ROLE OF DISULFIDE LINKAGE AND PUTATIVE INTERMOLECULAR BINDING RESIDUES IN THE STABILITY AND BINDING OF THE EXTRINSIC MANGANESE-STABILIZING PROTEIN TO THE PHOTOSYSTEM-II REACTION-CENTER
Rl. Burnap et al., ROLE OF DISULFIDE LINKAGE AND PUTATIVE INTERMOLECULAR BINDING RESIDUES IN THE STABILITY AND BINDING OF THE EXTRINSIC MANGANESE-STABILIZING PROTEIN TO THE PHOTOSYSTEM-II REACTION-CENTER, Biochemistry, 33(46), 1994, pp. 13712-13718
Site-directed mutations were produced at three highly conserved amino
acid positions of MSP of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center in
the transformable cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. The highly
conserved aspartate at position 9 of the mature MSP was changed to a
lysine (strain MSP-D9K) to assess its role in the proposed N-terminal
binding region (Eaten-Rye and Murata, 1989; Odom and Bricker, 1992). T
his strain accumulates normal levels of MSP, and the properties of the
H2O-splitting enzyme are only slightly altered relative to the wild-t
ype. In contrast, replacement of cysteine 20 with a serine, which is p
roposed to disrupt the intramolecular disulfide bridge (Tanaka et al.,
1989), produces a phenotype with no detectable accumulation of MSP, d
espite normal levels of mRNA transcripts. Like the psbO deletion strai
n, the MSP-C20S mutant exhibits impaired O-2 evolution activity and a
greater stability of the St state as measured by thermoluminescence. M
utation of strictly conserved aspartate 159 to asparagine (MSP-D159N)
does not affect the accumulation of MSP, but causes a reduction in the
H2O-oxidation activity and thermoluminescence properties intermediate
between the wild-type and the psbO deletion strain. In addition, we r
eport upon improved methods for obtaining oxygen-evolving membranes fr
om mutant cells.