Navassard V. Karapetyan
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Navassard V. Karapetyan.
Biophysical Journal | 2001
Bas Gobets; Ivo H. M. van Stokkum; Matthias Rögner; Jochen Kruip; Eberhard Schlodder; Navassard V. Karapetyan; Jan P. Dekker; Rienk van Grondelle
Photosystem I (PS-I) contains a small fraction of chlorophylls (Chls) that absorb at wavelengths longer than the primary electron donor P700. The total number of these long wavelength Chls and their spectral distribution are strongly species dependent. In this contribution we present room temperature time-resolved fluorescence data of five PS-I core complexes that contain different amounts of these long wavelength Chls, i.e., monomeric and trimeric photosystem I particles of the cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, Synechococcus elongatus, and Spirulina platensis, which were obtained using a synchroscan streak camera. Global analysis of the data reveals considerable differences between the equilibration components (3.4-15 ps) and trapping components (23-50 ps) of the various PS-I complexes. We show that a relatively simple compartmental model can be used to reproduce all of the observed kinetics and demonstrate that the large kinetic differences are purely the result of differences in the long wavelength Chl content. This procedure not only offers rate constants of energy transfer between and of trapping from the compartments, but also well-defined room temperature emission spectra of the individual Chl pools. A pool of red shifted Chls absorbing around 702 nm and emitting around 712 nm was found to be a common feature of all studied PS-I particles. These red shifted Chls were found to be located neither very close to P700 nor very remote from P700. In Synechococcus trimeric and Spirulina monomeric PS-I cores, a second pool of red Chls was present which absorbs around 708 nm, and emits around 721 nm. In Spirulina trimeric PS-I cores an even more red shifted second pool of red Chls was found, absorbing around 715 nm and emitting at 730 nm.
FEBS Letters | 2004
Marina G. Rakhimberdieva; Igor N. Stadnichuk; I.V. Elanskaya; Navassard V. Karapetyan
Brief – 10‐second long – irradiation of a photosystem II‐deficient mutant of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 with intense blue or UV‐B light causes an about 40% decrease of phycobilisome (PBS) fluorescence, slowly reversible in the dark. The registered action spectrum of PBS fluorescence quenching only shows bands at 500, 470 and 430 nm, typical of carotenoids, and an additional UV‐B band; no peaks in the region of chlorophyll or PBS absorption have been found. We propose that quenching induced by carotenoids, possibly protein‐bound or glycoside, reveals a new regulatory mechanism protecting photosynthetic apparatus of cyanobacteria against photodamage.
FEBS Letters | 1999
Navassard V. Karapetyan; Alfred R. Holzwarth; Matthias Rögner
The photosystem I complex organized in cyanobacterial membranes preferentially in trimeric form participates in electron transport and is also involved in dissipation of excess energy thus protecting the complex against photodamage. A small number of longwave chlorophylls in the core antenna of photosystem I are not located in the close vicinity of P700, but at the periphery, and increase the absorption cross‐section substantially. The picosecond fluorescence kinetics of trimers resolved the fastest energy transfer components reflecting the equilibration processes in the core antenna at different redox states of P700. Excitation kinetics in the photosystem I bulk antenna is nearly trap‐limited, whereas excitation trapping from longwave chlorophyll pools is diffusion‐limited and occurs via the bulk antenna. Charge separation in the photosystem I reaction center is the fastest of all known reaction centers.
FEBS Letters | 1993
Vladimir V. Shubin; Vladimir Tsuprun; I.N. Bezsmertnaya; Navassard V. Karapetyan
Oligomeric and monomeric forms of chlorophyll—protein complexes of photosystem I (PSI) have been isolated from the mesophilic cyanobacterium Spirulina [(1992) FEBS Lett. 309, 340–342]. Electron microscopic analysis of the complexes showed that the oligomeric form is a trimer of the shape and dimensions similar to those of the trimer from thermophilic cyanobacteria. The chlorophyl ratio in the isolated trimer and monomer was found to be 7:3. The trimeric form of PSI complex in contrast to the monomeric one contains the chlorophyll emitting at 760 nm (77K), which is also found in Spirulina membranes and therefore could be used as an intrinsic probe for the trimeric complex. The 77K circular dichroism spectrum of the trimeric form is much more similar to that of Spirulina membranes than the spectrum of the monomer. Thus, the trimeric PSI complexes exist and dominate in the Spirulina membranes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Jochen Kruip; Navassard V. Karapetyan; Irina V. Terekhova; Matthias Rögner
Many membrane proteins can be isolated in different oligomeric forms. Photosystem I (PSI), for example, exists in cyanobacteria either as a monomeric or as a trimeric complex. Neither the factors responsible for the specific trimerization process nor its biological role are known at present. In the filamentous cyanobacteriumSpirulina platensis, trimers in contrast to monomers show chlorophyll fluorescence emission at 760 nm. To investigate the oligomerization process as well as the nature of the long wavelength chlorophylls, we describe here an in vitro reconstitution procedure to assemble trimeric PS I from isolated purified PS I monomers. Monomers (and trimers) were extracted from S. platensis with n-dodecyl β-d-maltoside and further purified by perfusion chromatography steps. The isolated complexes had the same polypeptide composition as other cyanobacteria (PsaA–PsaF and PsaI–PsaM), as determined from high resolution gels and immunoblotting. They were incorporated into proteoliposomes, which had been prepared by the detergent absorption method, starting from a phosphatidylcholine:phosphatidic acid mixture solubilized by octylglucoside. After the addition of monomeric PS I (lipid:chlorophyll, 25:1), octylglucoside was gradually removed by the stepwise addition of Biobeads. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum of these proteoliposomes displays a long wavelength emission at 760 nm that is characteristic of PS I trimers, which indicates for the first time the successful in vitro reconstitution of PS I trimers. In addition, a high performance liquid chromatography analysis of complexes extracted from these proteoliposomes confirms the formation of structural trimers. We also could show with this system 1) that at least one of the stromal subunits PsaC, -D, and -E is necessary for trimer formation and 2) that the extreme long wavelength emitting chlorophyll is formed as a result of trimer formation.
Biochemistry | 2007
Navassard V. Karapetyan
The pathways of energy dissipation of excessive absorbed energy in cyanobacteria in comparison with that in higher plants are discussed. Two mechanisms of non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria are described. In one case this quenching occurs as light-induced decrease of the fluorescence yield of long-wavelength chlorophylls of the photosystem I trimers induced by inactive reaction centers: P700 cation-radical or P700 in triplet state. In the other case, non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria takes place with contribution of water-soluble protein OCP (containing 3′-hydroxyechinenone) that induces reversible quenching of allophycocyanin fluorescence in phycobilisomes. The possible evolutionary pathways of the involvement of carotenoid-binding proteins in non-photochemical quenching are discussed comparing the cyanobacterial OCP and plant PsbS protein.
FEBS Letters | 1992
Vladimir V. Shubin; I.N. Bezsmertnaya; Navassard V. Karapetyan
Two types of chlorophyll‐protein complexes of photosystem 1 (PSIa, PSIc) have been isolated from the membranes of Spirulina platensis using a Triton X‐100 treatment and chromatography on DEAE‐Toyopearl. The complexes are equally enriched with P700 (Chl: P700=100–110) but show different electrophoretic molecular masses ‐ 140 (PSIa) and 320 kDa (PSIc) ‐ and differ in the content of long‐wavelength absorbing Chl. PSIa has a typical PSI fluorescence band at 730 nm (F730) as the main band at 77 K, whereas PSIc is responsible for F760, the intensity of which depends on the redox state of P700. PSIc only shows 77 K light‐induced variable fluorescence at 760 typical of Spirulina membranes and cells.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1995
Vladimir V. Shubin; I.N. Bezsmertnaya; Navassard V. Karapetyan
Abstract To study the role of the long-wavelength chlorophylls (Chl) in photosystem I (PSI), the action spectra of P700 photooxidation at 293 and 77 K have been measured for PSI trimeric and monomeric complexes isolated from Spirulina platensis . The long-wavelength Chls which absorb in the region 710dash740 nm transfer excitation energy to the reduced P700 with the same efficiency as bulk antenna Chls, causing the oxidation of P700. The relative quantum yield of P700 photooxidation is about unity (293-77 K) even under the direct excitation of Chl absorbing at 735 nm (Chl735). At 77 K Chl735 exhibits a fluorescence band at 760 nm (F760) whose intensity is quenched under illumination of the PSI trimeric complexes from Spirulina . The relative quantum yield of F760 quenching is not dependent on the wavelength of excitation in the region 620–750 nm. Since the value of the overlap integral between the band of F760 and the absorption band of the cation radical of P700 (P700 + ) is higher than that of the P700 band, it is suggested that Chl735 transfers energy to P700 + more efficiently than to reduced P700; energy transfer to P700 + causes the quenching of F760. A linear relationship between the photooxidation rate of P700 and the fraction of P700 + at 293 K indicates that the energy exchange between PSI subunits of the trimer is negligible. Thus, the antenna of PSI trimers of Spirulina is organized in separate photosynthetic units.
Biochemistry | 2010
Eithar El-Mohsnawy; Marta J. Kopczak; Eberhard Schlodder; Marc M. Nowaczyk; Helmut E. Meyer; Bettina Warscheid; Navassard V. Karapetyan; Matthias Rögner
Until now, the functional and structural characterization of monomeric photosystem 1 (PS1) complexes from Thermosynechococcus elongatus has been hampered by the lack of a fully intact PS1 preparation; for this reason, the three-dimensional crystal structure at 2.5 A resolution was determined with the trimeric PS1 complex [Jordan, P., et al. (2001) Nature 411 (6840), 909-917]. Here we show the possibility of isolating from this cyanobacterium the intact monomeric PS1 complex which preserves all subunits and the photochemical activity of the isolated trimeric complex. Moreover, the equilibrium between these complexes in the thylakoid membrane can be shifted by a high-salt treatment in favor of monomeric PS1 which can be quantitatively extracted below the phase transition temperature. Both monomers and trimers exhibit identical posttranslational modifications of their subunits and the same reaction centers but differ in the long-wavelength antenna chlorophylls. Their chlorophyll/P700 ratio (108 for the monomer and 112 for the trimer) is slightly higher than in the crystal structure, confirming mild preparation conditions. Interaction of antenna chlorophylls of the monomers within the trimer leads to a larger amount of long-wavelength chlorophylls, resulting in a higher photochemical activity of the trimers under red or far-red illumination. The dynamic equilibrium between monomers and trimers in the thylakoid membrane may indicate a transient monomer population in the course of biogenesis and could also be the basis for short-term adaptation of the cell to changing environmental conditions.
Photosynthesis Research | 2008
Navassard V. Karapetyan
Two mechanisms of photoprotective dissipation of the excessively absorbed energy by photosynthetic apparatus of cyanobacteria are described that divert energy from reaction centers. Energy dissipation, monitored as nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching, occurs at different steps of energy transfer within the phycobilisomes or core antenna of photosystem I. Although these mechanisms differ significantly, in both cases, energy dissipates mainly from terminal emitters: allophycocyanin B or core membrane linker protein (LCM) in phycobilisomes, or the longest-wavelength chlorophylls in photosystem I antenna. It is supposed that carotenoid-induced energy dissipation in phycobilisomes is triggered by light-induced transformation of the nonquenched state of antenna into quenched state due to conformation changes caused by orange carotinoid-binding protein (OCP)–phycobilisome interaction. Fluorescence of the longest-wavelength chlorophylls of photosystem I antenna is strongly quenched by P700 cation radical or by P700 triplet state, dependent on redox state of the acceptor side cofactors of photosystem I.