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1.
Marine Synechococcus strains WH8103, WH8020, and WH7803 each possess two different phycoerythrins, PE(II) and PE(I), in a weight ratio of 2-4:1. PE(II) and PE(I) differ in amino acid sequence and in bilin composition and content. Studies with strain WH7803 indicated that both PE(II) and PE(I) were present in the same phycobilisome rod substructures and that energy absorbed by PE(II) was transferred to PE(I). Strain WH8103 and WH8020 PE(I)s carried five bilin chromophores thioether-linked to cysteine residues in sequences homologous to those previously characterized in C-, B-, and R-PEs. In contrast, six bilins were attached to strain WH8103 and WH8020 PE(II)s. Five of these were at positions homologous to bilin attachment sites in other phycoerythrins. The additional bilin attachment site was on the alpha subunit. The locations and bilin types in these PE(s) and in the marine Synechocystis strain WH8501 PE(I) (Swanson, R. V., Ong, L. J., Wilbanks, S. M., and Glazer, A. N. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 9528-9534) are: (table; see text) Since phycourobilin (PUB) (lambda max approximately 495 nm) transfers energy to phycoerythrobilin (PEB) (lambda max approximately 550 nm), inspection of these data shows that the invariant PEB group at beta-82 is the terminal energy acceptor in phycoerythrins. The adaptations to blue-green light, high PUB content and the presence of an additional bilin on the alpha subunit, increase the efficiency of light absorption by PE(II)s at approximately 500 nm.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Characterization of the bilin attachment sites in R-phycoerythrin   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The amino acid sequence around the sites of attachment of all the bilin prosthetic groups of Gastroclonium coulteri R-phycoerythrin, (alpha beta)6 gamma, have been determined. The sequences of tryptic peptides derived from the alpha and beta subunits are (Formula: see text) where the designations alpha and beta refer to the subunits from which the peptides derived. Cysteinyl residues involved in bilin attachment are indicated with an asterisk. Each peptide carries a single bilin, either phycoerythrobilin (PEB) or phycourobilin (PUB). Spectroscopic studies on the gamma subunit indicate the presence of one PEB and three PUB groups. However, five unique tryptic peptides, gamma-A through gamma-E, were characterized, indicating that Gastroclonium R-phycoerythrin is a mixture of at least two species, (alpha beta)6 gamma and (alpha beta)6 gamma', with gamma subunits differing in amino acid sequence. The sequences of the gamma subunit bilin peptides (see below) were not homologous to those from alpha and beta subunits of any biliprotein. (Formula: see text) The bilins in all these peptides are attached through single linkages to a cysteinyl residue, except for the phycourobilin on peptide beta-3 which is attached through two thioether linkages to cysteinyl residues 10 amino acids apart. The availability of small bilin peptides was exploited to obtain more accurate molar extinction coefficients for peptide-linked PEB and PUB groups. Application of these extinction coefficients in the calculation of the bilin content of R-, B-, and C-phycoerythrins shows that there are 5 bilins/alpha beta in each of these three biliprotein types.  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.
Determination of the partial amino acid sequence of the beta subunit of cryptomonad strain CBD phycoerythrin 566 established the nature, locations, and modes of attachment of the three bilin prosthetic groups and revealed a site of posttranslational methylation. Isolation of peptides cross-linked by a phycobiliviolin led to an unambiguous assignment of two thioether linkages, from residues beta-Cys-50 and beta-Cys-61 to this bilin. Two bilins were attached through single thioether linkages, a phycobiliviolin at beta-Cys-158 and a phycoerythrobilin at beta-Cys-82 (the residue numbering is that for B-phycoerythrin; Sidler, W., Kumpf, B., Suter, F., Morisset, W., Wehrmeyer, W., and Zuber, H. (1985) Biol. Chem. Hoppe-Seyler 366, 233-244). The partial sequences (99 residues) established for phycoerythrin 566 beta subunit showed a 79% identity with that of the red algal Porphyridium cruentum B-phycoerythrin beta subunit. A particularly remarkable finding is that the unique methylasparagine residue at position beta-72, highly conserved in cyanobacterial and red algal phycobiliproteins (Klotz, A. V., and Glazer, A. N. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 17350-17355), is also present at beta-72 in the cryptomonad phycoerythrin. Comparison of the locations of donor and acceptor bilins in cryptomonad phycoerythrin with those found for cyanobacterial and red algal phycobiliproteins showed different favored pathways of energy migration in the cryptomonad protein.  相似文献   

6.
Expression of cloned alpha and beta subunit genes of Synechococcus sp. PCC7002 C-phycocyanin in Escherichia coli led to the production of large amounts of apophycocyanin. The apophycocyanin was purified to homogeneity and shown to be an alpha beta monomer. The reactivity of the apoprotein toward a number of open chain and cyclic tetrapyrroles was examined. Phycocyanobilin (PCB), phycoerythrobilin, and biliverdin all formed covalent adducts with apophycocyanin in 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.0. Mesobiliverdin, bilirubin, PCB dimethyl ester, protoporphyrin IX, and hemin did not react with the apoprotein. None of these tetrapyrroles reacted with 2 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, cysteine, or reduced glutathione under the same conditions. The adduct with PCB was investigated in greater detail. Its visible absorption spectrum, with a maximum at 646 nm, is more similar to that of allophycocyanin than phycocyanin. Two PCBs are bound per alpha beta monomer when the reaction is performed with excess bilin. While tryptic digestion of the adduct generates numerous bilin peptides, amino acid analysis of these chromopeptides revealed that PCB reacted specifically at alpha-Cys-84 and beta-Cys-82, two of the three cysteinyl residues that serve as the attachment sites for PCB in native phycocyanin. The major bilin peptides arising from in vitro adduct formation at each of these sites differed both in chromatographic behavior and in spectroscopic properties from the corresponding PCB peptides isolated from tryptic digests of native C-phycocyanin.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The genes for the alpha and beta subunits of a novel six bilin-bearing (class II) phycoerythrin were cloned from Synechococcus sp. WH8020 and sequenced. The cloned genes (mpeA and mpeB) were detected by homology with the genes for C-phycoerythrin from Pseudanabaena sp. PCC7409. The mpe locus occurs once in the genome and is arranged similarly to that of many other phycobiliproteins, with mpeA shortly 3' of mpeB. Sequence comparison suggests that this phycoerythrin (and perhaps all class II phycoerythrins) occupy a branch of the phycoerythrin family separate from five-chromophore per alpha beta (class I) phycoerythrins, C-phycoerythrin, and B-phycoerythrin. The position of the sixth chromophore of the class II phycoerythrin of WH8020 was determined by comparison of the amino acid sequence of the chromopeptides (Ong, L. J., and Glazer, A. N. (1991) J. Biol Chem. 266, 9515-9527) with the sequence deduced from the gene. This located the chromophore at residue 75 of the alpha subunit, very close to the alpha-83 chromophore in the primary structure and, presumably, in the three-dimensional structure.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Genes encoding the and subunits of class II phycoerythrin from Synechococcus sp. strain WH8103 were cloned and sequenced. The deduced amino acid sequences were compared to class II phycoerythrin from Synechococcus sp. strain WH8020 and found to share 92% identity, yet the proteins differ in the bilin isomer (phycoerythrobilin versus phycourobilin) bound to two of the six chromophore attachment sites. Amino acid residues which might contact the bilin at each of the two variable sites were inferred by sequence alignment with phycocyanins. Putative bilin-contacting residues differing between the two phycocrythrins were identified which may determine bilin specificity.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The biliproteins of the unicellular, thylakoid-less cyanobacterium Gleobacter violaceus were resolved by chromatography on hydroxylapatite and DEAE-cellulose into five components: phycoerythrin I and II, phycocyanin I and II, and allophycocyanin. Allophycocyanin B was not detected. Three of these components, phycoerythrin II, phycocyanin II, and allophycocyanin, were purified to homogeneity. Phycoerythrin II crystallized as hexagonal prisms. G. violaceus allophycocyanin crystallized as thin plates; unter similar conditions other cyanobacterial allophycocyanins crystallize as needles. The biliproteins in the phycoerythrin I and phycocyanin I components were present in polydisperse, high molecular weight aggregates, which may represent incompletely dissociated substructures of the phycobilisome.Both phycoerythrin components from G. violaceus carry phycoerythrobilin and phycourbilin groups in the ratio of 6:1. Separation of the and subunits of these biliproteins revealed that the phycoerythrobilins were equally distributed between the two subunits, and that the subunit alone carried the phycourobilin. These phycoerythrins are the first cyanobacterial phycobiliproteins found to carry a phycourobilin prosthetic group.Abbreviations used PE poycoerythrin - PC phycocyanin - AP allophycocyanin - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - B Bangiophycean - R Rhodophytan - C Cyanobacterial  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
R-phycocyanin II (RPCII) is a recently discovered member of the phycocyanin family of photosynthetic light-harvesting proteins. Genes encoding the and subunits of RPCII were cloned and sequenced from marine Synechococcus sp. strains WH8020 and WH8103. The deduced amino acid sequences of RPCII were compared to two other types of phycocyanin, C-phycocyanin (CPC) and phycoerythrocyanin (PEC). These three types vary in the composition of their covalently bound bilin prosthetic groups. In terms of amino acid sequence identity RPCII is highly homologous to CPC and PEC, suggesting that the known three-dimensional structures of the latter two are representative of RPCII. Thus the amino acid residues contacting the three bilins of RPCII could be inferred and compared to those in CPC and PEC. Certain residues were identified among the three phycocyanins as possibly correlating with specific bilin isomers. In overall sequence RPCII and CPC are more homologous to one another than either is to PEC. This probably reflects functional homology in the roles of RPCII and CPC in the transfer of light energy to the core of the phycobilisome, a function not attributed to PEC. The genomes of Synechococcus sp. strains WH8020, WH8103 and WH7803 share homologous open reading frames in the vicinity of RPCII genes. The nucleotide sequence extending 3 from RPCII genes in strain WH8020 revealed two open reading frames homologous to components of an CPC phycocyanobilin lyase. These open reading frames may encode a lyase specific for the attachment of phycoerythrobilin to RPCII.  相似文献   

15.
通过蛋白质序列相似性分析,在Synechococcus sp. strain WH8102里面找到了与Fremyella diplosiphon的藻红蛋白裂合酶编码基因cpeY、cpeZ同源的基因SYNW2013、SYNW2012,分别命名为cpeY-Syn、cpeZ-Syn。通过分子克隆技术,将其构建在不同的表达载体上。通过大肠杆菌体内表达系统,藻红胆素(PEB)在CpeY-Syn和CpeZ-Syn的共同催化下,共价连接到藻红蛋白α亚基脱辅助基蛋白CpeA上,生成色素蛋白PEB-CpeA。实验也表明,在缺少CpeY-Syn的情况下,不能产生色素蛋白,而在缺少CpeZ-Syn的情况下,色素蛋白产率有所降低。与CpcE/F催化藻蓝蛋白α亚基共价连接藻蓝胆素(PCB)一样,CpeY/Z-Syn专一性的催化藻红蛋白α亚基与PEB的连接,它们属于同一类的蛋白家族。  相似文献   

16.
《BBA》2020,1861(8):148215
Marine Synechococcus are widespread in part because they are efficient at harvesting available light using their complex antenna, or phycobilisome, composed of multiple phycobiliproteins and bilin chromophores. Over 40% of Synechococcus strains are predicted to perform a type of chromatic acclimation that alters the ratio of two chromophores, green-light–absorbing phycoerythrobilin and blue-light–absorbing phycourobilin, to optimize light capture by phycoerythrin in the phycobilisome. Lyases are enzymes which catalyze the addition of bilin chromophores to specific cysteine residues on phycobiliproteins and are involved in chromatic acclimation. CpeY, a candidate lyase in the model strain Synechococcus sp. RS9916, added phycoerythrobilin to cysteine 82 of only the α subunit of phycoerythrin I (CpeA) in the presence or absence of the chaperone-like protein CpeZ in a recombinant protein expression system. These studies demonstrated that recombinant CpeY attaches phycoerythrobilin to as much as 72% of CpeA, making it one of the most efficient phycoerythrin lyases characterized to date. Phycobilisomes from a cpeY mutant showed a near native bilin composition in all light conditions except for a slight replacement of phycoerythrobilin by phycourobilin at CpeA cysteine 82. This demonstrates that CpeY is not involved in any chromatic acclimation-driven chromophore changes and suggests that the chromophore attached at cysteine 82 of CpeA in the cpeY mutant is ligated by an alternative phycoerythrobilin lyase. Although loss of CpeY does not greatly inhibit native phycobilisome assembly in vivo, the highly active recombinant CpeY can be used to generate large amounts of fluorescent CpeA for biotechnological uses.  相似文献   

17.
A role for cpeYZ in cyanobacterial phycoerythrin biosynthesis.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Pigment mutant strain FdR1 of the filamentous cyanobacterium Fremyella diplosiphon is characterized by constitutive synthesis of the phycobiliprotein phycoerythrin due to insertional inactivation of the rcaC regulatory gene by endogenous transposon Tn5469. Whereas the parental strain Fd33 harbors five genomic copies of Tn5469, cells of strain FdR1 harbor six genomic copies of the element; the sixth copy in FdR1 is localized to the rcaC gene. Electroporation of FdR1 cells yielded secondary pigment mutant strains FdR1E1 and FdR1E4, which identically exhibited the FdR1 phenotype with significantly reduced levels of phycoerythrin. In both FdR1E1 and FdR1E4, a seventh genomic copy of Tn5469 was localized to the cpeY gene of the sequenced but phenotypically uncharacterized cpeYZ gene set. This gene set is located downstream of the cpeBA operon which encodes the alpha and beta subunits of phycoerythrin. Complementation experiments correlated cpeYZ activity to the phenotype of strains FdR1E1 and FdR1E4. The predicted CpeY and CpeZ proteins share significant sequence identity with the products of homologous cpeY and cpeZ genes reported for Pseudanabaena sp. strain PCC 7409 and Synechococcus sp. strain WH 8020, both of which synthesize phycoerythrin. The CpeY and CpeZ proteins belong to a family of structurally related cyanobacterial proteins that includes the subunits of the CpcE/CpcF phycocyanin alpha-subunit lyase of Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002 and the subunits of the PecE/PecF phycoerythrocyanin alpha-subunit lyase of Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120. Phycobilisomes isolated from mutant strains FdR1E1 and FdR1E4 contained equal amounts of chromophorylated alpha and beta subunits of phycoerythrin at 46% of the levels of the parental strain FdR1. These results suggest that the cpeYZ gene products function in phycoerythrin synthesis, possibly as a lyase involved in the attachment of phycoerythrobilin to the alpha or beta subunit.  相似文献   

18.
A procedure is described for the preparation of stable phycobilisomes from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. 6301 (also known as Anacystis nidulans). Excitation of the phycocyanin in these particles at 580 nm leads to maximum fluorescence emission, from allophycocyanin and allophycocyanin B, at 673 nm. Electron microscopy shows that the phycobilisomes are clusters of rods. The rods are made up of stacks of discs which exhibit the dimensions of short stacks made up primarily of phycocyanin (Eiserling, F. A., and Glazer, A. N. (1974) J. Ultrastruct. Res. 47, 16-25). Loss of the clusters, by dissociation into rods under suitable conditions, is associated with loss of energy transfer as shown by a shift in fluorescence emission maximum to 652 nm. Synechococcus sp. 6301 phycobilisomes were shown to contain five nonpigmented polypeptides in addition to the colored subunits (which carry the covalently bound tetrapyrrole prosthetic groups) of the phycobiliproteins. Evidence is presented to demonstrate that these colorless polypeptides are genuine components of the phycobilisome. The nonpigmented polypeptides represent approximately 12% of the protein of the phycobilisomes; phycocyanin, approximately 75%, and allophycocyanin, approximately 12%. Spectroscopic studies that phycocyanin is in the hexamer form, (alpha beta)6, in intact phycobilisomes, and that the circular dichroism and absorbance of this aggregate are little affected by incorporation into the phycobilisome structure.  相似文献   

19.
The discovery that the phycocyanobilin group attached to Cys-155 of the beta subunit of C-phycocyanin is D-ring linked (Bishop, J. E., Lagarias, J. C., Nagy, J. O., Schoenleber, R. W., Rapoport, H., Klotz, A. V., and Glazer, A. N. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 6790-6796) prompted examination of the linkage mode for phycoerythrobilin (PEB) groups attached at the corresponding position in other biliproteins. Appropriate small peptides were obtained by exhaustive enzymatic digestion of Porphyridium cruentum R-phycocyanin (peptide R-PC beta-2TP PEB) and B-phycoerythrin (peptide B-PE beta-2TP PEB). These peptides had the following structures R-PC beta-2TP PEB Gly-Asp-Cys(PEB)-Ser-Ser B-PE beta-2TP PEB Cys(PEB)-Thr-Ser. The spectroscopic and chemical properties of these peptides were compared with those of P. cruentum B-phycoerythrin peptide alpha-1 PEB, Cys(PEB)-Tyr-Arg, in which the bilin is A-ring linked (Schoenleber, R. W., Leung, S.-L., Lundell, D. J., Glazer, A. N., and Rapoport, H. (1983) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 105, 4072-4076). The PEB groups in peptides R-PC beta-2TP PEB and B-PE beta-2TP PEB were shown to be D-ring linked on the basis of the following criteria. Secondary ion mass spectrometry showed the bilins in these peptides and in alpha-1 PEB to have the same mass. The 18'-CH3, 18'-H, and 15-H resonances in the 1H NMR spectra of R-PC beta-2TP PEB and B-PE beta-2TP PEB appear significantly upfield from the corresponding thioether-linked ring A resonances seen in the spectrum of peptide alpha-1 PEB. The CD spectra of the two former peptides showed a strong positive Cotton effect at 300 nm. Such a Cotton effect is absent from the CD spectrum of peptide alpha-1 PEB and those of other A-ring-linked PEB peptides. Refluxing in methanol led to a near-quantitative release of PEB from alpha-1 PEB but no release from R-PC beta-2TP PEB and less than 20% release from B-PE beta-2TP PEB. In conjunction with earlier studies, these results show that distinctive amino acid sequences are found about the attachment sites for A-ring-linked, D-ring-linked, and dilinked (A- and D-ring-linked) bilins on the alpha and beta subunits of cyanobacterial and red algal phycobiliproteins and that the mode of linkage can be correctly predicted from inspection of the amino acid sequence.  相似文献   

20.
Three unique bilin peptides, a beta subunit peptide bearing a doubly linked phycourobilin (PUB), and two gamma subunit peptides with singly linked PUB groups, were obtained by enzymatic degradation of Gastroclonium coulteri R-phycoerythrin. These peptides were shown to have the sequences (Klotz, A. V., and Glazer, A. N. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 4856-4863): (Formula: see text) The sequence of peptide beta-3T was identical to that previously established for a doubly linked phycoerythrobilin (PEB) peptide derived from a B-phycoerythrin (Lundell, D. J., Glazer, A. N., DeLange, R. J., and Brown, D. M. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5472-5480). Secondary ion mass spectrometry of beta-3T yielded a protonated molecular ion of 1629 mass units, the same as that given by the doubly linked PEB peptide (Schoenleber, R. W., Lundell, D. J., Glazer, A. N., and Rapoport, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5481-5484), indicating that the doubly linked PUB and PEB tetrapyrroles were isomeric structures. High resolution 1H NMR analyses of peptides beta-3T, gamma-BV8, and gamma-DP provided unambiguous structural assignments for the singly and doubly linked PUB chromophores and indicated that the peptides in gamma-BV8 and gamma-DP were linked to ring A. The determination of which peptide fragment is linked to ring A and which to ring D in peptide beta-3T was not achieved in this study. 1H NMR analyses of three PEB-peptides from G. coulteri R-phycoerythrin--alpha-1 Cys(PEB)-Tyr-Arg, alpha-2 Leu-Cys(PEB)-Val-Pro-Arg, and beta-1 Met-Ala-Ala-Cys(PEB)-Leu-Arg--showed that they were identical to previously described corresponding chromopeptides from Porphyridium cruentum B-phycoerythrin, with the peptide linked to ring A of PEB in each instance (Schoenleber, R. W., Lundell, D. J., Glazer, A. N., and Rapoport, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5485-5489). This is the first documented report on the structure of singly or doubly linked phycourobilins.  相似文献   

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