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Oxygen yield and thermoluminescence characteristics of a cyanobacterium lacking the manganese-stabilizing protein of photosystem II.

Oxygen yield and thermoluminescence characteristics of a cyanobacterium lacking the... Previous experiments have shown that a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 mutant (delta psbO) lacking the extrinsic manganese-stabilizing protein (MSP) exhibits impaired, but significant levels of H2O-splitting activity [Burnap, R., & Sherman, L.A. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 440-446]. [14C]DCMU-binding experiments now show that the number and affinity of DCMU-binding sites (normalized to chlorophyll) are equivalent in delta psbO and the wild type, suggesting equal concentrations of assembled reaction centers. A similar conclusion is reached on the basis of measurements of PSII electron transport (DPC-supported DCPIP reduction) by mutant and wild-type thylakoids. The pattern of flash O2 yield by delta psbO cells measured with a bare platinum electrode exhibits a period four oscillation (with a maximum on the third flash), indicating that the H2O-splitting enzyme in delta psbO retains the basic mechanistic features found in normal cells. However, the amplitude of these signals is smaller and more highly damped than those obtained from wild-type cells, suggesting the absence of MSP results in a higher miss probability and/or a reduction in the number of centers competent in oxygen evolution. Analysis of the rise kinetics of the ampermeric signal on the bare platinum electrode indicates that the S3-[S4]-S0 transition is retarded by at least a factor of 5 in the mutant. Thermoluminescence emission peak temperatures indicate that the S2QA-, S2QB-, and S3QB-charge pairs are significantly more stable with respect to recombination in the mutant. The intensities of the thermoluminescence emissions are also significantly reduced in the mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Biochemistry Pubmed

Oxygen yield and thermoluminescence characteristics of a cyanobacterium lacking the manganese-stabilizing protein of photosystem II.

Biochemistry , Volume 31 (32): -7393 – Sep 29, 1992

Oxygen yield and thermoluminescence characteristics of a cyanobacterium lacking the manganese-stabilizing protein of photosystem II.


Abstract

Previous experiments have shown that a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 mutant (delta psbO) lacking the extrinsic manganese-stabilizing protein (MSP) exhibits impaired, but significant levels of H2O-splitting activity [Burnap, R., & Sherman, L.A. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 440-446]. [14C]DCMU-binding experiments now show that the number and affinity of DCMU-binding sites (normalized to chlorophyll) are equivalent in delta psbO and the wild type, suggesting equal concentrations of assembled reaction centers. A similar conclusion is reached on the basis of measurements of PSII electron transport (DPC-supported DCPIP reduction) by mutant and wild-type thylakoids. The pattern of flash O2 yield by delta psbO cells measured with a bare platinum electrode exhibits a period four oscillation (with a maximum on the third flash), indicating that the H2O-splitting enzyme in delta psbO retains the basic mechanistic features found in normal cells. However, the amplitude of these signals is smaller and more highly damped than those obtained from wild-type cells, suggesting the absence of MSP results in a higher miss probability and/or a reduction in the number of centers competent in oxygen evolution. Analysis of the rise kinetics of the ampermeric signal on the bare platinum electrode indicates that the S3-[S4]-S0 transition is retarded by at least a factor of 5 in the mutant. Thermoluminescence emission peak temperatures indicate that the S2QA-, S2QB-, and S3QB-charge pairs are significantly more stable with respect to recombination in the mutant. The intensities of the thermoluminescence emissions are also significantly reduced in the mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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ISSN
0006-2960
DOI
10.1021/bi00147a027
pmid
1510930

Abstract

Previous experiments have shown that a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 mutant (delta psbO) lacking the extrinsic manganese-stabilizing protein (MSP) exhibits impaired, but significant levels of H2O-splitting activity [Burnap, R., & Sherman, L.A. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 440-446]. [14C]DCMU-binding experiments now show that the number and affinity of DCMU-binding sites (normalized to chlorophyll) are equivalent in delta psbO and the wild type, suggesting equal concentrations of assembled reaction centers. A similar conclusion is reached on the basis of measurements of PSII electron transport (DPC-supported DCPIP reduction) by mutant and wild-type thylakoids. The pattern of flash O2 yield by delta psbO cells measured with a bare platinum electrode exhibits a period four oscillation (with a maximum on the third flash), indicating that the H2O-splitting enzyme in delta psbO retains the basic mechanistic features found in normal cells. However, the amplitude of these signals is smaller and more highly damped than those obtained from wild-type cells, suggesting the absence of MSP results in a higher miss probability and/or a reduction in the number of centers competent in oxygen evolution. Analysis of the rise kinetics of the ampermeric signal on the bare platinum electrode indicates that the S3-[S4]-S0 transition is retarded by at least a factor of 5 in the mutant. Thermoluminescence emission peak temperatures indicate that the S2QA-, S2QB-, and S3QB-charge pairs are significantly more stable with respect to recombination in the mutant. The intensities of the thermoluminescence emissions are also significantly reduced in the mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal

BiochemistryPubmed

Published: Sep 29, 1992

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