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1.
A survey of marine unicellular cyanobacterial strains for phycobiliproteins with high phycourobilin (PUB) content led to a detailed investigation of Synechocystis sp. WH8501. The phycobiliproteins of this strain were purified and characterized with respect to their bilin composition and attachment sites. Amino-terminal sequences were determined for the alpha and beta subunits of the phycocyanin and the major and minor phycoerythrins. The amino acid sequences around the attachment sites of all bilin prosthetic groups of the phycocyanin and of the minor phycoerythrin were also determined. The phycocyanin from this strain carries a single PUB on the alpha subunit and two phycocyanobilins on the beta subunit. It is the only phycocyanin known to carry a PUB chromophore. The native protein, isolated in the (alpha beta)2 aggregation state, displays absorption maxima at 490 and 592 nm. Excitation at 470 nm, absorbed almost exclusively by PUB, leads to emission at 644 nm from phycocyanobilin. The major and minor phycoerythrins from strain WH8501 each carry five bilins per alpha beta unit, four PUBs and one phycoerythrobilin. Spectroscopic properties determine that the PUB groups function as energy donors to the sole phycoerythrobilin. Analysis of the bilin peptides unambiguously identifies the phycoerythrobilin at position beta-82 (residue numbering assigned by homology with B-phycoerythrin; Sidler, W., Kumpf, B., Suter, F., Klotz, A. V., Glazer, A. N., and Zuber, H. (1989) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 370, 115-124) as the terminal energy acceptor in phycoerythrins.  相似文献   

2.
Energy-transfer processes in the algal light-harvesting proteins, the phycocyanins, have been studied by means of picosecond absorption spectroscopy. After excitation at 530 nm, the absorption at several wavelengths in the range 480--669 nm decayed with a short time constant (picosecond) and a long time constant (greater than 1 ns). For C-phycocyanin, energy transfer from the beta to the alpha subunits is interpreted as being a likely candidate for the short time constant; the long time constant probably is the excitation lifetime of the chromophore on the alpha subunits. The time constants for energy transfer in monomers, trimers, and hexamers of C-phycocyanin extracted from a blue-green alga, Phormidium luridum, were measured as approximately 85, approximately 56, and approximately 32 ps, respectively. The corresponding time constant in the cryptomonad phycocyanin 645 from Chroomonas species was found to be less than 5 ps.  相似文献   

3.
Exposure of a phycocyanin-phycoerythrocyanin mixture extracted from Anabaena variabilis to sodium acetate, pH 3.8, ionic strength of 0.1, results in dissociation of the phycoerythrocyanin's beta subunit from its alpha subunit. The alpha subunit obtained by this method has a strong absorption transition at 508 nm. This transition is a consequence of the subunit's specific conformation, rather than of a new chromophore. The behavior of the phycocyanin-phycoerythrocyanin mixture in acetate buffers of variable compositions suggests that interactions which involve carboxylic amino acid residues play an important role, along with hydrophobic associations, in the association of phycoerythrocyanin subunits into monomers (alpha beta) and between this protein and phycocyanin. This work also indicates that the linkage between alpha and beta subunits of phycoerythrocyanin is labile and may be weaker than the association of these subunits with phycocyanin under acidic conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Phycoerythrin, a chromoprotein, from the cryptomonad alga Rhodomonas lens is composed of two pairs of nonidentical polypeptides (α2β2). This structure is indicated by a molecular weight of 54,300, calculated from osmotic pressure measurements and by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel electrophoresis, which showed bands with molecular weights of 9800 and 17,700 in a 1:1 molar ratio. The s20,w0 of 4.3S is consistent with a protein of this molecular weight. Similar results were obtained with another cryptomonad phycoerythrin and a cryptomonad phycocyanin. Electrophoresis after partial cross-linking by dimethyl suberimidate revealed seven bands for the cryptomonad phycocyanin and six bands for cryptomonad phycoerythrin and confirmed the proposed structure. Spectroscopic studies on α and β subunits of cryptomonad phycocyanin and phycoerythrin were carried out on the separated bands in SDS gels. The individual polypeptides possessed a single absorption band with the following maxima: phycoerythrin (R. lens), α at 565 nm, β at 531 nm; phycocyanin (Chroomonas sp.), α at 644 nm, β at 566 nm. Fluorescence polarization was not constant across the visible absorption band regions of phycoerythrin (R. lens and C. ovata) with higher polarizations located at higher wavelengths, as had also been previously shown for cryptomonad phycocyanin (Chroomonas sp.). Combining the absorption spectra and the polarization results indicates that in each case the β subunit contains sensitizing chromophores and the α subunit fluorescing chromophores. The CD spectra of cryptomonad phycocyanin and both phycoerythrins were similar and were related to the spectra of the individual subunits. In Ouchterlony double-diffusion experiments the cryptomonad phycoerythrins and phycocyanins cross-reacted, with spurring, with phycoerythrin isolated from a red alga. The cryptomonad phycoerythrins were immunochemically very similar to each other and to cryptomonad phycocyanin, with little spurring detected.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Structures of the open-chain tetrapyrrole (bilin) prosthetic groups of the cryptophycean biliproteins phycocyanin 645 (Cr-PC 645; from strain UW374), phycoerythrin 566 (Cr-PE 566; from strain Bermani) and phycoerythrin 545 (Cr-PE 545; from Proteomonas sulcata Hill & Wetherbee) were examined by absorption, 1H NMR spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry. These biliproteins carry the following covalently attached bilins: Cr-PC 645 (alpha subunit) has one mesobiliverdin, (beta subunit), two phycocyanobilins and a doubly linked 15,16-dihydrobiliverdin; Cr-PC 566 (alpha), bilin 584, (beta), phycoerythrobilin and two bilin 584 chromophores (Wedemayer, G.J., Wemmer, D.E., and Glazer, A.N. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 4731-4741); Cr-PE 545 (alpha) has one 15,16-dihydrobiliverdin and (beta), only phycoerythrobilins. This is the first report of naturally occurring biliproteins carrying either 15,16-dihydrobiliverdin or mesobiliverdin chromophores. Native cryptomonad phycobiliproteins have been classified on the basis of the position of their long wavelength absorption maxima. However, comparison of the bilins of Cr-PE 566 from strain Bermani with those of Cr-PE 566 of strain CBD shows that the two proteins carry different bilins on the alpha subunit. Consequently, the identity of the bilin prosthetic groups on cryptophycean phycobiliproteins cannot be unambiguously inferred from simple inspection of the visible absorption spectra.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
Light harvesting in cyanobacteria is performed by the biliproteins, which are organized into membrane-associated complexes called phycobilisomes. Most phycobilisomes have a core substructure that is composed of the allophycocyanin biliproteins and is energetically linked to chlorophyll in the photosynthetic membrane. Rod substructures are attached to the phycobilisome cores and contain phycocyanin and sometimes phycoerythrin. The different biliproteins have discrete absorbance and fluorescence maxima that overlap in an energy transfer pathway that terminates with chlorophyll. A phycocyanin-minus mutant in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain 6803 (strain 4R) has been shown to have a nonsense mutation in the cpcB gene encoding the phycocyanin beta subunit. We have expressed a foreign phycocyanin operon from Synechocystis sp. strain 6701 in the 4R strain and complemented the phycocyanin-minus phenotype. Complementation occurs because the foreign phycocyanin alpha and beta subunits assemble with endogenous phycobilisome components. The phycocyanin alpha subunit that is normally absent in the 4R strain can be rescued by heterologous assembly as well. Expression of the Synechocystis sp. strain 6701 cpcBA operon in the wild-type Synechocystis sp. strain 6803 was also examined and showed that the foreign phycocyanin can compete with the endogenous protein for assembly into phycobilisomes.  相似文献   

10.
p3phycoerythrin is the major phycobiliprotein of Rhodophyta and endows these algae with the characteristic color. R-phycoerythrin purified from red alga Calithamnion rubosom is composed of four dissimilar polypeptide subunits, alpha, beta, gamma, and delta. In calibrated SDS gel electrophoresis their molecular weights are 21 000, 21 600, 31 000 and 33 000 daltons, respectively. The stoichiometry of the subunits in the native protein is 9 alpha: 9 beta: 2 gamma: 1 delta. R-phycoerythrin carries two covalently linked apoprotein red tetrapyrrol pigments: phycoerythrobilin (PEB) and phycourobilin (PUB). Chemical and spectroscopic data show that alpha subunit carries solely two PEB chromophores, beta subunit--3 PEB and 1 PUB groups, gamma subunit--3 PEB and 2 PUB groups and delta subunit--1 or 2 PEB and 1 PUB groups. The chromophore and polypeptide structure of R-phycoerythrin is mostly composed of all known phycobiliproteins of red and blue-green algae.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
A series of experiments on the light-harvesting properties of the cryptomonad biliprotein phycoerythrin 566 has been carried out on purified protein isolated from Cryptomonas ovata. Although this pigment has an absorption maximum at 566 nm, a property very close to that of other phycoerythrins, it was found to have a totally unique set of chromophores. The chromophores (bilins) responsible for its absorption spectrum were analyzed by a number of approaches. Chromophore-containing peptides were produced by trypsin treatment and purified in order to isolate the individual peptide-bound bilins free of overlapping absorption. These chromopeptides, after comparison with appropriate controls, showed that three spectrally distinct bilins occurred on the purified oligomeric protein. Two of the bilins were the well-known phycoerythrobilin and cryptoviolin, but the third was previously undiscovered and had an absorption spectrum between that of cryptoviolin and phycocyanobilin. Since the spectral diversity of the three bilins was fully maintained in solvents that minimize the effects of apoprotein on the spectra of the bilins, it is likely that the three bilins are also structurally dissimilar. The alpha and beta subunits, which constitute the protein, were separated by ion-exchange chromatography, and the new bilin was found to be the sole chromophore on the alpha subunit. It was also found that at least two alpha subunits could be separated and they both had this unusual bilin (cryptobilin 596). The beta subunit, therefore, contained both phycoerythrobilin and cryptoviolin. On the basis of the spectra of the three chromopeptides, the absorption spectrum of the protein was modeled using the known absorptivities of cryptoviolin and phycoerythrobilin.  相似文献   

13.
Aphanizomenon flos-aquae (AFA) is a blue-green alga and represents a nutrient-dense food source. In this study the presence of phycocyanin (PC), a blue protein belonging to the photosynthetic apparatus, has been demonstrated in AFA. An efficient method for its separation has been set up: PC can be purified by a simple single step chromatographic run using a hydroxyapatite column (ratio A620/A280 of 4.78), allowing its usage for health-enhancing properties while eliminating other aspecific algal components. Proteomic investigation and HPLC analysis of purified AFA phycobilisomes revealed that, contrary to the well-characterized Synechocystis and Spirulina spp., only one type of biliprotein is present in phycobilisomes: phycocyanins with no allo-phycocyanins. Two subunit polypeptides of PC were also separated: the beta subunit containing two bilins as chromophore and the alpha subunit containing only one.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Phycobilisomes from the nonchromatic adapting cyanobacterium Spirulina platensis are composed of a central core containing allophycocyanin and rods with phycocyanin and linker polypeptides in a regular array. Room temperature absorption spectra of phycobilisomes from this organism indicated the presence of phycocyanin and allophycocyanin. However, low temperature absorption spectra showed the association of a phycobiliviolin type of chromophore within phycobilisomes. This chromophore had an absorption maximum at 590 nanometers when phycobilisomes were suspended in 0.75 molar K-phosphate buffer (pH 7.0). Purified phycocyanin from this cyanobacterium was found to consist of three subparticles and the phycobiliviolin type of chromophore was associated with the lowest density subparticle. Circular dichroism spectra of phycocyanin subparticles also indicated the association of this chromophore with the lowest density subparticle. Absorption spectral analysis of α and β subunits of phycocyanin showed that phycobiliviolin type of chromophore was attached to the α subunit, but not the β subunit. Effect of light quality showed that green light enhanced the synthesis of this chromophore as analyzed from the room temperature absorption spectra of phycocyanin subparticles and subunits, while red or white light did not have any effect. Low temperature absorption spectra of phycobilisomes isolated from green, red, and white light conditions also indicated the enhancement of phycobiliviolin type of chromophore under green light.  相似文献   

16.
Mixtures of the alpha and beta subunits of human luteinizing hormone, at 40°C and pH 7.50, demonstrate time dependence in their ultraviolet absorption spectra. Spectra of the native hormone or the separated subunits are stable with respect to time. The spectral changes are qualitatively consistent with a transfer of aromatic chromophores from an aqueous environment to less polar, possibly hydrophobic, surroundings during the process of subunit combination.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 and all other cyanobacteria that synthesize phycocyanin have a gene, cpcT, that is paralogous to cpeT, a gene of unknown function affecting phycoerythrin synthesis in Fremyella diplosiphon. A cpcT null mutant contains 40% less phycocyanin than wild type and produces smaller phycobilisomes with red-shifted absorbance and fluorescence emission maxima. Phycocyanin from the cpcT mutant has an absorbance maximum at 634 nm compared with 626 nm for the wild type. The phycocyanin beta-subunit from the cpcT mutant has slightly smaller apparent molecular weight on SDS-PAGE. Purified phycocyanins from the cpcT mutant and wild type were cleaved with formic acid, and the products were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. No phycocyanobilin chromophore was bound to the peptide containing Cys-153 derived from the phycocyanin beta-subunit of the cpcT mutant. Recombinant CpcT was used to perform in vitro bilin addition assays with apophycocyanin (CpcA/CpcB) and phycocyanobilin. Depending on the source of phycocyanobilin, reaction products with CpcT had absorbance maxima between 597 and 603 nm as compared with 638 nm for the control reactions, in which mesobiliverdin becomes covalently bound. After trypsin digestion and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography, the CpcT reaction product produced one major phycocyanobilin-containing peptide. This peptide had a retention time identical to that of the tryptic peptide that includes phycocyanobilin-bound, cysteine 153 of wild-type phycocyanin. The results from characterization of the cpcT mutant as well as the in vitro biochemical assays demonstrate that CpcT is a new phycocyanobilin lyase that specifically attaches phycocyanobilin to Cys-153 of the phycocyanin beta-subunit.  相似文献   

19.
We report on single-molecule fluorescence measurements performed on the phycobiliprotein allophycocyanin (APC). Our data support the presence of a unidirectional F?rster-type energy transfer process involving spectrally different chromophores, alpha84 (donor) and beta84 (acceptor), as well as of energy hopping amongst beta84 chromophores. Single-molecule fluorescence spectra recorded from individual immobilized APC proteins indicate the presence of a red-emitting chromophore with emission peaking at 660 nm, which we connect with beta84, and a species with the emission peak blue shifted at 630 nm, which we attribute to alpha84. Polarization data from single APC trimers point to the presence of three consecutive red emitters, suggesting energy hopping amongst beta84 chromophores. Based on the single-molecule fluorescence spectra and assuming that emission at the ensemble level in solution comes mainly from the acceptor chromophore, we were able to resolve the individual absorption and emission spectra of the alpha84 and beta84 chromophores in APC.  相似文献   

20.
A desulfoviridin-type sulfite reductase having the alpha band at 638 nm was purified from Desulfovibrio africanus Benghazi (NCIB 8401) by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-200, and DEAE-Sepharose columns and by disc gel electrophoresis. The content of desulfoviridin in the soluble protein was estimated to be about 6% from the purification indexes. Like the typical desulfoviridin from D. vulgaris Miyazaki K, it formed mainly trithionate besides thiosulfate and sulfide in sulfite reduction coupled to hydrogenase and methyl viologen. No significant differences in the amino acid compositions, CD patterns in the UV (205-250 nm) region, and subunit structures were found, except for a pI value about 1 unit larger (pI 5.3). The split Soret (410 +/- 2 nm, less intense peak at 391 +/- 2 nm with a shoulder around 380 nm) and beta (584 +/- 2 nm) band maxima of the enzyme as isolated, and the visible absorption and fluorescence spectra of the acidic acetone-extracted chromophore were almost identical to those ascribed to sirohydrochlorin in spite of the reported difference in the native enzyme (alpha band maxima at 638 nm as against 628 +/- 2 nm in a typical desulfoviridin). Iron was the only significant chelatable metal contained in the chromophore. Some differences between africanus and vulgaris desulfoviridins were observed in the CD patterns in the UV to near UV region (250-340 nm) and also in the visible absorption spectra in the presence of dithionite.  相似文献   

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