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Comparative Study
. 2004 Nov 4;1659(1):63-72.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2004.08.004.

Plastocyanin redox kinetics in spinach chloroplasts: evidence for disequilibrium in the high potential chain

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Free article
Comparative Study

Plastocyanin redox kinetics in spinach chloroplasts: evidence for disequilibrium in the high potential chain

Helmut Kirchhoff et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .
Free article

Abstract

Reduction kinetics of cytochrome f, plastocyanin (PC) and P(700) ('high-potential chain') in thylakoids from spinach were followed after pre-oxidation by a saturating light pulse. We describe a novel approach to follow PC redox kinetics from deconvolution of 810-860 nm absorption changes. The equilibration between the redox-components was analyzed by plotting the redox state of cytochrome f and PC against that of P(700). In thylakoids with (1) diminished electron transport rate (adjusted with a cytochrome bf inhibitor) or (2) de-stacked grana, cytochrome f and PC relaxed close to their thermodynamic equilibriums with P(700). In stacked thylakoids with non-inhibited electron transport, the equilibration plots were complex and non-hyperbolic, suggesting that during fast electron flux, the 'high-potential chain' does not homogeneously equilibrate throughout the membrane. Apparent equilibrium constants <5 were calculated, which are below the thermodynamic equilibrium known for the 'high potential chain'. The disequilibrium found in stacked thylakoids with high electron fluxes is explained by restricted long-range PC diffusion. We develop a model assuming that about 30% of Photosystem I mainly located in grana end-membranes and margins rapidly equilibrate with cytochrome f via short-distance transluminal PC diffusion, while long-range lateral PC migration between grana cores and distant stroma lamellae is restricted. Implications for the electron flux control are discussed.

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