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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2003, p . 3654-3660, Vol . 185,
No . 12
Oxidative Stress in Synechococcus sp. Strain PCC 7942: Various
Mechanisms for H2O2 Detoxification with Different
Physiological Roles
Alexander Perelman, Avraham Uzan, Dalia Hacohen, and Rakefet Schwarz*
Faculty of Life Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
Received 2 October 2002/ Accepted 21 March 2003
This study focuses on the mechanisms for hydrogen peroxide detoxification
in Synechococcus sp . strain PCC 7942 . To gain better understanding
of the role of different routes of hydrogen peroxide detoxification,
we inactivated tplA (thioredoxin-peroxidase-like), which we
recently identified . In addition, we inactivated the gene encoding
catalase-peroxidase and examined the ability to detoxify H2O2
and to survive oxidative stress in both of the single mutants
and in the double mutant . Surprisingly, we observed that the double
mutant survived H2O2 concentrations that the single
catalase-peroxidase mutant could not tolerate . This phenotype
correlated with an increased ability of the double mutant to detoxify
externally added H2O2 compared to the
catalase-peroxidase mutant . Therefore, our studies suggested the
existence of a hydrogen peroxide detoxification activity in addition
to catalase-peroxidase and thioredoxin-peroxidase . The rate of
detoxification of externally added H2O2 was similar
in the wild-type and the TplA mutant cells, suggesting that,
under these conditions, catalase-peroxidase activity was essential
for this process and TplA was dispensable . However, during excessive
radiation, conditions under which the cell might experience oxidative
stress, TplA appears to be essential for growth, and cells lacking it
cannot compete with the wild-type strain . Overall, these studies
suggested different physiological roles for various cellular hydrogen
peroxide detoxification mechanisms in Synechococcus sp . strain
PCC 7942 .
Cells of photosynthetic organisms possess substantial sources of
reactive oxygen species (ROS) in addition to the ROS-producing
processes common to all living cells . This stems from the need to
harvest light energy for their phototrophic metabolism . Accordingly,
these organisms face the challenge of capturing light energy
efficiently while avoiding oxidative damage caused by a surplus of
absorbed light . Excessive excitation stems from an imbalance between
energy absorption and dissipation rates (11,
19, 22) . Although high photon flux causes
excess excitation, light intensity is not the only effective factor .
Any environmental parameter that would slow down anabolism
(nonoptimal temperature, nutrient limitation, etc.) would decrease
photochemical dissipation and therefore may lead to oxidative stress
caused by excess absorbed light .
Certain excited pigment molecules may produce ROS, i.e., singlet
chlorophyll while decaying through triplet chlorophyll, causes the
formation of singlet oxygen (11, 19) . The
photosynthetic electron transport chain may produce damaging oxygen
species as well . For example, production of ROS may occur on the
acceptor side of photosystem II through electron flow from
phaeophytin or semiquinone . In addition, it is commonly accepted that
under excess of absorbed light, photosystem I can reduce molecular
oxygen to superoxide anion (Mehler reaction [1]), which
can be converted by superoxide dismutase to H2O2 .
Apart from being potentially harmful by itself, in the presence of
reduced metal ions H2O2 may be converted to
hydroxyl radical, a highly reactive and damaging entity . A recent
study (13) provided evidence for the involvement
of A-type flavoproteins in photoreduction of O2 by
electron transfer from photosystem I (the Mehler reaction) in
Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 (referred to here as Synechocystis
strain 6803) . One of the flavoproteins essential for photoreduction
of O2 has been shown to reduce O2 directly to water
in vitro (35) . It has therefore been suggested
that in contrast to eukaryotes, the Mehler reaction in cyanobacteria
does not produce ROS .
To avoid the damaging consequences of hydrogen peroxide production,
cells possess various enzymes that detoxify this compound (9,
11, 21, 24,
27, 32, 33) . Hydrogen
peroxide-detoxifying enzymes are traditionally classified as
catalases or peroxidases (27) . Enzymes of the
former group convert H2O2 to water and molecular
oxygen, whereas the peroxidases rely on electrons supplied by
reductants of low molecular weight, such as ascorbate and glutathione,
to reduce H2O2 or organic hydroperoxides . In
general, catalases exhibit lower affinity for H2O2
and higher kcat compared to the peroxidases . A
third type of hydrogen peroxide-detoxifying enzyme, one unique to
prokaryotes, is designated catalase-peroxidase (38) .
As a typical catalase, this enzyme converts H2O2 to water
and molecular oxygen but in vitro, it also shows a peroxidase
activity with o-dianisidine or pyrogallol as substrates . As
suggested by the substrate specificity (23), it is likely
that, in vivo, the cyanobacterial catalase-peroxidase functions as
a catalase rather than a peroxidase .
An additional antioxidant enzyme that drew attention recently is
thioredoxin-peroxidase, a protein conserved from bacteria to mammals .
The exact role and mode of regulation of these enzymes are not clear;
however, it is established that they rely on reduced thioredoxin (6,
10, 15-18) which in a
photosynthetic cell may be reduced by photosystem I through
ferredoxin (5) .
During studies on acclimation of Synechococcus sp . strain PCC
7942 (referred to here as Synechococcus) to nutrient limitation
and high-light stress, we identified an open reading frame (ORF)
that is highly homologous to thioredoxin-peroxidases (tplA,
for thioredoxin-peroxidase-like) . To obtain a comprehensive
picture of the relevance of TplA, as well as of the catalase-peroxidase,
for hydrogen peroxide detoxification and cell survival, we inactivated
the genes encoding for these enzymes and characterized each of
the single mutants, as well as the double mutant .
Culture conditions and competition experiments.
Synechococcus and its mutants were cultured as previously described
(7) . For growth experiments under high-light conditions
the cultures were illuminated with 800 µmol of photons m-2
s-1 (provided by halogen lamps cooled with water jackets) and
bubbled with air . The same conditions were applied for "competition
tests" in which a mixture of equal amounts of wild type and a
certain mutant (optical density at 750 nm [OD750] of 0.02)
served to initiate the experiment . The mixed culture was diluted
daily to the original OD; thus, the absorbed light remained fairly
constant throughout the experiment . The generation time under these
conditions was about 12 h . The number of wild-type and mutant cells
in the culture at a given time was assessed by diluting and plating
the cultures on solid medium, followed by restreaking of single
colonies on plates containing the appropriate antibiotic for the
selection of a specific mutant .
Construction of mutant strains, DNA manipulation, and isolation of
RNA. It is often observed that genes, the products of which are
involved in cell growth and survival under certain environmental
conditions, are clustered . Therefore, we sequenced further downstream
of nblR, the gene encoding for a response regulator that is
essential for cell survival during high-light illumination and
nutrient starvation (30) . This led to
identification of an ORF highly homologous to thioredoxin-peroxidases
located ca . 2 kb downstream of nblR . A 2-kb EcoRV/EcoRI
subclone was used for interposon inactivation of tplA by
insertion of a spectinomycin resistance cassette at an XcmI
site .
The gene encoding for catalase-peroxidase of Synechococcus,
katG, was amplified from genomic DNA by using primers designed
according to the published sequences (23)
(5'-CCAAACACCAACAGGAGA-3' and 5'-GTTGCGATAGCATCGTGA-3') . The PCR
product was cloned into a pGEM-T vector (Promega) . Digestion by
ClaI was used to delete a 609-bp fragment, which was replaced by
a kanamycin resistance cassette . Each of the plasmids containing
either the inactivated tplA or katG was used to
transform the wild-type strain to yield the tplA mutant (Tpl )
and the katG mutant (Kat ),
respectively .
The double mutant, KatTpl ,
characterized throughout the present study was obtained by
transforming the plasmid bearing the inactivated katG into Tpl .
Where indicated, a double mutant constructed by transforming Kat
with inactivated tplA was analyzed . PCR on genomic DNA
isolated from the transformants by using specific primers confirmed
the complete segregation and replacement of the native gene with the
inactivated one .
Molecular techniques were performed according to standard procedures
(29) . For transcript analyses, cultures were
illuminated with 70 or 400 µmol of photons m-2 s-1
provided by fluorescent lamps . RNA isolation and Northern blot
analyses were performed as described earlier (8) .
The 0.5-kbp EcoRI/XmnI fragment containing part of
tplA was used as a probe .
Determination of viability and analysis of H2O2
detoxification by whole cells. To determine viability after H2O2
treatment, cells at the exponential growth phase were adjusted to an
OD750 of 0.5, and H2O2 was applied
to a range of final concentrations (15 µM to 10 mM, depending on the
specific strain) . After incubation for 24 h under incandescent light
(50 µmol of photons m-2 s-1), aliquots were placed onto
solid medium plates to assess viability .
For analysis of H2O2 detoxification, cells harvested
during exponential growth (5,000 x
g, 5 min) were washed once with an equal volume of 20 mM NaNO3,
0.3 mM MgSO4 · 7H2O, and 0.2 mM CaCl2
· 2H2O (the concentrations of these salts in the growth
medium) and resuspended in the same solution to an OD750
of 0.5 . H2O2 was then added to the desired final
concentrations . Aliquots were drawn at various times and diluted
when required, and the amount of H2O2 was determined
by oxidation of Fe2+ in the presence of xylenol orange (36)
using a FOX assay (36) by measuring the absorbance
with a Multiskan RC (Labsystems) with a 560-nm band-pass filter . The
initial slope of the absorbance as a function of time served to
quantify the amount of H2O2 . Qualitative
determination of H2O2 was obtained by carrying out
color development to its maximal level . In these assays, yellow
color represents the absence and purple represents the presence of H2O2 .
Where indicated, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)
was added to a final concentration of 10 µM . Green light (50 µmol of
photons m-2 s-1) was provided with a 520-nm
filter .
As previously shown for Synechocystis strain 6803 (34),
we noticed that the ability to decompose H2O2
was strongly dependent on cell density . Therefore, all of the
analyses presented in the present study were performed at a fixed
cell density . Changing the cell density, however, affected the
absolute H2O2 concentrations that the strains
could tolerate and detoxify but not the relative differences between
the mutants .
The nucleotide sequence of the genomic region containing tplA
was deposited in GenBank under accession no.
AF492495 .
Identification of a thioredoxin-peroxidase-like gene. During
studies of the acclimation of Synechococcus to nutrient
limitation and high-light stress, we have identified an ORF highly
homologous to thioredoxin-peroxidases (also termed peroxiredoxins),
enzymes conserved from microorganisms to mammals . For example, the
Synechococcus TplA exhibits 88% similarity to sll0755 of
Synechocystis strain 6803 (http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyanobase/),
82% similarity to BAS1 from barley (2), 75% similarity
to human thioredoxin-peroxidase (31), and 55%
similarity to AhpC from Escherichia coli (4) .
The highest homology was observed between TplA and a subfamily of
thioredoxin-peroxidases designated 2-Cys peroxiredoxins . These
enzymes function as homodimers in which a disulfide bridge between
two conserved cysteins is formed during catalysis (6) .
Sequence alignment indicated that TplA possesses the two conserved
cystein residues essential for catalysis (not shown) . Although the
physiological role of these enzymes is not completely understood, it
has been established that peroxiredoxins reduce hydrogen peroxide or
alkyl hydroperoxides by using electrons from thioredoxin (10,
12, 14, 25) .
Viability of wild-type and mutant strains after H2O2
treatment. To study the physiological role of TplA in Synechococcus,
we inactivated its gene and characterized the mutant with respect
to its ability to survive externally added H2O2, to
detoxify H2O2, and to grow during high-light
illumination, conditions under which the cells might experience
oxidative stress . In order to gain better understanding of the
ability of the cell to cope with oxidative stress, we also
inactivated the gene encoding for catalase-peroxidase and
characterized this mutant, as well as the double mutant lacking both
genes .
The various strains were exposed to H2O2 in liquid
cultures for 24 h, followed by transfer of aliquots onto solid growth
medium (Fig . 1) . Strains possessing catalase-peroxidase
(wild type and Tpl )
survived exposure to 50- to 100-fold-higher concentrations of H2O2
than strains lacking this activity (Kat
and KatTpl )
(Fig . 1A and C, respectively) . Apparently,
catalase-peroxidase is required for detoxification of high
concentrations of externally added H2O2 .
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FIG . 1 . Cells spotted on solid growth medium (A and C) and qualitative
assay for remaining H2O2 (B and D) after
incubation for 24 h with the indicated concentrations of H2O2 .
Yellow represents the absence and purple represents the presence of H2O2 .
WT, wild type; Tpl ,
tplA mutant; Kat ,
catalase-peroxidase mutant; KatTpl ,
double mutant . In the specific experiment shown, viability and residual
H2O2 were determined simultaneously, and thus
cells were prepared as described for the determination of H2O2
content (see Materials and Methods).
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The ability to detoxify H2O2 likely contributes to cell
survival during oxidative stress and, therefore, we expected the
double mutant to be the most sensitive to the application of H2O2 .
Surprisingly, the double mutant survived higher H2O2
concentrations than did the catalase-peroxidase mutant (Fig.
1C) . Since the mutants were fully segregated (see
Materials and Methods), the data suggested that inactivation of both
katG and tplA resulted in the induction of H2O2
detoxification activity that is supplementary to catalase-peroxidase
and thioredoxin-peroxidase .
Detoxification of H2O2 by wild-type and mutant
cultures. Qualitative determination of the residual H2O2
remaining after 24 h of incubation was performed on the cultures that
served to assess the viability (Fig . 1) . These
analyses showed that the higher ability of the double mutant to
survive H2O2 (compared to the
catalase-peroxidase mutant) coincided with its increased capacity to
detoxify these levels of H2O2 (Fig . 1C and D) .
These experiments also indicated that catalase-possessing strains
were able to detoxify 100- to 200-fold-higher concentrations of
H2O2 than catalase-lacking strains (Fig . 1B
and D) . It is interesting that in catalase-lacking strains (Kat
and KatTpl ),
cell survival under a certain concentration of H2O2
correlated with the ability to decompose it (Fig . 1C
and D) . On the other hand, catalase-possessing strains (wild type and
Tpl )
could detoxify H2O2 concentrations that caused
cell death (Fig . 1A and B) . Presumably, KatG
remains active in H2O2-damaged cells, whereas
peroxidases can no longer function if their electron source is
exhausted .
The contribution of the different enzymes to H2O2
detoxification was assessed by monitoring the rate of H2O2
decomposition by the various strains . Comparisons between the rates
of detoxification by illuminated and darkened cultures were performed
since photosynthetic electron transport may be essential for
replenishment of the reducing equivalents required for peroxidase
activity .
The Kat
and the double mutant decomposed relatively low concentrations of H2O2
(15 or 30 µM) at a similar rate under either illumination or darkness
(Fig . 2A and B) . Challenging these strains with
higher H2O2 levels (50 and 100 µM) revealed a substantial
difference between these mutants (Fig . 2C and D) . The
KatTpl
mutant completely eliminated 50 µM within 12 min of incubation
in the light and was capable of partially reducing even 100 µM H2O2
within 40 min of illumination, unlike Kat ,
which did not reduce such concentrations (Fig . 2C
and D) . These experiments confirmed our finding (Fig . 1)
that the ability of the double mutant to survive high H2O2
levels originated from its ability to detoxify them .
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FIG . 2 . Time courses of decomposition of H2O2 by
illuminated (solid lines) or darkened (dashed lines) cultures of
catalase-peroxidase mutant ( )
or the double mutant KatTpl
( ) .
At time zero, 15 µM (A), 30 µM (B), 50 µM (C), or 100 µM (D) H2O2
was added to the cultures.
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In the dark, incubation with H2O2 did not reveal a
difference between Kat
and the double mutant; both strains were unable to reduce either 50
or 100 µM H2O2 (Fig . 2C and D) . These
two mutants, however, detoxified lower H2O2
concentrations similarly, although at a slower rate compared to
cultures incubated in the light . The dependence of H2O2
detoxification in these strains on light suggests a requirement for
reductants produced by the photosynthetic electron transport chain .
This was further supported by the lack of light-dependent H2O2
detoxification upon addition of DCMU or illumination with a
nonphotosynthetic (green) light (not shown) . Therefore, reduction of
relatively low concentrations of H2O2 in the
dark (Fig . 2A and B) may depend on the availability
of cellular pools of reduced compounds .
In accordance with their ability to survive high levels of H2O2,
wild type and Tpl
were capable of detoxifying relatively high concentrations of H2O2
compared to Kat
and the double mutant; 1 and 4 mM H2O2 were
completely decomposed within 15 and 65 min, respectively . High
concentrations of H2O2, such as 7 and 10 mM,
were only partially reduced within 65 min (Fig . 3), presumably
due to accumulating damage to enzyme activities . In addition,
the rate of detoxification of H2O2 in the wild type and
the tplA mutant were essentially identical (Fig .
3), suggesting that catalase activity was not affected by the
inactivation of tplA .
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FIG . 3 . Time courses of decomposition of H2O2 by
illuminated cultures of wild type (A) and tplA mutant (B) . At
zero time, 1 mM ( ),
4 mM ( ),
7 mM ( ),
and 10 mM ( )
H2O2 was added to the cultures . Identical curves
were obtained with darkened cultures.
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Identical rates of H2O2 detoxification were observed in
illuminated (Fig . 3) or darkened cultures (not
shown) of the wild-type and Tpl
cells . Since peroxidases but not catalases rely on reduced
constituents originating from photosynthetic electron transfer, this
result indicates that the catalase function of the catalase-peroxidase
provides the dominant activity required for detoxification of
the high H2O2 levels . Catalase also appears to be the
principal means for decomposition of lower concentration of H2O2;
Tpl
detoxified 5 µM H2O2 much faster than did Kat
(not shown) .
Response of mutant strains to high-light conditions during growth.
In addition to detoxification of externally supplied H2O2
(Fig . 1 to 3), it was important
to assess the ability of the various strains to cope with
environmental conditions that might result in oxidative stress, such
as growth under intensive radiation . Mutants where tplA was
inactivated (Tpl
and KatTpl )
grew very poorly under these conditions, whereas Kat
grew similarly to the wild-type cells (Fig . 4) .
Furthermore, growth experiments performed under high-light irradiance
demonstrated that Tpl
and the double mutant were outcompeted by the wild type, specifically
under these conditions (Fig . 5), but not when the light
intensity was 100 µmol of photons m-2 s-1 (not
shown) . Taken together, these data may indicate a crucial role for
TplA under a high-light regime . Furthermore, the novel H2O2
detoxification activity observed in the double mutant cannot
compensate for the lack of TplA under these conditions . An additional
support for the importance of TplA for high-light growth was provided
by the fivefold rise in the abundance of the tplA transcript
(Fig . 6) after the high-light treatment .
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FIG . 4 . Growth as measured by the change in OD750 of wild
type ( ),
Kat
( ),
Tpl
( ),
and the double mutant KatTpl
( )
during illumination with high-light intensity.
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FIG . 5 . Percentage of CFU of wild type (shaded), Kat
(hatched), Tpl
(dotted), and the double mutant KatTpl
(check pattern) at time zero and after 5 days of growth in a mixed
culture illuminated with 800 µmol of photons m-2 s-1
(see Materials and Methods for details of the competition tests).
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FIG . 6 . Northern blot hybridization with a tplA specific probe to
RNA isolated from Synechococcus grown at 70 µmol of photons m-2
s-1 (lane 1) or exposed to 400 µmol of photons m-2
s-1 for 45 min (lane 2) or 2 h (lane 3) . The probe hybridized
to a single band of ca . 800 bp . Each lane was loaded with 5 µg of RNA.
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A novel H2O2 detoxification activity in
Synechococcus. The double mutant, KatTpl ,
survived and detoxified H2O2 concentrations
that were not tolerated or reduced by the Kat
(Fig . 1 and 2) . These
observations indicated a novel H2O2 detoxifying activity,
in addition to that of TplA and catalase-peroxidase . Presumably,
the supplementary H2O2 detoxification activity is
expressed in the absence of both KatG and TplA . This novel activity
relies on reductants produced by the photosynthetic electron
transport chain, as suggested by its dependence on photosynthetic
light and inhibition by DCMU . It is plausible that inactivation of
both tplA and katG caused the induction of the novel H2O2
detoxification activity . An alternative possibility is that a
spontaneous mutation present in Tpl
contributed to the phenotype of the double mutant since the latter
was raised by inactivation of katG in Tpl .
However, a TplKat
mutant that was raised by inactivation of tplA in Kat
also exhibited higher resistance to H2O2 compared
to Kat
(not shown), thus supporting the hypothesis that the lack of both
KatG and TplA causes the induction of a supplementary H2O2-decomposing
activity .
Interestingly, the activity observed in the katG mutant (most
likely originating from TplA) is more susceptible to H2O2
treatment than is the activity exhibited by the double mutant . For
example, the lack of detoxification of 50 or 100 µM H2O2
by the katG mutant implies rapid oxidation of the reduced
substrates required for H2O2 detoxification
and/or damage to the enzyme itself . On the other hand, the activity
present in the double mutant was not impaired under these conditions
(Fig . 2), although the addition of 200 µM of H2O2
eliminated this activity as well (not shown) .
Although originally classified as lacking ascorbate peroxidase (21),
Synechococcus was shown to possess an ascorbate peroxidase-like
activity (28) . This activity, which appeared to be
cytosolic, copurified with a small non-heme iron-containing compound
and was heat stable . This ascorbate-peroxidase-like activity probably
does not account for the H2O2-detoxifying activity
observed in the double mutant since initial characterization of this
activity indicated that it is membrane associated and heat inactivated,
unlike the ascorbate-dependent activity . Currently, we are characterizing
the novel H2O2-detoxifying activity observed in the
double mutant to clarify its nature and physiological significance .
Differential role for catalase-peroxidase and TplA. Analyses
of viability (Fig . 1) and of H2O2
detoxification (Fig . 1 to 3)
indicated that catalase-peroxidase is essential for survival and the
elimination of relatively high concentrations of externally added H2O2 .
Studies of Synechocystis strain 6803 and its katG
mutant also suggested such a role (34) . Despite
its importance for the elimination of relatively high concentrations
of H2O2, catalase-peroxidase seems to be dispensable for
growth under high-light illumination (Fig . 4 and
5), conditions under which the cell might
experience severe oxidative stress (26) . Further,
although it reduced externally added H2O2 as efficiently
as the wild type (Fig . 3), a mutant lacking TplA grew
very poorly and was outcompeted by wild-type cells (Fig.
4 and 5, respectively) during
excessive radiation . Under the latter conditions, the double mutant
exhibited a phenotype similar to that of Tpl
(Fig . 4 and 5) . This indicated
that TplA was crucial for growth under high-light conditions and the
supplementary H2O2-detoxifying activity
observed in the double mutant could not replace it . Evidence for the
importance of thioredoxin-peroxidase for high-light growth is also
provided by the effect of high-light treatment on the quantum yield
in Synechocystis strain 6803 and its thioredoxin-peroxidase
mutant; the latter exhibited a lower quantum yield compared to
wild-type cells (18) . In addition to the high-light-sensitive
phenotype of the TplA-lacking mutants (Fig . 4 and
5), transcription induction of tplA observed
in wild-type cells, following high-light illumination (Fig.
6), also supports the physiological relevance of
this gene product under high-light conditions . The tplA transcript
appears to be monocistronic (the probe hybridized to a 800-bp
transcript), and therefore it is likely that the phenotype is not a
result of a polar effect .
As is apparent from our study, neither catalase-peroxidase nor the
additional peroxidase activity present in the double mutant could
substitute for TplA function during high-light growth . Given that the
photosynthetic electron transport chain reduces thioredoxin, one may
speculate that a thioredoxin-dependent peroxidase provides an energy
dissipation route, which might be critical under excessive
excitation . Support for this hypothesis comes from studies on
Synechococcus by Miller et al . (20), which
showed photosystem II-dependent oxygen evolution and fluorescence
quenching consequent on photoreduction of H2O2 . Further
support is provided by experiments on Synechocystis strain
6803 showing that when linear electron flow is blocked, the addition
of t-butyl-hydroperoxide enabled oxygen evolution by wild type
but not by a thioredoxin-peroxidase mutant (37) .
Production of organic hydroperoxides during excessive radiation and
their specific reduction by TplA may provide an additional
explanation for the indispensable role of this enzyme .
It is important to point out that the Arabidopsis genome contains
10 ORFs showing homology to members of the peroxiredoxins
(thioredoxin-peroxidases) family (10) . Use of
Arabidopsis plants expressing antisense to the
chloroplast-located thioredoxin-peroxidase suggested a protective
function for the enzyme (3) . However, the exact
role and physiological significance of these enzymes and that of
peroxiredoxins identified in other plants is yet to be established .
Sequences showing homology to catalase-peroxidase were not identified
in the complete genomes of Anabaena sp . strain PCC 7120, Nostoc
punctiforme ATCC 29133, Synechococcus strain WH 8102, and two
Prochlorococcus marinus strains (MI9313 and MED4) . In fact,
the latter three marine organisms do not possess sequences that
show homology to any catalase (mono-functional heme or manganese
enzyme) . On the other hand, each of the above-mentioned organisms
possesses at least one sequence that is highly homologous to
thioredoxin-peroxidase . These observations further emphasize the
physiological significance of thioredoxin-peroxidases .
A.P . and A.U . contributed equally to this study .
This work was supported by United States-Israel Binational Science
Foundation (grant 9800146) and by The Israel Science Foundation
(grant 210/99) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Faculty of Life
Sciences, Bar-Ilan University, 52900 Ramat-Gan, Israel . Phone: (972) 3-5317790 .
Fax: (972) 3-5351824 . E-mail:
schwarr2@mail.biu.ac.il .
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