Oxygen-evolving Photosystem II particles (crude PSII) retaining a high oxygen-evolving activity have been prepared from a marine centric diatom, Chaetoceros gracilis (Nagao et al., 2007). The crude PSII, however, contained a large amount of fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins (FCP). In this study, a purified PSII complex which was deprived of major components of FCP was isolated by one step of anion exchange chromatography from the crude PSII treated with Triton X-100. The purified PSII was still associated with the five extrinsic proteins of PsbO, PsbQ', PsbV, Psb31 and PsbU, and showed a high oxygen-evolving activity of 2135 micromol O2 (mg Chl a)(-1) h(-1) in the presence of phenyl-p-benzoquinone which was virtually independent of the addition of CaCl2. This activity is more than 2.5-fold higher than the activity of the crude PSII. The activity was completely inhibited by 3-(3,4)-dichlorophenyl-(1,1)-dimethylurea (DCMU). The purified PSII contained 42 molecules of Chl a, 2 molecules of diadinoxanthin and 2 molecules of Chl c on the basis of two molecules of pheophytin a, and showed typical absorption and fluorescence spectra similar to those of purified PSIIs from the other organisms. In this study, we also found that the crude PSII was significantly labile, as a significant inactivation of oxygen evolution, chlorophyll bleaching and degradation of PSII subunits were observed during incubation at 25 degrees C in the dark. In contrast, these inactivation, bleaching and degradation were scarcely detected in the purified PSII. Thus, we succeeded for the first time in preparation of a stable PSII from diatom cells.
We previously showed that most subunits in the oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) preparation from the diatom Chaetoceros gracilis are proteolytically unstable. Here, we focused on identifying the proteases that cleave PSII subunits in thylakoid membranes. Major PSII subunits and fucoxanthin chlorophyll (Chl) a/c-binding proteins (FCPs) were specifically degraded in thylakoid membranes. The PSI subunits, PsaA and PsaB, were slowly degraded, and cytochrome f was barely degraded. Using zymography, proteolytic activities for three metalloproteases (116, 83, and 75kDa) and one serine protease (156kDa) were detected in thylakoid membranes. Two FCP fractions (FCP-A and FCP-B/C) and a photosystem fraction were separated by sucrose gradient centrifugation using dodecyl maltoside-solubilized thylakoids. The FCP-A fraction featured enriched Chl c compared with the bulk of FCP-B/C. Zymography revealed that 116, 83, and 94kDa metalloproteases were mostly in the FCP-A fraction along with the 156kDa serine protease. When solubilized thylakoids were separated with clear-native PAGE, zymography detected only the 83kDa metalloprotease in the FCP-A band. Because FCP-A is selectively associated with PSII, these FCP-A-associated metalloproteases and serine protease may be responsible for the proteolytic degradation of FCPs and PSII in thylakoid membranes.
In higher plants, autophagy is bulk degradation process in vacuole necessary for survival under nutrient-limited conditions and plays important roles in senescence, development and pathogenic response, etc. Cowpea is one of the most important legume crops in semi-aride region, which is highly tolerant to drought stress. Changes of photoassimilate status by drought stress and/or sink-source balance appeared to affect autophagy and senescence of leaf in cowpea. Accordingly, we focused on roles of sucrose signal in autophagy and amino acid recycling in cowpea. Effects of starvation stress on the expression of autophagy-related genes (ATGs) and amino acid catabolism-related genes in cowpea [Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp] were examined by Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and anti-ATG8i specific antibody. Sucrose starvation stress enhanced the expression levels of VuATG8i, VuATG8c and VuATG4 in cowpea seedlings. The expressions of amino acid catabolism related genes, such as asparagine synthase (VuASN1), proline dehydrogenase1 (VuProDH) and branched chain amino acid transaminase (VuBCAT2), are also up-regulated under the sucrose starvation. In contrast, high sucrose condition suppressed autophagy and the expressions of ATGs. These results indicate that sucrose starvation stress stimulates both autophagy and amino acid catabolism by regulation of ATGs and VuBCAT2. It is conceivable that sucrose starvation stress enhances autophagy in cowpea, possibly via branched chain amino acid level regulated by the starvation-induced BCAT.
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