1000 µmol photons m
2
s
1 for 60 min (PI) in the absence of lincomycin. The
subsequent recovery of oxygen evolution at 40 µmol photons
m
2 s
1 in the presence of lincomycin was
monitored using bicarbonate as the electron acceptor. C, AR (
), PD
(
), CD (
), and PCD (
) strains were illuminated at 1500 µmol
photons m
2 s
1 for 60 min (PI), and the
restoration of DCBQ-dependent oxygen evolution was followed at 40 µmol photons m
2 s
1. All treatments were
performed in the absence of lincomycin.
2 s
1, we
further lowered the light intensity to measure the intrinsic susceptibility of PSII photoinactivation in the presence of the protein-synthesis inhibitor lincomycin, which prevents the concurrent repair of PSII. Distinct differences prevailed in the susceptibility of
PSII to photoinhibition between AR and PD, even when protein synthesis
was blocked; PD was clearly more tolerant to photoinhibition than the
control strain AR when measured with DCBQ (Fig. 1D). Under similar
conditions, however, no difference could be detected in the rate of
photoinhibition between the AR and PD strains if oxygen evolution was
assayed with bicarbonate as the final electron acceptor; a severe
photoinhibition of PSII was now also seen in the PD strain (Fig. 1D).
2
s
1 and then transferred the cells to low
recovery light with the simultaneous addition of the protein-synthesis
inhibitor lincomycin to prevent protein-synthesis-dependent repair of
PSII centers. The differential susceptibility of PSII to high light in
the AR and PD cells was evident when oxygen evolution was monitored
with DCBQ (Fig. 2A), whereas equal susceptibility was recorded when bicarbonate-dependent oxygen evolution was monitored (Fig. 2B).
2 s
1. This
illumination induced severe (about 80%) photoinhibition in all strains
except PD; the PSII activity of the PD cells remained somewhat higher
despite several trials to enhance photoinhibition either by prolonged
incubation of the cells at 1500 µmol photons m
2 s
1 or by increasing
the light intensity up to 2500 µmol photons m
2 s
1 (data not shown).
Despite severe photoinhibition, the transfer of the control AR and the
mutant strains PD and CD back to growth-light conditions induced full
restoration of their PSII function within 4 h (Fig. 2C). This
restoration of PSII function was fully dependent on protein synthesis
in all strains (data not shown). It should be noted that during the 1st
h of recovery, more than 50% restoration of the PSII activity occurred
in AR and PD cells, whereas the cleavage-region mutants recovered more
slowly, with less than 20% restoration occurring within the 1st h. The
overall capacity of the PCD strain to recover from photoinhibition
during 4 h of incubation was clearly suppressed compared with
the other strains (Fig. 2C).
Degradation Rates of the D1 Protein at High Light
The half-lives of the D1 protein in AR and the mutant strains at a PPFD of 1500 µmol m
2
s
1 measured with the pulse-chase technique are
given in Table II. Half-lives at growth
conditions (Mulo et al., 1997
|
|
Variation of the psbA-2 Transcript Level during Photoinhibitory Illumination
The fluctuation in the amount of the psbA-2 mRNA, the product of the only active psbA gene in all of the strains, was followed in the course of photoinhibitory illumination. In the AR strain, the amount of the psbA-2 mRNA at growth-light conditions was low, but the high-light treatment induced a strong accumulation of the psbA-2 mRNA (Figs. 4 and 5). PCD also had a low level of the psbA-2 mRNA at growth-light conditions, but, unlike the AR strain, no drastic accumulation of the psbA-2 mRNA occurred during high-light illumination. In the PD and CD strains the steady-state level of the psbA-2 mRNA under growth-light conditions was about 10-fold higher than that in the AR and PCD strains (Mulo et al., 1997
|
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
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|
|
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We have constructed a unique autotrophic PSII mutant with a
deletion in the D-E loop of the D1 polypeptide (Mulo et al., 1997
). This deletion has significantly modified the conformation of the QB pocket, as evidenced by a strongly modified
oxygen-evolution capacity with different artificial electron acceptors
and the incapability of DCMU to inhibit DCBQ-dependent oxygen evolution (Table I). Apparently because of these drastic modifications in the
QB site, the PD mutant showed specific tolerance
against photoinactivation of PSII when assayed with DCBQ, which has
been suggested to accept electrons directly from
QA (Graan and Ort, 1986
; Satoh et al., 1993
,
1995
) (Figs. 1, A, B, and D, and 2A). Since the yield of variable
fluorescence was similar in the presence and absence of DCBQ, it can be
concluded that in the PD mutant, reduced QA also
serves as the electron donor to DCBQ (E. Tyystjärvi, personal
communication), thereby excluding the possibility that the mutation had
created new avenues for the reduction of DCBQ. No specific tolerance of
the PD cells to high light was evident when photoinhibition of oxygen
evolution was assayed with DMBQ (Fig. 1C) (there were, however,
extremely low activities; Table I) or with bicarbonate as the final
electron acceptor (Fig. 2B). Nevertheless, even this inhibition
differed from that of the control AR cells in being largely reversible,
without the need for de novo protein synthesis, when the cells were
transferred to low-light conditions (Fig. 2B).
) and later with the
PEST (
E226-Q233;
Nixon et al., 1995
) and
psbH (Komenda and Barber, 1995
)
mutants of PSII. The reversibility of this reaction in vivo was deduced
from fluorescence and thermoluminescence experiments (Kirilovsky et
al., 1990
; Ohad et al., 1990
), but a clear biochemical demonstration
for such a reversible conformational change in the
QB pocket under physiological conditions has been
missing until now. It is conceivable that the initial modification in
the QB-binding site renders the cells susceptible
to subsequent irreversible events: an inhibition of QA reduction and a consequent irreversible damage
to the D1 protein. Generally, the reversible phase is difficult to trap
(Vavilin et al., 1995
) because the subsequent irreversible phases
rapidly follow the initial conformational change in the
QB pocket. This model of early photoinhibitory
events in the QB pocket agrees with the reduced
rate of PSII photoinactivation at low temperatures reported in several
systems both in vivo and in vitro (Aro et al., 1990
; Kirilovsky et al.,
1990
), presumably because the initial conformational changes in the
QB pocket slow down with declining temperatures.
PEST mutant (Nixon et
al., 1995
), which has a somewhat smaller deletion in the same region of
the D-E loop compared with that of PD, showed no such tolerance against
high-light-induced photoinhibition. Detailed comparison of these two
autotrophic mutants
PEST and PD, both showing perturbations in the
function of the acceptor side of PSII, also revealed an important
difference. Both thermoluminescence and fluorescence-decay measurements
point to a very small driving force for the electron transfer from
QA
to QB
in the PD mutant (Mulo et al., 1997
), whereas
PEST is much less
severely affected in this respect (Nixon et al., 1995
). It is
conceivable that the large deletion in PD, including amino acids of the
possible contact site between the D1 and D2 proteins (Trebst and
Soll-Bracht, 1996
), also drastically modifies the QA-binding site in the D2 protein, rendering
QA
less accessible to
reoxidation.
;
Constant et al., 1996
), the psbH deletion mutant (Mayes et
al., 1993
; Komenda and Barber, 1995
), the
PEST mutant (Nixon et al.,
1995
), and the strains with point mutations or small deletions in the
PEST and cleavage-site regions (Tyystjärvi et al., 1994
), have
been reported to be intrinsically either equally or more sensitive to
light-induced damage of PSII than the wild type. No simple correlation,
however, seems to exist between the efficiency of electron-transfer
reactions on the acceptor side of PSII and the susceptibility of PSII
to photoinhibition. Nevertheless, a picture is now emerging suggesting
that mutations that mainly alter the QB-binding
properties may render the cells more susceptible to photoinhibition,
whereas mutations that lead to an isolation of QA
from
QB may protect PSII centers against irreversible
photodamage. PD belongs to the latter group, whereas the heterotrophic
CD and PCD strains also suffer from extremely poor exchange of
plastoquinone in the QB pocket (Table I; Mulo et
al., 1997
), which exacerbates the irreversible photoinhibitory damage
to PSII.
;
Komenda and Barber, 1995
).
; Kanervo et al., 1993
) and
control AR and the mutants PD and CD possessed high amounts of
psbA-2 transcripts at high light, whereas PCD was the only mutant not able to efficiently accumulate psbA-2 mRNA at
high light (Figs. 4 and 5). A similar situation could be mimicked in the AR cells by blocking the protein synthesis with lincomycin during
the high-light treatment. This might infer a link between regulation of
the psbA-2 gene transcription and the D1 protein synthesis
and suggests that there are interacting factors in the regulation of
efficient D1 turnover rather than a single determinant such as the
light intensity.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Received November 11, 1997;
accepted February 19, 1998.
| |
ABBREVIATIONS |
|---|
Abbreviations:
AR, antibiotic-resistant strain.
CD,
G240-V249 mutant.
DCBQ, 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone.
DMBQ, 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone.
PCD,
R225-V249
mutant.
PD,
R225-F239 mutant.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Drs. T. Tyystjärvi and E. Tyystjärvi for discussions and critical reading of the manuscript.
| |
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