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1.
The three-dimensional (3D) structure of the reaction center (RC) complex isolated from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum was determined from projections of negatively stained preparations by angular reconstitution. The purified complex contained the PscA, PscC, PscB, PscD subunits and the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) protein. Its mass was found to be 454 kDa by scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), indicating the presence of two copies of the PscA subunit, one copy of the PscB and PscD subunits, three FMO proteins and at least one copy of the PscC subunit. An additional mass peak at 183 kDa suggested that FMO trimers copurify with the RC complexes. Images of negatively stained RC complexes were recorded by STEM and aligned and classified by multivariate statistical analysis. Averages of the major classes indicated that different morphologies of the elongated particles (length=19 nm, width=8 nm) resulted from a rotation around the long axis. The 3D map reconstructed from these projections allowed visualization of the RC complex associated with one FMO trimer. A second FMO trimer could be correspondingly accommodated to yield a symmetric complex, a structure observed in a small number of side views and proposed to be the intact form of the RC complex.  相似文献   

2.
The composition of the P840-reaction center complex (RC), energy and electron transfer within the RC, as well as its topographical organization and interaction with other components in the membrane of green sulfur bacteria are presented, and compared to the FeS-type reaction centers of Photosystem I and of Heliobacteria. The core of the RC is homodimeric, since pscA is the only gene found in the genome of Chlorobium tepidum which resembles the genes psaA and -B for the heterodimeric core of Photosystem I. Functionally intact RC can be isolated from several species of green sulfur bacteria. It is generally composed of five subunits, PscA-D plus the BChl a-protein FMO. Functional cores, with PscA and PscB only, can be isolated from Prostecochloris aestuarii. The PscA-dimer binds P840, a special pair of BChl a-molecules, the primary electron acceptor A(0), which is a Chl a-derivative and FeS-center F(X). An equivalent to the electron acceptor A(1) in Photosystem I, which is tightly bound phylloquinone acting between A(0) and F(X), is not required for forward electron transfer in the RC of green sulfur bacteria. This difference is reflected by different rates of electron transfer between A(0) and F(X) in the two systems. The subunit PscB contains the two FeS-centers F(A) and F(B). STEM particle analysis suggests that the core of the RC with PscA and PscB resembles the PsaAB/PsaC-core of the P700-reaction center in Photosystem I. PscB may form a protrusion into the cytoplasmic space where reduction of ferredoxin occurs, with FMO trimers bound on both sides of this protrusion. Thus the subunit composition of the RC in vivo should be 2(FMO)(3)(PscA)(2)PscB(PscC)(2)PscD. Only 16 BChl a-, four Chl a-molecules and two carotenoids are bound to the RC-core, which is substantially less than its counterpart of Photosystem I, with 85 Chl a-molecules and 22 carotenoids. A total of 58 BChl a/RC are present in the membranes of green sulfur bacteria outside the chlorosomes, corresponding to two trimers of FMO (42 Bchl a) per RC (16 BChl a). The question whether the homodimeric RC is totally symmetric is still open. Furthermore, it is still unclear which cytochrome c is the physiological electron donor to P840(+). Also the way of NAD(+)-reduction is unknown, since a gene equivalent to ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase is not present in the genome.  相似文献   

3.
A series of spectroscopic measurements were performed on membrane fractions and detergent-solubilized complexes from the green sulfur bacterium (GSB) Chlorobaculum (Cba.) tepidum. The excitation migration through the entire GSB photosynthetic apparatus cannot be observed upon excitation of membranes in the chlorosome region at 77?K. In order to observe energy transfer from the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) protein to the reaction center (RC), FMO was directly excited at ~800?nm in transient absorption experiments. However, interpretation of the results is complicated by the spectral overlap between FMO and the RC. The availability of the Y16F FMO mutant, whose absorption spectrum is drastically different from that of the WT, has enabled the selection of spectral regions where either only FMO or the RC contributes. The application of a directed kinetic modeling approach, or target analysis, revealed the various decay and energy transfer pathways within the pigment-protein complexes. The calculated FMO-to-RC excitation energy transfer efficiencies are approximately 25% and 48% for the Y16F and WT samples, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
The Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO)-protein and the FMO-reaction center (RC) core complex from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum were examined at 6 K by absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy. The absorption spectrum of the RC core complex was obtained by a subtraction method and found to have fiye peaks in the QY region, at 797, 808, 818, 834 and 837 nm. The efficiency of energy transfer from carotenoid to bacteriochlorophyll a in the RC core complex was 23% at 6 K, and from the FMO-protein to the core it was 35%. Energy transfer from the FMO-protein to the core complex was also measured in isolated membranes of Prosthecochloris aestuarii from the action spectra of charge separation. Again, a low efficiency of energy transfer was obtained, both at 6 K and at room temperature.Abbreviations BChl- bacteriochlorophyll - P840- primary electron donor - RC- reaction center - FMO-protein- Fenna-Matthews-Olson-protein  相似文献   

5.
Exciton calculations on symmetric and asymmetric Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) trimers, combined with absorption difference anisotropy measurements on FMO trimers from the green bacterium Chlorobium tepidum, suggest that real samples exhibit sufficient diagonal energy disorder so that their laser-excited exciton states are noticeably localized. Our observed anisotropies are clearly inconsistent with 21-pigment exciton simulations based on a threefold-symmetric FMO protein. They are more consistent with a 7-pigment model that assumes that the laser-prepared states are localized within a subunit of the trimer. Differential diagonal energy shifts of 50 cm(-1) between symmetry-related pigments in different subunits are large enough to cause sharp localization in the stationary states; these shifts are commensurate with the approximately 95 cm(-1) inhomogeneous linewidth of the lowest exciton levels. Experimental anisotropies (and by implication steady-state linear and circular dichroism) likely arise from statistical averaging over states with widely contrasting values of these observables, in consequence of their sensitivity to diagonal energy disorder.  相似文献   

6.
Linear and circular dichroism spectra of isolated bacteriochlorophyll a proteins (FMO proteins) and membrane vesicles containing FMO protein from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum were measured at room temperature and 77 K. The orientation of membranes and isolated FMO protein was obtained by gel squeezing. Linear dichroism (LD) data indicate that isolated FMO protein and membrane vesicles associated with the FMO protein are oriented in a similar way in a squeezed polyacrylamide gel. Both samples show a characteristic negative LD band around 814 nm with flanking positive bands at 802 and 824 nm ascribed to the Qy excitonic transitions of BChl a of the FMO protein. This confirms that the C3 symmetry axis of the trimer is perpendicular to the membrane plane, which is supported by the model of the disc-like structure of FMO protein trimers of Cb. tepidum [Li Yi-Fen, Zhou W, Blankenship RE, and Allen JP (1997) J Mol Biol 272: 456–471]. The LD data are consistent with either BChl 3 or 6, but not 7 as the principal contributor to the low temperature band at 825 nm. The low temperature linear and circular dichroism spectra of FMO protein trimers from Chlorobium tepidum show significant differences from the low temperature LD and CD spectra of FMO protein trimers from Prosthecochloris aestuarii. The data are interpreted in terms of somewhat different pigment-protein and pigment-pigment interactions in the two complexes.  相似文献   

7.
Allophycocyanin (APC), a cyanobacterial photosynthetic phycobiliprotein, functions in energy transfer as a light-harvesting protein. One of the prominent spectroscopic characteristics of APC is a strong red-shift in the absorption and emission maxima when monomers are assembled into a trimer. Previously, holo-APC α and β subunits (holo-ApcA and ApcB) were successfully synthesized in Escherichia coli. In this study, both holo-subunits from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 were co-expressed in E. coli, and found to self-assemble into trimers. The recombinant APC trimer was purified by metal affinity and size-exclusion chromatography, and had a native structure identical to native APC, as determined by characteristic spectroscopic measurements, fluorescence quantum yield, tryptic digestion analysis, and molecular weight measurements. Combined with results from a study in which only the monomer was formed, our results indicate that bilin synthesis and the subsequent attachment to apo-subunits are important for the successful assembly of APC trimers. This is the first study to report on the assembly of recombinant ApcA and ApcB into a trimer with native structure. Our study provides a promising method for producing better fluorescent tags, as well as a method to facilitate the genetic analysis of APC trimer assembly and biological function.  相似文献   

8.
Wen J  Zhang H  Gross ML  Blankenship RE 《Biochemistry》2011,50(17):3502-3511
The nature and stoichiometry of pigments in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) photosynthetic antenna protein complex were determined by native electrospray mass spectrometry. The FMO antenna complex was the first chlorophyll-containing protein that was crystallized. Previous results indicate that the FMO protein forms a trimer with seven bacteriochlorophyll a in each monomer. This model has long been a working basis to understand the molecular mechanism of energy transfer through pigment/pigment and pigment/protein coupling. Recent results have suggested, however, that an eighth bacteriochlorophyll is present in some subunits. In this report, a direct mass spectrometry measurement of the molecular weight of the intact FMO protein complex clearly indicates the existence of an eighth pigment, which is assigned as a bacteriochlorophyll a by mass analysis of the complex and HPLC analysis of the pigment. The eighth pigment is found to be easily lost during purification, which results in its partial occupancy in the mass spectra of the intact complex prepared by different procedures. The results are consistent with the recent X-ray structural models. The existence of the eighth bacteriochlorophyll a in this model antenna protein gives new insights into the functional role of the FMO protein and motivates the need for new theoretical and spectroscopic assignments of spectral features of the FMO protein.  相似文献   

9.
Photosynthetically active reaction centre core (RCC) complexes were isolated from two species of green sulfur bacteria, Prosthecochloris (Ptc.) aestuarii strain 2K and Chlorobium (Chl.) tepidum, using the same isolation procedure. Both complexes contained the main reaction centre protein PscA and the iron–sulfur protein PscB, but were devoid of Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) protein. The Chl. tepidum RCC preparation contained in addition PscC (cytochrome c). In order to allow accurate determination of the pigment content of the RCC complexes, the extinction coefficients of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a in several solvents were redetermined with high precision. They varied between 54.8 mM−1 cm−1 for methanol and 97.0 mM−1 cm−1 for diethylether in the QY maximum. Both preparations appeared to contain 16 BChls a of which two are probably the 132-epimers, 4 chlorophylls (Chls) a 670 and 2 carotenoids per RCC. The latter were of at least two different types. Quinones were virtually absent. The absorption spectra were similar for the two species, but not identical. Eight bands were present at 6 K in the BChl a QY region, with positions varying from 777 to 837 nm. The linear dichroism spectra showed that the orientation of the BChl a QY transitions is roughly parallel to the membrane plane; most nearly parallel were transitions at 800 and 806 nm. For both species, the circular dichroism spectra were dominated by a strong band at 807–809 nm, indicating strong interactions between at least some of the BChls. The absorption, CD and LD spectra of the four Chls a 670 were virtually identical for both RCC complexes, indicating that their binding sites are highly conserved and that they are an essential part of the RCC complexes, possibly as components of the electron transfer chain. Low temperature absorption spectroscopy indicated that typical FMO–RCC complexes of Ptc. aestuarii and Chl. tepidum contain two FMO trimers per reaction centre. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

10.
The Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) antenna protein from the green bacterium Pelodictyon phaeum mediates the transfer of energy from the peripheral chlorosome antenna complex to the membrane-bound reaction center. The three-dimensional structure of this protein has been solved using protein crystallography to a resolution limit of 2.0 Å, with R work and R free values of 16.6 and 19.9%, respectively. The structure is a trimer of three identical subunits related by a threefold symmetry axis. Each subunit has two beta sheets that surround 8 bacteriochlorophylls. The bacteriochlorophylls are all five-coordinated, with the axial ligand being a histidine, serine, backbone carbonyl, or bound water molecule. The arrangement of the bacteriochlorophylls is generally well conserved in comparison to other FMO structures, but differences are apparent in the interactions with the surrounding protein. In this structure the position and orientation of the eighth bacteriochlorophyll is well defined and shows differences in its location and the coordination of the central Mg compared to previous models. The implications of this structure on the ability of the FMO protein to perform energy transfer are discussed in terms of the experimental optical measurements.  相似文献   

11.
We describe simulations of absorption difference spectra in strongly coupled photosynthetic antennas. In the presence of large resonance couplings, distinctive features arise from excited-state absorption transitions between one- and two-exciton levels. We first outline the theory for the heterodimer and for the general N-pigment system, and we demonstrate the transition between the strong and weak coupling regimes. The theory is applied to Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) bacteriochlorophyll a protein trimers from the green photosynthetic bacterium Prosthecochloris aestuarii and then compared with experimental low-temperature absorption difference spectra of FMO trimers from the green bacterium Chlorobium tepidum.  相似文献   

12.
Phototrophy, the conversion of light to biochemical energy, occurs throughout the Bacteria and plants, however, debate continues over how different phototrophic mechanisms and the bacteria that contain them are related. There are two types of phototrophic mechanisms in the Bacteria: reaction center type 1 (RC1) has core and core antenna domains that are parts of a single polypeptide, whereas reaction center type 2 (RC2) is composed of short core proteins without antenna domains. In cyanobacteria, RC2 is associated with separate core antenna proteins that are homologous to the core antenna domains of RC1. We reconstructed evolutionary relationships among phototrophic mechanisms based on a phylogeny of core antenna domains/proteins. Core antenna domains of 46 polypeptides were aligned, including the RC1 core proteins of heliobacteria, green sulfur bacteria, and photosystem I (PSI) of cyanobacteria and plastids, plus core antenna proteins of photosystem II (PSII) from cyanobacteria and plastids. Maximum likelihood, parsimony, and neighbor joining methods all supported a single phylogeny in which PSII core antenna proteins (PsbC, PsbB) arose within the cyanobacteria from duplications of the RC1-associated core antenna domains and accessory antenna proteins (IsiA, PcbA, PcbC) arose from duplications of PsbB. The data indicate an evolutionary history of RC1 in which an initially homodimeric reaction center was vertically transmitted to green sulfur bacteria, heliobacteria, and an ancestor of cyanobacteria. A heterodimeric RC1 (=PSI) then arose within the cyanobacterial lineage. In this scenario, the current diversity of core antenna domains/proteins is explained without a need to invoke horizontal transfer.This article contains online-only supplementary material.Reviewing Editor: Dr. W. Ford Doolittle  相似文献   

13.
The light-harvesting complex of cyanobacteria and red algae, the phycobilisome, has two structural domains, the core and the rods. Both contain biliproteins and linker peptides. The core contains the site of attachment to the thylakoid membrane and the energy transfer link between the phycobilisome and chlorophyll. There are also six rod-binding sites in the membrane-distal periphery of the core. The structure of phycobilisomes in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 was studied by Glazer, who proposed a model for the internal organization of the bicylindrical core. In the construction of that model, it was necessary to make arbitrary decisions between two possible locations for one of the trimeric protein complexes within a core cylinder and between two possible orientations of the basal core cylinders relative to one another. We isolated the tricylindrical cores from an ultraviolet-light-induced mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6701 and obtained, by partial dissociation, a unique core substructure that maintained some contacts between the two basal cylinders. From its structure and spectral properties, we conclude that this particle is a central core substructure that resulted from dissociation of the two layers of peripheral trimers in the intact core. The compositions of this particle and the dissociated trimers were inconsistent with the proposed location of one of the trimers in the 6301 core model, but supported the placement of that trimer in the alternative position within the basal core cylinder. Rod-binding sites within the central core substructure were studied by partial dissociation of the short-rod phycobilisomes from another mutant of 6701. This dissociation generated particles that were interpreted as being central core substructures with the two basal rods attached. The appearance of these particles in the electron microscope suggested that both basal rods would be localized towards the same side of the intact core. Such an asymmetrical arrangement of basal rods is supported by previously published edge-views of intact cores with basal rods from strain 6701. These observations suggest a parallel arrangement of the basal cylinders with respect to each other, creating an asymmetrical core. A phycobilisome model was constructed that incorporated core asymmetry. This model predicts the energy transfer pathways from the basal and upper rods to specific trimers in the core.  相似文献   

14.
The PscD subunit in the homodimeric "type I" photosynthetic reaction center (RC) complex of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum was disrupted by insertional mutagenesis of its relevant pscD gene. This is the first report on the use of the direct mutagenic approach into the RC-related genes in green sulfur bacteria. The RC complex of C. tepidum is supposed to form a homodimer of two identical PscA subunits together with three other subunits: PscB (FA/FB-containing protein), PscC (cytochrome cz), and PscD. PscD shows a relatively low but significant similarity in its amino acid sequence to PsaD in the photosystem I of plants and cyanobacteria. We studied the biochemical and spectroscopic properties of a mutant lacking PscD in order to elucidate its unknown function. 1) The RC complex isolated from the mutant cells showed no band corresponding to PscD on SDS-PAGE analysis. 2) The growth rate of the PscD-less mutant was slower than that of the wild-type cells at low light intensities. 3) Time-resolved fluorescence spectra at 77 K revealed prolonged decay times of the fluorescence from bacteriochlorophyll c on the antenna chlorosome and from bacteriochlorophyll a on the Fenna-Matthews-Olson antenna protein in the mutant cells. The loss of PscD led to a much slower energy transfer from the antenna pigments to the special pair bacteriochlorophyll a (P840). 4) The mutant strain exhibited slightly less activity of ferredoxin-mediated NADP+ photoreduction compared with that in the wild-type strain. The extent of suppression, however, was less significant than that reported in the PsaD-less mutants of cyanobacterial photosystem I. The evolutionary relationship between PscD and PsaD was also discussed based on a structural homology modeling of the former.  相似文献   

15.
The kinetics of photoinduced absorbance changes in the 400-ns to 100-ms time range were studied between 770 and 1025 nm in reaction center core (RCC) complexes isolated from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium vibrioforme. A global, multiple stretched-exponential analysis shows the presence of two distinct but strongly overlapping spectra. The spectrum of the 70-micros component consists of a broad bleaching with two minima at 810 and 825 nm and a broad positive band at wavelengths greater than 865 nm and is assigned to the decay of (3)Bchl a of the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) protein. The contribution of the 70-micros component correlates with the amount of FMO protein in the isolated RCC complex. The spectrum of the 1.6-micros component has a sharp bleaching at 835 nm, a maximum at 805 nm, a broad positive band at wavelengths higher than 865 nm, and a broad negative band at wavelengths higher than 960 nm. When the RCC is incubated with inorganic iron and sulfur, the 1.6-micros component is replaced by a component with a lifetime of approximately 40 micros, consistent with the reconstruction of the F(X) cluster. We propose that the 1.6-micros component results from charge recombination between P840(+) and an intermediate electron acceptor operating between A(0) and F(X). Our studies in Chlorobium RCCs show that approaches that employ a single wavelength in the measurement of absorption changes have inherent limitations and that a global kinetic analysis at multiple wavelengths in the near-infrared is required to reliably separate absorption changes due to P840/P840(+) from the decay of (3)Bchl a in the FMO protein.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of 1-hexanol on spectral properties and the processes of energy transfer of the green gliding photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus was investigated with reference to the baseplate region. On addition of 1-hexanol to a cell suspension in a concentration of one-fourth saturation, a specific change in the baseplate region was induced: that is, a bleach of the 793-nm component, and an increase in absorption of the 813-nm component. This result was also confirmed by fluorescence spectra of whole cells and isolated chlorosomes. The processes of energy transfer were affected in the overall transfer efficiency but not kinetically, indicating that 1-hexanol suppressed the flux of energy flow from the baseplate to the B806-866 complexes in the cytoplasmic membranes. The fluorescence excitation spectrum suggests a specific site of interaction between bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c with a maximum at 771 nm in the rod elements and BChl a with a maximum at 793 nm in the baseplate, which is a funnel for a fast transfer of energy to the B806-866 complexes in the membranes. The absorption spectrum of chlorosomes was resolved to components consistently on the basis, including circular dichroism and magnetic circular dichroism spectra; besides two major BChl c forms, bands corresponding to tetramer, dimer, and monomer were also discernible, which are supposed to be intermediary components for a higher order structure. A tentative model for the antenna system of C. aurantiacus is proposed.Abbreviations A670 a component whose absorption maximum is located at 670 nm - (B)Chl (bacterio)chlorophyll - CD circular dichroism - F675 a component whose emission maximum is located at 675 nm - FMO protein Fenna-Mathews-Olson protein - LD linear dichroism - LH light-harvesting - McD magnetic circular dichroism - PS photosystem - RC reaction center  相似文献   

17.
Allophycocyanin: trimers,monomers, subunits,and homodimers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
MacColl R  Eisele LE  Menikh A 《Biopolymers》2003,72(5):352-365
Allophycocyanin is a photosynthetic light-harvesting pigment-protein complex located in the phycobilisomes of cyanobacteria and red algae. Using dynamic light scattering and circular dichroism, solutions of purified allophycocyanin were shown to consist of homogeneous trimers (alpha3beta3) with a nonspherical shape over a very wide range of protein concentrations at pH 6.0 and 20 degrees C. Deconvolutions of the visible circular dichroism spectrum of the trimer were carried out for the first determination of the individual spectra of all six-component chromophores. The chromophores were shown to be in different microenvironments that helped determine the spectrum of the trimer. Monomers (alpha beta) that were formed in either the presence of 0.50M NaSCN or at 45 degrees C were shown to be completely reversible to trimers. However, subunits (alpha and beta) that were formed in either the presence of 8M urea or at 60 degrees C, using spectroscopy and gel-filtration column chromatography, were observed to only partially reconstitute trimers. Homodimers (alpha2 and/or beta2) formed during the regeneration of trimers. The homodimer, which was detected for the first time when both subunits were present, was shown to be in equilibrium with its subunits. Unlike the trimer situation, subunits were found to fully reconstitute monomers in the presence of 0.50M NaSCN. These results suggest a route to trimer assembly from subunits with monomers serving as intermediaries and the homodimers forming in a nonproductive step that did not interfere with the overall assembly scheme.  相似文献   

18.
In photosynthetic membranes of cyanobacteria, algae, and higher plants, photosystem I (PSI) mediates light-driven transmembrane electron transfer from plastocyanin or cytochrome c6 to the ferredoxin-NADP complex. The oxidoreductase function of PSI is sensitized by a reversible photooxidation of primary electron donor P700, which launches a multistep electron transfer via a series of redox cofactors of the reaction center (RC). The excitation energy for the functioning of the primary electron donor in the RC is delivered via the chlorophyll core antenna in the complex with peripheral light-harvesting antennas. Supermolecular complexes of the PSI acquire remarkably different structural forms of the peripheral light-harvesting antenna complexes, including distinct pigment types and organizational principles. The PSI core antenna, being the main functional unit of the supercomplexes, provides an increased functional connectivity in the chlorophyll antenna network due to dense pigment packing resulting in a fast spread of the excitation among the neighbors. Functional connectivity within the network as well as the spectral overlap of antenna pigments allows equilibration of the excitation energy in the depth of the whole membrane within picoseconds and loss-free delivery of the excitation to primary donor P700 within 20-40 ps. Low-light-adapted cyanobacteria under iron-deficiency conditions extend this capacity via assembly of efficiently energy coupled rings of CP43-like complexes around the PSI trimers. In green algae and higher plants, less efficient energy coupling in the eukaryotic PSI-LHCI supercomplexes is probably a result of the structural adaptation of the Chl a/b binding LHCI peripheral antenna that not only extends the absorption cross section of the PSI core but participates in regulation of excitation flows between the two photosystems as well as in photoprotection.  相似文献   

19.
The Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein is a water-soluble protein found only in green sulfur bacteria. Each subunit contains seven bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a molecules wrapped in a string bag of protein consisting of mostly β sheet. Most other chlorophyll-binding proteins are water-insoluble proteins containing membrane-spanning α helices. We compared an FMO consensus sequence to well-characterized, membrane-bound chlorophyll-binding proteins: L & M (reaction center proteins of proteobacteria), D1 & D2 (reaction center proteins of PS II), CP43 & CP47 (core proteins of PS II), PsaA & PsaB (reaction center proteins of PS I), PscA (reaction center protein of green sulfur bacteria), and PshA (reaction center protein of heliobacteria). We aligned the FMO sequence with the other sequences using the PAM250 matrix modified for His binding-site identities and found a signature sequence (LxHHxxxGxFxxF) common to FMO and PscA. (The two His residues are BChl a. binding sites in FMO.) This signature sequence is part of a 220-residue C-terminal segment with an identity score of 13%. PRSS (Probability of Random Shuffle) analysis showed that the 220-residue alignment is better than 96% of randomized alignments. This evidence supports the hypothesis that FMO protein is related to PscA. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Cyanobacteria perform photosynthesis with the use of large light-harvesting antennae called phycobilisomes (PBSs). These hemispherical PBSs contain hundreds of open-chain tetrapyrrole chromophores bound to different peptides, providing an arrangement in which excitation energy is funnelled towards the PBS core from where it can be transferred to photosystem I and/or photosystem II. In the PBS core, many allophycocyanin (APC) trimers are present, red-light-absorbing phycobiliproteins that covalently bind phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophores. APC trimers were amongst the first light-harvesting complexes to be crystallized. APC trimers have two spectrally different PCBs per monomer, a high- and a low-energy pigment. The crystal structure of the APC trimer reveals the close distance (~21 Å) between those two chromophores (the distance within one monomer is ~51 Å) and this explains the ultrafast (~1 ps) excitation energy transfer (EET) between them. Both chromophores adopt a somewhat different structure, which is held responsible for their spectral difference. Here we used spectrally resolved picosecond fluorescence to study EET in these APC trimers both in crystallized and in solubilized form. We found that not all closely spaced pigment couples consist of a low- and a high-energy pigment. In ~10% of the cases, a couple consists of two high-energy pigments. EET to a low-energy pigment, which can spectrally be resolved, occurs on a time scale of tens of picoseconds. This transfer turns out to be three times faster in the crystal than in the solution. The spectral characteristics and the time scale of this transfer component are similar to what have been observed in the whole cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, for which it was ascribed to EET from C-phycocyanin to APC. The present results thus demonstrate that part of this transfer should probably also be ascribed to EET within APC trimers.  相似文献   

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