Balancing the two photosystems: photosynthetic electron transfer governs transcription of reaction centre genes in chloroplasts
Open Access
- 29 October 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 355 (1402) , 1351-1359
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2000.0697
Abstract
Chloroplasts are cytoplasmic organelles whose primary function is photosynthesis, but which also contain small, specialized and quasi–autonomous genetic systems. In photosynthesis, two energy converting photosystems are connected, electrochemically, in series. The connecting electron carriers are oxidized by photosystem I (PS I) and reduced by photosystem II (PS II). It has recently been shown that the oxidation–reduction state of one connecting electron carrier, plastoquinone, controls transcription of chloroplast genes for reaction centre proteins of the two photosystems. The control counteracts the imbalance in electron transport that causes it: oxidized plastoquinone induces PS II and represses PS I; reduced plastoquinone induces PS I and represses PS II. This complementarity is observed both in vivo, using light favouring one or other photosystem, and in vitro, when site–specific electron transport inhibitors are added to transcriptionally and photosynthetically active chloroplasts. There is thus a transcriptional level of control that has a regulatory function similar to that of purely post–translational ‘state transitions’ in which the redistribution of absorbed excitation energy between photosystems is mediated by thylakoid membrane protein phosphorylation. The changes in rates of transcription that are induced by spectral changes in vivo can be detected even before the corresponding state transitions are complete, suggesting the operation of a branched pathway of redox signal transduction. These findings suggest a mechanism for adjustment of photosystem stoichiometry in which initial events involve a sensor of the redox state of plastoquinone, and may thus be the same as the initial events of state transitions. Redox control of chloroplast transcription is also consistent with the proposal that a direct regulatory coupling between electron transport and gene expression determines the function and composition of the chloroplast's extra–nuclear genetic system.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Protein Tyrosine Kinase of Chloroplast Thylakoid Membranes Phosphorylates Light Harvesting Complex II ProteinsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1998
- Separate Sexes and the Mitochondrial Theory of AgeingJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1996
- Control of Gene Expression by Redox Potential and the Requirement for Chloroplast and Mitochondrial GenomesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1993
- Chloroplast thylakoid protein phosphatase reactions are redox‐independent and kinetically heterogeneousFEBS Letters, 1993
- Modification of a gInB‐like gene product by photosynthetic electron transport in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301FEBS Letters, 1990
- Correlation of membrane protein phosphorylation with excitation energy distribution in the cyanobacteriumSynechococcus6301FEBS Letters, 1985
- Possible molecular mechanisms of the protonmotive function of cytochrome systemsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1976
- Fluorescence and oxygen evolution from Chlorella pyrenoidosaBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 1969
- Function and identification of two photochemical systems in photosynthesisBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1962
- Function of the Two Cytochrome Components in Chloroplasts: A Working HypothesisNature, 1960