937 resultados para light harvesting complex EPR monomer trimer structural analysis


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Der Haupt-Lichtsammenkomplex II (LHCII) höherer Pflanzen ist das häufigsternMembranprotein der Welt und in die chloroplastidäre Thylakoidmembran integriert. DerrnLHCII kann als Modellsystem genutzt werden, um die Funktionsweise vonrnMembranproteinen besser zu verstehen, da 96 % seiner Struktur kristallografisch aufgelöstrnist und er in rekombinanter Form in vitro rückgefaltet werden kann. Hierbei entsteht einrnvoll funktionaler Protein-Pigment.Komplex, der nahezu identisch mit der in vivo Varianternist.rnElektronenparamagnetischen Resonanz (EPR) Spektroskopie ist eine hoch sensitive undrnideal geeignete Methode, um die Strukturdynamik von Proteinen zu untersuchen. Hierzurnist eine ortsspezifische Markierung mit Spinsonden notwendig, die kovalent an Cysteinernbinden. Möglich wird dies, indem sorgfältig ausgewählte Aminosäuren gegen Cysteinerngetauscht werden, ohne dass die Funktionsweise des LHCII beeinträchtigt wird.rnIm Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden die Stabilität des verwendeten Spinmarkers und diernProbenqualität verbessert, indem alle Schritte der Probenpräparation untersucht wurden.rnMithilfe dieser Erkenntnisse konnte sowohl die Gefahr einer Proteinaggregation als auchrnein Verlust des EPR Signals deutlich vermindert werden. In Kombination mit derrngleichzeitigen Etablierung des Q-Band EPR können nun deutlich geringer konzentrierternProben zuverlässig vermessen werden. Darüber hinaus wurde eine reproduzierbarernMethode entwickelt, um heterogene Trimere herzustellen. Diese bestehen aus einemrndoppelt markierten Monomer und zwei unmarkierten Monomeren und erlauben es, diernkristallografisch unvollständig aufgelöste N-terminale Domäne im monomeren undrntrimeren Assemblierungsgrad zu untersuchen. Die Ergebnisse konnten einerseits diernVermutung bestätigen, dass diese Domäne im Vergleich zum starren Proteinkern sehrrnflexibel ist und andererseits, dass sie in Monomeren noch mobiler ist als in Trimeren.rnZudem wurde die lumenale Schleifenregion bei unterschiedlichen pH Werten undrnvariierender Pigmentzusammensetzung untersucht, da dieser Bereich sehr kontroversrndiskutiert wird. Die Messergebnisse offenbarten, dass diese Region starre und flexiblerernSektionen aufweist. Während der pH Wert keinen Einfluss auf die Konformation hatte,rnzeigte sich, dass die Abwesenheit von Neoxanthin zu einer Änderung der Konformationrnführt. Weiterführende Analysen der strukturellen Dynamik des LHCII in einerrnLipidmembran konnten hingegen nicht durchgeführt werden, da dies eine gerichteternInsertion des rückgefalteten Proteins in Liposomen erfordert, was trotz intensiverrnVersuche nicht zum Erfolg führte.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Structure and folding of membrane proteins are important issues in molecular and cell biology. In this work new approaches are developed to characterize the structure of folded, unfolded and partially folded membrane proteins. These approaches combine site-directed spin labeling and pulse EPR techniques. The major plant light harvesting complex LHCIIb was used as a model system. Measurements of longitudinal and transversal relaxation times of electron spins and of hyperfine couplings to neighboring nuclei by electron spin echo envelope modulation(ESEEM) provide complementary information about the local environment of a single spin label. By double electron electron resonance (DEER) distances in the nanometer range between two spin labels can be determined. The results are analyzed in terms of relative water accessibilities of different sites in LHCIIb and its geometry. They reveal conformational changes as a function of micelle composition. This arsenal of methods is used to study protein folding during the LHCIIb self assembly and a spatially and temporally resolved folding model is proposed. The approaches developed here are potentially applicable for studying structure and folding of any protein or other self-assembling structure if site-directed spin labeling is feasible and the time scale of folding is accessible to freeze-quench techniques.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In green plants, the function of collecting solar energy for photosynthesis is fulfilled by a series of light-harvesting complexes (LHC). The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein (LHCP) is synthesized in the cytosol as a precursor (pLHCP), then imported into chloroplasts and assembled into photosynthetic thylakoid membranes. Knowledge about the regulation of the transport processes of LHCP is rather limited. Closely mimicking the in vivo situation, cell-free protein expression system is employed in this dissertation to study the reconstitution of LHCP into artificial membranes. The approach starts merely from the genetic information of the protein, so the difficult and time-consuming procedures of protein expression and purification can be avoided. The LHCP encoding gene from Pisum sativum was cloned into a cell-free compatible vector system and the protein was expressed in wheat germ extracts. Vesicles or pigment-containing vesicles were prepared with either synthetic lipid or purified plant leaf lipid to mimic cell membranes. LHCP was synthesized in wheat germ extract systems with or without supplemented lipids. The addition of either synthetic or purified plant leaf lipid was found to be beneficial to the general productivity of the expression system. The lipid membrane insertion of the LHCP was investigated by radioactive labelling, protease digestion, and centrifugation assays. The LHCP is partially protected against protease digestion; however the protection is independent from the supplemented lipids.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Here we describe the in vitro reconstitution of photosystem I light-harvesting complexes with pigments and proteins (Lhca1 and Lhca4) obtained by overexpression of tomato Lhca genes in Escherichia coli. Using Lhca1 and Lhca4 individually for reconstitution results in monomeric pigment-proteins, whereas a combination thereof yields a dimeric complex. Interactions of the apoproteins is highly specific, as reconstitution of either of the two constituent proteins in combination with a light-harvesting protein of photosystem II does not result in dimerization. The reconstituted Lhca1/4, but not complexes obtained with either Lhca1 or Lhca4 alone, closely resembles the native LHCI-730 dimer from tomato leaves with regard to spectroscopic properties, pigment composition, and stoichiometry. Monomeric complexes of Lhca1 or Lhca4 possess lower pigment/protein ratios, indicating that interactions of the two subunits not only facilitates pigment reorganization but also recruitment of additional pigments. In addition to higher averages of chlorophyll a/b ratios in monomeric complexes than in LHCI-730, comparative fluorescence and CD spectra demonstrate that heterodimerization involves preferential ligation of more chlorophyll b.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The membrane proteins of peripheral light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) bind chlorophylls and carotenoids and transfer energy to the reaction centers for photosynthesis. LHCs of chlorophytes, chromophytes, dinophytes, and rhodophytes are similar in that they have three transmembrane regions and several highly conserved Chl-binding residues. All LHCs bind Chl a, but in specific taxa certain characteristic pigments accompany Chl a: Chl b and lutein in chlorophytes, Chl c and fucoxanthin in chromophytes, Chl c and peridinin in dinophytes, and zeaxanthin in rhodophytes. The specificity of pigment binding was examined by in vitro reconstitution of various pigments with a simple light-harvesting protein (LHCaR1), from a red alga (Porphyridium cruentum), that normally has eight Chl a and four zeaxanthin molecules. The pigments typical of a chlorophyte (Spinacea oleracea), a chromophyte (Thallasiosira fluviatilis), and a dinophyte (Prorocentrum micans) were found to functionally bind to this protein as evidenced by their participation in energy transfer to Chl a, the terminal pigment. This is a demonstration of a functional relatedness of rhodophyte and higher plant LHCs. The results suggest that eight Chl-binding sites per polypeptide are an ancestral trait, and that the flexibility to bind various Chl and carotenoid pigments may have been retained throughout the evolution of LHCs.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In the dinoflagellate Amphidinium carterae, photoadaptation involves changes in the transcription of genes encoding both of the major classes of light-harvesting proteins, the peridinin chlorophyll a proteins (PCPs) and the major a/c-containing intrinsic light-harvesting proteins (LHCs). PCP and LHC transcript levels were increased up to 86- and 6-fold higher, respectively, under low-light conditions relative to cells grown at high illumination. These increases in transcript abundance were accompanied by decreases in the extent of methylation of CpG and CpNpG motifs within or near PCP- and LHC-coding regions. Cytosine methylation levels in A. carterae are therefore nonstatic and may vary with environmental conditions in a manner suggestive of involvement in the regulation of gene expression. However, chemically induced undermethylation was insufficient in activating transcription, because treatment with two methylation inhibitors had no effect on PCP mRNA or protein levels. Regulation of gene activity through changes in DNA methylation has traditionally been assumed to be restricted to higher eukaryotes (deuterostomes and green plants); however, the atypically large genomes of dinoflagellates may have generated the requirement for systems of this type in a relatively “primitive” organism. Dinoflagellates may therefore provide a unique perspective on the evolution of eukaryotic DNA-methylation systems.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Cyanobacteria are important contributors to global photosynthesis in both marine and terrestrial environments. Quantitative data are presented on UV-B-induced damage to the major cyanobacterial photosynthetic light harvesting complex, the phycobilisome, and to each of its constituent phycobiliproteins. The photodestruction quantum yield, phi295 nm, for the phycobiliproteins is high (approximately 10(-3), as compared with approximately 10(-7) for visible light). Energy transfer on a picosecond time scale does not compete with photodestruction. Photodamage to phycobilisomes in vitro and in living cells is amplified by causing dissociation and loss of function of the complex. In photosynthetic organisms, UV-B damage to light-harvesting complexes may significantly exceed that to DNA.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The role of carotenoids in quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in the major light-harvesting complex of photosystem II has been studied with a view to understanding the molecular basis of the control of photoprotective nonradiative energy dissipation by the xanthophyll cycle in vivo. The control of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching in the isolated complex has been investigated in terms of the number of the conjugated double bonds for a series of carotenoids ranging from n = 5-19, giving an estimated first excited singlet state energy from 20,700 cm-1 to 10,120 cm-1. At pH 7.8 the addition of exogenous carotenoids with >=10 conjugated double bonds (including zeaxanthin) stimulated fluorescence quenching relative to the control with no added carotenoid, whereas those with n light-harvesting complex of photosystem II was induced by a lowering of pH to 5.5, carotenoids with n light-harvesting complex of photosystem II could only be reversed by violaxanthin. These results are discussed in terms of the two theories developed to explain the role of zeaxanthin and violaxanthin in nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The main chlorophyll a/b light-harvesting complex (LHC 11) has been isolated directly from thylakoid membranes of marine green alga (Bryopsis corticulans Setch.) by two consecutive runs of anion exchange and gel-filtration chromatography. LHC 11 proteins in the membrane extracts treated with 3% n-Octyl-b-D-glucopyranoside (OG) obtained specific binding ability on Q Sepharose column, and thus were isolated from the thylakoid membranes in a highly selective fraction. The monomeric, trimeric and oligomeric subcomplexes of LHC 11 have been obtained by fractionation of the LHC 11 mixes with sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation. The SDS-PAGE analysis of peptide composition and absorption spectrum showed that LHC 11 monomers, trimers and oligomers prepared through this work were intact and in high purity. Our report is the first to show that it is possible to purify LHC If directly from thylakoid membranes without extensively biochemical purification.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

We present results of calculations [1] that employ a new mixed quantum classical iterative density matrix propagation approach (ILDM , or so called Is‐Landmap) [2] to explore the survival of coherence in different photo synthetic models. Our model studies confirm the long lived quantum coherence , while conventional theoretical tools (such as Redfield equation) fail to describe these phenomenon [3,4]. Our ILDM method is a numerical exactly propagation scheme and can be served as a bench mark calculation tools[2]. Result get from ILDM and from other recent methods have been compared and show agreement with each other[4,5]. Long lived coherence plateau has been attribute to the shift of harmonic potential due to the system bath interaction, and the harvesting efficiency is a balance between the coherence and dissipation[1]. We use this approach to investigate the excitation energy transfer dynamics in various light harvesting complex include Fenna‐Matthews‐Olsen light harvesting complex[1] and Cryptophyte Phycocyanin 645 [6]. [1] P.Huo and D.F.Coker ,J. Chem. Phys. 133, 184108 (2010) . [2] E.R. Dunkel, S. Bonella, and D.F. Coker, J. Chem. Phys. 129, 114106 (2008). [3] A. Ishizaki and G.R. Fleming, J. Chem. Phys. 130, 234111 (2009). [4] A. Ishizaki and G.R. Fleming, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 106, 17255 (2009). [5] G. Tao and W.H. Miller, J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 1, 891 (2010). [6] P.Huo and D.F.Coker in preparation

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase is a key enzyme for the light-induced greening of etiolated angiosperm plants. In barley, two POR proteins exist termed PORA and PORB that have previously been proposed to structurally and functionally cooperate in terms of a higher molecular mass light-harvesting complex named LHPP, in the prolamellar body of etioplasts [Nature 397 (1999) 80]. In this study we examined the expression pattern of LHPP during seedling etiolation and de-etiolation under different experimental conditions. Our results show that LHPP is developmentally expressed across the barley leaf gradient. We further provide evidence that LHPP operates both in plants that etiolate completely before being exposed to white light and in plants that etiolate only partially and begin light-harvesting as soon as traces of light become available in the uppermost parts of the soil. As a result of light absorption, in either case LHPP converts Pchlide a to chlorophyllide (Chlide) a and in turn disintegrates. The released Chlide a, as well as Chlide b produced upon LHPP’s light-dependent dissociation, which leads to the activation of the PORA as a Pchlide b-reducing enzyme, then bind to homologs of water-soluble chlorophyll proteins of Brassicaceae. We propose that these proteins transfer Chlide a and Chlide b to the thylakoids, where their esterification with phytol and assembly into the photosynthetic membrane complexes ultimately takes place. Presumably due to the tight coupling of LHPP synthesis and degradation, as well as WSCP formation and photosynthetic membrane assembly, efficient photo-protection is conferred onto the plant.