Subunit organization of PSI particles from brown algae and diatoms: polypeptide and pigment analysis.

Photosynth Res

Laboratoire des Biomembranes et surfaces cellulaires végétales, UA CNRS 311, Ecole Normale Supérieure, 46, rue d'Ulm, F-75230, Paris Cédex 05, France.

Published: February 1990

P700 enriched fractions were isolated from two brown algae and one diatom using sucrose density centrifugation after digitinin solubilization. They had a Chl a/P700 ratio of about 250 to 375 according to the species, they were enriched in long-wavelength absorbing Chl a and exhibited a fluorescence emission maximum at 77 K near 720 nm. They all presented a major polypeptide component at 66±2 kDa, but their polypeptide composition was rather complex and somewhat different from one species to another. Further solubilization with dodecylmaltoside of those 'native' PSI particles allowed the separation of two or three fractions. The lightest, xanthophyll-rich, fraction was identified to be a light-harvesting complex. It contained no P700 and had a major polypeptide of molecular weight near 20 kDa (at the same molecular weight than the respective LH 'native' fraction of each species) and exhibited a 77 K peak fluorescence emission at 685 nm. The other fractions were enriched in P700 and almost entirely depleted in xanthophylls. When two of them are present, they both exhibited a major polypeptide at 66±2 kDa and were totally devoid of the LH polypeptide, but the two fractions widely differed one from another in the abundance and molecular weight of the other polypeptide components. The most purified of these two fractions presented a composition similar to PSI core complex from green plants.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00035009DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

major polypeptide
12
molecular weight
12
psi particles
8
brown algae
8
fluorescence emission
8
66±2 kda
8
polypeptide
7
fractions
5
subunit organization
4
organization psi
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!