Laboratory of Photobiology, Department of Plant Biology,
Université de Liege, Liege, Belgium (F.F.); and
Institute for Plant Sciences, Plant Genetics, Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland (U.S., G.F., B.P., B.v.C.,
K.A., G.A.A.)
The etioplast of dark-grown angiosperms is characterized by
the prolamellar body (PLB) inner membrane, the absence of chlorophyll, and the accumulation of divinyl and monovinyl derivatives of
protochlorophyll(ide) a [Pchl(ide) a].
Either of two structurally related, but differentially expressed
light-dependent NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductases (PORs), PORA and PORB,
can assemble the PLB and form dark-stable ternary complexes containing
enzymatically photoactive Pchlide-F655. Here we have examined in detail
whether these polypeptides play redundant roles in etioplast
differentiation by manipulating the total POR content and the
PORA-to-PORB ratio of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings using antisense
and overexpression approaches. POR content correlates closely with PLB
formation, the amounts, spectroscopic properties, and photoreduction
kinetics of photoactive Pchlide, the ratio of photoactive Pchlide-F655
to non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632, and the ratio of divinyl- to
monovinyl-Pchl(ide). This last result defines POR as the first
endogenous protein factor demonstrated to influence the chemical
heterogeneity of Pchl(ide) in angiosperms. It is intriguing that
excitation energy transfer between different spectroscopic forms of
Pchl(ide) in etiolated cotyledons remains largely independent of POR
content. We therefore propose that the PLB contains a minimal
structural unit with defined pigment stoichiometries, within which a
small amount of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) transfers excitation energy
to a large excess of photoactive Pchlide-F655. In addition, our data
suggests that POR may bind not only stoichiometric amounts of
photoactive Pchlide, but also substoichiometric amounts of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide). We conclude that the typical characteristics
of etioplasts are closely related to total POR content, but not
obviously to the specific presence of PORA or PORB.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Etioplasts are the typical
achlorophyllous plastids found in the cotyledons of dark-grown
angiosperm seedlings and are transformed into chloroplasts during
light-dependent greening. Two obvious features distinguish etioplasts
from other plastid types (for review, see Griffiths, 1991
; Ryberg and
Sundqvist, 1991
): the prolamellar body (PLB), a highly regular,
lattice-like membrane structure composed of interconnected tubules,
and the accumulation of the chlorophyll (Chl) precursor,
protochlorophyll(ide) a [Pchl(ide) a]
(Scheumann et al., 1999
). PLB formation and the accumulation of
Pchl(ide) correlate with the presence of the strictly light-dependent NADPH:protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) oxidoreductase (POR; EC 1.3.1.33), a nuclear-encoded enzyme that is synthesized as a cytosolic precursor and imported into plastids (Griffiths, 1978
, 1991
; Apel et al., 1980
).
POR is the most abundant protein of the PLB and is also present in
small amounts in the unstacked stromal prothylakoid (PT) membranes
(Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
, 1991
). This enzyme catalyzes the only
light-dependent reaction in the Chl biosynthetic pathway and is hence
intimately involved in the greening of angiosperms (for review, see
Beale, 1999
). Dark-stable Pchlide:NADPH:POR ternary complexes are
poised such that photon absorption by the pigment leads to its
immediate reduction. The chlorophyllide a (Chlide a) product is subsequently converted to the esterified
pigments Chl a and Chl b in conjunction with the
dispersal of the PLB and the formation of functional photosynthetic
membranes (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1991
). POR is thus a plastid-specific
photon sensor that triggers light-dependent Chl biosynthesis and
membrane reorganization during the transformation of etioplasts to chloroplasts.
Several factors that reflect the natural complexity of angiosperms
complicate analyses of etioplast differentiation and chloroplast formation, however. First, the Pchl(ide) a present in vivo
is actually a chemically heterogeneous mixture of pigments dominated by
unesterified divinyl (DV)- and monovinyl (MV)-Pchlide, but that also
includes a small amount of esterified protochlorophyll (Pchl; Belanger
and Rebeiz, 1980
; Carey and Rebeiz, 1985
; Shioi and Takamiya, 1992
;
Whyte and Griffiths, 1993
; Ioannides et al., 1994
). In contrast to
Pchlide, Pchl seems neither to be a POR substrate nor to bind to the
enzyme (Schoch et al., 1995
; Ouazzani Chahdi et al., 1998
; Klement et
al., 1999
).
Second, etiolated cotyledons contain several spectroscopically distinct
Pchl(ide) species that can be observed in situ (for review, see Virgin,
1981
; Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1991
). Photoactive Pchlide, i.e. the
pigment fraction bound in POR ternary complexes that is immediately
reduced to Chlide upon illumination, exhibits room temperature
absorption maxima at about 640 and 650 nm (Pchlide-A640 and
Pchlide-A650, respectively). These pigment forms give rise to low
temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission maxima at 645 and 655 nm
(Pchlide-F645 and Pchlide-F655, respectively). Only photoactive
Pchlide-F655 is readily observed, however, due to efficient energy
migration from Pchlide-A640 to Pchlide-A650 (Kahn et al., 1970
;
Böddi et al., 1992
). Photoactive Pchlide-F655 is the dominant
pigment form in PLBs, which have a 10-fold higher Pchl(ide) content
than the PTs (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
; Böddi et al., 1989
;
Ouazzani Chahdi et al., 1998
). Pchlide-F655 seems to arise from highly
aggregated POR ternary complexes, whereas Pchlide-F645 may represent a
smaller aggregate at the periphery of the PLB or in the PTs
(Böddi et al., 1989
; Ryberg et al., 1992
; Ouazzani Chahdi et al.,
1998
). Non-photoactive Pchl(ide), i.e. the pigment fraction that is not
immediately reduced to Chlide by a saturating light flash, consists of
a poorly defined mixture of Pchlide and Pchl pigments that is
highly enriched in the PTs (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
; Böddi
et al., 1989
). Non-photoactive Pchl(ide) displays room temperature
absorption and low temperature fluorescence emission maxima at 628 nm
[Pchl(ide)-A628] and 632 nm [Pchl(ide)-F632], respectively (Ryberg
and Sundqvist, 1991
), but is actually spectroscopically heterogeneous
(Cohen and Rebeiz, 1981
; Schoefs and Franck, 1998
).
Third, two differentially regulated genes, PORA and
PORB, that encode structurally related light-dependent POR
enzymes have been identified in Arabidopsis and barley (Armstrong et
al., 1995
; Holtorf et al., 1995a
). PORA is strongly
expressed in etiolated seedlings and the abundance of its mRNA is
dramatically down-regulated by light. PORB is also expressed
in etiolated tissues, but its mRNA is less strongly down-regulated by
light than PORA in Arabidopsis or is even constitutively
expressed during greening in barley. The amount of PORA mRNA
is much higher than that of PORB mRNA in etiolated barley,
although the two mRNAs accumulate to similar levels in etiolated Arabidopsis.
Because the relationships between the various chemically and
spectroscopically distinct Pchl(ide) species, their associations with
the PORA and PORB enzymes, and the intraplastidic localization of the
different pigments and pigment-protein complexes remain largely
undefined, it is not yet possible to present an integrated model
describing the etioplast. In this context, the question of whether the
two angiosperm POR enzymes perform unique or redundant functions has
been the subject of vigorous in vivo investigation in Arabidopsis
(Lebedev et al., 1995
; Runge et al., 1996
; Sperling et al., 1997
, 1998
,
1999
) and in vitro experimentation using barley PORA and PORB
(Reinbothe et al., 1996
, 1999
). On the one hand, PORA has been
suggested to be specifically involved in photoactive Pchlide-F655
formation, in the assembly of the PLB, and in protection against
non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632-induced photooxidative damage (Lebedev
et al., 1995
; Reinbothe et al., 1996
). On the other hand, constitutive
overexpression of the Arabidopsis POR enzymes in the homologous host
demonstrates that not only PORA, but also PORB can independently
perform all of these functions (Runge et al., 1996
; Sperling et al.,
1997
, 1998
, 1999
). It has recently been speculated that etiolated
barley seedlings contain a supercomplex composed of non-photoactive
protochlorophyll(ide) b [Pchl(ide)
b]:NADPH:PORA and photoactive Pchlide
a:NADPH:PORB ternary complexes in a 5:1 ratio (Reinbothe et
al., 1999
). This supercomplex is hypothesized to assemble the PLB,
provide light harvesting and photoprotective functions during greening,
and allow the selective reduction of Pchlide a bound to
PORB. However, this model conflicts with other published data (i.e.
Sperling et al., 1998
; Klement et al., 1999
; Scheumann et al., 1999
)
and is problematic for a number of reasons detailed elsewhere (for review, see Armstrong et al., 2000
).
Here we have studied the roles of PORA and PORB in etioplast
differentiation by comparing the plastid inner membrane structures, the
distribution and in situ spectroscopic properties of Pchl(ide) pigments
and pigment-protein complexes, and the chemical heterogeneity of
Pchl(ide) in POR-antisense and POR-overexpressing Arabidopsis seedlings. The goal of these experiments has been to rigorously investigate whether PORA and PORB perform unique or redundant functions
in etioplasts and how their levels influence the development of this
plastid type.
 |
RESULTS |
Inhibition of Expression of PORA and PORB
in Etiolated Arabidopsis Seedlings
Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation
of Arabidopsis root explants led to the isolation of putative
transgenic lines expected to constitutively express Arabidopsis
PORA or PORB antisense mRNA. An initial survey of
the POR sense mRNA levels by gel-blot analysis was conducted
using etiolated seedlings of all antisense lines available in the
homozygous state. On the basis of these results, two lines each
carrying PORA-antisense (PAA) or PORB-antisense
(PBA) transgenes were selected to examine the quantitative inhibition
of POR gene expression by the antisense constructs and the
specificity of this inhibition for PORA and PORB.
POR mRNA and POR protein levels were determined in etiolated
seedlings, as shown in Figure 1. The
decrease in the endogenous POR mRNA levels relative to the
wild type varied between 2- and 10-fold, with lines PBA-24 and PBA-25
displaying the strongest antisense effects (Fig. 1A). By measuring
PORA and PORB mRNA levels individually in the
same experiment it was possible to demonstrate that either
POR-antisense transgene equally inhibited the expression of
both endogenous POR genes. In this context we note that the two POR cDNA sequences used in the antisense constructs were
83% identical (Armstrong et al., 1995
).

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Figure 1.
POR mRNA and POR protein amounts in
etiolated Arabidopsis POR-antisense seedlings. A, PORA and
PORB mRNA levels in transgenic PAA and PBA lines. Gel blots
were prepared with 5 µg of total RNA from 4-d-old seedlings and were
probed for the mRNAs indicated at the left. ACT mRNA
provides a control for the sample loading. Numbers at the bottom
represent the ACT-corrected amounts of the relevant mRNAs
from transgenic seedlings, relative to the wild-type (Wt) control. B,
Total POR protein levels. A gel blot was prepared using 5 µg of total
protein from extracts of 4-d-old seedlings that, independent of
genotype, contained similar amounts of total protein on a per seedling
basis. Numbers at the bottom represent the amounts of immunoreactive
POR protein detected relative to the wild-type control.
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|
The total POR contents of seedlings harvested in parallel to
those used for the RNA analysis were determined immunologically following electrophoretic separation of total protein extracts by
SDS-PAGE and subsequent gel blotting. PORA and PORB comigrate and
are detected as a single immunoreactive signal with an apparent molecular mass of about 36 kD (Fig. 1B). In antisense lines PAA-28, PBA-24, and PBA-25 the total POR content was reduced 2- to 3-fold relative to the wild type, a significant decrease given that POR is by
far the most abundant protein in the PLB (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1991
).
Because neither antisense construct specifically inhibited the
accumulation of a particular POR mRNA, it is likely that all four PAA and PBA lines contain decreased levels of both POR enzymes.
Determination of Etioplast Membrane Ultrastructure and
the Distribution of Pchl(ide) Pigment Forms
Ultrathin sections of cotyledon cells from etiolated seedlings of
various genotypes were viewed by transmission electron microscopy. For
this analysis we selected the POR-antisense lines PAA-28 and PBA-24 and
the PORB-overexpressing line PBO-10, which accumulates about twice as
much total POR as the wild type under these conditions (Sperling et
al., 1998
). As seen in Figure 2, a wide
range of plastid inner membrane architectures were observed, depending upon the seedling genotype. Sections of wild-type etioplasts revealed a
PLB from which unstacked PTs protruded into the stroma in 76% of the
45 plastids examined (Fig. 2A). PBO-10 etioplasts consistently displayed very extensive PLBs (Fig. 2B). Unusually large, albeit less
extensively developed PLBs have also been observed in the PORA- or
PORB-overexpressing lines PAO-3 and PBO-1, respectively (Sperling et
al., 1998
). PBO-10 etioplasts were also irregular in shape, in contrast
to the spherical or ellipsoidal plastids found in cotyledons of the
other seedling genotypes (Fig. 2, A and C-F), and tended to be larger
than those of the wild type.

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Figure 2.
Etioplast ultrastructure in POR-antisense and
POR-overexpressing seedlings. A, Wild type. B, Line PBO-10 (strong PORB
overexpression). C, Line PAA-28 (weak POR antisense) with PLB. D, Line
PAA-28 without PLB. E, Line PBA-24 (strong POR antisense) with PLB. F,
Line PBA-24 without PLB. Membrane ultrastructure of cotyledon plastids
from 4-d-old seedlings was examined by transmission electron
microscopy. Magnifications were 20,000× for A and B; 25,000× for C
and D;, 15,000× for E; and 12,000× for F. Bars in A through F = 1 µm.
|
|
In line PAA-28, PLBs and PTs that resembled those seen in the wild type
were visible in 41% of the 49 etioplasts examined (Fig. 2C), whereas
only PTs were observed in the remaining plastids (Fig. 2D). PAA-28
etioplasts were usually slightly smaller than those of the wild type.
In line PBA-24, a PLB was visible in 50% of the 112 etioplasts viewed
(Fig. 2, E and F). In striking contrast to seedlings of other
genotypes, concentric rings of PTs were common in PBA-24 plastids.
Etioplasts of this line were, in general, somewhat larger than those of
the wild type.
Low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy was performed on intact
cotyledons of lines PAA-28, PBA-24, and PBO-10 to obtain qualitative
data on the pigments and pigment-protein complexes present in situ.
As illustrated in Figure 3, etiolated
wild-type cotyledons contained pigment forms corresponding to
Pchl(ide)-F632, emitting in this case at 633 nm, and Pchlide-F655. A
single 1-ms light flash supplied at
20°C reduced virtually all of
the accumulated Pchlide-F655 to a pigment form emitting at 688 nm (Fig.
3A) that corresponds to Chlide-F690, the first long-lived
photoreduction product (Sironval and Brouers, 1970
). The pre- and
post-flash emission spectra of the line PAA-28 were similar to those of
the wild type (Fig. 3B). Dramatic effects on the content
of Pchl(ide) pigment forms prior to the flash treatment were,
however, observed in lines PBA-24 and PBO-10 (Fig. 3, C and D). Line
PBA-24 contained a much higher ratio of non-photoactive
Pchl(ide)-F632-to-photoactive Pchlide-F655 than was found in the wild
type. In line PBO-10 exactly the opposite effect was observed, in
qualitative agreement with less extreme changes in the ratio of pigment
forms previously reported for lines PAO-3 and PBO-1 (Sperling et
al., 1998
).

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Figure 3.
Fluorescence emission spectra of Pchl(ide) pigment
forms present in situ in etiolated POR-antisense and POR-overexpressing
seedlings. A, Wild type. B, Line PAA-28 (weak POR antisense). C, Line
PBA-24 (strong POR antisense). D, Line PBO-10 (strong PORB
overexpression). In situ low temperature fluorescence spectra of
unilluminated (solid curves) and flash-illuminated (dashed curves)
cotyledons of 4-d-old seedlings. Emission bands observed with an
excitation wavelength of 440 nm include non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632,
photoactive Pchlide-F655 arising from the aggregated Pchlide:NADPH:POR
ternary complex, and, after flash treatment applied at 20°C,
Chlide-F690. The broad pre-flash fluorescence emissions centered at
about 693 nm in PBA-24 cotyledons (C) and roughly 720 nm in PBO-10
cotyledons (D) represent vibrational sublevels of Pchl(ide)-F632 and
Pchlide-F655, respectively (Böddi et al., 1992 ).
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To obtain information about the absolute amounts of different Pchl(ide)
pigment forms present in cotyledons of etiolated seedlings, room
temperature fluorimetric measurements of acetone-extracted pigments
were performed. Figure 4 illustrates that
the amounts of total Pchl(ide) and photoactive Pchlide are lower in the
POR-antisense lines and higher in the POR-overexpressing lines than in
the wild type. The total Pchl(ide) content as a percentage of the
wild-type value ranged from about 60% in line PAA-28 to 210% in line
PBO-10 (Fig. 4A). The comparable photoactive Pchlide contents of
seedlings of these lines were 60% and 260%, respectively (Fig. 4B).
With respect to the ratios of different pigment forms (Fig. 4C), the wild type contained about 2-fold more photoactive than non-photoactive pigment (0.77 versus 0.40 ng/cotyledon pair). Lines PAA-28, PAO-3, PBO-1, and PBO-10 displayed pigment ratios that ranged from about 2.1 to 4.8. Therefore, in seedlings of these genotypes, total Pchl(ide)
consists mostly of photoactive Pchlide. It is exceptional that the
ratio of photoactive to non-photoactive pigment was only 0.9 in the
strong POR-antisense line PBA-24.

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Figure 4.
Quantitative determination of Pchl(ide) pigment
forms present in etiolated seedlings. A, Total Pchl(ide). B,
Photoactive Pchlide. C, Ratio of photoactive Pchlide-to-non-photoactive
Pchl(ide). Room temperature fluorescence emission measurements of the
acetone-extracted total pigments from unilluminated and
flash-illuminated cotyledons of 4-d-old wild-type, POR-antisense, and
POR-overexpressing seedlings collected at an excitation wavelength of
435 nm. Total Pchl(ide) was calculated from the pre-flash fluorescence
emission band at 634 nm. Photoactive Pchlide-F655 was determined based
on the post-flash emission at 672 nm that results from its quantitative
POR-mediated reduction to Chlide. Non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 was
set equal to the difference between these two quantities. Pigment
amounts are given on a per cotyledon pair basis. Seedling genotypes are
given from left to right in the order of increasing total POR content
(see Fig. 5).
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The Relationship between the Amounts of Photoactive Pchlide and
Total POR in Etiolated Cotyledons
To determine whether photoactive Pchlide and total POR protein
always occur in a defined stoichiometry in vivo, a plot of the relative
amounts of total POR protein (Fig. 1B; Sperling et al., 1998
) versus
photoactive Pchlide (Fig. 4B) in POR-antisense, wild-type, and
POR-overexpressing seedlings was prepared. As seen in Figure
5, this analysis clearly indicates a
direct proportionality between the amounts of photoactive Pchlide in
cotyledons and total POR protein in seedlings, most of which is found
in cotyledons, over the 6-fold range of POR expression levels available
in vivo. The high correlation coefficient between the data points,
including those derived from seedlings that specifically overexpress
either PORA or PORB, also seems to exclude the possibility that
photoactive Pchlide content depends upon the PORA-to-PORB
ratio.

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Figure 5.
Quantitative correlation analysis of the amounts
of total POR protein and photoactive Pchlide in etiolated seedlings.
The ratio of total POR protein in seedlings-to-photoactive Pchlide in
cotyledons calculated for 4-d-old seedlings of each transgenic genotype
relative to the wild type. A best-fit trendline through the data points
was calculated and its correlation coefficient determined.
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Perturbation of the Spectroscopic Properties of Photoactive Pchlide
as a Function of POR Content
The spectroscopic properties of photoactive Pchlide and the
interactions between Pchl(ide) pigment forms were further examined by
recording in situ low temperature excitation spectra of the fluorescence emitted by Pchlide-F655 upon excitation with different wavelengths of light from the Soret (blue) region. Some of
these data are presented in Figure
6A for the transgenic lines PBA-24 and
PBO-10, whose ratios of photoactive-to-non-photoactive pigment deviated
most strongly from that of the wild type (Fig. 4C). In cotyledons of
wild-type seedlings, Pchlide-F655 showed a main excitation band at 445 nm and two shoulders at 459 and 472 nm whose wavelength values were
obtained from fourth-derivative analysis of the spectra (data not
shown). These shoulders were very weak in line PBA-24, whereas in line
PBO-10 their relative amplitudes were enhanced to such an extent that
the excitation maximum was shifted to 459 nm. The excitation spectra of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 displayed a maximum at 442 nm in
wild-type cotyledons and showed relatively minor genotype-specific
variations (Fig. 6B).

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Figure 6.
Fluorescence excitation spectra from the
Soret region of Pchl(ide) pigment forms present in situ in etiolated
seedlings. A, Photoactive Pchlide-F655. B, Non-photoactive
Pchl(ide)-F632. In situ low temperature fluorescence spectra normalized
at their respective maxima from cotyledons of 4-d-old wild-type,
POR-antisense, and POR-overexpressing seedlings. Seedling genotypes are
given and the wavelengths positions of the maxima and a shoulder are
indicated.
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As illustrated in Figure 7, the ratio of
the 655 nm fluorescence intensities upon excitation with 465 versus 440 nm light (IF655,
465/IF655,E440) was taken as an index
of the relative contributions of the 459 and 472 nm components versus
the 445 nm component to the excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655. This
ratio was about 0.65 in the wild type and in lines PAA-28, PAO-3, and PBO-1. In seedlings of these four genotypes the Soret region excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 showed relatively small differences (Fig. 6A
and data not shown). Line PBO-1 has a total POR content similar to that
of line PAO-3 and was included in the analysis to allow a more direct
comparison of the effects of PORA versus PORB overexpression. The
similarity between the
IF655,465/IF655,E440 ratios
and excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 in these two lines indeed
reinforces the conclusion based on the in situ low temperature emission
spectra (Fig. 3; Sperling et al., 1998
) that the PORA-to-PORB ratio
does not significantly influence the spectroscopic properties of
photoactive Pchlide.

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Figure 7.
Relative efficiency of the excitation of
photoactive Pchlide-F655 by 465 nm light in etiolated seedlings.
Calculation of the ratio of the in situ low temperature fluorescence
emissions at 655 nm in cotyledons of 4-d-old wild-type and transgenic
seedlings upon excitation at 465 or 440 nm. Seedling genotypes are
arranged left to right as POR-antisense, wild type, and PORA- or
PORB-overexpressing. Error bars indicate the standard deviations.
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On the other hand, lines PBA-24 and PBO-10, whose Pchlide-F655
excitation spectra deviated significantly from that of the wild type
(Fig. 6), displayed
IF655,465/IF655,E440 ratios
of 0.35 and 0.94, respectively (Fig. 7). To test whether these
deviations were caused by genotype-specific differences in the
screening efficiency of carotenoids in the Soret region, seedlings were treated with norflurazon, an inhibitor of carotenoid biosynthesis (Kümmel and Grimme, 1974
). This treatment caused a 10-fold
decrease in the amount of colored carotenoids, but did not affect the
excitation spectra in a manner consistent with genotype-specific
differences in carotenoid screening (data not shown). In line PBA-24 we
also verified that the smaller contributions of the 459 and 472 nm bands and hence the larger relative contribution of the 445 nm band to
the emission at 655 nm did not simply reflect a larger direct
contribution of non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632. In this analysis the
experimental Pchlide-F655 excitation spectrum (Fig. 6A) was corrected
by subtraction of the small contribution of Pchl(ide)-F632 and hence
its excitation spectrum, to the emission band at 655 nm (data not shown).
POR Dependence of the Chemical Heterogeneity of Pchl(ide)
a in Etiolated Seedlings
To further investigate the genotype-specific differences in the in
situ excitation spectra of photoactive Pchlide-F655 (Fig. 6A) we
examined whether the Pchl(ide) pool of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings might be chemically heterogeneous. For this purpose, the spectroscopic properties of organically extracted pigments from
cotyledons of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings were analyzed in detail.
The room temperature fluorescence emission spectra of acetone-extracted
total Pchl(ide) and, subsequent to flash illumination, of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide) displayed maxima at 634 nm upon excitation at
435 nm for seedlings of all genotypes (data not shown). Furthermore, as
illustrated in Figure 8A for the wild
type, the pre- and post-flash Soret excitation spectra of this emission
band were virtually identical. If, as proposed for barley, Pchl(ide)
a and Pchl(ide) b had been present in etiolated seedlings and the ratio of their amounts had changed due to the selective reduction of photoactive Pchlide a by flash
illumination (Reinbothe et al., 1999
), one would have expected to find
differences in the excitation spectra of the two Pchl(ide) extracts in
the Soret region (Schoch et al., 1995
).

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Figure 8.
Quantitative determination of the distribution of
DV- and MV-Pchl(ide) within the non-photoactive and photoactive pigment
fractions of etiolated seedlings. Fluorimetric analysis of the total
Pchl(ide) organically extracted from cotyledons of 4-d-old etiolated
wild-type, POR-antisense, and POR-overexpressing seedlings. A, Room
temperature fluorescence excitation spectra of the Pchl(ide) emission
band at 634 nm in acetone-extracted total pigments from unilluminated
(solid curves) and flash-illuminated (dashed curves) cotyledons of
wild-type seedlings. The spectra were normalized at their respective
maxima (434 nm), but have been slightly vertically offset to facilitate
their presentation. B, Room temperature fluorescence excitation spectra
of the Pchl(ide) emission band at 634 nm in acetone-extracted total
pigments from etiolated cotyledons of wild-type, POR-antisense, and
POR-overexpressing seedlings. The spectra were normalized at their
respective maxima. Seedlings genotypes are given and wavelength
positions of the maxima are indicated. C, Low temperature fluorescence
excitation spectra of the Pchl(ide) emission band at 625 nm in
acetone-extracted total pigments transferred to diethyl ether. The
spectra were collected from extracts of etiolated cotyledons of
wild-type, POR-antisense, and POR-overexpressing seedlings and were
normalized at their respective maxima. Seedling genotypes are given and
the wavelength positions of the emission maxima and a shoulder are
indicated. D, Determination of the relative amounts of DV- and
MV-Pchl(ide) within the photoactive and non-photoactive pigment
fractions of the total Pchl(ide) extracted from etiolated cotyledons of
wild-type and transgenic seedlings. Pigment amounts are given relative
to the wild type for which total Pchl(ide) has been defined as 100%.
The respective DV-to-MV pigment ratios for the total Pchl(ide),
photoactive Pchlide, and non-photoactive Pchl(ide) fractions of
seedlings of each genotype are given below. Seedling genotypes are
arranged left to right as POR antisense, wild type, and PORA or PORB
overexpressing.
|
|
The low-temperature emission and Soret excitation spectra of
acetone-extracted total Pchl(ide) from etiolated wild-type and PBO-10 cotyledons were also collected (data not shown). In these samples the Pchl(ide) emission band was always found at 631 nm, independent of whether the pigments were excited at 440 or 455 nm. At
an excitation wavelength of 463 nm almost no fluorescence at 631 nm or
at any other wavelength could be detected. Thus no spectroscopic
evidence for the existence of Pchl(ide) b in etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings could be obtained.
Spectra of pigments from POR-overexpressing seedlings did, however,
display small, but reproducible red shifts relative to the wild type in
the room temperature excitation maxima of the 634 nm fluorescence
emission band arising from acetone-extracted total Pchl(ide)
a (Fig. 8B and data not shown). The largest effect was seen
in line PBO-10 in which the excitation maximum was shifted from 434 to
437.5 nm. These red shifts were observed in the pre- and post-flash
excitation spectra of the Pchl(ide) emission (data not shown). We
therefore investigated the possibility that etiolated Arabidopsis
seedlings might contain a mixture of DV-Pchl(ide) a and
MV-Pchl(ide) a by analogy to other angiosperms (Shioi and Takamiya, 1992
; Whyte and Griffiths, 1993
; Ioannides et al., 1994
), and
that differences in the ratio of these pigments might lead to the
genotype-specific spectral shifts. For this purpose the acetone-extracted pigments were transferred to diethyl ether and their
low temperature excitation spectra were collected to more readily
detect differences in the maxima of the Soret region (Tripathy and
Rebeiz, 1985
).
As seen in Figure 8C, the low temperature excitation spectrum of
extracted total Pchl(ide) from the wild type contained a main band at
about 438 nm that was slightly blue-shifted to 437 nm or red-shifted to
442 nm in the transgenic lines PBA-24 and PBO-10, respectively. These
spectral shifts paralleled those initially observed in cotyledons of
seedlings of the same genotypes in the in situ low temperature
excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 (Fig. 6A) and, to a lesser extent,
in the room temperature excitation spectra of acetone-extracted total
Pchl(ide) (Fig. 8B). The positions of the low temperature excitation
maxima and shoulders (Fig. 8C) were consistent with the presence of a
mixture of DV- and MV-Pchl(ide) (Tripathy and Rebeiz, 1985
; Suzuki and
Bauer, 1995
) in which the proportion of DV-Pchl(ide) increased as a
function of the total POR content in seedlings of different genotypes.
By comparing the pre- and post-flash excitation spectra of the
Pchl(ide) emission band at 625 nm in diethyl ether and using a
previously described set of equations (Tripathy and Rebeiz, 1985
), the
relative amounts of the DV- and MV-Pchl(ide) species within the total
and non-photoactive Pchl(ide) fractions were determined. These data
were combined with the quantitative room temperature analysis of the
acetone-extracted pigments (Fig. 4) to calculate the absolute amounts
of DV- and MV-Pchl(ide) and the proportions of DV-Pchl(ide) in the
photoactive, non-photoactive, and total pigment pools for cotyledons of
etiolated seedlings of each genotype (Fig. 8D). DV-Pchl(ide) was found
to constitute about 25% of the total Pchl(ide) present in wild-type seedlings. This amount ranged from 16% in PBA-24 seedlings to 77% in
PBO-10 seedlings. Lines PBO-1 and PAO-3 contained about the same
proportion of total DV-Pchl(ide), indicating that the DV-Pchl(ide)-to-MV-Pchl(ide) ratio was not a specific function of the
amount of PORA or PORB, but rather of total POR content (Fig. 5). It is
interesting that the POR-dependent perturbation in the ratio of
DV-Pchl(ide)-to-MV-Pchl(ide) occurred to roughly similar extents in the
photoactive and non-photoactive pigment fractions (Fig. 8D; see
"Discussion"). We conclude that genotype-specific differences in
the relative amounts of DV- and MV-Pchlide a most likely
contribute to the perturbations observed in the in situ excitation
spectra of Pchlide-F655 in etiolated cotyledons containing drastically
altered amounts of POR (Fig. 6A).
Energy Transfer between Different Pchl(ide) Pigment Forms in the
PLB
The possibility that the spectral shifts in the low temperature
excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 in PBO-10 and PBA-24 seedlings might
arise from differences in excitation energy migration among the
various Pchl(ide) forms was also investigated. Such differences could,
in turn, reflect fundamental changes in the organization of
pigments and pigmentprotein complexes within etioplast inner membranes. Energy migration from photoactive Pchlide-F645 and non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 to photoactive Pchlide-F655 has been previously demonstrated (Kahn et al., 1970
; Sironval and Brouers,
1970
; Ignatov et al., 1983
). However, a reliable determination of the
relative contributions of different Pchl(ide) forms to the excitation
spectrum of Pchlide-F655 in the Soret region is difficult because each
pigment form should have two overlapping Soret excitation bands
corresponding to the Bx and
By transitions. When non-photoactive
Pchl(ide) and photoactive Pchlide forms simultaneously contribute to
the excitation spectrum, the Soret bands of an individual pigment
species cannot be conclusively identified. Previous studies have
indicated, however, that the excitation shoulder at 460 nm is specific
to Pchlide-F655, whereas overlapping bands at shorter wavelengths
arise, at least in part, from the other Pchl(ide) forms that transfer
excitation energy to Pchlide-F655 (Fradkin et al., 1969
; Cohen and
Rebeiz, 1981
; Ignatov et al., 1983
; Böddi et al., 1993
).
To investigate energy migration processes we measured the low
temperature fluorescence emission arising from Pchlide-F655 upon
excitation with different wavelengths of red light. As seen in Figure
9, an excitation maximum at 650 nm and
two shoulders at about 628 and 640 nm were visible in the spectra from
cotyledons of seedlings of all genotypes (Fig. 9A and data not shown).
The components at 628, 640, and 650 nm correspond to the red excitation bands of Pchl(ide)-F632, Pchlide-F645, and Pchlide-F655, respectively, that are always found in the low temperature absorbance spectra of
etiolated leaves (Virgin, 1981
; Ignatov et al., 1983
). These maxima
should be insensitive to the chemical heterogeneity of Pchl(ide)
because MV- and DV-pigment species display very similar red absorption
bands in solution (Shioi and Takamiya, 1992
; Knaust et al., 1993
). The
Pchlide-F655 excitation spectra, illustrated by that of the wild type,
could be deconvoluted with less than 1% error using three gaussian
components at 628.0 ± 0.5, 640.4 ± 0.3, and 651.6 ± 0.4 nm (one-half-bandwidths of 20.8 ± 0.7, 15.5 ± 0.4, 11.8 ± 0.3 nm, respectively; Fig. 9B and data not shown). The
relative amplitudes of the 628, 640, and 652 components and hence the
energy migration fluxes from Pchl(ide)-F632 and Pchlide-F645 to
Pchlide-F655, were with one exception, very similar in cotyledons of
seedlings of all genotypes (Fig. 9C). This result is remarkable because
overexpression or antisense manipulation of POR levels can lead
to substantial differences in the absolute amount of photoactive
Pchlide and the ratios of different Pchl(ide) pigment forms (Figs. 3
and 4). Only in cotyledons of line PBA-24, which has the lowest ratio
of photoactive Pchlide-to-non-photoactive Pchl(ide), were the
relative amplitudes of the 628 and 640 nm components significantly
higher than in the wild type. We therefore cannot exclude the
possibility that normal energy transfer processes may be enhanced in
seedlings of this genotype due to alterations in the pigment
organization.

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Figure 9.
Fluorescence excitation spectra from the red
region of photoactive Pchlide-F655 present in situ in etiolated
seedlings. A, In situ low temperature excitation spectra of the
fluorescence emission at 730 nm, which corresponds to a vibrational
sublevel of Pchlide-F655 (Böddi et al., 1992 ), were collected
from cotyledons of 4-d-old wild-type and transgenic seedlings. Spectra
were normalized at their respective maxima. B, Gaussian deconvolution
of the wild-type excitation spectrum (inset, the difference between the
experimental spectrum and the sum of the G628, G640, and G652 gaussian
components). C, Relative amplitudes of the G628 and G640 gaussian
components (the amplitude of G652 has been defined as 1 for each
genotype). Error bars indicate the standard deviations. Seedling
genotypes are arranged left to right as POR antisense, wild type, and
PORA or PORB overexpressing.
|
|
In general, however, the POR-independent nature of energy migration
between different Pchl(ide) forms suggests the existence of an energy
transfer unit with fixed pigment stoichiometries. Thus the spectral
shifts seen in the in situ excitation spectra of photoactive
Pchlide-F655 (Fig. 6A) probably do not arise from genotype-specific
differences in energy transfer between the various Pchl(ide) pigment forms.
Stoichiometries of the Non-Photoactive and Photoactive Pigments
within the Pchl(ide) Energy Transfer Unit
To characterize the pigment stoichiometries within such an energy
transfer unit the number of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) molecules that
contribute to the fluorescence emission of a single photoactive Pchlide
molecule was calculated (Schoefs et al., 2000
). As seen in Figure
10, the ratios of the quantitated
amounts of these pigment forms for seedlings with different amounts of
total POR were plotted as a function of the ratio of the corresponding
low temperature fluorescence emissions at 632 and 655 nm, respectively.
The resulting data set was linearly extrapolated to obtain the
y-intercept, which corresponds to the number of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide) molecules that are coupled to a single
photoactive Pchlide molecule within an energy transfer unit. The slope
of this line depends not only upon the stoichiometries of the pigments
involved, but also upon their relative fluorescence yields and
extinction coefficients. Data obtained from seedlings of lines PBA-24
and PBO-10 was not included in this analysis because they contain
mixtures of DV- and MV-Pchl(ide) that deviate most significantly from
that of the wild type (Fig. 8D), which theoretically might influence
the ratio of fluorescence emitted in situ at 632 versus 655 nm upon excitation in the Soret region (Fig. 6). Furthermore, line PBA-24 may
contain an energy transfer unit with an atypical structure (Fig.
9).

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Figure 10.
Estimation of the ratio of non-photoactive
Pchl(ide)-to-photoactive Pchlide molecules within an energy transfer
unit. The ratio of non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-to-photoactive Pchlide
obtained from pigment quantitations was plotted against the ratio of
the in situ low temperature fluorescence emission bands at 632 and 655 nm for cotyledons of 4-d-old transgenic and wild-type seedlings. A
best-fit trendline through the data points was calculated and its
correlation coefficient was determined. Error bars indicate the
SDs.
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|
Using data from duplicate measurements of wild-type, PAA-28, PBO-1, and
PAO-3 cotyledons, the y-intercept was found to have a value
of 0.173 (Fig. 10). This corresponds to a non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-to-photoactive Pchlide ratio of 1:6 within an energy transfer
unit in the PLB of etiolated Arabidopsis cotyledons. For comparison,
the value of the y-intercept would decrease to 0.075, corresponding to a pigment ratio of 1:13 if the PBO-10 data point were
to be included. Because this ratio is rather sensitive to the
distribution of the data points it should be taken primarily as a
semiquantitative indication that substoichiometric amounts of
non-photoactive pigment are coupled to a large excess of photoactive Pchlide.
Determination of the Kinetics of Photoactive Pchlide Photoreduction
in Seedlings
In a final experiment to characterize the pigment-protein
complexes of etioplasts we determined the kinetics of photoactive Pchlide reduction in situ at room temperature in cotyledons of wild-type and transgenic seedlings. The approach used was to measure the time course of the increase in Chlide fluorescence during a
short (1-s) illumination with intense red light with a maximum at 650 nm.
Actual recordings obtained for cotyledons of the wild type and of lines
PBA-24 and PBO-10 are compared in Figure
11A. The fluorescence intensity
increased from a low initial value originating from Pchlide vibrational
sublevels to a maximum within less than 100 ms under the experimental
conditions. On such a short time scale this increase derives
exclusively from the formation of the Chlide-F690 photoproduct, with
negligible contributions of further Chlide spectral shifts and of
photoactive Pchlide regeneration processes (Schoefs et al., 1994
;
McCormac et al., 1996
). The maximal Chlide fluorescence values achieved
agree qualitatively with the initial amounts of photoactive Pchlide
present (Fig. 4B).

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Figure 11.
Photoactive Pchlide reduction kinetics upon
illumination of etiolated seedlings. A, Time courses of the in situ
Chlide fluorescence increase in cotyledons of 4-d-old wild-type and
transgenic seedlings exposed to 650 nm light at room temperature. B,
Photoactive Pchlide reduction halftimes determined from the rate of the
Chlide fluorescence increase. Error bars indicate the standard
deviations. Seedling genotypes are arranged left to right as POR
antisense, wild type, and PORA- or PORB-overexpressing.
|
|
The rate of the fluorescence intensity increase from the initial to the
maximum level was used to calculate a halftime for photoactive Pchlide
photoreduction under these excitation conditions of 7.0 ms in wild-type
seedlings. Halftime values were found to be genotype-dependent with
very little variation between repetitions of the same measurement (Fig.
11B). Average halftime values tended to increase, indicating modest
decreases in the rates of Pchlide reduction with increasing amounts of
photoactive Pchlide (Fig. 4B) and total POR (Fig. 5). Deconvolution of
the kinetics into exponential components revealed a biexponential
character of the Chlide fluorescence increase in seedlings of all
genotypes (data not shown), suggesting no apparent relationship between
the amplitudes of the two components and the ratio of PORA to PORB.
 |
DISCUSSION |
In Vivo Manipulation of Etioplast Development Suggests Redundant
Roles for the Light-Dependent PORA and PORB Enzymes
The two distinguishing features of the etioplast plastid type of
dark-grown angiosperms are the accumulation of photoactive Pchlide-F655
and the presence of the PLB inner membrane in which this pigment form
is localized (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1991
). These features may reflect
the need to efficiently store the pigments and lipids that are later
needed for Chl biosynthesis and thylakoid membrane formation during the
light-dependent differentiation of etioplasts into chloroplasts. By
exploiting the complete range of PORA and PORB expression levels
available using antisense and overexpression techniques in Arabidopsis,
we have been able to manipulate etioplast development in vivo in a
detailed fashion. In particular, we have examined whether PORA and PORB
perform unique functions in etioplasts or whether the properties of
this plastid type are determined by total POR content rather than by the ratio of these two enzymes.
As discussed below, increasing total POR content correlates
closely with increases in the ratio of PLB-to-PT membranes, the amount
of and perturbations in the excitation maxima and photoreduction kinetics of photoactive Pchlide, the ratio of photoactive Pchlide-F655 to non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632, and the ratio of DV- to MV-Pchl(ide) a. The last result defines POR as the first endogenous
protein factor demonstrated to influence the chemical heterogeneity of the Pchl(ide) pool in angiosperms. Excitation energy transfer between
different spectroscopic forms of Pchl(ide) present in etiolated
cotyledons remains largely POR independent, however. This indicates
that Pchl(ide) pigments in the PLB are organized into a minimal
structural unit with defined stoichiometries of the various
spectroscopically distinguishable forms. Within this unit a small
amount of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) transfers its excitation energy to
a large excess of photoactive Pchlide-F655. Our data further suggest
that POR ternary complexes may bind not only a single molecule of
photoactive Pchlide, but also a substoichiometric amount of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide), which may correspond to the non-photoactive
pigment fraction involved in energy transfer. We conclude that the
typical characteristics of etioplasts are closely related to total POR
content, rather than to the ratio of PORA-to-PORB.
The Characteristics of Etioplast Pigment-Protein Complexes and
Inner Membranes Vary as a Function of Total POR Content
The etioplasts of POR-antisense and POR-overexpressing
Arabidopsis seedlings contain a variety of inner membranes
architectures ranging from abundant PTs in line PBA-24 to extensive
PLBs that monopolize the interior of the organelle in line PBO-10 (Fig. 2). No obvious effects on etioplast inner membrane structure could, however, be specifically attributed to PORA or PORB, as opposed to
total POR. Cotyledons of PBA-24 seedlings display an in situ low
temperature fluorescence emission spectrum of Pchl(ide) pigment forms
dominated by non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 (Fig. 3C). This spectrum
strongly resembles that of an isolated PT-enriched membrane fraction
obtained from wheat etioplasts (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
; Böddi
et al., 1989
; Ouazzani Chahdi et al., 1998
). On the other hand,
cotyledons of line PBO-10 exhibit a spectrum with a very prominent
photoactive Pchlide-F655 emission (Fig. 3D) that is highly reminiscent
of that seen with purified wheat PLB membranes. Therefore, transgenic
lines PBA-24 and PBO-10 would be of particular interest for the
analysis of different etioplast inner membrane fractions.
Pre- and post-flash low temperature fluorescence emission spectra of
etiolated transgenic seedlings containing different amounts of total
POR and PORA-to-PORB ratios did not reveal Pchlide or Chlide emission
bands specific to only one of the POR enzymes (Fig. 3; Sperling et al.,
1998
). For example, no PORB-specific emission bands were seen in
cotyledons of line PBO-10 (Fig. 3D), which accumulates more than twice
as much total POR as the etiolated wild type and represents an extreme
phenotype in terms of etioplast membrane structure (Fig. 2B) and
pigment levels (Fig. 4). Nevertheless, large genotype-specific
variations in the ratio of in situ fluorescence intensities of
photoactive Pchlide-F655 to non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 were evident
(Fig. 3), and could be confirmed in the quantitative analysis of
different Pchl(ide) pigment forms (Fig. 4C). In fact, the amount of
photoactive Pchlide present in cotyledons of etiolated Arabidopsis
seedlings proved to be directly proportional to total POR content in
seedlings, rather than to the ratio of PORA-to-PORB (Fig. 5). More
extensive spectroscopic analyses of the Pchl(ide) forms present in
POR-overexpressing and POR-antisense seedlings, in particular
comparisons of transgenic seedlings with similar levels of total POR
(i.e. PAO-1, PAO-3, and PBO-1; Sperling et al., 1998
), also did not
provide evidence for PORA- or PORB-specific photoactive complexes with
distinct biophysical properties (Figs. 6-10). The slightly decreasing
rate of photoactive Pchlide photoreduction observed in situ as a
function of increasing total POR content (Fig. 11) may be due to
indirect effects correlated with the extent of the PLB such as
Pchl(ide) pigment screening or changes in light scattering.
Our conclusion that the highly aggregated PORA and PORB photoactive
Pchlide-F655 complexes present in vivo in the PLB have very
similar, if not identical properties agrees with several other lines of
evidence. First, the overexpression of either enzyme in the strongly
POR-deficient Arabidopsis cop1-18 (previously det340) mutant leads to the in vivo assembly of the PLB and
photoactive Pchlide-F655 (Sperling et al., 1998
). Second, a preliminary
comparison of the barley PORB and PORA ternary complexes, reconstituted
in vitro from bacterially overexpressed MalE::POR fusion
proteins, suggests that they too may be biophysically similar (Lebedev
and Timko, 1999
, and unpublished data cited therein). In this case, the
photoactive Pchlide present in the barley complexes displays a
blue-shifted low temperature fluorescence emission maximum at 644 rather than 655 nm because of its lower aggregation state, as has been
described in other in vitro and in vivo studies (Apel et al., 1980
;
Ikeuchi and Murakami, 1982
; Böddi et al., 1989
; Ryberg et al.,
1992
; Ouazzani Chahdi et al., 1998
).
Total POR content is clearly one of the most important factors
controlling etioplast differentiation. In the presence of the NADPH and
Pchlide needed to stabilize POR ternary complexes (Ryberg and
Sundqvist, 1991
), the appropriate combination of lipids required to
produce the PLB can be mobilized by PORA or PORB in etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings (Fig. 3; Sperling et al., 1998
). That other unidentified factors contribute to the formation of etioplast inner
membranes is suggested by the phenotype of the lip1
constitutive photomorphogenic mutant of pea, an angiosperm that seems
to contain only a single POR gene (Spano et al., 1992
). By
analogy to the pleiotropic cop1 mutant of Arabidopsis
(Lebedev et al., 1995
; Sperling et al., 1998
), lip1 displays
a light-grown seedling morphology even when germinated in the dark and
its plastids lack PLBs and normal amounts of photoactive Pchlide-F655
(Seyyedi et al., 1999
). However, unlike cop1, the
lip1 mutant retains roughly wild-type amounts of POR
polypeptide, suggesting that this mutant is defective in some other
component(s) required for etioplast differentiation.
POR-Dependent Pchl(ide) a Chemical Heterogeneity
Influences the in Situ Spectroscopic Properties of Photoactive
Pchlide-F655
The in situ low temperature Soret excitation maxima of
photoactive Pchlide-F655, and to a much smaller extent of
non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632, were blue- or red-shifted with respect
to the wild type in etiolated cotyledons of Arabidopsis lines PBA-24 and PBO-10, respectively (Figs. 6 and 7). The most likely explanation for these opposing spectral shifts in seedlings containing unusually large or small amounts of POR is provided by our finding that total
Pchl(ide) is, in fact, a POR-dependent mixture of DV- and MV-Pchl(ide)
(Fig. 8). To the best of our knowledge, no published information about
the chemical heterogeneity of Pchl(ide) in Arabidopsis exists. However,
the Pchl(ide) a present in a number of other angiosperms
occurs as a mixture of the DV- and MV-pigments, whose proportions are
dependent upon the species, the developmental state, and the growth
conditions (Belanger and Rebeiz, 1980
; Carey and Rebeiz, 1985
; Shioi
and Takamiya, 1992
; Whyte and Griffiths, 1993
; Ioannides et al., 1994
).
Angiosperms and other higher plants have been classified into several
groups according to the ratios of DV-Pchl(ide)-to-MV-Pchl(ide) that
they accumulate during photoperiodic growth when harvested in the light
versus the dark (Carey and Rebeiz, 1985
; Ioannides et al., 1994
). The
function, if any, of this Pchl(ide) chemical heterogeneity has not been
determined. The transgenic POR-overexpressing and POR-antisense
Arabidopsis lines described here should therefore provide valuable
tools to address this question in vivo.
By analogy to our current study, red shifts have been previously noted
in the comparisons of the in situ low temperature excitation maxima of
photoactive Pchlide in photoperiodically grown and etiolated bean
seedlings (Lebedev et al., 1985
), etiolated cucumber and etiolated bean
(Cohen and Rebeiz, 1981
), greening barley seedlings and etiolated
barley seedlings (Franck and Strzalka, 1992
), and dark-grown pine and
etiolated angiosperms (Schoefs and Franck, 1998
). These red shifts
likely reflect the relative proportions of DV-Pchl(ide) present in
these species under particular growth conditions (Carey and Rebeiz,
1985
; Shioi and Takamiya, 1992
; Ioannides et al., 1994
; Schoefs and
Franck, 1998
).
Although we consider POR-dependent variations in the relative amounts
of photoactive DV- and MV-Pchlide to offer the most likely explanation
for the spectral shifts found in the in situ excitation spectra of
Pchlide-F655, we cannot entirely exclude several other possibilities.
First, in PBO-10 cotyledons the pronounced contributions of the 459 and
472 nm excitation bands might indicate an intrinsically different
geometry of the pigment aggregates that fluoresce at 655 nm caused
by the unusually high photoactive Pchlide concentration in this
transgenic line. Several previous studies have raised the possibility
that Pchlide-F655 excitation shoulders at about 460 nm may result from
photoactive pigment aggregation (Fradkin et al., 1969
; Cohen and
Rebeiz, 1981
; Ignatov et al., 1983
; Böddi et al., 1993
). On the
other hand, the structure of the Pchl(ide) energy transfer unit in
PBO-10 seedlings seems equivalent to that of the wild type (Fig. 9),
which would argue against significant aggregation-induced differences
in pigment organization. Second, the high amplitudes of the 459 and 472 nm excitation bands might reflect a specific property of the PORB photoactive complex. The red shift in the excitation spectrum of
Pchlide-F655 observed during a previous study of the greening process
in wild-type barley seedlings (Franck and Strzalka, 1992
) could, for
example, be interpreted to reflect the expected expression of barley
PORB, but not PORA under these conditions (Holtorf et al., 1995a
).
However, the in situ excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 in etiolated
cotyledons of PAO-3 and PBO-1 seedlings, which overexpress Arabidopsis
PORA or PORB to similar extents, are nearly identical (Fig. 7 and data
not shown). Furthermore, in vitro studies of reconstituted barley PORB
and PORA ternary complexes apparently suggest that these two enzymes
have similar properties (Lebedev and Timko, 1999
and unpublished data
cited therein).
With respect to the recent hypothesis that non-photoactive Pchl(ide)
b rather than photoactive Pchl(ide) a may be
the main pigment species present in etiolated barley seedlings
(Reinbothe et al., 1999
), we find no spectroscopic evidence that
Arabidopsis seedlings contain Pchl(ide) b (Fig. 8A and data
not shown). Furthermore, most of the Pchl(ide) a present in
etiolated cotyledons is photoactive (Fig. 4). These results are in
accordance with other studies of higher plants, including barley
(Granick and Gassman, 1970
; Adra and Rebeiz, 1998
; Scheumann et al.,
1999
; Seyyedi et al., 1999
) and support the consensus view that
etiolated angiosperms contain exclusively Pchl(ide) a,
most of which is photoactive (Armstrong et al., 2000
).
Substrate Competition between POR and DV-Pchl(ide) Reductase May
Regulate Pchl(ide) a Chemical Heterogeneity in
Angiosperms
Prior to the work reported here, the endogenous factors
responsible for the wide range of DV-Pchl(ide)-to-MV-Pchl(ide)
a pigment ratios observed in various etiolated and
photoperiodically grown angiosperms had been the subject of
speculation. It had, for example, been proposed that Pchl(ide)
a chemical heterogeneity might reflect the activity of the
putative DV-Pchl(ide) reductase, an enzyme postulated to convert DV- to
MV-Pchl(ide) by reduction of the 8-vinyl group and/or the availability
of reducing equivalents for this enzyme (Griffiths, 1991
; Whyte and
Griffiths, 1993
; Suzuki and Bauer, 1995
; Kim et al., 1997
).
Our observation that the proportions of DV-Pchl(ide) in the
total Pchl(ide) and photoactive Pchlide pools increase as a function of
POR content (Figs. 5 and 8D) raises the question of the mechanism. In
fact POR can use DV- or MV-Pchlide a as a substrate in vitro in reconstituted ternary complexes and in vivo in intact cotyledons and
seems to bind both pigments with roughly similar affinities (Fig. 8D;
Griffiths, 1991
; Knaust et al., 1993
; Whyte and Griffiths, 1993
; Adra
and Rebeiz, 1998
). Although POR might conceivably compete with the
putative DV reductase for NADPH binding, it has been argued that the
amount of this cofactor does not limit the activities of these enzymes
in plastids (Griffiths, 1991
; Kim et al., 1997
). Rather, we propose
that PORA and PORB compete with the DV reductase for the binding of
newly synthesized DV Pchl(ide) a and that this competition
together with the relative catalytic activities of these enzymes
generates the Pchl(ide) chemical heterogeneity observed in vivo. In
etiolated seedlings the amount of photoactive DV-Pchlide sequestered in
dark-stable POR ternary complexes and hence presumably inaccessible to
the DV reductase would therefore increase as a function of total POR content.
Photoactive Pchlide-F655 and POR Occur in a 1:1
Stoichiometry in Vivo
The direct proportionality between the amount of photoactive
Pchlide and total POR content (Fig. 5) indicates a defined
pigment-to-protein stoichiometry in the various Arabidopsis lines
investigated and suggests that PORA and PORB bind the same number of
enzymatically active pigment molecules. Several early in vitro studies
reported stoichiometries between the Pchlide pigment and POR
polypeptide ranging from 1:1 to 3:1 (Apel et al., 1980
; Ikeuchi and
Murakami, 1982
; Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
). A 1:1 ratio of photoactive Pchlide to POR is supported by recent data obtained in vitro by reconstituting a barley PORB fusion protein (Lebedev and Timko, 1999
)
and with a highly purified POR preparation from oat PLBs (Klement et
al., 1999
).
That a 1:1 ratio of photoactive pigment-to-POR protein occurs in vivo
can also be concluded from the fact that in most plants including
Arabidopsis (Fig. 4C), photoactive Pchlide is the main pigment form in
mature etioplasts in situ (Granick and Gassman, 1970
; Adra and Rebeiz,
1998
; Seyyedi et al., 1999
). Taking into account that POR possesses a
single NADPH-binding site, each dark-stable ternary complex should
reduce only one photoactive Pchlide molecule per light flash. It seems
highly unlikely that the NADP+ generated by the
flash-induced photoreduction of a single molecule of photoactive
Pchlide at the POR active site could exchange freely with the
environment or be rereduced in situ during 1 ms at
20°C. The
simplest explanation for the result that most of the total Pchl(ide)
in cotyledons of etiolated seedlings is photoactive is therefore the
existence of a 1:1:1 stoichiometry of photoactive Pchlide-to-NADPH-to-POR in the ternary complexes.
Pchl(ide) Pigment Forms Exist in Structurally Conserved
Energy Transfer Units within Etioplast Inner Membranes
Previous spectroscopic studies have demonstrated that
excitation energy migrates from short-wavelength Pchlide forms [i.e. non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 and photoactive Pchlide-F645] to photoactive Pchlide-F655 (Kahn et al., 1970
; Sironval and
Brouers, 1970
; Ignatov et al., 1983
). One might therefore expect
different relative contributions of short-wavelength Pchl(ide)
excitation bands to the excitation spectra of Pchlide-F655 in plants
with different photoactive-to-non-photoactive pigment ratios. This would, in principle, apply to the red and Soret regions, although in
the latter case the assignment of the excitation bands to
specific Pchl(ide) forms is more difficult. Nevertheless, despite
substantial variations in the photoactive-to-non-photoactive
pigment ratio in cotyledons of seedlings of different genotypes (Fig.
4C), we found in all but one case unaltered contributions of the
Pchl(ide)-F632 and Pchlide-F645 excitation bands at 628 and 640 nm,
respectively, to the in situ fluorescence emission of Pchlide-F655
(Fig. 9, B and C).
These results suggest the occurrence of a structure or energy transfer
unit within the PLB in which different Pchlide forms are associated in
constant proportions that are independent of the relative amounts of
PORA and PORB and the total POR content. Within such a structure a
small amount of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) transfers its excitation
energy to a large excess of photoactive Pchlide (Fig. 10). POR
overexpression in seedlings of line PBO-10 led to a large change in the
proportions of photoactive DV-Pchlide and non-photoactive DV-Pchl(ide)
(Fig. 8D), but had no apparent effect on the spectroscopic properties
of the energy transfer unit (Fig. 9A). Thus this structure seems to be
insensitive to the chemical heterogeneity of the endogenous Pchl(ide)
pool and to the local concentration of photoactive Pchlide-F655 in the etioplast.
In line PBA-24, in contrast to seedlings of other
genotypes, the in situ excitation spectrum of Pchlide-F655 in the red
region differed in that the relative amplitudes of the Pchl(ide)-F632 and Pchlide-F645 bands at 628 and 640 nm, respectively, were
significantly higher. This indicates that the Pchlide energy transfer
units contain unusually high ratios of short-wavelength Pchlide forms, in agreement with the low ratio of photoactive-to-non-photoactive pigment measured quantitatively (Fig. 4C) and consistent with the
unusually high ratio of PT-to-PLB inner membranes visible in electron
micrographs of PBA-24 etioplasts (Fig. 2C).
To reconcile the existence of an energy transfer unit with fixed
stoichiometries of the different Pchl(ide) pigment forms with the
various ratios of photoactive Pchlide-to-non-photoactive Pchl(ide)
observed in vivo (Fig. 4C), one must postulate the existence of a pool
of non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632 that does not participate in energy
transfer. Recent spectroscopic measurements of different developmental
stages of etiolated bean leaves have led to a similar conclusion
(Schoefs et al., 2000
). Because energy transfer units containing
Pchlide-F655, Pchlide-F645 and Pchl(ide)-F632 in fixed ratios are
expected to be concentrated in PLBs, excess Pchl(ide)-F632 may be
localized primarily in PTs and hence spatially separated from
aggregated POR ternary complexes. In support of this model, previous
studies with wheat etioplast inner membrane fractions have demonstrated
the ratio of non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632-to-photoactive Pchlide-F655
to be much higher in PTs than in PLBs (Ryberg and Sundqvist, 1982
;
Böddi et al., 1989
; Ouazzani Chahdi et al., 1998
). We have also
found strong qualitative correlations between the amount of photoactive
Pchlide and the extent of the PLB and the amount of non-photoactive
Pchl(ide) and the occurrence of the PTs (Figs. 2 and 4; Sperling et
al., 1998
). A further possibility is that some of the Pchl(ide)-F632
located outside of energy transfer units might be found in etioplast
envelope membranes. Spinach chloroplast envelope membranes, for
example, do contain a small amount of Pchl(ide)-F632, although it was
not reported whether this pigment was non-photoactive upon flash
illumination (Joyard et al., 1990
).
POR May Bind Substoichiometric Amounts of Non-Photoactive Pchlide
That Transfer Excitation Energy to Photoactive Pchlide
It is interesting that the POR-dependent increase in the relative
amount of DV-Pchl(ide) as a fraction of total Pchl(ide) holds true not
only for the POR-bound photoactive pigment, but also for
non-photoactive Pchl(ide) (Fig. 8D). This result is difficult to
understand if one considers all of the non-photoactive DV-Pchl(ide) molecules to be "free," and hence readily accessible to the
putative DV reductase rather than to be at least partially sequestered. One possible explanation consistent with our data is that POR binds not
only a stoichiometric amount of photoactive Pchlide at the active site,
but also a substoichiometric amount of non-photoactive Pchlide at a
second site. The existence of such a second site is supported by
reconstitution studies of oat POR by Klement et al. (1999)
. If
non-photoactive Pchlide were to be bound to this site it would be in
close proximity to photoactive Pchlide, which would explain that energy
transfer from a subpopulation of Pchl(ide)-F632 to Pchlide-F655 takes
place within the PLB (Fig. 10).
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmid Constructs
Plasmid vectors suitable for the antisense inhibition of
expression of PORA and PORB in Arabidopsis were prepared, propagated in
Escherichia coli, and analyzed according to standard
procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989
). pPORA1.0 and pPORB1.0, which carry
the complete coding regions of the Arabidopsis PORA and
PORB cDNAs, respectively (Armstrong et al., 1995
), were
modified by the insertion of an oligonucleotide containing