| Literature DB >> 27368145 |
Qian-Zhao Xu1, Jia-Xin Han1, Qi-Ying Tang1, Wen-Long Ding1, Dan Miao1, Ming Zhou1, Hugo Scheer2, Kai-Hong Zhao3.
Abstract
Cyanobacterial light-harvesting complexes, phycobilisomes, can undergo extensive remodeling under varying light conditions. Acclimation to far-red light involves not only generation of red-shifted chlorophylls in the photosystems, but also induction of additional copies of core biliproteins that have been related to red-shifted components of the phycobilisome (Gan et al., Life 5, 4, 2015). We are studying the molecular basis for these acclimations in Chroococcidiopsis thermalis sp. PCC7203. Five far-red induced allophycocyanin subunits (ApcA2, ApcA3, ApcB2, ApcB3 and ApcF2) were expressed in Escherichia coli, together with S-type chromophore-protein lyases and in situ generated chromophore, phycocyanobilin. Only one subunit, ApcF2, shows an unusual red-shift (λAmax~675nm, λFmax~698nm): it binds the chromophore non-covalently, thereby preserving its full conjugation length. This mechanism operates also in two Cys-variants of the induced subunits of bulky APC. All other wild-type subunits bind phycocyanobilin covalently to the conventional Cys-81 under catalysis of the lyase, CpcS1. Although three of them also show binding to additional cysteines, all absorb and fluoresce similar to conventional APC subunits (λAmax~610nm, λFmax~640nm). Another origin of red-shifted complexes was identified, however, when different wild-type α- and β-subunits of the far-red induced bulky APC were combined in a combinatorial fashion. Strongly red-shifted complexes (λFmax≤722nm) were formed when the α-subunit, PCB-ApcA2, and the β-subunit, PCB-ApcB2, were generated together in E. coli. This extreme aggregation-induced red-shift of ~90nm of covalently bound chromophores is reminiscent, but much larger, than the ~30nm observed with conventional APC.Entities:
Keywords: Allophycocyanin; Chromophorylation; Cyanobacteria; Energy transfer; Far-red photoacclimation; Phycobilisome; Phycocyanobilin
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27368145 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2016.06.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002