FEBS Letters
Volume 581, Issue 15 , Pages 2768-2775, 19 June 2007

Role of thylakoid protein kinases in photosynthetic acclimation

Edited by Horst Feldmann

Departments of Molecular Biology and Plant Biology, University of Geneva, 30, Quai Ernest Ansermet, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland

Received 28 March 2007; received in revised form 16 April 2007; accepted 18 April 2007. published online 25 April 2007.

Abstract 

Photosynthetic organisms are able to adjust to changes in light quality through state transition, a process which leads to a balancing of the light excitation energy between the antennae systems of photosystem II and photosystem I. A genetic approach has been used in Chlamydomonas with the aim of elucidating the signaling chain involved in state transitions. This has led to the identification of a small family of Ser–Thr protein kinases associated with the thylakoid membrane and conserved in algae and land plants. These kinases appear to be involved both in short and long term adaptations to changes in the light environment.

Abbreviations: PSII, photosystem II, PSI, photosystem I, LHC, light-harvesting complex, PQ, plastoquinone, PQH2, plastoquinol, DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)1,1-dimethylurea

Keywords: Light acclimation, State transitions, Thylakoid membrane, Kinase, Light-harvesting system, ATP

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PII: S0014-5793(07)00426-7

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2007.04.038

FEBS Letters
Volume 581, Issue 15 , Pages 2768-2775, 19 June 2007