| Literature DB >> 18284595 |
Abstract
Biliproteins are a widespread group of brilliantly coloured photoreceptors characterized by linear tetrapyrrolic chromophores, bilins, which are covalently bound to the apoproteins via relatively stable thioether bonds. Covalent binding stabilizes the chromoproteins and is mandatory for phycobilisome assembly; and, it is also important in biliprotein applications such as fluorescence labelling. Covalent binding has, on the other hand, also considerably hindered biliprotein research because autocatalytic chromophore additions are rare, and information on enzymatic addition by lyases was limited to a single example, an EF-type lyase attaching phycocyanobilin to cysteine-alpha84 of C-phycocyanin. The discovery of new activities for the latter lyases, and of new types of lyases, have reinvigorated research activities in the subject. So far, work has mainly concentrated on cyanobacterial phycobiliproteins. Methodological advances in the process, however, as well as the finding of often large numbers of homologues, opens new possibilities for research on the subsequent assembly/disassembly of the phycobilisome in cyanobacteria and red algae, on the assembly and organization of the cryptophyte light-harvesting system, on applications in basic research such as protein folding, and on the use of phycobiliproteins for labelling.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18284595 PMCID: PMC2327270 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2008.06160.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Microbiol ISSN: 0950-382X Impact factor: 3.501
Fig. 1Post-translational modifications of biliproteins. Tetrapyrrole binding cysteines (consensus numbering2) with chromophores indicated in their approximate colours of the native chromoproteins (PCB in blue, PVB in purple, PEB in red, PUB in orange, MBV in green, BV in blue-green and PΦB in dark green): alternative chromophores to certain binding sites are indicated in brackets. Arrows pointing to tetrapyrrole binding sites represent identified lyases, with solid arrows indicating S-type lyases, dotted arrows T-type lyases and the dashed arrow E/F-type lyases. Boxed site numbers indicate correct autocatalytic binding, dotted boxes unclear situations. Vertical knobs indicate (partial) methylation at Asn-β72. Another PE, termed PE III, is not shown here. It has been identified in a high-light Prochlorococcus marinus, it carries only a single chromophore on the α-subunit, and none on the β-subunit (Hess ). a, plant and most cyanobacterial phytochromes; b, bacterial, fungal and several cyanobacterial phytochromes; c, PE 545; d, only in red-algal b- (and possibly B-) PE. For biliprotein nomenclature, see Sidler (1994), Schluchter and Bryant (2002), and, alternatively (MacColl, 1998).
Fig. 2Free and protein bound bilins. Full structures of biliverdin in the typical cyclic-helical conformation of free chromophores (with IUPAC numbering, top centre), and of PCB bound at C-31 to a cysteine residue of the apoprotein, in the typical extended conformation of bound chromophores (lower left), and partial structures of modified rings A and D in other biliprotein chromophores. Rings B and C remain unchanged throughout. Protein-linked rings are marked by ‘prime’, this nomenclature is also used in the lower right table giving the names and abbreviations of the various biliprotein chromophores in the free and protein-bound form. Arrows represent lyase actions; apoprotein is indicated by heavy wavy lines.
Fig. 3Reaction schemes of the S-type (top) and isomerizing E/F-type lyases (bottom). Non-covalent chromophore binding is indicated by broken lines, covalent binding by solid lines and colouration of both the chromophore and the protein. Intermediates (Pxxx) are named according to their absorption maxima at xxx nm.