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1.
The structure of the phycobiliprotein phycoerythrocyanin from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus has been determined at 2.7 A resolution by X-ray diffraction methods on the basis of the molecular model of C-phycocyanin from the same organism. Hexagonal phycoerythrocyanin crystals of space group P6(3) with cell constants a = b = 156.86 A, c = 40.39 A, alpha = beta = 90 degrees, gamma = 120 degrees are almost isomorphous to C-phycocyanin crystals. The crystal structure has been refined by energy-restrained crystallographic refinement and model building. The conventional crystallographic R-factor of the final model was 19.2% with data to 2.7 A resolution. In phycoerythrocyanin, the three (alpha beta)-subunits are arranged around a 3-fold symmetry axis, as in C-phycocyanin. The two structures are very similar. After superposition, the 162 C alpha atoms of the alpha-subunit have a mean difference of 0.71 A and the 171 C alpha atoms of the beta-subunit differ by 0.51 A. The stereochemistry of the chiral atoms in the phycobiliviolin chromophore A84 is C(31)-R, C(4)-S. The configuration of the chromophore is C(10)-Z, C(15)-Z and the conformation C(5)-anti, C(9)-syn and C(14)-anti like the phycocyanobilin chromophores in phycoerythrocyanin and C-phycocyanin.  相似文献   

2.
The light-harvesting pigment-protein complex B-phycoerythrin from the red alga Porphyridium sordidum has been isolated and crystallized. B-Phycoerythrin consists of three different subunits forming an (alpha beta)6 gamma aggregate. The three-dimensional structure of the (alpha beta)6 hexamer was solved by Patterson search techniques using the molecular model of C-phycocyanin from Fremyella diplosiphon. The asymmetric unit of the crystal cell (space group P3, with a = b = 111.2 A, c = 59.9 A, alpha = beta = 90 degrees, gamma = 120 degrees) contains two (alpha beta) monomers related by a local dyad. Three asymmetric units are arranged around the crystallographic 3-fold axis building an (alpha beta)6 hexamer, as in C-phycocyanin. The crystal structure has been refined by energy-restrained crystallographic refinement and model building. The conventional R-factor of the final model was 18.9% with data to 2.2 A resolution. The molecular structures of the alpha and beta-subunits resemble those of C-phycocyanin. Major changes in comparison to phycocyanin are caused by deletion or insertion of segments involved in protein-chromophore interactions. The singly linked phycoerythrobilin chromophores alpha-84, alpha-140a, beta-84 and beta-155 are each covalently bound to a cysteine by ring A. The doubly linked chromophore beta-50/beta-61 is attached at cysteine beta-50 through ring A and at cysteine beta-61 through ring D. B-Phycoerythrin contains additionally a 30 kDa gamma-subunit, which is presumably located in the central cavity of the hexamer. It is disordered, as a consequence of crystal and local symmetry averaging.  相似文献   

3.
The crystal structure of the light-harvesting protein-pigment complex C-phycocyanin from the cyanobacterium Agmenellum quadruplicatum has been determined by Patterson search techniques on the basis of the molecular model of C-phycocyanin from Mastigocladus laminosus. The crystal unit cell (space group P321) contains three (alpha beta)6 hexamers centred on the crystallographic triads. The hexamer at the origin of the unit cell exhibits crystallographic 32 point symmetry. The other two hexamers (independent of the former) show crystallographic 3-fold and local 2-fold symmetry. The 3-fold redundancy of the asymmetric unit of the crystal cell was used in the refinement process, which proceeded by cyclic averaging, model building and energy-restrained crystallographic refinement. Refinement was terminated with a conventional crystallographic R-value of 0.20 with data to 2.5 A resolution. The two independent hexamers of the unit cell are identical within the limits of error at all levels of aggregation. Two trimers, which closely resemble the M. laminosus C-phycocyanin, are aggregated head-to-head to form the hexamer. Both trimers fit complementarily and are held together by polar and ionic interactions. Conservation of the amino acid residues involved in protein-chromophore and intermonomer interactions suggests common structural features for all biliproteins. Most probably, the hexameric aggregation form present in the crystals is closely related to the discs of native phycobilisome rods. All tetrapyrrole chromophores are extended but with different geometries enforced by different protein surroundings. In particular, interactions of the propionic side-chains with arginine residues and of the pyrrole nitrogen atoms with aspartate residues define configuration and conformation of the chromophores. Relative chromophore distances and orientations have been determined and a preferential pathway for the energy transfer suggested. Accordingly, within a hexamer the absorbed energy is funneled to chromophore B84 and then transduced via B84 chromophores along the phycobilisome rods.  相似文献   

4.
A new member of the phycocyanin family of phycobiliproteins, R-phycocyanin II (R-PC II) has been discovered in several strains of marine Synechococcus sp. R-PC II has absorption maxima at 533 and 554 nm, a subsidiary maximum at 615 nm, and a fluorescence emission maximum at 646 nm. It is the first phycoerythrobilin (PEB)-containing phycocyanin of cyanobacterial origin. The purified protein is made up of alpha and beta subunits in equal amounts and is in an (alpha beta)2 aggregation state. The alpha and beta subunits of this protein are homologous to the corresponding subunits of previously described C- and R-phycocyanins as assessed by amino-terminal sequence determination and analyses of sequences about sites of bilin attachment. R-PC II carries phycocyanobilin (PCB) at beta-84 and PEB at alpha-84 and beta-155 (residue numbering is that for C-phycocyanin), whereas in C-phycocyanin PCB is present at all three positions. In R-phycocyanin, the bilin distribution is alpha-84 (PCB), beta-84 (PCB), beta-155 (PEB). In both R-phycocyanin and R-phycocyanin II excitation at 550 nm, absorbed primarily by PEB groups, leads to emission at 625 nm from PCB. These comparative data support the conclusion that the invariant beta-84 PCB serves as the terminal energy acceptor in phycocyanins.  相似文献   

5.
The structure of the biliprotein C-phycocyanin from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus has been determined at 3 A resolution by X-ray diffraction methods. Phases have been obtained by the multiple isomorphous replacement method. The electron density map could be improved by solvent flattening and has been interpreted in terms of the amino acid sequence. The protein consists of three identical (alpha-beta)-units which are arranged around a threefold symmetry axis to form a disc of approximate dimensions 110 A X 30 A with a central channel of 35 A in diameter. This aggregation form is supposed to be the same as that found in the rods of native phycobilisomes. Both subunits, alpha and beta, exhibit a similar structure and are related by a local twofold rotational axis. Each subunit is folded into eight helices and irregular loops. Six helices are arranged to form a globular part, whereas two helices stick out and mediate extensive contact between the subunits. The arrangement of the helices of the globular part resembles the globin fold: 59 equivalent C alpha-atoms have a root-mean-square deviation of 2 X 9 A. The chromophores attached to cystein 84 of the alpha- and beta-subunits are topologically equivalent to the haem. All three chromophores of C-phycocyanin, open-chain tetrapyrroles, are in an extended conformation. alpha 84 and beta 84 are attached to helix E (globin nomenclature), beta 155 is linked to the G--H loop. The shortest centre-to-centre distance between chromophores in trimer is 22 A.  相似文献   

6.
Absorption and fluorescence spectra of the C-phycocyanin beta-subunit were quantitatively deconvoluted into component spectra of the beta-84 and beta-155 chromophores. The deconvolution procedure was based on a theoretical treatment of polarization properties. Four kinds of spectra (absorption, emission, emission polarization, and excitation polarization) measured on C-phycocyanin isolated from the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus were used as the experimental data set. Without any assumption of spectral shape, the absorption and fluorescence spectra of both chromophores were unambiguously resolved and their fluorescence quantum yields were evaluated. By combining the spectra of the alpha-subunit, independently measured, with the resolved spectra of the beta-subunit, the fluorescence and fluorescence polarization spectra and the fluorescence quantum yield of the monomer were estimated; they agree with experimental values to within an acceptable error. Further, the matrix of energy transfer rates in the monomer was estimated; it gave a significantly different result (by up to 40%) from previously estimated ones.  相似文献   

7.
The crystal structure of the light-harvesting protein-pigment complex C-phycocyanin (C-PC) from Mastigocladus laminosus (at 2.1 A resolution (1 A = 0.1 nm] has been refined by energy-restrained least-squares methods to a conventional R-factor of 21.7%. In the same way, the crystal structure of C-PC from Agmenellum quadruplicatum has been refined further (2.5 A, R = 18.4%); pyrrole rings C and D of the chromophore at position A84 have been corrected with respect to the previously reported structure. The two C-PC structures are very similar, 213 C alpha positions have a root-mean-square deviation of 0.49 A. Polar and ionic side-chain interactions are discussed in detail and the two subunits of C-PC from M. laminosus are compared to each other. All three chromophores are completely defined and their tetrapyrroles exhibit very similar geometry. The structure of a C-PC chromophore resembles a cleaved porphyrin which has been twisted roughly 180 degrees around the C-5-C-6 and C-14-C-15 bonds. Accordingly, the configuration/conformation of the chromophores is Z-anti, Z-syn, Z-anti (with the exception of the "configuration" of C-15 of chromophore B155, which is almost midway between Z and E). The three chromophores interact similarly with the protein. They arch around aspartate residues (A87, B87 and B39), and the nitrogens of pyrroles B and C are within hydrogen-bonding distance of one of the carboxylate oxygens. Most of the propionic side-chains of the chromophores form salt bridges with arginine and lysine residues. The updated relative chromophore distances and orientations confirm our conclusion that hexameric aggregates are probably the basic functional units, and that inter-hexameric energy transfer takes place preferentially via the central B84 chromophores.  相似文献   

8.
The light-harvesting protein phycoerythrocyanin from the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus Cohn has been crystallized in two different crystal forms by vapour diffusion. In 5% (w/v) polyethylene glycol at pH 8.5, hexagonal crystals of space group P63 with cell constants a = b = 158 A, c = 40.6 A were obtained, which turned out to be almost isomorphous with the hexagonal crystals of C-phycocyanin from the same organism. Consequently, the conformation of both phycobiliproteins must be very similar. From 1.5 M-ammonium sulfate (pH 8.5), orthorhombic crystals of space group P2221 with cell constants a = 60.5 A, b = 105 A, c = 188 A could be grown. Density measurements of these crystals indicate that the unit cell contains 18 (alpha beta)-units. A detailed packing scheme is proposed that is consistent with the observed pseudo-hexagonal X-ray intensity pattern and with the known size and shape of (alpha beta)3-trimers of C-phycocyanin. Accordingly, disc-like (alpha beta)3-trimers are associated face-to-face and stacked one upon another in rods with a period of 60.5 A, corresponding to the cell dimension a.  相似文献   

9.
Determination of the complete amino-acid sequence of the subunits of B-phycoerythrin from Porphyridium cruentum has shown that the alpha subunit contains 164 amino-acid residues and the beta subunit contains 177 residues. When the sequences of B- and C-phycoerythrins are aligned with those of other phycobiliproteins, it is obvious that B-phycoerythrin lacks a deletion at beta-21-22 present in C-phycoerythrin. However, relative to C-phycoerythrin from Fremyella diplosiphon (Calothrix) (Sidler, W., Kumpf, B., Rüdiger, W. and Zuber, H. (1986) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 367, 627-642), B-phycoerythrin has deletions at beta-141k-o, beta-142, beta-143, beta-147 and beta-148. The four singly-linked phycoerythrobilins at positions alpha-84, alpha-143a, beta-84 and beta-155, and the doubly-linked phycoerythrobilin at position beta-50/61 are at sites homologous to the attachment sites in C-phycoerythrin. The aspartyl residues (alpha-87, beta-87, and beta-39), that interact with the bilins at alpha-84, beta-84, and beta-155 in C-phycocyanin, are found in the homologous positions in B-phycoerythrin. B-Phycoerythrin, in common with other phycobiliproteins, contains a N gamma-methylasparagine residue at position beta-72.  相似文献   

10.
C-phycocyanin from two strains of the thermotolerant blue-green alga, Mastigocladus laminosus (NZ-DB2-m and I-30-m), that grow within different temperature ranges have been characterized with respect to aggregation, immunologic properties, subunit composition, and thermodenaturation. The critical thermal-denaturation temperature for phycocyanin from both strains of M. laminosus phycocyanin is 60 degrees C which is higher than that for mesophilic phyococyanin. Immunodiffusion studied have shown that these two strains of M. laminosus exhibit no antigenic differences and are closely related to the mesophilic Plectonema calothricoides and the thermophilic Synechococcus lividus (strains 3). Neither phenol nor alpha-naphthol has any effect on phycocyanin aggregation in these two strains of M. laminosus. There is also no enhancement of formation of large aggregates at their elevated temperature of cultivation. Furthermore, the phycocyanin of both strains of M. laminosus does not demonstrate any large amount of 19S or higher aggregates at any pH value. These observations suggest that the mode of adaptation of M. laminosus phycocyanin to high temperature is differnet from the previously encountered. It is also important to note that phycocyanin is essentially unchanged whether it is extracted from the same strain, M. laminosus (NZ-DBS-m), grown at either 50 degrees C or 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
The following phycobiliproteins and complexes of the allophycocyanin core were isolated from phycobilisomes of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus: alpha AP, beta AP, (alpha AP beta AP), (alpha AP beta AP)3, (alpha AP beta AP)3L8.9C, (alpha APB alpha AP2 beta AP3)L8.9C. The six proteins and complexes were characterised spectroscopically with respect to absorption, oscillator strength, extinction coefficient, fluorescence emission, relative quantum yield, fluorescence emission polarisation and fluorescence excitation polarisation. The interpretation of the spectral data was based on the three-dimensional structure model of (alpha PC beta PC)3 (Schirmer et al. (1985) J. Mol. Biol. 184, 257-277), which is related to the allophycocyanin trimer. The absorption and CD spectra of the complexes (alpha AP beta AP)3, (alpha AP beta AP)3L8.9C and (alpha APB alpha AP2 beta AP3)L8.9C could be deconvoluted into the spectra of the phycobiliprotein subunits. The assumptions made for the deconvolution could be checked by the synthesis of the spectra of (alpha APB beta AP)3. The synthesised spectra are in good agreement with the corresponding measured spectra published by other authors. Considering the deconvoluted spectra the following influences on the chromophores could be ascribed to L8.9C: L8.9C neither influences the alpha AP nor the alpha APB chromophores. L8.9C shifts the absorption maximum of the beta AP chromophore to longer wavelength than the absorption maximum of the alpha AP chromophore in trimeric complexes. L8.9C increases the oszillator strength of the beta AP chromophores to about the value of the alpha AP chromophores in trimeric complexes. L8.9C turns the beta AP chromophores from sensitizing into weak fluorescing chromophores. By means of the hydropathy plot and the predicted secondary structure, a postulated three-fold symmetry in the tertiary structure of L8.9C could be confirmed.  相似文献   

12.
The linear dichroism (LD) spectra of the C-phycocyanin (C-PC) trimer disks oriented in poly(vinyl alcohol) films (PVA) at room temperature and at 95 K were determined. Utilizing the known atomic coordinates of the chromophores (Schirmer, T., Bode, W. and Huber, R. (1987) J. Mol. Biol. 196, 677-695) and theoretical estimates of the orientations of the transition dipole moments relative to the molecular framework, the LD spectra were simulated using the pairwise exciton interaction model of Sauer and Scheer (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 936 (1988) 157-170); in this model, the alpha 84 and beta 84 transition moments are coupled by an exciton mechanism, while the beta 155 chromophore remains uncoupled. Linear dichroism spectra calculated using this exciton model, as well as an uncoupled chromophore (molecular) model, were compared with experimental LD spectra. Satisfactory qualitative agreement can be obtained in both the exciton and molecular models using somewhat different relative values of the theoretically estimated magnitudes of the beta 155 oscillator strength. Because the relative contributions of each of the chromophores (and thus exciton components) to the overall absorption of the C-PC trimer are not known exactly, it is difficult to differentiate successfully between the molecular and exciton models at this time. The linear dichroism spectra of PC dodecamers derived from phycobilisomes of Nostoc sp. oriented in stretched PVA films closely resemble those of the C-PC trimers from Mastigocladus laminosus, suggesting that the phycocyanin chromophores are oriented in a similar manner in both cases, and that neither linker polypeptides nor the state of aggregation have a significant influence on these orientations and linear dichroism spectra. The LD spectra of oriented phycocyanins in stretched PVA films at low temperatures (95 K) appear to be of similar quality and magnitude as the LD spectra of single C-PC crystals (Schirmer, T. and Vincent, M.G. (1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 893, 379-385).  相似文献   

13.
The crystal structure of the light-harvesting phycobiliprotein, c-phycocyanin from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechochoccus vulcanus has been determined by molecular replacement to 2.5 A resolution. The crystal belongs to space group R32 with cell parameters a=b=188.43 A, c=61.28 A, alpha=beta=90 degrees, gamma=120 degrees, with one (alphabeta) monomer in the asymmetric unit. The structure has been refined to a crystallographic R factor of 20.2 % (R-free factor is 24.4 %), for all data to 2.5 A. The crystals were grown from phycocyanin (alphabeta)(3) trimers that form (alphabeta)(6) hexamers in the crystals, in a fashion similar to other phycocyanins. Comparison of the primary, tertiary and quaternary structures of the S. vulcanus phycocyanin structure with phycocyanins from both the mesophilic Fremyella diplsiphon and the thermophilic Mastigocladus laminosus were performed. We show that each level of assembly of oligomeric phycocyanin, which leads to the formation of the phycobilisome structure, can be stabilized in thermophilic organisms by amino acid residue substitutions. Each substitution can form additional ionic interactions at critical positions of each association interface. In addition, a significant shift in the position of ring D of the B155 phycocyanobilin cofactor in the S. vulcanus phycocyanin, enables the formation of important polar interactions at both the (alphabeta) monomer and (alphabeta)(6) hexamer association interfaces.  相似文献   

14.
Mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 constructed by the insertional inactivation of either the cpcE or cpcF gene produce low levels of spectroscopically detectable phycocyanin. The majority of the phycocyanin produced in these strains appears to lack the alpha subunit phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophore (Zhou, J., Gasparich, G. E., Stirewalt, V. L., de Lorimier, R., and Bryant, D. A. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 16138-16145). Purification of the phycocyanin produced in the mutants revealed two fractions each with an aberrant absorption spectrum. Tryptic peptide maps of the major fraction showed that the alpha-84 PCB peptide was absent. The two PCB peptides derived from the beta subunit were normal. Tryptic digests of the less abundant phycocyanin fraction contained a family of bilin peptides derived from the alpha subunit. Several distinct bilin adducts were present. A major component was a mesobiliverdin adduct, a previously described product of the in vitro reaction of PCB and apophycocyanin. The same results were obtained with both the cpcE mutant and the cpcF mutant. In vitro reactions with PCB and the fractions containing apo alpha subunit showed that the alpha-84 bilin attachment site was unmodified and competent for adduct formation. Pseudo-revertants of both strains were observed to arise at high frequency. Analysis of the phycocyanin from a cpcE pseudo-revertant, which produced a near wild-type level of phycocyanin with alpha subunit carrying PCB, revealed a single amino acid substitution, alpha-Tyr129----Cys. This residue, which is conserved in all phycocyanins sequenced to date, forms part of the alpha-84 bilin binding site and lies within 5 A of alpha-Cys84. A mutated cpcA gene containing this substitution was constructed by site-directed mutagenesis and transformed, along with cpcB, into a cpcBAC deletion strain containing an insertionally inactivated cpcE. This strain produces high levels of phycocyanin and the majority of the alpha subunit carries PCB at alpha-Cys84.  相似文献   

15.
Derks AK  Vasiliev S  Bruce D 《Biochemistry》2008,47(45):11877-11884
Phycobilisomes are the major light-harvesting complexes for cyanobacteria, and phycocyanin is the primary phycobiliprotein of the phycobilisome rod. Phycocyanobilin chromophores are covalently bonded to the phycocyanin beta subunit (CpcB) by specific lyases which have been recently identified in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002. Surprisingly, we found that mutants missing the CpcB lyases were nevertheless capable of producing pigmented phycocyanin when grown under low-light conditions. Absorbance measurements at 10 K revealed the energy states of the beta phycocyanin chromophores to be slightly shifted, and 77 K steady state fluorescence emission spectroscopy showed that excitation energy transfer involving the targeted chromophores was disrupted. This evidence indicates that the position of the phycocyanobilin chromophore within the binding domain of the phycocyanin beta subunit had been modified. We hypothesize that alternate, less specific lyases are able to add chromophores, with varying effectiveness, to the beta binding sites.  相似文献   

16.
The amino-acid sequences of both subunits of C-phycoerythrin from the cyanobacterium Fremyella diplosiphon have been determined. The alpha-subunit contains 164 amino acid residues, two phycoerythrobilin (PEB) chromophores and has a molecular mass of 18,368 Da (protein: 17,192 Da + 2 PEB, one PEB accounting for 588 Da). The beta-subunit consists of 184 residues, three PEB chromophores and has a molecular mass of 20,931 Da (protein: 19,168 Da and 3 PEB: 1,764 Da). The five PEB chromophores (open chain tetrapyrroles) are covalently bound to six cysteine residues (one of them doubly bound to two cysteine residues). On the alpha-subunit, the first chromophore was found at position 84, homologous to the chromophore binding site of the other biliproteins APC, PC and PEC. The second chromophore, unique for the alpha-subunit of PE, is inserted together with a pentapeptide at position 143 a. On the beta-subunit, a doubly bound chromophore is attached to cysteine residues 50 and 61, similar to the rhodophytan phycoerythrins (B-PE and R-PE). The second and third chromophores were found at positions 84 and 155, homologous to the other biliproteins. A unique peptide insertion of 14 amino acid residues (without chromophore) was found at position 141 a-o in the beta-subunit and probably is located in the three-dimensional model near the additional chromophores of the C-PE alpha- and beta-subunits. Both additional chromophores of the C-PE alpha- and beta-subunit may be located at the periphery of the C-PE-trimer. The amino-acid sequence homology between C-PE alpha- and beta-subunit is 26% and to the alpha- and beta-subunits of C-PC from Mastigocladus laminosus 49% and 48%, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
A family of specific cloning vectors was constructed to express in the cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC7120 recombinant C-phycocyanin subunits with one or more different tags, including the 6xHis tag, oligomerization domains, and the streptavidin-binding Strep2 tag. Such tagged alpha or beta subunits of Anabaena sp. PCC7120 C-phycocyanin formed stoichiometric complexes in vivo with appropriate wild-type subunits to give constructs with the appropriate oligomerization state and normal posttranslational modifications and with spectroscopic properties very similar to those of unmodified phycocyanin. All of these constructs were incorporated in vivo into the rod substructures of the light-harvesting complex, the phycobilisome. The C-terminal 114-residue portion of the Anabaena sp. PCC7120 biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP114) was cloned and overexpressed and was biotinylated up to 20% in Escherichia coli and 40% in wild-type Anabaena sp. His-tagged phycocyanin beta--BCCP114 constructs expressed in Anabaena sp. were >30% biotinylated. In such recombinant phycocyanins equipped with stable trimerization domains, >75% of the fusion protein was specifically bound to streptavidin- or avidin-coated beads. Thus, the methods described here achieve in vivo production of stable oligomeric phycobiliprotein constructs equipped with affinity purification tags and biospecific recognition domains usable as fluorescent labels without further chemical manipulation.  相似文献   

18.
《BBA》1986,848(2):155-166
The optical characteristics and pathway of energy transfer in the C phycocyanin trimer isolated from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus were investigated at steady state by absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence and fluorescence polarization spectroscopy. Based on the comparison of optical data with the 3-dimensional structure of the C-phycocyanin trimer determined by X-ray analysis (Schirmer, T., Bode, W., Huber, R., Sidler, W. and Zuber, H. (1984) in Proceedings of the Symposium on Optical Properties and Structure of Tetrapyrroles, (Blauer, G. and Sund, M., eds.), pp. 445–449, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, and (1985) J. Mol. Biol. 184, 257–277), the functional assignment of three types of chromophore was established. An α subunit has an s chromophore and the chromophores at the positions 84 and 155 in the amino acid sequence of the β subunit are assigned as f and s chromophores, respectively. In the C phycocyanin trimer energy transfer occurs from the α chromophore in one monomer to the βf chromophore in an adjacent monomer, and from the βs chromophore to the βf chromophore in the same monomer. The direction of energy flow is from the outside to the inside of the trimer, where the locus for the binding of a colourless polypeptide is postulated. In the phycobilisomes the energy concentrated at the βf chromophores might be transferred toward the allophycocyanin core mainly by the βf chromophores in the phycocyanin rods.  相似文献   

19.
The light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes allophycocyanin (AP), C-phycocyanin (PC) and phycoerythrocyanin (PEC) of the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus consist of alpha- and beta-subunits containing about 170 amino-acid residues each. These two subunits form an alpha,beta-monomer, three of which build up a disc-shaped trimer. In this study these phycobiliproteins were crosslinked with bis-imidates. Various spacer lengths of the reagent and various aggregation states of the phycobiliprotein were tested. An intersubunit crosslink could be verified in all three phycobiliproteins. PC-trimers were crosslinked with the homobifunctional reagent dimethyl pimelimidate having a maximal crosslinking distance of 10 A. Two crosslinks could be identified: an intramonomer intersubunit crosslink with a yield of 48% and an intrasubunit crosslink within alpha PC (57%). These products were chemically and enzymatically fragmented and the small crosslinked peptides were isolated and then identified by amino-acid analysis. The following amino acids were crosslinked: alpha-Val 1 with beta-Ala 1 and alpha-Lys 62 with alpha-Lys 134. Both crosslinks could be localized within the known three-dimensional structure of PC.  相似文献   

20.
B Stec  R F Troxler    M M Teeter 《Biophysical journal》1999,76(6):2912-2921
The crystal structure of the light-harvesting protein phycocyanin from the cyanobacterium Cyanidium caldarium with novel crystal packing has been solved at 1.65-A resolution. The structure has been refined to an R value of 18.3% with excellent backbone and side-chain stereochemical parameters. In crystals of phycocyanin used in this study, the hexamers are offset rather than aligned as in other phycocyanins that have been crystallized to date. Analysis of this crystal's unique packing leads to a proposal for phycobilisome assembly in vivo and for a more prominent role for chromophore beta-155. This new role assigned to chromophore beta-155 in phycocyanin sheds light on the numerical relationships among and function of external chromophores found in phycoerythrins and phycoerythrocyanins.  相似文献   

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