Protein Information

ID 554
Name protein is
Synonyms ANX 2; p36; LIP 2; LIP2; ANX2; ANX2L4; ANX2P1; ANX2P2…

Compound Information

ID 318
Name diuron
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
7853392 Kless H, Vermaas W: Many combinations of amino acid sequences in a conserved region of the D1 protein satisfy photosystem II function. J Mol Biol. 1995 Feb 10;246(1):120-31.
The putative de helix of the D1 protein is located at the acceptor side of photosystem II (PS II) and serves as an indispensable part of a niche that binds the secondary plastoquinone QB. Combinatorial mutagenesis was applied to a stretch of four residues in a highly conserved region of this putative helix in order to reveal amino acid combinations that are able to support PS II function. An obligate photoheterotrophic mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, missing four residues (delta YFGR254-7) in the de helix, was transformed with a D1-coding sequence carrying fully degenerate combinations of codons at the site of the deletion. Upon selection for photoautotrophy, 25 mutants with functional PS II were isolated. All mutants showed different codon combinations at positions 254 to 257; none was identical to the wild-type sequence, and none of the conserved residues was found to be mandatory for PS II function. However, 24 of the mutants contained Tyr of Phe at position 254 while at the other three positions many different amino acid combinations could be functionally accommodated. Most sequences maintained an amphiphilic arrangement of the helix that may align Tyr254 facing the QB binding pocket. This residue is proposed to be functionally analogous to Phe216 of the L subunit in purple bacteria which contributes to binding of QB. Most of the PS II properties were similar in the mutants compared to wild-type. Noticeable modifications in the mutants concerned the semiquinone equilibrium of electron transfer between QA and QB, and the affinity of PS II inhibitors. Differential effects on the semiquinone equilibrium were observed between two distinct quinones occupying the QB site (plastoquinone versus 2,5-dichloro-p-benzo- quinone), implying that residues in this domain are involved, directly or indirectly, with different binding determinants of the quinones. Even though many different combinations of amino acids in positions 254 to 257 of the D1 protein may satisfy the primary function of PS II, complex requirements need to be combined for optimized performance of the QB binding niche.
1(0,0,0,1)