Abstract

Various electron transport reactions in cell or isolated thylakoid membranes of the thermophilic blue-green alga, Synechococcus sp. were measured at a different temperatures between 72 and 3°C. They are classified into two groups with respect to their temperature dependency. The first group involves cytochrome 553 photooxidation, methyl viologen photoreduction with reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron donor and 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-resistant ferricyanide photoreduction determined in the presence or absence of silicomolybdate. The Arrhenius plot of these reactions showed a single straight line with the activation energy of about 10 kcal/mol throughout wide temperature ranges studied. Methyl viologen photoreduction with water as electron donor, reduction of flash-oxidized cytochrome 553, ferricyanide photoreduction and photosynthetic O 2 evolution form the second group. Their Arrhenius plots are characterized by discontinuities or breaks at about 30 and 10°C, which respectively correspond to the upper and lower boundaries of the lateral phase separation of the membrane lipids. The first group reactions represent short spans of electron transport which are mediated either by Photosystem I or Photosystem II alone and not related to plastoquinone, whereas all the reactions of the second group involve plastoquinone. It is concluded therefore that the membrane fluidity affect electron transport specifically at the region of plastoquinone. It is proposed that the reaction center chlorophyll-protein complexes of both Photosystems I and II are closely associated with related electron carrier proteins to form functional supramolecular assemblies so that electron transfer within such a cluster of proteins proceeds independently of the phase changes in the membrane lipids. On the other hand, the role of plastoquinone as a mobile electron carrier mediating electron trnasfer from the protein assembly of Photosystem II to that of Photosystem I through the fluid hydrophobic matrix of the membranes is highly sensitive to the physical state of the membrane lipids. It is proposed that the reaction center chlorophyll-protein complexes of both Photosystems I and II are closely associated with related electron carrier proteins to form functional supramolecular assemblies so that electron transfer within such a cluster of proteins proceeds independently of the phase changes in the membrane lipids. On the other hand, the role of plastoquinone as a mobile electron carrier mediating electron transfer from the protein assembly of Photosystem II to that of Photosystem I through the fluid hydrophobic matrix of the membranes is highly sensitive to the physical state of the membrane lipids.

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