Abstract

The CyanoQ protein has been demonstrated to be a component of cyanobacterial Photosystem II (PS II), but there exist a number of outstanding questions concerning its physical association with the complex. CyanoQ is a lipoprotein; upon cleavage of its transit peptide by Signal Peptidase II, which targets delivery of the mature protein to the thylakoid lumenal space, the N-terminal cysteinyl residue is lipid-modified. This modification appears to tether this otherwise soluble component to the thylakoid membrane. To probe the functional significance of the lipid anchor, mutants of the CyanoQ protein have been generated in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to eliminate the N-terminal cysteinyl residue, preventing lipid modification. Substitution of the N-terminal cysteinyl residue with serine (Q-C22S) resulted in a decrease in the amount of detectable CyanoQ protein to 17% that of the wild-type protein. Moreover, the physical properties of the accumulated Q-C22S protein were consistent with altered processing of the CyanoQ precursor. The Q-C22S protein was shifted to a higher apparent molecular mass and partitioned in the hydrophobic phase in TX-114 phase-partitioning experiments. These results suggest that the hydrophobic N-terminal 22 amino acids were not properly cleaved by a signal peptidase. Substitution of the entire CyanoQ transit peptide with the transit peptide of the soluble lumenal protein PsbO yielded the Q-SS mutant and resulted in no detectable accumulation of the modified CyanoQ protein. Finally, the CyanoQ protein was present at normal amounts in the PS II mutant strains ΔpsbB and ΔpsbO, indicating that an association with PS II was not a prerequisite for stable CyanoQ accumulation. Together these results indicate that CyanoQ accumulation in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 depends on the presence of the N-terminal lipid anchor, but not on the association of CyanoQ with the PS II complex.

Highlights

  • Photosystem II (PS II) is the light-driven water-plastoquinone oxidoreductase found in the thylakoid membranes of cyanobacteria, algae, and plants, splitting water into molecular oxygen and reducing plastoquinone to plastoquinol

  • In the case of the PS II extrinsic proteins PsbO, PsbU and PsbV, the signal peptides are recognized by Signal Peptidase I upon transport across the thylakoid membrane

  • The extrinsic lipoproteins CyanoQ, CyanoP, and Psb27 have signal peptides like those recognized by Signal Peptidase II and upon targeting across the thylakoid membrane and signal sequence cleavage, the resulting N-terminal cysteinyl residue is covalently modified with a lipid moiety

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Summary

Introduction

Photosystem II (PS II) is the light-driven water-plastoquinone oxidoreductase found in the thylakoid membranes of cyanobacteria, algae, and plants, splitting water into molecular oxygen and reducing plastoquinone to plastoquinol. This membrane protein complex contains at least. The PsbO, PsbP and PsbQ subunits are present while cyanobacteria contain the PsbO, PsbU, PsbV, CyanoQ and, possibly the CyanoP, proteins. These extrinsic proteins associate with the lumenal face of PS II and collectively interact with each other and with the intrinsic components to support oxygen evolution. Functional studies indicate that they are not equivalent [2,3,4]

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