9 research outputs found

    Assessing freshwater water balance in Cimanuk River Basin

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    Abstract Indramayu Estuary plays a vital role in the sufficiency of food crop production in Indonesia. Managing freshwater inflows is essential due to the complex interaction between river flow and water extraction for multiple users. This study aimed to evaluate the freshwater water balance in the lower Cimanuk River Basin, West Java, Indonesia. The hydrological, meteorological, and statistical data were analyzed the water availability and demand. The Water Evaluation and Planning System model was used to evaluate water demand and supply, taking into account changes in river flow. The model was calibrated using the streamflow and the water requirement for irrigation, fishery, domestic, and industries. The study showed that the Lower Cimanuk River Basin’s current water shortages were relatively high, indicated by flow discharge of only 2.7 to 48.04 CMS from August to December 2020. This shortage would become a critical constraint in which coverage of water demand does not satisfied water users for irrigating food crop cultivation in the areas and it is threatening the sustainability of food need nationally. Therefore, it is necessary to store freshwater inflow in the study area for the relevant decision-makers by rubber dam restoration at the lower Cimanuk River Basin.</jats:p

    Assembly of D1/D2 complexes of photosystem II: binding of pigments and a network of auxiliary proteins

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    Photosystem II (PSII) is the multi-subunit light-driven oxidoreductase that drives photosynthetic electron transport using electrons extracted from water. To investigate the initial steps of PSII assembly, we used strains of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 arrested at early stages of PSII biogenesis and expressing affinity-tagged PSII subunits to isolate PSII reaction center assembly (RCII) complexes and their precursor D1 and D2 modules (D1mod and D2mod). RCII preparations isolated using either a His-tagged D2 or a FLAG-tagged PsbI subunit contained the previously described RCIIa and RCII* complexes that differ with respect to the presence of the Ycf39 assembly factor and high-light-inducible proteins (Hlips) and a larger complex consisting of RCIIa bound to monomeric PSI. All RCII complexes contained the PSII subunits D1, D2, PsbI, PsbE, and PsbF and the assembly factors rubredoxin A (RubA) and Ycf48, but we also detected PsbN, Slr1470, and the Slr0575 proteins, which all have plant homologs. The RCII preparations also contained prohibitins/stomatins (Phbs) of unknown function and FtsH protease subunits. RCII complexes were active in light-induced primary charge separation and bound chlorophylls, pheophytins, beta-carotenes, and heme. The isolated D1mod consisted of D1/PsbI/Ycf48 with some Ycf39 and Phb3, while D2mod contained D2/cytochrome b559 with co-purifying PsbY, Phb1, Phb3, FtsH2/FtsH3, CyanoP, and Slr1470. As stably bound chlorophyll was detected in D1mod but not D2mod, formation of RCII appears to be important for stable binding of most of the chlorophylls and both pheophytins. We suggest that chlorophyll can be delivered to RCII from either monomeric PSI or Ycf39/Hlip complexes

    The Evolution and Evolvability of Photosystem II

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    Photosystem II is the water-oxidizing and O2-evolving enzyme of photosynthesis. How and when this remarkable enzyme arose are fundamental questions in the history of life that have remained difficult to answer. Here, recent advances in our understanding of the origin and evolution of photosystem II are reviewed and discussed in detail. The evolution of photosystem II indicates that water oxidation originated early in the history of life, long before the diversification of cyanobacteria and other major groups of prokaryotes, challenging and transforming current paradigms on the evolution of photosynthesis. We show that photosystem II has remained virtually unchanged for billions of years, and yet the nonstop duplication process of the D1 subunit of photosystem II, which controls photochemistry and catalysis, has enabled the enzyme to become adaptable to variable environmental conditions and even to innovate enzymatic functions beyond water oxidation. We suggest that this evolvability can be harnessed to develop novel light-powered enzymes with the capacity to carry out complex multistep oxidative transformations for sustainable biocatalysis.</p
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