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THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY 0 1930 by The American Society for Biochemistry Vol. 265, No. 21, Issue of July 25, pp. 12563%12568,199O and Molecular Biology, Inc. Printed in U.S.A. Light-dependent Dl Protein Synthesis and Translocation by Reaction Center II REACTION CENTER II SERVES AS AN ACCEPTOR FOR THE Dl PRECURSOR* (Received Noam From Adir, Susana the Department Shochat, of Biological and Itzhak Chemistry, Is Regulated for publication, January 18, 1990) Ohad The Hebrew Light induces an irreversible modification of the photosystem II reaction center (RCII) affecting specifically one of its major components, the Dl protein (Ohad, I., Adir, N., Koike, H., Kyle, D. J., and Inoue, Y. I. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 1972-1979) which is degraded and replaced continuously (turnover). The turnover rate of Dl is related to light intensity. Evidence is presented showing that RCII translocates from the site of damage in the grana (appressed) domain of the chloroplast membranes to unappressed membrane domains where the Dl precursor protein (pD1) is translated and becomes integrated into RCII. Several forms of RCII (a, a*, and b) were identified on the basis of their electrophoretic mobility. pD1 was found only in the a and b forms in the unappressed membranes. Processing of pD1 occurs after its integration into RCII. Mature Dl appeared mostly in the a form of RCII and following its translocation to the appressed membrane domains also in the Q* form. Thus the light intensity-dependent synthesis of Dl protein is related to the availability of modified RCII which serves as an acceptor for pD1. The shuttling of RCII between the two membrane domains may represent a control mechanism of thylakoid membrane protein synthesis. The chloroplast-encoded Dl protein of the photosystem II reaction center (RCII)’ (1, 2) turns over in the light, but not in the dark, in higher plants (3) and in green algae (4). Turnover of Dl is essential for the maintenance of functional RCII (5, 6). Dl is synthesized as a precursor protein, pD1, by polyribosomes attached to the stroma (exposed face) of the chloroplast photosynthetic membranes (thylakoids) (7). In light-grown plants the mRNA that encodes pD1 is abundant, irrespective of transient changes in the light regime (8). Synthesis of pD1, however, occurs only in the light, and thus it has been proposed that Dl synthesis is controlled at the level of translation (S-10). The light-dependent degradation of Dl does not require simultaneous synthesis (4, ll), and thus the two processes *This work was supported by a grant awarded by the Israeli Academy of Sciences (to I. O.), a grant in cooperation with K. Kloppstech, University of Hannover, Federal Republic of Germany, awarded by the National Council for Research and Development joint German-Israel Program in Biotechnology, and Grant 184, B-9 in cooperation with R. Herrmann, University of Miinchen, Federal Republic of Germany, awarded by Sonderforschungs bereiche. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. ’ The abbreviations used are: RCII, reaction center of photosystem II; pD1, precursor of the Dl protein; SDS, sodium dodecyl sulfate. University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel can be separated in time. Recently we have shown (6,12) that in the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y-l, degradation of the Dl protein is related to a light-induced modification of RCII. This process can be resolved into (i) a reversible conformational change affecting the binding site of the secondary acceptor quinone (Qa) followed by (ii) an irreversible modification of the Dl protein. The rate of the lightinduced reversible modification depends on the total amount of light absorbed (12)) and a link could be established between this phenomenon and Dl degradation and synthesis. The nature of the mechanism connecting the two phenomena thus far remains unknown. RCII is located in the appressed membranes of the grana region and is thus segregated from the site of synthesis and insertion of pD1 in the unappressed stroma membrane domains (7,13). In the present work we considered the possibility that light-modified RCII might migrate to the unappressed membranes where it could serve as an acceptor for pD1 replacing the nonfunctional Dl. RCII could then translocate back to the grana as shown so far only for the Dl protein (13). The results presented here support this hypothesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS C. reinhardtii y-l cells were grown in the light as previously described (14). Thylakoids were isolated (11) and further fractionated into the appressed grana domain (10 K fraction), the intermediate fraction enriched in unappressed membranes (40 K fraction), and the stromal unappressed membranes (144 K fraction) using the procedure of Kyle et al. (15). The experimental approach for the identification and localization of protein precursors is to use short radioactive labeling (pulse) followed by chase of the label or inhibition of further protein synthesis. Based on results of preliminary experiments with C. reinhardtii cells (data not shown), the only effective procedure to block further chloroplast protein labeling and permit detection of the Dl precursor is to use chloroplast protein synthesis inhibitors. In this procedure the labeling of the Dl protein is effectively blocked (see Figs. 2-4). However, labeling of cytosolic synthesized proteins continues during the chase as shown in Figs. 2-4. Addition of cycloheximide which could have prevented this further labeling was not used so as to avoid further disruption of the normal cell metabolism. The precursor of the Dl protein (pD1) was identified by the following procedure. Cells were incubated in the light (400 PE mm2 s-l, measured with a Li-Cor quantum radiometer in the incubation vessel) for 30-60 min to increase the level of Dl turnover rate (12), and then labeling was carried out for 2 min by the addition of L-[~~S] methionine (Du Pont-New England Nuclear, 100 &i/ml, 1100 Ci/ mmol). Chloramphenicol (D-three, Sigma, 200 rg/ml) was added, and the labeled cells were harvested immediately (pulse). Part of the labeled cells was further incubated for 30 min (chase). Termination of chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis by the addition of chloramphenicol occurred within less than 2 min as indicated by the limited increase in the radioactivity of the Dl protein. For resolution of pD1 from Dl in thylakoids or thyalkoid subfractions, the proteins were separated by denaturing electrophoresis on a lo-20% (w/v) polyacrylamide gel using the method of Laemmli (16) 12563 12564 Light Regulation of pD1 Synthesis which allowed us to discern between pD1 and Dl differing only by l1.5 kDa (13). Separation of thylakoid proteins by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 8 M urea did not improve the separation of pD1 from Dl. The gels were dried and autoradiographed. For estimation of the apparent molecular mass of the resolved polypeptides, molecular weight markers (Bio-Rad, low range) were used. For detection of pD1 and Dl in RCII complexes, isolated thylakoids or thylakoid subfractions were solubilized in a detergent mixture (w/ v) containing 0.75:0.2:0.05 octyl fi-D-glucoside:nonyl B-D-glucoside:SDS at a chlorophyll concentration of 1 mg/ml for 10 min at 4 “C. Chlorophyll-protein complexes were resolved in the first dimension by nondenaturing polyacrylamide (6% w/v) gel electrophoresis in the presence of the zwitterionic detergent Deriphat-160 (17, 18). Gel strips were excised and incubated for 15 min at 70 “C in SDS sample buffer to denature the complexes. The strips were embedded in stacking gel (pH = 6.8), and the polypeptide composition of each complex was resolved by denaturing polyacrylamide electrophoresis using a 14% (w/v) gel in the second dimension. Free low molecular weight proteins are less hindered during migration through the first dimensional low concentration gel, and thus their relative electrophoretie mobility is not strictly a function of the logarithm of their molecular weight as is the case when later separated on the second dimensional denaturing gel. This results in the migration of the free polypeptides along an exponential diagonal during the second dimension run. Polypeptides which remained associated in protein complexes during electrophoresis in the first dimension appear in a vertical line below the diagonal. Protein immunoblotting was performed as previously described (19). For identification of Dl and pD1 in the autoradiograms of Fig. 2 the stained dried gel was rehydrated, removed from the paper, and soaked in a 6 M urea solution containing 0.1% (w/v) SDS in the transfer buffer used for blotting (19). The gel was then electroblotted for 4 h, and the blot was immunodecorated with anti-D1 antibodies followed by detection with ‘*“I-protein A. The exposure time required to detect the iodinated protein A was only 20 h as compared with 14 days required for the detection of the L-[““Slmethionine-labeled proteins present in the gel. Thus double exposure did not interfere with the results of this experiment. Antiserum against the D2 protein was produced as described for that of Dl antiserum (19). RESULTS Light Enhances Translocation of RCII to the Unappressed Membranes--To test whether exposure of C. reinhardtii cells to high light intensities enhances the appearance of RCII in the unappressed membrane domains, the content of RCII in the grana, intermediate, and stromal membrane fractions was assayed by protein immunoblotting. In cells exposed to growth light intensity, most of the RCII is localized in the granal fraction as detected by antibodies against the 47-kDa Dl and D2 polypeptides (Fig. 1, control lanes). Following exposure of the cells to light intensity known to induce modification of RCII (6,12) and shorten the tth of the Dl protein from about 8 h at growth light intensity (4) to about 2 h (ll), an increase in the amount of RCII polypeptides was observed in the unappressed intermediate fraction (Fig. 1, high light, intermediate lane, compare with control lane). Similar results were found to occur in the stromal membrane fraction (data not shown). As a control, the distribution of the apoproteins of photosystem I reaction center (Fig. 1, PSI) between the two membrane domains did not change significantly as a result of the light treatment (Fig. 1). Comparison of the polypeptide pattern in the control lanes indicates that the unappressed intermediate fraction is not contaminated with significant amounts of appressed membranes as suggested by the low content of RCII polypeptides in the control lane. Localization of pD1 Synthesis in C. reinhardtii Thylakoids- Unlike higher plants, thylakoids of C. reinhardtii are organized into large appressed domains containing only a few stacked membrane layers interconnected by relatively short regions of unappressed membranes (20). The average number of lamellae in a grana stack is about 4-6, and the average length of the grana stacks containing more than 6 lamellae is Is Mediated by RCII CBB a IB l-3 C HL C HL MC-02 G I FIG. 1. Light-induced G translocation I of RCII to unappressed Cells were exuosed for 90 min to 1600 or 30 ILE mi s-’ white light (high light (Hi) or low light intensity (control C)), respectively. Thylakoids were then isolated and fractionated into the different membrane types. The polypeptides of the appressed granal (G) and unappressed intermediate (40,000 x g) (Z) fractions were resolved by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis loading equal amounts of membranes (3 fig of chlorophyll). The resolved polypeptides were electrotransferred to nitrocellulose paper. The individual RCII polypeptides (47 kDa, Dl, and D2) and the apoprotein of photosystem I (PSI) were identified by immunodecoration with specific antibodies and “‘I-labeled protein A (ZB). CBB, stained gel strips. The difference in the detection intensity of the immunodecorated polypeptides (ZB) is ascribed to differences in antisera binding characteristics. thvlakoid domains. shorter than that of the stacks containing 2-4 lamellae (20). Thus exposed membrane surfaces where polyribosomes can bind are found not only in the pure stromal membrane fraction (144 K) as in higher plants (7, 13) but also in the intermediate fraction (40 K) and to some extent also in the grana fraction as isolated by the method (15) used in this work. Therefore, in view of this difference and considering the results in Fig. 1, it was necessary to separate the grana, intermediate, and stroma fractions to locate the site of pD1 integration in the membranes. Following a short radioactive pulse labeling, pD1 could be found only in membrane fractions consisting of or being enriched in unappressed domains (Fig. 2a, pulse lanes (P) of autoradiogram (A) of the intermediate and stromal fractions). A small amount of pD1 was already processed to the mature Dl form and appeared in the intermediate and grana fraction during the radioactive pulse. These results differ from those obtained with higher plant systems in which processed Dl appears already at the end of the radioactive pulse in the stroma fraction (13). After a chase period of 30 min (Fig. 2, a and b, chase lanes (c), no pD1 was apparent, and mature Dl could be seen in the grana and intermediate fractions. To ascertain that the radioactively labeled band appearing at the level of the pD1 is indeed pD1, the gel was transferred to nitrocellulose paper as described under “Materials and Methods” and immunodecorated with anti-D1 antibodies (Fig. 2b). The immunoblot detects the steady-state level of the precursor and mature Dl protein in the cells exposed to high light prior to (pulse) and after the addition of chloramphenicol (chase). Fig. 2b shows the presence of pD1 in the stroma and the total membrane fractions of the cells which were used for the pulse-labeling experiment. During the chase the precursor protein amount diminishes substantially in these fractions. Mature Dl protein is present in the intermediate fraction during the pulse period and diminishes as well during the chase. The amounts of Dl protein in the grana and total thylakoids are compatible with the amount of stained protein in the original gels (compare with Fig. 2a, CBB). The fast processing of pD1 in the unappressed membrane fractions could indicate that the processing enzyme Light Regulation of pD1 Synthesis Is Mediated 97.466.242.731.0- 42.7- 31.0- y ‘-J _- -I 2.. 12565 by RCII _ f 43 PDI J _ I OIL DL e i 47DI* D2” 7 21.1 - -. 14.4- dcge*“w-eJP- 21.1- ,.k . I- 14.4- 97.4 66.2- * . 42.7CPC PC P c P CPC P CBB (b) c P c . P A 31.0-- ,-M--I-G,-IY-SY l D, +-F- -. -s. C * 21.1l4.4- CElB CPCPCPCP FIG. 2. The Dl precursor (PDZ) is found intermediate thylakoid membrane in unappressed domains. a, cells were radioactively labeled, and thylakoid membranes were prepared and fractionated as described under “Materials and Methods.” Proteins of equivalent membrane fractions on a chlorophyll basis (5 rg) were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. M, total thylakoid membranes; G, grana fraction; Z, intermediate unappressed fraction; S, stroma unappressed fraction; P, pulse; C, chase; CBB, Coomassie Brilliant Blue-stained gel; A, autoradiogram. b, immunoblot of the stained gel after transfer to nitrocellulose paper. After the pulse pD1 (open circles) is found only in the unappressed membrane fractions. Some pD1 has already been processed to mature Dl (closed circles) and translocated to the intermediate and grana fractions. During the chase all pD1 is processed and translocated to the intermediate and grana fractions. stroma and for the maturation of pD1 may be enriched in the interphase between the unappressed and appressed membrane domains.The Precursor of the Dl Protein Is Integrated in XII-Having identified pD1 in the unappressed domains of C. reinhardtii thylakoids, we addressed the question of whether pD1 is inserted as a free polypeptide in the membrane or becomes integrated into a protein complex. To answer this question total thylakoids from the experiment shown in Fig. 2 were subjected to nondenaturing gel electrophoresis, which preserves the intactness of chlorophyll-protein complexes including RCII (equivalent to CCII+a in Ref. 17) (Fig. 3). The polypeptide compositions of the protein complexes at the end of pulse (P) and chase (C) are shown in Fig. 3, left upper and lower panels, respectively. Polypeptides dissociating from a specific complex appear in a vertical row deviating from the exponential diagonal migration of free polypeptides (left upper panel; also see “Materials and Methods”). In this procedure the following components of RCII are resolved (upper left panel): the 47-kDa polypeptide, Dl and D2 identified by blotting with specific antibodies, and cytochrome bssg identified by heme staining (21) in the first dimension nondenaturing gel (data not shown). The 43-kDa reaction center II polypeptide, which binds chlorophyll and forms the RCII core antenna, migrates as a separate entity (CP43 (17)) (Fig. 3). Autoradiography of the second dimension denaturing gels shows that all labeled Dl or pD1 as identified in Fig. 2 are found only in RCII complexes (Fig. 3, P and C panels, arrowhead and large black arrow, respectively). These labeled polypeptides are found in a position identical to the Coomassie system responsible FIG. 3. pD1 and mature A Dl are found only in reaction cen- Equal amounts of total thylakoids from cells labeled as in Fig. 2 (3 rg) were resolved into chlorophyll-protein complexes, and their constituent polypeptides were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (see “Materials and Methods”): P, pulse; C, chase; A, autoradiogram; CBB, stained gels in which the RCII polypeptides, 47 kDa, 43 kDa, Dl, and D2, are marked by different arrows; proteinchlorophyll complexes resolved in the first dimension nondenaturing electrophoresis are marked. At the end of the pulse, pD1 (arrowhead) is seen in a position corresponding to RCII resolved into two forms (RCII a and RCII b) as detected by the Coomassie Brilliant Blue stain; at the end of the chase, mature Dl protein (large black arrow) is seen in RCII a. ter II. Blue-stained RCII (compare with CBB panels, Fig. 3), off diagonal. When the thylakoids were heat-denatured prior to the first dimension electrophoretic separation, all proteins appeared on a diagonal line (data not shown). These results could be explained only if pD1 is integrated into RCII located in the unappressed membrane domains and is processed after its integration into the RCII complex. It has been previously shown that the D2 protein turns over in the light at lower rates than Dl (11). Some radioactively labeled D2 (corresponding to the D2 stained band (Fig. 3, CBB)) is also present in RCII as expected (Fig. 3, P panel, open arrow). A third labeled band, positioned 2-3 kDa below D2, which does not correspond to the visibly stained polypeptide band is identified as Dl. This identification is based on protein immunoblotting (Fig. 2b; see also Fig. 1, Dl). The nature of this band is not yet clear. Its reactivity with the Dl antibodies could indicate that this band, representing only a small amount of protein, could be a degradation product of Dl. However, the fact that this band is already labeled during the pulse does not support this interpretation. Thus this band could represent a different conformer of Dl occurring in the presence of SDS. Different Forms of RCII Shuttle between the Appressed and Unappressed Membrane Domains in the Process of pD1 Synthesis and Maturation-Different forms of chlorophyll protein complexes related to RCII could be separated by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis as carried out in this work. To establish their relative distribution, nondenaturing gels of the thylakoid subfractions (grana, intermediate, and stroma) were run, and the polypeptide compositions of the chlorophyll-protein complexes were resolved by denaturing electrophoresis in the 12566 Light Regulation of pD1 Synthesis second dimension (Fig. 4). Three distinct forms of RCII were resolved. These are denoted as a, a*, and b (Figs. 3 and 4, CBB panels). In some experiments, complex a* could be identified in two-dimensional gels of total thylakoids by immunoblotting as well as by staining (data not shown). As can be seen, radioactively labeled pD1 identified as such in Fig. 2. is present in complexes a and b in the stroma membrane domain (Fig. 4, Stroma, Pulse panel, arrowhead). The same is true for the intermediate fraction (Fig. 4, Intermediate, Pulse). The label marked by the arrowhead (pD1) also contains a small amount of mature Dl (as identified in Fig. 2a). Comparison of Figs. 2, a and b, shows that at the end of the pulse labeling most of the Dl is in the precursor form (Fig. 2a, I, P), while in the immunoblot which shows the steady state level of the protein, most of the Dl is in the mature form (Fig. 2b, Z, P). Thus processing appears to take place in this membrane fraction. The same complexes, however, contain processed Dl in the grana domains (Fig. 4, Grana, Pulse, black arrow). After 30 min of chase no radioactive label is found in complex b in all membrane fractions. Also, no radioactively labeled Dl is found in the complexes present in the stromal membrane domains (Fig. 4, Chase, Stroma panel). Following chase, labeled Dl is found in complex a in the intermediate and grana membranes and in complex a* in the grana membrane domains (Fig. 4, Chase panels, black arrow). The appearance of more than one type of RCII complex can be attributed to: (i) changes in RCII organization during Grana Intermediate 1 1 t 7 t -D 2 _Stroma a=Q t t a b t t ab a’ d FIG. 4. Reaction center II containing newly synthesized Dl translocates from the unappressed to the appressed membrane domains. Thylakoid membranes labeled and fractionated as in Fig. 2 were separated (3 pg of chlorophyll/fraction) into protein complex polypeptide components as in Fig. 3: CBB, stained gel (representative of both pulse and chase membrane fractions); P, pulse; C, chase. Three forms of RCII are resolved in order of decreasingapparent molecular mass:a*, a, and b. After pulse labeling, pD1 (arrowheads) is found only in the a and b forms of RCII in unappressedmembranes. These complexescontain a small amount of already processedDl in the intermediate fraction. Dl (black arrow) is found in the a and b forms of RCII and after chase, in a and in a and u* forms in the intermediate and granal fraction, respectively. Is Mediated by RCII the process of light-induced modification and Dl protein exchange (see “Discussion”); (ii) the presence of other photosystem II polypeptides not resolved by this gel system, or (iii) by the association of more than one RCII unit into oligomeric complexes as has been described for the photosystern I reaction center (22). DISCUSSION Based on the data presented in this work we propose that following its light-induced modification (6, 12), RCII dissociates in uiuo from the light-harvesting antennae in the granal membrane domain (23) as an assembled complex and appears to translocate to the unappressed membrane domains where it serves as an acceptor for the newly synthesized pD1. Alternatively, one could consider that unstacking may occur where modified RCII dissociates from the light-harvesting complex. Unstacking, as examined by electron microscopy, does not appear to occur in chloroplasts of cells exposed to high light for up to 90 min under conditions enhancing Dl turnover (11): Thus translocation of RCII seems to be the operative control mechanism of Dl exchange. The contention that light enhances translocation of RCII to the unappressed membrane regions as an assembled complex is essential to this conclusion and is based on the fact that neither pD1 nor the Dl, D2, or 47-kDa polypeptides of RCII could be detected as free running polypeptides in the second dimension electrophoresis. The involvement of RCII components in the regulation of Dl synthesis has been documented by results obtained with C. reinhardtii and cyanobacterial mutants. The Dl protein is not detectable in mutants lacking D2 (9), the 47-kDa polypeptide (lo), or the cytochrome bss9 apoproteins (24, 25). Conversely the latter polypeptides are synthesized but do not accumulate in Dl-less mutants (26). Thus one would expect that addition of chloramphenicol, preventing synthesis and replacement of Dl protein, will promote the degradation of all reaction center II proteins. This is, however, not the case (ll), supporting the idea that RCII does not disassemble during the process of Dl degradation and replacement. Thus the increase in the amount of RCII polypeptides in the intermediate membrane fraction can be ascribed to translocation of RCII complexes. The methodology used in this work did not permit identification of Dl-less reaction centers in experiments in which cells were exposed to high light intensity in the presence of chloramphenicol (data not shown). Whether RCII directly regulates the translation of pD1 or stabilizes pD1 after its synthesis, protecting it from immediate degradation, cannot yet be decided unequivocally. If pD1 is first inserted into the membranes as a free polypeptide and RCII only protects pD1 from proteolysis after its integration into the complex, then the processes of integration and/or degradation of free pD1 are extremely fast since no free pD1 could be detected at the end of the 2-min pulse. Translation control by arrest of the elongation process in the absence of chlorophyll synthesis has been described for chlorophyll-binding proteins (27). It is thus possible that pD1 chain elongation is arrested unless the nascent chain is accepted by RCII. Binding of newly synthesized chloroplast proteins to a specific acceptor protein (possibly the 47-kDa polypeptide) has been suggested before as a translation arrest mechanism (10). The role of RCII as an acceptor of pD1 and the implication that processing of pD1 occurs following integration into RCII are supported by the previous observation that in a Scenedesmus mutant lacking the processing enzyme system, pD1 ap’ N. Adir, S. Shochat, and I. Ohad, unpublished data. Light Regulation of pD1 Synthesis Is Mediated pears as a stoichiometric stable component of photochemitally active RCII (28, 29). We have previously reported that both pD1 and Dl proteins in situ are not susceptible to cross-linking reagents unless denatured by treatment of the membranes with certain detergents and thus have proposed that they share a similar conformation and/or environment (19). The results presented here are in agreement with these observations. Three forms of RCII complexes of different apparent molecular mass could be resolved by the nondenaturing electrophoresis technique used in this work. The a type complex form appeared in all membrane fractions. Considering the amount of grana membrane domain relative to the total membranes as estimated from the chlorophyll amount in the various fractions, the a form of RCII is the predominant form in C. reinhardtii thylakoids. The a* form which was found only in the grana membranes could be an oligomeric form of RCII. The b form of RCII was found mostly in the unappressed membrane fractions and thus amounts only to a relatively small fraction (about 10-E%) of the total RCII present in the thylakoids. The presence of these RCII forms is apparently not an artifact of the detergent treatment. This is strongly suggested by the specific and transient appearance of pD1 in the a and b forms of RCII in the stroma membrane fraction, by the transient appearance of the processed Dl in the a and b forms of RCII in the intermediate membrane domain, and by the absence of labeled Dl in the a* RCII form during pulse labeling and its appearance during the chase period. One should stress here that the identification of the radioactive spots corresponding to the Dl protein in the various forms of RCII as pD1 and Dl is based not only on the denaturing electrophoresis carried in the two-dimensional gels but also on the data obtained by gradient SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shown in Fig. 2. The second dimension gels serve mostly the purpose of demonstrating the presence of pulse-labeled precursor and mature Dl in reaction center II complexes. The fact that pD1 appears transiently in two different RCII complex forms precludes the possibility that pD1 is integrated in the membranes as a free protein and that its location in the lanes corresponding to RCII forms is an experimental artifact. Based on these and previous results (6, 12), one could consider that the modified forms of RCII characterized by impaired electron flow and charge recombination (6, 12), induced by exposure of chloroplasts to light, may be related to the a and b RCII forms found in the unappressed membrane domains. Reactivation of photoinhibited irreversibly damaged RCII requires replacement of the altered Dl protein by a newly synthesized molecule (3, 12). Thus such RCII forms may dissociate from the light-harvesting complex (23) and migrate to the unappressed membrane domains where they could serve as an acceptor for the newly synthesized pD1. The average distance from the center of a granum stack to the adjacent unappressed membrane domain in C. reinhardtii thylakoids is in the range of 200 nm (20). Translocation of RCII complexes from the grana to the unappressed domains is thus compatible with the observed results considering that the diffusion coefficient of chloroplast membrane-protein complexes within the membrane bilayer is estimated as 2 x 10-l’ cm2 s-’ at 25 “C (30). Following integration of pD1 the properties of RCII change concomitantly with the processing of pD1 to mature Dl. Thus while pD1 may be initially integrated in the b form of RCII, conversion of b to a will result in the presence of pD1 in both forms of RCII. It also appears that conversion of b to a is not by RCII a consequence of the processing step. Following translocation to the appressed membrane domain, mature Dl is found for a short time in both these forms of RCII. The presence of Dl in the b form of RCII in the grana fraction at the end of the pulse could be attributed to the presence of unappressed surface-exposed membranes. However, after only a 30-min chase period the b form converts to the a or a* forms. These forms having been translocated back to the grana appressed membrane domains complete the cycle of light-induced inactivation/reactivation of RCII (6, 12) and Dl turnover. Reaction centers unable to transfer electrons to the plastoquinone pool were reported to occur preferentially in unstacked thylakoids (p centers (31)). The relative amount of @ centers increases in light-exposed cells (32). Hence, p centers may include the light-modified RCII (b form of RCII?) described above. Migration of RCII components to the stroma membrane domains in photoinhibited thylakoids was reported to occur in vitro (33). The data reported so far are consistent with the hypothesis that RCII modified by light exposure shuttles from granal to stromal membrane domains where it serves to regulate pD1 synthesis, possibly by translational control. This involvement of RCII provides a coupling mechanism between light intensity-dependent damage to RCII and Dl degradation and light intensity-dependent pD1 synthesis. Acknowledgment-Antisera against the 47-kDa apoprotein of the photosystem Dr. R. Nechushtai, The Hebrew protein and the reaction center were the kind gift of University, Jerusalem, Israel. REFERENCES 1. Nanba, O., and Satoh, K. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 84,109-112 2. Nixon, P. J., Dyer, T. A., Barber, J., and Hunter, C. N. (1986) FEBS Z&t. 209,83-86 3. Mattoo, A. K., Hoffman-Falk, H., Marder, J. B., and Edelman, M. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 81, 1380-1384 4. Wettern, M., and Ohad, I. (1984) Zsr. J. Bot. 33, 253-263 5. Ohad. I.. Kyle. D. J.. and Arntzen. C. J. (1984) J. Cell Biol. 99. 4811485 6. Ohad, I., Adir, N., Koike, H., Kyle, D. J., and Inoue, Y. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265,1972-1979 7. Herrin, D., and Michaels, A. (1985) FEBS L&t. 184, 90-95 8. Fromm. H.. Devic. M.. Fluhr. R.. and Edelman. M. 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