Joanna Kargul
University of Warsaw
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Featured researches published by Joanna Kargul.
FEBS Journal | 2005
Joanna Kargul; Maria V. Turkina; Jon Nield; Sam Benson; Alexander V. Vener; James Barber
The State 1 to State 2 transition in the photosynthetic membranes of plants and green algae involves the functional coupling of phosphorylated light‐harvesting complexes of photosystem II (LHCII) to photosystem I (PSI). We present evidence suggesting that in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii this coupling may be aided by a hyper‐phosphorylated form of the LHCII‐like CP29 protein (Lhcbm4). MS analysis of CP29 showed that Thr6, Thr16 and Thr32, and Ser102 are phosphorylated in State 2, whereas in State 1‐exposed cells only phosphorylation of Thr6 and Thr32 could be detected. The LHCI–PSI supercomplex isolated from the alga in State 2 was found to contain strongly associated CP29 in phosphorylated form. Electron microscopy suggests that the binding site for this highly phosphorylated CP29 is close to the PsaH protein. It is therefore postulated that redox‐dependent multiple phosphorylation of CP29 in green algae is an integral part of the State transition process in which the structural changes of CP29, induced by reversible phosphorylation, determine the affinity of LHCII for either of the two photosystems.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2008
James W. Murray; Karim Maghlaoui; Joanna Kargul; Naoko Ishida; Thanh-Lan Lai; A. William Rutherford; Miwa Sugiura; Alain Boussac; James Barber
Bromide anomalous X-ray diffraction analyses have been used to locate chloride binding sites in the vicinity of the water splitting/oxygen evolving centre (OEC) of Photosystem II. Three-dimensional crystals of PSII from Thermosynechococcus elongatus were grown from (i) isolated PSII crystals infiltrated with bromide or (ii) PSII obtained from cells cultured in a medium in which the chloride content was totally replaced by bromide. In either case, the anomalous diffraction yielded the same result, the existence of two bromide binding sites in the vicinity of the OEC. Neither are in the first coordination sphere of the Mn and Ca ions which form the catalytic centre of the OEC, being about 6 to 7 A from the metal-cluster. Site 1 is located close to the side chain nitrogen of D2-K317 and the backbone nitrogen of D1-Glu333 while Site 2 is adjacent to backbone nitrogens of CP43-Glu354 and D1-Asn338. Their positioning close to postulated hydrophilic channels may suggest a role in proton removal from, or substrate access to, the OEC.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2006
Maria V. Turkina; Joanna Kargul; Amaya Blanco-Rivero; Arsenio Villarejo; James Barber; Alexander V. Vener
Mapping of in vivo protein phosphorylation sites in photosynthetic membranes of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii revealed that the major environmentally dependent changes in phosphorylation are clustered at the interface between the photosystem II (PSII) core and its light-harvesting antennae (LHCII). The photosynthetic membranes that were isolated form the algal cells exposed to four distinct environmental conditions affecting photosynthesis: (i) dark aerobic, corresponding to photosynthetic State 1; (ii) dark under nitrogen atmosphere, corresponding to photosynthetic State 2; (iii) moderate light; and (iv) high light. The surface-exposed phosphorylated peptides were cleaved from the membrane by trypsin, methyl-esterified, enriched by immobilized metal affinity chromatography, and sequenced by nanospray-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. A total of 19 in vivo phosphorylation sites were mapped in the proteins corresponding to 15 genes in C. reinhardtii. Amino-terminal acetylation of seven proteins was concomitantly determined. Sequenced amino termini of six mature LHCII proteins differed from the predicted ones. The State 1-to-State 2 transition induced phosphorylation of the PSII core components D2 and PsbR and quadruple phosphorylation of a minor LHCII antennae subunit, CP29, as well as phosphorylation of constituents of a major LHCII complex, Lhcbm1 and Lhcbm10. Exposure of the algal cells to either moderate or high light caused additional phosphorylation of the D1 and CP43 proteins of the PSII core. The high light treatment led to specific hyperphosphorylation of CP29 at seven distinct residues, phosphorylation of another minor LHCII constituent, CP26, at a single threonine, and double phosphorylation of additional subunits of a major LHCII complex including Lhcbm4, Lhcbm6, Lhcbm9, and Lhcbm11. Environmentally induced protein phosphorylation at the interface of PSII core and the associated antenna proteins, particularly multiple differential phosphorylations of CP29 linker protein, suggests the mechanisms for control of photosynthetic state transitions and for LHCII uncoupling from PSII under high light stress to allow thermal energy dissipation.
FEBS Journal | 2008
Joanna Kargul; James Barber
In order to carry out photosynthesis, plants and algae rely on the co‐operative interaction of two photosystems: photosystem I and photosystem II. For maximum efficiency, each photosystem should absorb the same amount of light. To achieve this, plants and green algae have a mobile pool of chlorophyll a/b‐binding proteins that can switch between being light‐harvesting antenna for photosystem I or photosystem II, in order to maintain an optimal excitation balance. This switch, termed state transitions, involves the reversible phosphorylation of the mobile chlorophyll a/b‐binding proteins, which is regulated by the redox state of the plastoquinone‐mediating electron transfer between photosystem I and photosystem II. In this review, we will present the data supporting the function of redox‐dependent phosphorylation of the major and minor chlorophyll a/b‐binding proteins by the specific thylakoid‐bound kinases (Stt7, STN7, TAKs) providing a molecular switch for the structural remodelling of the light‐harvesting complexes during state transitions. We will also overview the latest X‐ray crystallographic and electron microscopy‐derived models for structural re‐arrangement of the light‐harvesting antenna during State 1‐to‐State 2 transition, in which the minor chlorophyll a/b‐binding protein, CP29, and the mobile light‐harvesting complex II trimer detach from the light‐harvesting complex II–photosystem II supercomplex and associate with the photosystem I core in the vicinity of the PsaH/L/O/P domain.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014
Håkan Nilsson; Tomasz Krupnik; Joanna Kargul; Johannes Messinger
The binding affinity of the two substrate-water molecules to the water-oxidizing Mn₄CaO₅ catalyst in photosystem II core complexes of the extremophilic red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae was studied in the S₂ and S₃ states by the exchange of bound ¹⁶O-substrate against ¹⁸O-labeled water. The rate of this exchange was detected via the membrane-inlet mass spectrometric analysis of flash-induced oxygen evolution. For both redox states a fast and slow phase of water-exchange was resolved at the mixed labeled m/z 34 mass peak: kf=52 ± 8s⁻¹ and ks=1.9 ± 0.3s⁻¹ in the S₂ state, and kf=42 ± 2s⁻¹ and kslow=1.2 ± 0.3s⁻¹ in S₃, respectively. Overall these exchange rates are similar to those observed previously with preparations of other organisms. The most remarkable finding is a significantly slower exchange at the fast substrate-water site in the S₂ state, which confirms beyond doubt that both substrate-water molecules are already bound in the S2 state. This leads to a very small change of the affinity for both the fast and the slowly exchanging substrates during the S₂→S₃ transition. Implications for recent models for water-oxidation are briefly discussed.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013
Tomasz Krupnik; Eva Kotabová; Laura S. van Bezouwen; Radosław Mazur; Maciej Garstka; Peter J. Nixon; James Barber; Radek Kaňa; Egbert J. Boekema; Joanna Kargul
Background: PSII is a protein complex that captures sunlight to drive water oxidation. Results: Cyanidioschyzon merolae PSII is protected by reversible reaction center-based non-photochemical quenching. Conclusion: C. merolae PSII employs reaction center non-photochemical quenching as the main photoprotective mechanism. Significance: We provide the first direct evidence of the PSII reaction center as the primary locus of non-photochemical quenching in the extremophilic red algae. Members of the rhodophytan order Cyanidiales are unique among phototrophs in their ability to live in extremely low pH levels and moderately high temperatures. The photosynthetic apparatus of the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae represents an intermediate type between cyanobacteria and higher plants, suggesting that this alga may provide the evolutionary link between prokaryotic and eukaryotic phototrophs. Although we now have a detailed structural model of photosystem II (PSII) from cyanobacteria at an atomic resolution, no corresponding structure of the eukaryotic PSII complex has been published to date. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a highly active and robust dimeric PSII complex from C. merolae. We show that this complex is highly stable across a range of extreme light, temperature, and pH conditions. By measuring fluorescence quenching properties of the isolated C. merolae PSII complex, we provide the first direct evidence of pH-dependent non-photochemical quenching in the red algal PSII reaction center. This type of quenching, together with high zeaxanthin content, appears to underlie photoprotection mechanisms that are efficiently employed by this robust natural water-splitting complex under excess irradiance. In order to provide structural details of this eukaryotic form of PSII, we have employed electron microscopy and single particle analyses to obtain a 17 Å map of the C. merolae PSII dimer in which we locate the position of the protein mass corresponding to the additional extrinsic protein stabilizing the oxygen-evolving complex, PsbQ′. We conclude that this lumenal subunit is present in the vicinity of the CP43 protein, close to the membrane plane.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2012
Joanna Kargul; Julian David Janna Olmos; Tomasz Krupnik
Photosystem I (PSI) is one of the most efficient biological macromolecular complexes that converts solar energy into condensed energy of chemical bonds. Despite high structural complexity, PSI operates with a quantum yield close to 1.0 and to date, no man-made synthetic system approached this remarkable efficiency. This review highlights recent developments in dissecting molecular structure and function of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic PSI. It also overviews progress in the application of this complex as a natural photocathode for production of hydrogen within the biomimetic solar-to-fuel nanodevices.
FEBS Letters | 2001
Joanna Kargul; Xavier Gansel; Matthew Tyrrell; Liliane Sticher; Michael R. Blatt
Syntaxins and other SNARE ( oluble SF‐ ttachment protein ceptor) complex proteins play a key role in the cellular processes of vesicle trafficking, vesicle fusion and secretion. Intriguingly, the SNARE NtSyr1 (=NtSyp121) from Nicotiana tabacum also appears to have a role in signalling evoked by the plant stress hormone abscisic acid. However, partner proteins contributing to its function(s) remain unknown. We used an affinity chromatography approach to identify proteins from tobacco leaf microsomes that directly interact with the hydrophilic (cytosolic) domains of NtSyr1 and report several interacting proteins with sensitivities to the endopeptidase activity of Clostridium botulinum neurotoxins, including one protein that was recognised by αAtSNAP33 antiserum, raised against the Arabidopsis SNAP25 homologue. Treatment of microsomal membrane fractions indicated a protein near 55 kDa was sensitive to proteolysis by BotN/A and BotN/E, yielding degradation products of approximately 34 and 23 kDa. Expressed and purified AtSNAP33 also bound directly to the cytosolic domain of NtSyr1 and was sensitive to proteolysis by these toxins, suggesting that NtSyr1, a tobacco homologue of AtSNAP33, and coordinate SNAREs are likely to associate as partners for function in vivo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Elżbieta Romanowska; Joanna Kargul; Marta Powikrowska; Giovanni Finazzi; Jon Nield; Anna Drożak; Berenika Pokorska
We investigated the organization of photosystem II (PSII) in agranal bundle sheath thylakoids from a C4 plant maize. Using blue native/SDS-PAGE and single particle analysis, we show for the first time that PSII in the bundle sheath (BS) chloroplasts exists in a dimeric form and forms light-harvesting complex II (LHCII)·PSII supercomplexes. We also demonstrate that a similar set of photosynthetic membrane complexes exists in mesophyll and agranal BS chloroplasts, including intact LHCI·PSI supercomplexes, PSI monomers, PSII core dimers, PSII monomers devoid of CP43, LHCII trimers, LHCII monomers, ATP synthase, and cytochrome b6f complex. Fluorescence functional measurements clearly indicate that BS chloroplasts contain PSII complexes that are capable of performing charge separation and are efficiently sensitized by the associated LHCII. We identified a fraction of LHCII present within BS thylakoids that is weakly energetically coupled to the PSII reaction center; however, the majority of BS LHCII is shown to be tightly connected to PSII. Overall, we demonstrate that organization of the photosynthetic apparatus in BS agranal chloroplasts of a model C4 plant is clearly distinct from that of the stroma lamellae of the C3 plants. In particular, supramolecular organization of the dimeric LHCII·PSII in the BS thylakoids strongly suggests that PSII in the BS agranal membranes may donate electrons to PSI. We propose that the residual PSII activity may supply electrons to poise cyclic electron flow around PSI and prevent PSI overoxidation, which is essential for the CO2 fixation in BS cells, and hence, may optimize ATP production within this compartment.
Photosynthesis Research | 2008
James W. Murray; Karim Maghlaoui; Joanna Kargul; Miwa Sugiura; James Barber
In order to investigate oxygen binding and hydrophobic cavities in photosystem II (PSII), we have introduced xenon under pressure into crystals of PSII isolated from Thermosynechococcus elongatus and used X-ray anomalous diffraction analyses to identify the xenon sites in the complex. Under the conditions employed, 25 Xe-binding sites were identified in each monomer of the dimeric PSII complex. The majority of these were distributed within the membrane spanning portion of the complex with no obvious correlation with the previously proposed oxygen channels. One binding site was located close to the haem of cytochrome b559 in a position analogous to a Xe-binding site of myoglobin. The only Xe-binding site not associated with the intrinsic subunits of PSII was within the hydrophobic core of the PsbO protein.