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1.
Phycocyanin is an important component of the phycobilisome, which is the principal light-harvesting complex in cyanobacteria. The covalent attachment of the phycocyanobilin chromophore to phycocyanin is catalyzed by the enzyme phycocyanin lyase. The photosynthetic properties and phycobilisome assembly state were characterized in wild type and two mutants which lack holo-α-phycocyanin. Insertional inactivation of the phycocyanin α-subunit lyase (ΔcpcF mutant) prevents the ligation of phycocyanobilin to α-phycocyanin (CpcA), while disruption of the cpcB/A/C2/C1 operon in the CK mutant prevents synthesis of both apo-α-phycocyanin (apo-CpcA) and apo-β-phycocyanin (apo-CpcB). Both mutants exhibited similar light saturation curves under white actinic light illumination conditions, indicating the phycobilisomes in the ΔcpcF mutant are not fully functional in excitation energy transfer. Under red actinic light illumination, wild type and both phycocyanin mutant strains exhibited similar light saturation characteristics. This indicates that all three strains contain functional allophycocyanin cores associated with their phycobilisomes. Analysis of the phycobilisome content of these strains indicated that, as expected, wild type exhibited normal phycobilisome assembly and the CK mutant assembled only the allophycocyanin core. However, the ΔcpcF mutant assembled phycobilisomes which, while much larger than the allophycocyanin core observed in the CK mutant, were significantly smaller than phycobilisomes observed in wild type. Interestingly, the phycobilisomes from the ΔcpcF mutant contained holo-CpcB and apo-CpcA. Additionally, we found that the large form of FNR (FNRL) accumulated to normal levels in wild type and the ΔcpcF mutant. In the CK mutant, however, significantly less FNRL accumulated. FNRL has been reported to associate with the phycocyanin rods in phycobilisomes via its N-terminal domain, which shares sequence homology with a phycocyanin linker polypeptide. We suggest that the assembly of apo-CpcA in the phycobilisomes of ΔcpcF can stabilize FNRL and modulate its function. These phycobilisomes, however, inefficiently transfer excitation energy to Photosystem II.  相似文献   

2.
We have isolated phycobilisomes from two classes of red algae, several subdivisions of the cyanobacteria, and the cyanelles of Cyanophora paradoxa. In addition to the major light harvesting biliproteins, these phycobilisomes also contain several other polypeptides, the largest of which ranges from 75 to 120 kilodaltons in the different species surveyed. This protein, previously isolated and characterized from three species, was shown to be the final emitter of excitation energy in phycobilisomes and is also thought to be involved in the attachment of the phycobilisomes to the thylakoid membrane. We have obtained polyclonal antibodies to the 95 kilodalton polypeptide isolated from phycobilisomes of the cyanobacterium, Nostoc sp. This protein shares no common antigenic determinants with either the α or β subunits of allophycocyanin, or any of the other biliproteins, as determined by the sensitive Western immunoblotting technique. However, this antiserum cross-reacts with the highest molecular weight polypeptide of all the rhodophytan and cyanobacterial phycobilisomes tested. That these proteins are immunologically related, but are unrelated to other biliproteins, is reminiscent of previous immunological studies of biliproteins which showed that while the three major spectroscopically distinct classes of biliproteins (phycoerythrin, phycocyanin, and allophycocyanin) shared no common antigenic determinants, there was a strong antigenic determinant to specific biliprotein classes which crossed taxonomic divisions.  相似文献   

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5.
Studies on Cyanidium caldarium Phycobiliprotein Pigment Mutants   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Phycobiliprotein biosynthesis was investigated in four strains of the unicellular rhodophyte, Cyandium caldarium, with different pigment phenotypes. All strains were incapable of synthesizing phycobiliproteins when grown in the dark. Western blotting experiments showed that dark-grown cells of the wild-type and mutant GGB synthesized the α and β subunit polypeptides of allophyocyanin and phycocyanin after exposure to light for 24 hours, whereas cells of mutant IIIC and GGBY did not. Similarly, light promoted the appearance of allophycocyanin and phycocyanin mRNAs in the wild-type and GGB but not in IIIC and GGBY. However, Southern blots of restricted genomic DNA from the wild type, IIIC, GGBY, and GGB, all hybridized with heterologous phycobiliprotein gene probes and revealed that all four strains contained identical Pst, EcoRI, and Dral restriction fragments containing allophycocyanin and phycocyanin genes. Cells of the wild type and GGB incubated in the dark with the heme precursor. δ-aminolevulinate, synthesized allophycocyanin and phycocyanin apoproteins providing strong evidence for the role of a tetrapyrrole in regulation of phycobiliprotein gene expression. However, cells of IIIC and GGBY incubated in the dark with δ-aminolevulinate did not contain detectable quantities of allophycocyanin or phycocyanin apoproteins. The possible role of a tetrapyrrole in phycobiliprotein gene expression and basis for the genetic lesion in mutants IIIC and GGBY is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Raps S 《Plant physiology》1990,92(2):358-362
Microcystis aeruginosa, a unicellular cyanobacterium, contains small phycobilisomes consisting of C-phycocyanin, allophycocyanin, and linker polypeptides. SDS-polyacrylamide gels of the phycobilisomes were examined for fluorescent bands before and after spraying with a solution of ZnSO4, followed by Coomassie brilliant blue staining for protein. This procedure provides a rapid and sensitive method for detecting small amounts of phycobilin-containing polypeptides and distinguishing them from other tetrapyrrole-containing polypeptides and from `colorless' ones. Three polypeptide bands, in addition to the α and β phycobiliprotein subunits, have been detected under these conditions. An 85 kilodalton polypeptide was identified as a phycobiliprotein due to its enhanced fluorescence in the presence of ZnSO4. The other polypeptides do not contain chromophores and are colorless. They are approximately 34.5 and 30 kilodaltons in size.  相似文献   

7.
Since akinete germination is triggered by light and the action spectrum for this process has features in common with the spectra of the two photochromic pigments, phycochromes b and d, a search was made for the presence of these phycochromes in akinetes of the blue-green alga. Anabaena variabilis Kützing. Allophycocyanin-B was also looked for, since the action spectrum for akinete germination points to a possible participation of this pigment too. Isoelectric focusing was used for purification of the pigments. The different fractions were investigated for phycochromes b and d by measuring the absorbance difference spectra: for phycochrome b. 500 nm irradiated minus 570 nm irradiated, and for phycochrome d, 650 nm irradiated minus 610 nm irradiated. For determination of allophycocyanin-B. fourth derivative analysis of absorption spectra was made for some of the fractions from the isoelectric focusing column. Phycochrome b was also assayed for by measuring in vivo absorption difference spectra. The assays were positive for all three pigments. The complete photosynthetic pigment systems were also studied by in vivo fluorescence measurements on both akinetes and vegetative cells of Anabaena variabilis. Fluorescence emission and excitation spectra at selected emission wavelengths were measured at room temperature and liquid nitrogen temperature. The energy transfer from phycoerythrocyanin to phycocyanin is very efficient under all conditions, as is the energy transfer from phycocyanin to allophycocyanin at room temperature. At low temperature, however, phycocyanin is partly decoupled from allophycocyanin, particularly in the akinetes; the energy transfer from allophycocyanin to chlorophyll a is less efficient at low temperature in both types of cells, but especially in akinetes. Delayed light emission was measured for both types of cells and found to be very weak in akinetes compared to vegetative cells. From this study it would seem that akinetes lack an active photosystem II, although the 691 nm peak in the 570 nm excited low temperature fluorescence emission spectrum proves the presence of photosystem II chlorophyll, and also its energetic connection to the phycobilisomes.  相似文献   

8.
A spontaneous, stable, pigmentation mutant of Nostoc sp. strain MAC was isolated. Under various growth conditions, this mutant, R-MAC, had similar phycoerythrin contents (relative to allophycocyanin) but significantly lower phycocyanin contents (relative to allophycocyanin) than the parent strain. In saturating white light, the mutant grew more slowly than the parent strain. In nonsaturating red light, MAC grew with a shorter generation time than the mutant; however, R-MAC grew more quickly in nonsaturating green light.

When the parental and mutant strains were grown in green light, the phycoerythrin contents, relative to allophycocyanin, were significantly higher than the phycoerythrin contents of cells grown in red light. For both strains, the relative phycocyanin contents were only slightly higher for cells grown in red light than for cells grown in green light. These changes characterize both MAC and R-MAC as belonging to chromatic adaptation group II: phycoerythrin synthesis alone photocontrolled.

A comparative analysis of the phycobilisomes, isolated from cultures of MAC and R-MAC grown in both red and green light, was performed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of 8.0 molar urea or sodium dodecyl sulfate. Consistent with the assignment of MAC and R-MAC to chromatic adaptation group II, no evidence for the synthesis of red light-inducible phycocyanin subunits was found in either strain. Phycobilisomes isolated from MAC and R-MAC contained linker polypeptides with relative molecular masses of 95, 34.5, 34, 32, and 29 kilodaltons. When grown in red light, phycobilisomes of the mutant R-MAC appeared to contain a slightly higher amount of the 32-kilodalton linker polypeptide than did the phycobilisomes isolated from the parental strain under the same conditions. The 34.5-kilodalton linker polypeptide was totally absent from phycobilisomes isolated from cells of either MAC or R-MAC grown in green light.

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9.
Phycobilisomes of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 contain C-phycocyanin and allophycocyanin in a molar ratio of approximately 3.8:1, a minor biliprotein, allophycocyanin B, and nonpigmented polypeptides of 75, 33, 30, and 27 kilodaltons. A nitrosoguanidine-induced mutant AN112 produces altered phycobilisomes with the molar ratio of C-phycocyanin to allophycocyanin reduced to approximately 1.4:1 and without any of the 33- and 30-kilodalton polypeptides. The mutant and wild type phycobilisomes contain the same molar amount of the 75- and 27-kilodalton polypeptides relative to allophycocyanin. As seen by electron microscopy, the allophycocyanin-containing core of the mutant and of the wild type phycobilisomes appears the same. In some views of the core, each of the two core units in the mutant particles can be seen to consist of four discs approximately 3 nm thick. In wild type phycobilisomes five or six rods, made up of two to six stacked discs (11.5 X 6 nm) are attached to the core. In the mutant, no such rods are seen; rather, single disc-shaped elements, ranging from two to six in number, are found attached. Spectroscopic measurements show that the assembly form of phycocyanin in the mutant phycobilisomes differs from that in the wild type particles but reveal no difference in the organization of the core elements. These results indicate that the portions of the rod substructures of wild type phycobilisomes, beyond the disc proximal to the core, are made up of phycocyanin and the 33- and 30-kilodalton polypeptides. Emission from phycocyanin is a significant component in the fluorescence from isolated Synechococcus 6301 phycobilisomes and indicates an upper limit of 94% for the efficiency of energy transfer from phycocyanin to allophycocyanin and allophycocyanin B in these particles.  相似文献   

10.
Exposure of intact cells of Spirulina to high temperature (HT) stress (40–60 °C) caused decrease in absorption spectrum and fluorescence emission spectrum. Low temperature emission spectra were altered at phycocyanin (PC) level. Room and low temperature emission spectra of intact phycobilisomes showed that PC was the main target in this cyanobacterium for the altered energy transfer under HT.This revised version was published online in March 2005 with corrections to the page numbers.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Mercury, at a low concentration (3 µM) caused an enhancementin the intensity of room temperature fluorescence emitted byphycocyanin and induced a blue shift in the emission peak ofSpirulina cells indicating the alterations in the energy transferwithin the phycobilisomes. In vitro the isolated intact Spirulinaphycobilisomes from control cells exhibited only a reductionin fluorescence yield with low concentration of HgCl2 withoutbeing accompanied by changes in the emission features, whereasthe isolated phycobilisomes from mercury treated cells exhibitedthe alterations in the spectral characteristics at the levelof phycocyanin. When isolated phycocyanin and allophycocyaninwere exposed to very low concentrations of Hg2* ions, C-phycocyaninexhibited a large decrease in the absorbance in the longer wavelength(615–620 nm) region, but not allophycocyanin. In addition,mercury also caused a monotonous decrease in the C-phycocyaninemission intensity at 646 nm accompanied by a blue shift to642 nm. These results on isolated C-phycocyanin suggest thatselective bleaching of beta-84 chromophore of phycocyanin isinduced by mercury. The differential effect of mercury towardsC-phycocyanin and allophycocyanin could possibly be due to thedifference in the protein conformation of phycocyanin and allophycocyanin. (Received July 11, 1990; Accepted December 17, 1990)  相似文献   

13.
Exposure of blue-green or red algal cells to temperatures exceeding 60–65°C for several minutes resulted in bleaching of all phycobilin absorption in the visible range, with virtually no alteration in chlorophyll or carotenoid absorption. Difference spectra of non-bleached vs bleached cells appeared identical to absorption spectra of purified phycobilisomes isolated from the same cell culture in high phosphate medium. All phycobilin chromophores were bleached at approximately the same rate during heating. There were no changes in apparent molecular weights or relative amounts of the phycobilisome apoproteins during chromophore bleaching. Phycobilisomes in cell extracts from Anacystis nidulans resisted bleaching when suspended in medium of high phosphate concentration, but were bleached at 60–65°C within a few minutes when placed in diluted medium. The results indicate that phycobilisomes in vivo are stabilized by a mechanism other than high osmotic and ionic strength. This represents a rapid and quantitative method to characterize the phycobiliprotein content of cyanobacteria and red algae in vivo.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - APC allophycocyanin - PC phycocyanin - PE phycoerythrin - SPM medium, 0.2 M sucrose, 15 mM MgCl2, 0.75 M Na/KPO4, pH 7.8  相似文献   

14.
Redlinger T  Gantt E 《Plant physiology》1981,68(6):1375-1379
Purified phycobilisomes of Porphyridium cruentum were solubilized in sodium dodecyl sulfate and resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis into nine colored and nine colorless polypeptides. The colored polypeptides accounted for about 84% of the total stainable protein, and the colorless polypeptides accounted for the remaining 16%. Five of the colored polypeptides ranging in molecular weight from 13,300 to 19,500 were identified as the α and β subunits of allophycocyanin, R-phycocyanin, and phycoerythrin. Three others (29,000-30,500) were orange and are probably related to the γ subunit of phycoerythrin. Another colored polypeptide had a molecular weight of 95,000 and the characteristics of long wavelength-emitting allophycocyanin. Sequential dissociation of phycobilisomes, and analysis of the polypeptides in each fraction, revealed the association of a 32,500 molecular weight colorless polypeptide with a phycoerythrin fraction. The remaining eight colorless polypeptides were in the core fraction of the phycobilisome, which also was enriched in allophycocyanin. In addition, the core fraction was enriched in a colored 95,000 dalton polypeptide. Inasmuch as a polypeptide with the same molecular weight is found in thylakoid membranes (free of phycobilisomes), it is suggested that this polypeptide is involved in anchoring phycobilisomes to thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Isolated phycobilisome (PBS) sub-assemblies have been widely subjected to X-ray crystallography analysis to obtain greater insights into the structure-function relationship of this light harvesting complex. Allophycocyanin (APC) is the phycobiliprotein always found in the PBS core complex. Phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophores, covalently bound to conserved Cys residues of α- and β- subunits of APC, are responsible for solar energy absorption from phycocyanin and for transfer to photosynthetic apparatus. In the known APC structures, heterodimers of α- and β- subunits (known as αβ monomers) assemble as trimer or hexamer. We here for the first time report the crystal structure of APC isolated from a marine cyanobacterium (Phormidium sp. A09DM). The crystal structure has been refined against all the observed data to the resolution of 2.51 Å to Rwork (Rfree) of 0.158 (0.229) with good stereochemistry of the atomic model. The Phormidium protein exists as a trimer of αβ monomers in solution and in crystal lattice. The overall tertiary structures of α- and β- subunits, and trimeric quaternary fold of the Phormidium protein resemble the other known APC structures. Also, configuration and conformation of the two covalently bound PCB chromophores in the marine APC are same as those observed in fresh water cyanobacteria and marine red algae. More hydrophobic residues, however, constitute the environment of the chromophore bound to α-subunit of the Phormidium protein, owing mainly to amino acid substitutions in the marine protein.  相似文献   

16.
Phycobilisomes of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 contain the phycobiliproteins phycocyanin, allophycocyanin, and allophycocyanin B, and four major non pigmented polypeptides of 75, 33, 30, and 27 kdaltons. The molar ratio of phycocyanin to allophycocyanin in wild type phycobilisomes can be varied over about a two-fold range by alterations in culture conditions with parallel changes in the amounts of the 33 and 30 kdalton polypeptides whereas the levels of the 27 and 75 kdalton polypeptides do not vary. Two nitrosoguanidine-induced mutants, AN112 and AN135, produce abnormally small phycobilisomes, containing only 35 and 50% of the wild type level of phycocyanin. AN135 phycobilisomes contain less 33 kdalton polypeptide than wild type and the 30 kdalton polypeptide is only detected in phycobilisomes from cultures grown under conditions favoring high levels of phycocyanin. AN112 lacks both the 30 and 33 kdalton polypeptides and produces phycobilisomes of constant size and composition, independent of growth conditions. Both mutant phycobilisomes have wild type levels of 27 and 75 kdalton polypeptides relative to allophycocyanin and have normal energy transfer properties. These results indicate that modulation of phycobilisome size involves concurrent regulation of the levels of phycocyanin and of both the 30 and 33 kdalton polypeptides with no change in the composition of the allophycocyanin-containing core.Abbreviations LP cells cells grown under conditions favoring low p phycobiliprotein levels - HP cells cells grown under conditions favoring high phycobiliprotein levels - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid - NaK-PO4 NaH2PO4 titrated with K2HPO4 to a given pH A preliminary report of some of this work was presented at the 81st Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Dallas, Texas, March 1981  相似文献   

17.
The gene encoding a phycocyanin-associated linker polypeptide of Mr 33000 from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 was found to be located adjacent and 3 to the genes encoding the and subunits of phycocyanin. The identity of this gene, designated cpcC, was proven by matching the amino-terminal sequence of the authentic polypeptide with that predicted by the nucleotide sequence. A cpcC mutant strain of this cyanobacterium was constructed. The effect of the mutation was to prevent assembly of half the total phycocyanin into phycobilisomes. By electron microscopy, phycobilisomes from this mutant were shown to contain rod substructures composed of a single disc of hexameric phycocyanin, as opposed to two discs in the wild type. It was concluded that the Mr 33000 linker polypeptide is required for attachment of the core-distal phycocyanin hexamer to the core-proximal one. Using absorption spectra of the wild type, CpcC, and phycocyanin-less phycobilisomes, the in situ absorbances expected for specific phycocyanin-linker complexes were calculated. These data confirm earlier findings on isolated complexes regarding the influence of linkers on the spectroscopic properties of phycocyanin.Abbreviations PC phycocyanin - PEC phycoerythrocyanin - AP allophycocyanin - SDS-PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecylsulfate. Linker polypeptides are abbreviated according to Glazer (1985). L infX supY refers to a linker having a mass Y, located at a position X in the phycobilisome, where X can be R (rod), RC (rod or core), C (core) or CM (core to membrane). When necessary, the abbreviation for a linker is appended with that of its associated phycobiliprotein. Thus, L infR sup34.5PEC is a rod linker of Mr 34 500 that is associated with phycoerythrocyanin  相似文献   

18.
Phycobiliproteins produced in dark-grown cells of Tolypothrix tenuis Kützing formed Phycobilisomes functionally capable of energy transfer. The phycobilisomes could be recovered in high yield (80% of extracted phycobiliproteins). Phycobilisomes from cells grown without light and in red light had the same size, morphology, and spectral characteristics. They had a phycocyanin to allophycocyanin malar ratio of 3:1. Phycocyanin and allophycocyanin in phycobilisomes were energetically coupled as indicated by their fluorescence emission (maximum of ca. 690 nm at –196° C) and excitation spectra. Phycobilisomes were attached to the outer surface of thylakoids and were hemidiscoidal in shape. In thin sections they had a diameter of 42 ± 3nm, a height of 24 ± 4 nm and a thickness of 10 ± 2 nm. Isolated and negatively stained Phycobilisomes were larger with a diameter of 51 ± 2 nm and height of 33 ± 2 nm, Isolated phycobilisomes in face view had a central core of three units and six peripheral rods. Each rod appeared to be composed of three hexamers (three double discs), consistent with the observed dimensions and substructure. After Phycoerythria synthesis was induced by a 15 min green light exposure, phycobilisomes of dark-grown cells exhibited energy transfer from phycoerythrin to a long wavelength allophycocyanin, indicating that phycoerythrin synthesized in darkness was incorporated into functional phycobilisomes.  相似文献   

19.
Phycobilisomes isolated from Microcystis aeruginosa grown to midlog at high light (270 microeinsteins per square meter per second) or at low light intensities (40 microeinsteins per square meter per second) were found to be identical. Electron micrographs established that they have a triangular central core apparently consisting of three allophycocyanin trimers surrounded by six rods, each composed of two hexameric phycocyanin molecules. The apparent mass of a phycobilisome obtained by gel filtration is 2.96 × 106 daltons. The molar ratio of the phycobiliproteins per phycobilisome is 12 phycocyanin hexamers:9 allophycocyanin trimers. The electron microscopic observations combined with the phycobilisome apparent mass and the phycobiliprotein stoichiometry data indicate that M. aeruginosa phycobilisomes are composed of a triangular central core of three stacks of three allophycocyanin trimers and six rods each containing two phycocyanin hexamers. Adaptation of M. aeruginosa to high light intensity results in a decrease in the number of phycobilisomes per cell with no alteration in phycobilisome composition or structure.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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