
Protonophores induce plastoquinol oxidation and quench chloroplast fluorescence: Evidence for a cyclic, proton-conducting pathway in oxygenic photosynthesis
Author(s) -
Steven W. McCauley,
Anastasios Melis,
George M.-S. Tang,
Daniel I. Ar
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.84.23.8424
Subject(s) - plastoquinone , photochemistry , photosystem ii , chemistry , nigericin , electrochemical gradient , proton transport , electron transport chain , electron acceptor , cytochrome b6f complex , thylakoid , photosynthesis , photosystem i , chloroplast , membrane , biochemistry , gene
The photosynthetic apparatus converts light into chemical energy by a series of reactions that give rise to a coupled flow of electrons and protons that generate reducing power and ATP, respectively. A key intermediate in these reactions is plastoquinone (PQ), the most abundant electron and proton (hydrogen) carrier in photosynthetic membranes (thylakoids). PQ ultimately transfers electrons to a terminal electron acceptor by way of the Rieske Fe-S center of the cytochromebf complex. In the absence of a terminal acceptor, electrons accumulate in the PQ pool, which is reduced to plastoquinol (PQH2 ), and also on a specialized PQ, QA , which is reduced to an unprotonated semiquinone anion (QA - ). The accumulation of QA - is measured by a rise in fluorescence yield and the accumulation of PQH2 is measured by absorption difference spectrometry. We have found that in the absence of a terminal electron acceptor, two chemically diverse proton-conducting ionophores (protonophores), 2,6-di-t -butyl-4-(2′,2′-dicyanovinyl)phenol (SF 6847) and carbonylcyanidep -trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP), induced oxidation of PQH2 and quenching of chloroplast fluorescence, signifying oxidation of QA - . The two protonophores produced the same effects even when the only recognized pathway of PQH2 oxidation by way of the cytochromebf complex was inhibited by dibromothymoquinone. Two other uncouplers, gramicidin and nigericin, which are not protonophores but facilitate proton movement across membranes by other mechanisms, were ineffective. These findings are consistent with the operation in the oxygen-generating photosystem (photosystem II) of a cyclic, proton-conducting pathway.