Cosuppression of photosystem I subunit PSI-H in Arabidopsis thaliana. Efficient electron transfer and stability of photosystem I is dependent upon the PSI-H subunit

J Biol Chem. 1999 Apr 16;274(16):10784-9. doi: 10.1074/jbc.274.16.10784.

Abstract

PSI-H is an intrinsic membrane protein of 10 kDa that is a subunit of photosystem I (PSI). PSI-H is one of the three PSI subunits found only in eukaryotes. The function of PSI-H was characterized in Arabidopsis plants transformed with a psaH cDNA in sense orientation. Cosuppressed plants containing less than 3% PSI-H are smaller than wild type when grown on sterile media but are similar to wild type under optimal conditions. PSI complexes lacking PSI-H contain 50% PSI-L, whereas other PSI subunits accumulate in wild type amounts. PSI devoid of PSI-H has only 61% NADP+ photoreduction activity compared with wild type and is highly unstable in the presence of urea as determined from flash-induced absorbance changes at 834 nm. Our data show that PSI-H is required for stable accumulation of PSI and efficient electron transfer in the complex. The plants lacking PSI-H compensate for the less efficient PSI with a 15% increase in the P700/chlorophyll ratio, and this compensation is sufficient to prevent overreduction of the plastoquinone pool as evidenced by normal photochemical quenching of fluorescence. Nonphotochemical quenching is approximately 60% of the wild type value, suggesting that the proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane is decreased in the absence of PSI-H.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Arabidopsis / growth & development
  • Arabidopsis / metabolism*
  • DNA, Complementary
  • DNA, Plant
  • Electron Transport
  • Kinetics
  • Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes
  • Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins / chemistry
  • Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins / metabolism*
  • Photosystem I Protein Complex
  • Plants, Genetically Modified / growth & development
  • Plants, Genetically Modified / metabolism
  • Protein Binding

Substances

  • DNA, Complementary
  • DNA, Plant
  • Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes
  • Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins
  • Photosystem I Protein Complex