OXYGEN EVOLUTION IN THE ABSENCE OF THE 33-KILODALTON MANGANESE-STABILIZING PROTEIN

被引:122
作者
BRICKER, TM
机构
[1] Department of Botany, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge
关键词
D O I
10.1021/bi00134a012
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
There has been a considerable amount of controversy concerning the ability of photosystem II to evolve oxygen in the absence of the 33-kDa, manganese-stabilizing protein. Early reports indicated that some capacity for oxygen evolution existed in manganese-stabilizing protein-depleted membranes while more recent studies have suggested that the observed oxygen evolution activity arose from residual manganese-stabilizing protein present in the salt-washed preparations. In this paper, it is conclusively demonstrated that significant rates of steady-state oxygen evolution are observed in oxygen-evolving photosystem II membranes in the absence of detectable quantities of the manganese-stabilizing protein. More then 99% of the manganese-stabilizing protein was removed by either one CaCl2 or two NaCl-urea washes. The amount of manganese-stabilizing protein removed was quantified immunologically using mouse polyclonal antibodies. Oxygen evolution rates of 115-140-mu-mol Of O2 (Mg Of Chl)-1 h-1 were observed in the NaCl-urea-washed preparations. These rates represent about 24% of the rate observed in untreated membranes [450-600-mu-mol of O2 (mg of Chl)-1 h-1]. Somewhat lower, although still significant rates were observed in the CaCl2-washed preparations. Optimal rates of oxygen-evolving activity in NaCl-urea-washed membranes which are devoid of the manganese-stabilizing protein required high concentrations of calcium and chloride.
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页码:4623 / 4628
页数:6
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