Photosystem II (PSII) contains two accessory chlorophylls (Chl(Z), ligated to D1-His118, and Chl(D), ligated to D2-His117), carotenoid (Car), and heme (cytochrome b(559)) cofactors that function as alternate electron donors under conditions in which the primary electron-donation pathway from the O(2)-evolving complex to P680(+) is inhibited. The photooxidation of the redox-active accessory chlorophylls and Car has been characterized by near-infrared (near-IR) absorbance, shifted-excitation Raman difference spectroscopy (SERDS), and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy over a range of cryogenic temperatures from 6 to 120 K in both Synechocystis PSII core complexes and spinach PSII membranes. The following key observations were made: (1) only one Chl(+) near-IR band is observed at 814 nm in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, which is assigned to Chl(Z)(+) based on previous spectroscopic studies of the D1-H118Q and D2-H117Q mutants [Stewart, D. H., Cua, A., Chisholm, D. A., Diner, B. A., Bocian, D. F., and Brudvig, G. W. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 10040-10046]; (2) two Chl(+) near-IR bands are observed at 817 and 850 nm in spinach PSII membranes which are formed with variable relative yields depending on the illumination temperature and are assigned to Chl(Z)(+), and Chl(D)(+), respectively; (3) the Chl and Car cation radicals have significantly different stabilities at reduced temperatures with Car(+) decaying much faster; (4) in Synechocystis PSII core complexes, Car(+) decays by recombination with Q(A)(-) and not by Chl(Z)/Chl(D) oxidation, with multiphasic kinetics that are attributed to an ensemble of protein conformers that are trapped as the protein is frozen; and (5) in spinach PSII membranes, Car(+) decays mainly by recombination with Q(A)(-), but also partly by formation of the 850 nm Chl cation radical. The greater stability of Chl(Z)(+) at low temperatures enabled us to confirm that resonance Raman bands previously assigned to Chl(Z)(+) are correctly assigned. In addition, the formation and decay of these cations provide insight into the alternate electron-donation pathways to P680(+).
Chlorophyll Z (ChlZ) is a redox-active chlorophyll (Chl) which is photooxidized by low-temperature (<100 K) illumination of photosystem II (PSII) to form a cation radical, ChlZ+. This cofactor has been proposed to be an "accessory" Chl in the PSII reaction center and is expected to be buried in the transmembrane region of the PSII complex, but the location of ChlZ is unknown. A series of single-replacement site-directed mutants of PSII were made in which each of two potentially Chl-ligating histidines, D1-H118 or D2-H117, was substituted with amino acids which varied in their ability to coordinate Chl. Assays of the wild-type and mutant strains showed parallel phenotypes for the D1-118 and D2-117 mutants: noncoordinating or poorly coordinating residues at either position decreased photosynthetic competence and impaired assembly of PSII complexes. Only the mutants substituted with glutamine (D1-H118Q and D2-H117Q) had phenotypes comparable to the wild-type strain. The ChlZ+ cation was characterized by low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), near-infrared (IR) absorbance, and resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopies in wild-type, H118Q, and H117Q PSII core complexes. The quantum yield of ChlZ+ formation is the same (approximately 2.5% per saturating flash at 77 K) for wild-type, H118Q, and H117Q, indicating that its efficiency of photooxidation is unchanged by the mutations. Similarly, the EPR and near-IR absorbance spectra of ChlZ+ are insensitive to the mutations made at D1-118 and D2-117. In contrast, the RR signature of ChlZ+ in H118Q PSII, obtained by selective near-IR excitation into the ChlZ+ cation absorbance band, is significantly altered relative to wild-type PSII while the RR spectrum of ChlZ+ in the H117Q mutant remains identical to wild-type. Shifts in the RR spectrum of ChlZ+ in H118Q reflect a change in the structure of the Chl ring, most likely due to a perturbation of the core size and/or extent of doming caused by a change in the axial ligand to Mg(II). Thus, we conclude that the axial ligand to ChlZ is H118 of the D1 polypeptide. Furthermore, we propose that H117 of the D2 polypeptide is the ligand to a homologous redox-inactive accessory Chl which we term ChlD. The Chl Z and D terminology reflects the 2-fold structural symmetry of PSII which is apparent in the redox-active tyrosines, YZ and YD, and the active/inactive branch homology of the D1/D2 polypeptides with the L/M polypeptides of the bacterial reaction center.
Low-temperature (77 K) illumination of manganese-depleted Synechocystis PCC 6803 photosystem II core complexes caused the reversible photooxidation of a carotenoid, forming a carotenoid cation radical with an absorbance maximum at 984 nm. Resonance FT-Raman spectra obtained with 1064 nm excitation gave a spectrum characteristic of carotenoid cation radicals in solution. This is the first example of a resonance Raman spectrum of a carotenoid cation radical in a protein. The carotenoid photooxidation requires prior chemical oxidation of cytochrome b559 which implicates the carotenoid in the secondary electron-transfer pathway of photosystem II that may play a role in photoprotection. The possible nature of the pathway and the structure of the carotenoid cation radical are discussed.
High-throughput screening technologies have revolutionized the manner in which potential therapeutics are identified. Although they are the source of lead compounds for ~65% of anticancer and antimicrobial drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration between 1981 and 2002, natural products have largely been excluded from modern screening programs. This is due, at least in part, to the inherent difficulties in testing complex extract mixtures, which often contain nuisance compounds, in modern bioassay systems. In this article, the authors present a novel electrochemiluminescent assay system for inhibition of MDM2 activity that is suitable for testing natural product extracts in high-throughput screening systems. The assay was used to screen more than 144,000 natural product extracts. The authors identified 1 natural product, sempervirine, that inhibited MDM2 auto-ubiquitination, MDM2-mediated p53 degradation, and led to accumulation of p53 in cells. Sempervirine preferentially induced apoptosis in transformed cells expressing wild-type p53, suggesting that it could be a potential lead for anticancer therapeutics. ( Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2008:229-237)
Photosystem II (PSII) contains a collection of pheophytins (Pheo) and chlorophylls (Chl) that have unique absorbance spectra depending on their electronic structure and the surrounding protein environment. Despite numerous efforts to identify the spectra of each cofactor, differing assignments of the chromophore absorbance bands and electrochromic effects have led to conflicting models of pigment organization and chromophore interactions in PSII. We have utilized low-temperature measurements on well-defined redox states, together with the use of site-directed mutants, to make spectral assignments of several reaction center (RC) chromophores. Cryogenic (77 K) optical spectroscopy has been used to trap the bound redox-active quinone, Q(A), in the reduced form and measure the effect of the redox state of Q(A) on PSII chromophores without interference from other redox-active cofactors. The Q(A)(-) minus Q(A) difference spectrum contains a number of features that represent the perturbation of Pheo and Chl absorbance bands upon Q(A) reduction. Using site-directed mutants in which the axial ligand of the D1-side monomeric core Chl, P(A), is changed (D1-H198Q) or the hydrogen-bonding environment of the D1-side Pheo is modified (D1-Q130E), we have assigned the Q(y)() absorbance bands of four chromophores shifted by Q(A) reduction including both RC Pheos, the D1-side monomeric accessory Chl (B(A)), and one other Chl in PSII. The absorbance maximum of B(A) was identified at 683.5 nm from least-squares fits of the D1-H198Q minus wild type (WT) Q(A)(-) minus Q(A) double-difference spectrum; this assignment provides new evidence of a secondary effect of site-directed mutation on a RC chromophore. The other chromophores were assigned from simultaneous fits of the WT and D1-Q130E spectra in which the parameters of only the D1-side Pheo were allowed to vary. The D1-side and D2-side Pheos were found to have lambda(max) values at 685.6 and 669.3 nm, respectively, and another Chl influenced by Q(A)(-) was identified at 678.8 nm. These assignments are in good agreement with previous spectral analyses of intact PSII preparations and reveal that the number of chromophores affected by Q(A) reduction has been underestimated previously. In addition, the assignments are generally consistent with chromophore positions that are similar in the PSII RC and the bacterial photosynthetic RC.
The role of cytochrome b 559 in photosynthetic oxygen evolution has been investigated in three chloroplast mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, in which one of the two histidine axial ligands to the heme, provided by the ␣ subunit, has been replaced by the residues methionine, tyrosine, and glutamine. Photosystem two complexes functional for oxygen evolution could be assembled in the methionine and tyrosine mutants up to ϳ15% of wild type levels, whereas no complexes with oxygen evolution activity could be detected in the glutamine mutant. PSII supercomplexes isolated from the tyrosine and methionine mutants were as active as wild type in terms of light-saturated rates of oxygen evolution but in contrast to wild type contained no bound heme despite the presence of the ␣ subunit. Oxygen evolution in the tyrosine and methionine mutants was, however, more sensitive to photoinactivation than the WT. Overall, these data establish unambiguously that a redox role for the heme of cytochrome b 559 is not required for photosynthetic oxygen evolution. Instead, our data provide new evidence of a role for cytochrome b 559 in the protection of the photosystem two complex in vivo.
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