Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) is considered to play an important role in the ordered assembly and structural maintenance of the photosynthetic apparatus in thylakoid membranes. However, its function in photosynthesis remains poorly understood. In this study we have identified a pgsA gene of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 that encodes a PG phosphate synthase involved in the biosynthesis of PG. A disruption of the pgsA gene allowed us to manipulate the content of PG in thylakoid membranes and to investigate the function of PG in photosynthesis. The obtained pgsA mutant could grow only in the medium containing PG, and the photosynthetic activity of the pgsA mutant dramatically decreased with a concomitant decrease of PG content in thylakoid membranes when the cells grown in the presence of PG were transferred to the medium without PG. This decrease of photosynthetic activity was attributed to the decrease of photosystem (PS)II activity, but not to the decrease in PSI activity. These findings demonstrate that PG is essential for growth of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and provide the first direct evidence that PG plays an important role in PSII.
Phosphatidylglycerol (PG), a ubiquitous constituent of thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts and cyanobacteria, is demonstrated to be essential for the functionality of plastoquinone electron acceptor Q(B) in the photosystem II reaction center of oxygenic photosynthesis. Growth of the pgsA mutant cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 that are defective in phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase and are incapable of synthesizing PG, in a medium without PG, resulted in a 90% decrease in PG content and a 50% loss of photosynthetic oxygen-evolving activity as reported [Hagio, M., Gombos, Z., Várkonyi, Z., Masamoto, K., Sato, N., Tsuzuki, M., and Wada, H. (2000) Plant Physiol. 124, 795-804]. We have studied each step of the electron transport in photosystem II of the pgsA mutant to clarify the functional site of PG. Accumulation of Q(A)(-) was indicated by the fast rise of chlorophyll fluorescence yield under continuous and flash illumination. Oxidation of Q(A)(-) by Q(B) plastoquinone was shown to become slow, and Q(A)(-) reoxidation required a few seconds when measured by double flash fluorescence measurements. Thermoluminescence measurements further indicated the accumulation of the S(2)Q(A)(-) state but not of the S(2)Q(B)(-) state following the PG deprivation. These results suggest that the function of Q(B) plastoquinone was inactivated by the PG deprivation. We assume that PG is an indispensable component of the photosystem II reaction center complex to maintain the structural integrity of the Q(B)-binding site. These findings provide the first clear identification of a specific functional site of PG in the photosynthetic reaction center.
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