Abstract

Rates of chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 wild type and mutants lacking one or both photosystems by labeling cells with ( 15NH 4) 2SO 4 and Na 15NO 3. Pigments extracted from cells were separated by HPLC and incorporation of the 15N label into porphyrins was subsequently examined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. The life time ( τ) of chlorophyll in wild-type Synechocystis grown at a light intensity of 100 μmol photons m −2 s −1 was determined to be about 300 h, much longer than the cell doubling time of about 14 h. Slow chlorophyll degradation ( τ ∼200–400 h) was also observed in Photosystem I-less and in Photosystem II-less Synechocystis mutants, whereas in a mutant lacking both Photosystem I and Photosystem II chlorophyll degradation was accelerated 4–5 fold ( τ ∼50 h). Chlorophyllide and pheophorbide were identified as intermediates of chlorophyll degradation in the Photosystem I-less/Photosystem II-less mutant. In comparison with the wild type, the chlorophyll synthesis rate was five-fold slower in the Photosystem I-less strain and about eight-fold slower in the strain lacking both photosystems, resulting in different chlorophyll levels in the various mutants. The results presented in this paper demonstrate the presence of a regulation that adjusts the rate of chlorophyll synthesis according to the needs of chlorophyll-binding polypeptides associated with the photosystems.

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