首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 78 毫秒
1.
Biliproteins are post-translationally modified by chromophore addition. In phycoerythrocyanin, the heterodimeric lyase PecE/F covalently attaches phycocyanobilin (PCB) to cysteine-alpha84 of the apoprotein PecA, with concomitant isomerization to phycoviolobilin. We found that: (a) PecA adds autocatalytically PCB, yielding a low absorbance, low fluorescence PCB.PecA adduct, termed P645 according to its absorption maximum; (b) In the presence of PecE, a high absorbance, high fluorescence PCB.PecA adduct is formed, termed P641; (c) PecE is capable of transforming P645 to P641; (d) When in stop-flow experiments, PecA and PecE were preincubated before chromophore addition, a red-shifted intermediate (P650, tau=32 ms) was observed followed by a second, which was blue-shifted (P605, tau=0.5 s), and finally a third (P638, tau=14 s) that yielded the adduct (P641, tau=20 min); (e) The reaction was slower, and P605 was missing, if PecA and PecE were not preincubated; (f) Gel filtration gave no evidence of a stable complex between PecA and PecE; however, complex formation is induced by adding PCB; and (g) A red-shifted intermediate was also formed, but more slowly, with phycoerythrobilin, and denaturation showed that this is not yet covalently bound. We conclude, therefore, that PecA and PecE form a weak complex that is stabilized by PCB, that the first reaction step involves a conformational change and/or protonation of PCB, and that PecE has a chaperone-like function on the chromoprotein.  相似文献   

2.
Cofactor requirements and enzyme kinetics have been studied of the novel, dual-action enzyme, the isomerizing phycoviolobilin phycoerythrocyanin-alpha84-cystein-lyase(PVB-PEC-lyase) from Mastigocladus laminosus, which catalyses both the covalent attachment of phycocyanobilin to PecA, the apo-alpha-subunit of phycoerythrocyanin, and its isomerization to phycoviolobilin. Thiols and the divalent metals, Mg2+ or Mn2+, were required, and the reaction was aided by the detergent, Triton X-100. Phosphate buffer inhibits precipitation of the proteins present in the reconstitution mixture, but at the same time binds the required metal. Kinetic constants were obtained for both substrates, the chromophore (Km = 12-16 micro m, depending on [PecA], kcat approximately 1.2 x 10-4.s-1) and the apoprotein (Km = 2.4 micro m at 14 micro m PCB, kcat = 0.8 x 10-4.s-1). The kinetic analysis indicated that the reconstitution reaction proceeds by a sequential mechanism. By a combination of untagged and His-tagged subunits, evidence was obtained for a complex formation between PecE and PecF (subunits of PVB-PEC-lyase), and by experiments with single subunits for the prevalent function of PecE in binding and PecF in isomerizing the chromophore.  相似文献   

3.
Many cyanobacteria use brilliantly pigmented, multisubunit macromolecular structures known as phycobilisomes as antenna to enhance light harvesting for photosynthesis. Recent studies have defined the enzymes that synthesize phycobilin chromophores as well as many of the phycobilin lyase enzymes that attach these chromophores to their cognate apoproteins. The ability of the phycocyanin α-subunit (CpcA) to bind alternative linear tetrapyrrole chromophores was examined through the use of a heterologous expression system in Escherichia coli. E. coli strains produced phycocyanobilin, phytochromobilin, or phycoerythrobilin when they expressed 3Z-phycocyanobilin:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PcyA), 3Z-phytochromobilin:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (HY2) from Arabidopsis thaliana, or phycoerythrobilin synthase (PebS) from the myovirus P-SSM4, respectively. CpcA from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 or Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 was coexpressed in these strains with the phycocyanin α-subunit phycocyanobilin lyase, CpcE/CpcF, or the phycoerythrocyanin α-subunit phycocyanobilin isomerizing lyase, PecE/PecF, from Noctoc sp. PCC 7120. Both lyases were capable of attaching three different linear tetrapyrrole chromophores to CpcA; thus, up to six different CpcA variants, each with a unique chromophore, could be produced with this system. One of these chromophores, denoted phytoviolobilin, has not yet been observed naturally. The recombinant proteins had unexpected and potentially useful properties, which included very high fluorescence quantum yields and photochemical activity. Chimeric lyases PecE/CpcF and CpcE/PecF were used to show that the isomerizing activity that converts phycocyanobilin to phycoviolobilin resides with PecF and not PecE. Finally, spectroscopic properties of recombinant phycocyanin R-PCIII, in which the CpcA subunits carry a phycoerythrobilin chromophore, are described.  相似文献   

4.
Zhao KH  Wu D  Zhou M  Zhang L  Böhm S  Bubenzer C  Scheer H 《Biochemistry》2005,44(22):8126-8137
PecE and PecF jointly catalyze the covalent attachment of phycocyanobilin to Cys-alpha84 of PecA and its concomitant isomerization to phycoviolobilin. (a) An Eschertchia coli supernatant expressing pecF has a residual activity of 6%; compared to the holoenzyme, this activity is lost upon purification. (b) Functional domains of both subunits from the cyanobacterium Mastigocladus laminosus were evaluated by mutageneses and chemical modification of amino acids. When in PecE the two motifs Y29YAAWWL and D263DLL were deleted, the holoenzyme lost its activity; it is also inactivated upon deletion of a central part (R111 to A122). The three conserved cysteines C48, C91, and C161 have only minor effects on catalysis. When in PecF the 20 C-terminal and 56 N-terminal amino acids were truncated, the lyase-isomerase activity in combination with PecE decreased to 12% and 15%, respectively, compared to the native enzyme. The catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) decreased 16-fold when the unique four histidine residues in PecF beginning at H53 were deleted. H121 and C122 of PecF are essential for the enzyme activity; they are part of a unique stretch extending from A104 to N125 which is absent in the beta-subunit of related but nonisomerizing lyases. A single histidine and a single tryptophan are required for activity in both PecE and PecF, as judged from diethyl pyrocarbonate and N-bromosuccinimide modification and statistical analyses. Inactivation of PecE and PecF is also possible by arginine-specific reagents, while modifications of lysine, glutamate, and aspartate retained activity. (c) PecE and PecF, as well as most of the mutants, bind PCB covalently in substoichiometric amounts, as assayed by Zn(2+)-induced fluorescence on denaturing gels.  相似文献   

5.
藻红蓝蛋白裂合异构酶对几种脱辅基藻胆蛋白的催化作用   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
PecE/PecF是层理鞭枝藻藻红蓝蛋白α亚基(α-PEC)生物合成的裂合异构酶。以4种脱辅基藻胆蛋白为底物,初步研究了PecE/PecF对底物蛋白的催化专一性。结果表明,PecE/PecF可催化藻蓝胆素(PCB)与高度同源的层理鞭枝藻不同亚种的α-PEC脱辅基蛋白的体外重组,也可催化经128位Trp定点突变到Phe而得到的α-PEC脱辅基蛋白的体外重组,但PecE/PecF对PCB与藻蓝蛋白α亚基(α-CPC)脱辅基蛋白的体外重组无催化作用。A-PEC脱辅基蛋白的重组不受表面活性剂Triton X-100的影响,而Triton X-100可改进PCB与α-CPC脱辅基蛋白的重组。  相似文献   

6.
The phycobilin: Cysteine-84-phycobiliprotein lyase, CpeS1, catalyzes phycocyanobilin (PCB) and phycoerythrobilin attachment to nearly all cysteine-84 (consensus sequence) binding sites of phycoerythrin, phycoerythrocyanin, phycocyanin and allophycocyanin (Zhao et al. (2007) Proc Natl Acad Sci 104:14300–14305). We now show that CpeS1 can bind PCB, as assayed by Ni2+ chelating affinity chromatography. Binding is rapid, and the chromophore is bound in an extended conformation similar to that in phycobiliproteins but only poorly fluorescent. Upon addition of apo-biliproteins, the chromophore is transferred to the latter much slower (∼1 h), indicating that chromophorylated CpeS1 is an intermediate in the enzymatic reaction. In addition, imidazole is bound to PCB, as shown by mass spectroscopy of tryptic digests of the intermediate CpeS1–PCB complex.  相似文献   

7.
While chromophore attachment to alpha-subunits of cyanobacterial biliproteins has been studied in some detail, little is known about this process in beta-subunits. The ones of phycoerythrocyanin and C-phycocyanin each carry two phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophores covalently attached to cysteins beta84 and beta155. The differential nonenzymatic reconstitution of PCB to the apoproteins, PecA, PecB, CpcA and CpcB, as well as to mutant proteins of the beta-subunits lacking either one of the two binding cysteins, was studied using overexpression of the respective genes. PCB adds selectively to Cys-84 of CpcA, CpcB, PecA, and PecB, but the bound chromophore has a nonnative configuration, and in the case of CpcA, is partly oxidized to mesobiliverdin (MBV). The oxidation is independent of thiols but can be suppressed by ascorbate. The addition to Cys-beta84 is suppressed in the presence of detergents like Triton X-100, in favor of an addition to Cys-beta155 yielding the correctly bound chromophore. Triton X-100 also inhibits oxidation of the chromophore during addition to CpcA. The effect of Triton X-100 was studied on the isolated components of the reconstitution system. Absorption, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectra indicate a major conformational change of the chromophore upon addition of the detergent, which probably controls the site selectivity of the addition reaction, and inhibits the oxidation of PCB to MBV.  相似文献   

8.
Assembly of holophytochrome in the plant cell requires covalent attachment of the linear tetrapyrrole chromophore precursor, phytochromobilin, to a unique cysteine in the nascent apoprotein. In this investigation we compare chromophore analogs with the natural chromophore precursor for their ability to attach covalently to recombinant oat apophytochrome and to form photoactive holoproteins. Ethylidene-containing analogs readily form covalent adducts with apophytochrome, whereas chromophores lacking this double bond are poor substrates for attachment. Kinetic measurements establish that although the chromophore binding site on apophytochrome is best tailored to phytochromobilin, apophytochrome will accommodate the two analogs with modified D-rings, phycocyanobilin and phycoerythrobilin. The phycocyanobilin-apophytochrome adduct is photoactive and undergoes a light-induced protein conformational change similar to the native holoprotein. By contrast, the phycoerythrobilin adduct is locked into a photochemically inactive protein conformation that is similar to the red light-absorbing Pr form of phytochrome. These results support the hypothesis that the photoconversion from Pr to Pfr, the far red light- absorbing form of phytochrome, involves the photoisomerization of the C15 double bond. Knowledge gained from these studies provides impetus for rational design of chromophore analogs whose insertion into apophytochrome should elicit profound changes in light-mediated plant growth and development.  相似文献   

9.
By co-expression of heme oxygenase and various bilin reductase(s) in a single operon in conjunction with apophytochrome using two compatible plasmids, we developed a system to produce phytochromes with various chromophores in Escherichia coli. Through the selection of different bilin reductases, apophytochromes were assembled with phytochromobilin, phycocyanobilin, and phycoerythrobilin. The blue-shifted difference spectra of truncated phytochromes were observed with a phycocyanobilin chromophore compared to a phytochromobilin chromophore. When the phycoerythrobilin biosynthetic enzymes were co-expressed, E. coli cells accumulated orange-fluorescent phytochrome. The metabolic engineering of bacteria for the production of various bilins for assembly into phytochromes will facilitate the molecular analysis of photoreceptors.  相似文献   

10.
The entire pathway for the biosynthesis of the phycobiliviolin-bearing His-tagged holo-alpha subunit of the cyanobacterial photosynthetic accessory protein phycoerythrocyanin was reconstituted in Escherichia coli. Cyanobacterial genes encoding enzymes required for the conversion of heme to 3Z-phycocyanobilin, a precursor of phycobiliviolin (namely, heme oxygenase 1 and 3Z-phycocyanobilin:ferredoxin oxidoreductase), were expressed from a plasmid under the control of the hybrid trp-lac (trc) promoter. Genes for the apo-phycoerythrocyanin alpha subunit (pecA) and the heterodimeric lyase/isomerase (pecE and pecF), which catalyzes both the covalent attachment of phycocyanobilin and its concurrent isomerization to phycobiliviolin, were expressed from the trc promoter on a second plasmid. Upon induction, recombinant E. coli used endogenous heme to produce holo-PecA with absorbance and fluorescence properties similar to those of the same protein produced in cyanobacteria. About two-thirds of the apo-PecA was converted to holo-PecA. No significant bilin addition took place in a similarly engineered E. coli strain that lacks pecE and pecF. By using immobilized metal affinity chromatography, both apo-PecA and holo-PecA were isolated as ternary complexes with PecE and PecF. The identities of all three components in the ternary complexes were established unambiguously by protein and tryptic peptide analyses performed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

11.
The phycobilin:cysteine 84-phycobiliprotein lyase, CpcS1, catalyzes phycocyanobilin (PCB) and phycoerythrobilin (PEB) attachment at nearly all cysteine 82 binding sites (consensus numbering) of phycoerythrin, phycoerythrocyanin, phycocyanin, and allophycocyanin (Zhao, K. H., Su, P., Tu, J. M., Wang, X., Liu, H., Plöscher, M., Eichacker, L., Yang, B., Zhou, M., and Scheer, H. (2007) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 104, 14300–14305). We now show that CpcS1 binds PCB and PEB rapidly with bi-exponential kinetics (38/119 and 12/8300 ms, respectively). Chromophore binding to the lyase is reversible and much faster than the spontaneous, but low fidelity chromophore addition to the apo-protein in the absence of the lyase. This indicates kinetic control by the enzyme, which then transfers the chromophore to the apo-protein in a slow (tens of minutes) but stereo- and regioselectively corrects the reaction. This mode of action is reminiscent of chaperones but does not require ATP. The amino acid residues Arg-18 and Arg-149 of the lyase are essential for chromophore attachment in vitro and in Escherichia coli, mutations of His-21, His-22, Trp-75, Trp-140, and Arg-147 result in reduced activity (<30% of wild type in vitro). Mutants R147Q and W69M were active but had reduced capacity for PCB binding; additionally, with W69M there was loss of fidelity in chromophore attachment. Imidazole is a non-competitive inhibitor, supporting a bilin-binding function of histidine. Evidence was obtained that CpcS1 also catalyzes exchange of C-β84-bound PCB in biliproteins by PEB.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The later stages in the pathway of biosynthesis of phycocyanobilin, the chromophore of phycocyanin, were studied by using radiolabelled intermediates. Three possible pathways from biliverdin IX-alpha to phycocyanobilin were considered. 14C-labelled samples of key intermediates in two of the pathways, 3-vinyl-18-ethyl biliverdin IX-alpha and 3-ethyl-18-vinyl biliverdin IX-alpha, were synthesized chemically and were administered to cultures of Cyanidium caldarium that were actively synthesizing photosynthetic pigments in the light. Neither of these two compounds was apparently incorporated into the phycobiliprotein chromophore, suggesting that two of the three pathways were not operative. By elimination, the results imply that the third possible pathway, which involves phytochromobilin, the chromophore of phytochrome, represents the route for biosynthesis of phycocyanobilin. Unfortunately, since 14C-labelled phytochromobilin is not available, no direct proof of this pathway could be obtained. However, if correct, the present interpretation represents a unified pathway for biosynthesis of all plant bilins, via the intermediacy of phytochromobilin.  相似文献   

14.
Lamparter T  Michael N 《Biochemistry》2005,44(23):8461-8469
Photoconversion of phytochrome from the red-absorbing form Pr to the far-red-absorbing form Pfr is initiated by a Z to E isomerization around the ring C-ring D connecting double bond; the chromophore undergoes a ZZZ to ZZE isomerization. In vivo, phytochrome chromophores are covalently bound to the protein, but several examples of noncovalent in vitro adducts have been reported which also undergo Pr to Pfr photoconversion. We show that free biliverdin or phycocyanobilin, highly enriched in the ZZE isomer, can easily be obtained from chromophores bound in a noncovalent manner to Agrobacterium phytochrome Agp1, and used for spectral assays. Photoconversion of free biliverdin in a methanol/HCl solution from ZZE to ZZZ proceeded with a quantum yield of 1.8%, but was negligible in neutral methanol solution, indicating that this process is proton-dependent. The ZZE form of biliverdin and phycocyanobilin were tested for their ability to assemble with Agp1 and cyanobacterial phytochrome Cph1, respectively. In both cases, a Pfr-like adduct was formed but the chromophore was bound in a noncovalent manner to the protein. Agp1 Pfr undergoes dark reversion to Pr; the same feature was found for the noncovalent ZZE adduct. After dark reversion, the chromophore became covalently bound to the protein. In analogy, the PCB chromophore became covalently bound to Cph1 upon irradiation with strong far-red light which initiated ZZE to ZZZ isomerization. Agrobacterium Agp2 belongs to a yet small group of phytochromes which also assemble in the Pr form but convert from Pr to Pfr in darkness. When the Agp2 apoprotein was assembled with the ZZE form of biliverdin, the formation of the final adduct was accelerated compared to the formation of the ZZZ control, indicating that the ZZE chromophore fits directly into the chromophore pocket of Agp2.  相似文献   

15.
The pathway for phycocyanobilin biosynthesis in Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002 comprises two enzymes: heme oxygenase and phycocyanobilin synthase (PcyA). The phycobilin content of cells can be modified by overexpressing genes encoding alternative enzymes for biliverdin reduction. Overexpression of the pebAB and HY2 genes, encoding alternative ferredoxin-dependent biliverdin reductases, caused unique effects due to the overproduction of phycoerythrobilin and phytochromobilin, respectively. Colonies overexpressing pebAB became reddish brown and visually resembled strains that naturally produce phycoerythrin. This was almost exclusively due to the replacement of phycocyanobilin by phycoerythrobilin on the phycocyanin α-subunit. This phenotype was unstable, and such strains rapidly reverted to the wild-type appearance, presumably due to strong selective pressure to inactivate pebAB expression. Overproduction of phytochromobilin, synthesized by the Arabidopsis thaliana HY2 product, was tolerated much better. Cells overexpressing HY2 were only slightly less pigmented and blue-green than the wild type. Although the pcyA gene could not be inactivated in the wild type, pcyA was easily inactivated when cells expressed HY2. These results indicate that phytochromobilin can functionally substitute for phycocyanobilin in Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002. Although functional phycobilisomes were assembled in this strain, the overall phycobiliprotein content of cells was lower, the efficiency of energy transfer by these phycobilisomes was lower than for wild-type phycobilisomes, and the absorption cross-section of the cells was reduced relative to that of the wild type because of an increased spectral overlap of the modified phycobiliproteins with chlorophyll a. As a result, the strain producing phycobiliproteins carrying phytochromobilin grew much more slowly at low light intensity.  相似文献   

16.
Phytochrome photoconversion   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
The spectral properties of native and modified phytochromes and the molecular events during phytochrome photoconversion, , are reviewed. Steady-state and time-resolved absorption spectra of native phytochrome A, as well as recombinant phytochromes (oat and potato phytochrome A and potato phytochrome B) reconstituted with phycocyanobilin and phytochromobilin as chromophores, are analysed. The vinyl double bond, present at position 18 in phytochromobilin and substituted by an ethyl group in phycocyanobilin, has a considerable influence on the photo-transformation kinetics of phytochromes A and B, evidently due to a strong interaction of this region of the chromophore with the protein surrounding. The kinetics of the phototransformation of potato phytochrome B differs from that of oat phytochrome A (wild-type and recombinant), indicating that the chromophore-protein interaction in phytochrome B is different from that in phytochrome A. It remains to be seen whether this difference is due to the di- versus monocotyledon origin of the phytochromes. Optoacoustic spectroscopy, applied to native oat phytochrome A, afforded thermo-dynamic, structural and kinetic parameters of the Pr→I700 and the I700→Pr phototransformations. Raman and infrared spectroscopic data for wild-type phytochrome A suggest that the protonated chromophore in Pr undergoes torsions around two single bonds in addition to the Z→E isomerization of the 15 ,16 double bond, and that all transients, possibly with the exception of IbI, are protonated at the central pyrrole ring.  相似文献   

17.
An enzyme extract from the phycocyanin-containing unicellular rhodophyte, Cyanidium caldarium, reductively transforms biliverdin IX alpha to phycocyanobilin, the chromophore of phycocyanin, in the presence of NADPH. Unpurified cell extract forms both 3(E)-phycocyanobilin, which is identical to the major pigment that is released from phycocyanin by methanolysis, and 3(Z)-phycocyanobilin, which is obtained as a minor methanolysis product. After removal of low molecular weight material from the cell extract, only 3(Z)-phycocyanobilin is formed. 3(E)-Phycocyanobilin formation from biliverdin IX alpha, and the ability to isomerize 3(Z)-phycocyanobilin to 3(E)-phycocyanobilin, are reconstituted by the addition of glutathione to the incubation mixture. Partially purified protein fractions derived from the initial enzyme extract form 3(Z)-phycocyanobilin plus two additional, violet colored bilins, upon incubation with NADPH and biliverdin IX alpha. Further purified protein fractions produce only the violet colored bilins from biliverdin IX alpha. One of these bilins was identified as 3(Z)-phycoerythrobilin by comparative spectrophotometry, reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography, and 1H NMR spectroscopy. A C. caldarium protein fraction catalyzes the conversion of 3(Z)-phycoerythrobilin to 3(Z)-phycocyanobilin. This fraction also catalyzes the conversion of 3(E)-phycoerythrobilin to 3(E)-phycocyanobilin. The conversion of phycoerythrobilins to phycocyanobilins requires neither biliverdin nor NADPH. The synthesis of phycoerythrobilin and its conversion to phycocyanobilin by extracts of C. caldarium, a species that does not contain phycoerythrin, indicates that phycoerythrobilin is a biosynthetic precursor to phycocyanobilin. The enzymatic conversion of the ethylidine group from the Z to the E configuration suggests that the E-isomer is the precursor to the protein-bound chromophore.  相似文献   

18.
We isolated a new pea mutant that was selected on the basis of pale color and elongated internodes in a screen under white light. The mutant was designated pcd1 for phytochrome chromophore deficient. Light-grown pcd1 plants have yellow-green foliage with a reduced chlorophyll (Chl) content and an abnormally high Chl a/Chl b ratio. Etiolated pcd1 seedlings are developmentally insensitive to far-red light, show a reduced response to red light, and have no spectrophotometrically detectable phytochrome. The phytochrome A apoprotein is present at the wild-type level in etiolated pcd1 seedlings but is not depleted by red light treatment. Crude phytochrome preparations from etiolated pcd1 tissue also lack spectral activity but can be assembled with phycocyanobilin, an analog of the endogenous phytochrome chromophore phytochromobilin, to yield a difference spectrum characteristic of an apophytochrome-phycocyanobilin adduct. These results indicate that the pcd1-conferred phenotype results from a deficiency in phytochrome chromophore synthesis. Furthermore, etioplast preparations from pcd1 seedlings can metabolize biliverdin (BV) IX[alpha] but not heme to phytochromobilin, indicating that pcd1 plants are severely impaired in their ability to convert heme to BV IX[alpha]. This provides clear evidence that the conversion of heme to BV IX[alpha] is an enzymatic process in higher plants and that it is required for synthesis of the phytochrome chromophore and hence for normal photomorphogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
Pigments released from phycoerythrins and phycocyanins by treatment with hot methanol are currently regarded as equivalent to the native chromophores phycoerythrobilin and phycocyanobilin. However, evidence presented here confirms the original view of O'Carra & O'hEocha [(1966 Phytochemistry 5, 993-997] that these methanol-released pigments are artefacts differing in their chromophoric conjugated systems from the native protein-bound prosthetic groups. By contrast, the native spectral properties are retained in pigments released by careful acid treatment of the biliproteins and these acid-released phycobilins, rather than the methanol-released pigments, are therefore regarded as the protein-free forms of the native chromophores. The conclusion reached by Chapman, Cole & Siegelman [(1968) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 89, 3643-3645], that all the algal biliproteins contain only phycoerythrobilin and phycocyanobilin, is shown to be incorrect. The identification of a urobilinoid chromophore, phycourobilin, accompanying phycoerythrobilin in B- and R- phycoerythrins is confirmed and supported by more extensive evidence. The cryptomonad phycocyanins are shown to contain a phycobilin chromophore accompanying phycocyanobilin. This further phycobilin has the spectral properties of the class of bilins known as violins and the provisional name "cryptoviolin" is proposed pending elucidation of its structure.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics and mechanism of the autocatalytic assembly of holo-Cph1 phytochrome (from Synechocystis) from the apoprotein and the bilin chromophores phycocyanobilin (PCB) and phycoerythrobilin (PEB) were investigated by stopped flow and circular dichroism. At 1:1 stoichiometry, pH 7.9, and 10 degrees C, SVD analysis of the kinetic data for PCB revealed three spectral components involving three transitions with time constants tau(1) approximately 150 ms, tau(2) approximately 2.5 s, and tau(3) approximately 50 s. Tau(1) was associated with a major red shift and transfer of oscillator strength from the Soret region to the 680 nm region. When the sulfhydryl group of cysteine 259 was blocked with iodoacetamide, preventing the formation of a covalent adduct, a noncovalent red-shifted complex (680 nm) was formed with a time constant of 200 ms. Tau(1) could thus be assigned to the formation of a noncovalent complex. The absorption changes during tau(1) are due to the formation of the extended conformation of the linear tetrapyrrole and to its protonation in the binding pocket. From the concentration and pH dependence of the kinetics we obtained a value of 1.5 microM for the K(D) of this noncovalent complex and a value of 8.4 for the pK(a) of the proton donor. The tau(2) component was associated with a blue shift of about 25 nm and was attributed to the formation of the covalent bond (P(r)), accompanied with the loss of the 3-3' double bond to ring A. Tau(3) was due to photoconversion to P(fr). For PEB, which is not photochromic, the formation of the noncovalent complex is faster (tau(1) = 70 ms), but the covalent bond formation is about 80 times slower (tau(2) = 200 s) than with the natural chromophore PCB. The CD spectra of the PCB adduct in the 250-800 nm range show that the chromophore geometries in P(r) and P(fr) are similar to those in plant phytochrome. The opposite rotational strengths of P(r) and P(fr) in the longest wavelength band suggest that the photoisomerization induces a reversal of the chirality. The Cph1 complex with noncovalently bound PCB was still photochromic when cysteine 259 was blocked with IAA or with the bulkier IAF. The covalent linkage to cysteine 259 is thus not required for photoconversion. The CD spectra of the noncovalently bound PCB in P(r)- and P(fr)-like states are qualitatively similar to those of the covalent adducts, suggesting analogous structures in the binding pocket. The noncovalent interactions with the binding pocket are apparently sufficient to hold the chromophore in the appropriate geometry for photoisomerization.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号