Co-reporter:Nikki Cecil M. Magdaong, Rafael G. Saer, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, and Robert E. Blankenship
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B May 11, 2017 Volume 121(Issue 18) pp:4700-4700
Publication Date(Web):April 19, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b01270
Ultrafast transient absorption (TA) and time-resolved fluorescence (TRF) spectroscopic studies were performed on several mutants of the bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a-containing Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) complex from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum. These mutants were generated to perturb a particular BChl a site and determine its effects on the optical spectroscopic properties of the pigment–protein complex. Measurements conducted at 77 K under both oxidizing and reducing conditions revealed changes in the dynamics of the various spectral components as compared to the data set from wild-type FMO. TRF results show that under reducing conditions all FMO samples decay with a similar lifetime in the ∼2 ns range. The oxidized samples revealed varying fluorescence lifetimes of the terminal BChl a emitter, considerably shorter than those recorded for the reduced samples, indicating that the quenching mechanism in wild-type FMO is still present in the mutants. Global fitting of TA data yielded similar overall results, and in addition, the lifetimes of early decaying components were determined. Target analyses of TA data for select FMO samples generated kinetic models that better simulate the TA data. A comparison of the lifetime of excitonic components for all samples reveals that the mutations affect mainly the early kinetic components, but not that of the lowest energy exciton, which reflects the flexibility of energy transfer in FMO.
Co-reporter:Yue Lu, Haijun Liu, Rafael Saer, Veronica L. Li, Hao Zhang, Liuqing Shi, Carrie Goodson, Michael L. Gross, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry June 6, 2017 Volume 56(Issue 22) pp:2812-2812
Publication Date(Web):May 17, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00202
The cyanobacterial orange carotenoid protein (OCP) protects photosynthetic cyanobacteria from photodamage by dissipating excess excitation energy collected by phycobilisomes (PBS) as heat. Dissociation of the PBS–OCP complex in vivo is facilitated by another protein known as the fluorescence recovery protein (FRP), which primarily exists as a dimeric complex. We used various mass spectrometry (MS)-based techniques to investigate the molecular mechanism of this FRP-mediated process. FRP in the dimeric state (dFRP) retains its high affinity for the C-terminal domain (CTD) of OCP in the red state (OCPr). Site-directed mutagenesis and native MS suggest the head region on FRP is a candidate to bind OCP. After attachment to the CTD, the conformational changes of dFRP allow it to bridge the two domains, facilitating the reversion of OCPr into the orange state (OCPo) accompanied by a structural rearrangement of dFRP. Interestingly, we found a mutual response between FRP and OCP; that is, FRP and OCPr destabilize each other, whereas FRP and OCPo stabilize each other. A detailed mechanism of FRP function is proposed on the basis of the experimental results.
Co-reporter:Gregory S. Orf, Aaron M. Collins, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Marcus Tank, Vera Thiel, Adam Kell, Donald A. Bryant, Gabriel A. Montaño, and Robert E. Blankenship
Langmuir June 27, 2017 Volume 33(Issue 25) pp:6427-6427
Publication Date(Web):June 6, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b01761
Chlorosomes are one of the characteristic light-harvesting antennas from green sulfur bacteria. These complexes represent a unique paradigm: self-assembly of bacteriochlorophyll pigments within a lipid monolayer without the influence of protein. Because of their large size and reduced complexity, they have been targeted as models for the development of bioinspired light-harvesting arrays. We report the production of biohybrid light-harvesting nanocomposites mimicking chlorosomes, composed of amphiphilic diblock copolymer membrane bodies that incorporate thousands of natural self-assembling bacteriochlorophyll molecules derived from green sulfur bacteria. The driving force behind the assembly of these polymer–chlorosome nanocomposites is the transfer of the mixed raw materials from the organic to the aqueous phase. We incorporated up to five different self-assembling pigment types into single nanocomposites that mimic chlorosome morphology. We establish that the copolymer-BChl self-assembly process works smoothly even when non-native combinations of BChl homologues are included. Spectroscopic characterization revealed that the different types of self-assembling pigments participate in ultrafast energy transfer, expanding beyond single chromophore constraints of the natural chlorosome system. This study further demonstrates the utility of flexible short-chain, diblock copolymers for building scalable, tunable light-harvesting arrays for technological use and allows for an in vitro analysis of the flexibility of natural self-assembling chromophores in unique and controlled combinations.
Co-reporter:Hao Zhang;Lucas B. Harrington;Yue Lu
Journal of The American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2017 Volume 28( Issue 1) pp:87-95
Publication Date(Web):2017 January
DOI:10.1007/s13361-016-1451-8
Native mass spectrometry (MS) is an emerging approach to study protein complexes in their near-native states and to elucidate their stoichiometry and topology. Here, we report a native MS study of the membrane-embedded reaction center (RC) protein complex from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The membrane-embedded RC protein complex is stabilized by detergent micelles in aqueous solution, directly introduced into a mass spectrometer by nano-electrospray (nESI), and freed of detergents and dissociated in the gas phase by collisional activation. As the collision energy is increased, the chlorophyll pigments are gradually released from the RC complex, suggesting that native MS introduces a near-native structure that continues to bind pigments. Two bacteriochlorophyll a pigments remain tightly bound to the RC protein at the highest collision energy. The order of pigment release and their resistance to release by gas-phase activation indicates the strength of pigment interaction in the RC complex. This investigation sets the stage for future native MS studies of membrane-embedded photosynthetic pigment–protein and related complexes.
Co-reporter:Yue LuHaijun Liu, Rafael G. Saer, Hao Zhang, Christine M. Meyer, Veronica L. Li, Liuqing Shi, Jeremy D. King, Michael L. Gross, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2017 Volume 56(Issue 1) pp:
Publication Date(Web):December 8, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b01094
The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) and fluorescence recovery protein (FRP) are present in many cyanobacteria and regulate an essential photoprotection cycle in an antagonistic manner as a function of light intensity. We characterized the oligomerization states of OCP and FRP by using native mass spectrometry, a technique that has the capability of studying native proteins under a wide range of protein concentrations and molecular masses. We found that dimeric FRP is the predominant state at protein concentrations ranging from 3 to 180 μM and that higher-order oligomers gradually form at protein concentrations above this range. The OCP, however, demonstrates significantly different oligomerization behavior. Monomeric OCP (mOCP) dominates at low protein concentrations, with an observable population of dimeric OCP (dOCP). The ratio of dOCP to mOCP, however, increases proportionally with protein concentration. Higher-order OCP oligomers form at protein concentrations beyond 10 μM. Additionally, native mass spectrometry coupled with ion mobility allowed us to measure protein collisional cross sections and interrogate the unfolding of different FRP and OCP oligomers. We found that monomeric FRP exhibits a one-stage unfolding process, which could be correlated with its C-terminal bent crystal structure. The structural domain compositions of FRP and OCP are compared and discussed.
Co-reporter:Erica L.-W. Majumder;Benjamin M. Wolf;Haijun Liu
Photosynthesis Research 2017 Volume 134( Issue 2) pp:183-192
Publication Date(Web):11 September 2017
DOI:10.1007/s11120-017-0428-1
Far-Red Light (FRL) acclimation is a process that has been observed in cyanobacteria and algae that can grow solely on light above 700 nm. The acclimation to FRL results in rearrangement and synthesis of new pigments and pigment-protein complexes. In this study, cyanobacteria containing chlorophyll f, Synechococcus sp. PCC 7335 and Halomicronema hongdechloris, were imaged as live cells with confocal microscopy. H. hongdechloris was further studied with hyperspectral confocal fluorescence microscopy (HCFM) and freeze-substituted thin-section transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Under FRL, phycocyanin-containing complexes and chlorophyll-containing complexes were determined to be physically separated and the synthesis of red-form phycobilisome and Chl f was increased. The timing of these responses was observed. The heterogeneity and eco-physiological response of the cells was noted. Additionally, a gliding motility for H. hongdechloris is reported.
Co-reporter:Yue Lu, Hao Zhang, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Jing Jiang, Robert E. Blankenship, and Michael L. Gross
Analytical Chemistry 2016 Volume 88(Issue 17) pp:8827
Publication Date(Web):August 8, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.6b01945
Although membrane proteins are crucial participants in photosynthesis and other biological processes, many lack high-resolution structures. Prior to achieving a high-resolution structure, we are investigating whether MS-based footprinting can provide coarse-grained protein structure by following structural changes that occur upon ligand binding, pH change, and membrane binding. Our platform probes topology and conformation of membrane proteins by combining MS-based footprinting, specifically fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), and lipid Nanodiscs, which are more similar to the native membrane environment than are the widely used detergent micelles. We describe here results that show a protein’s outer membrane regions are more heavily footprinted by OH radicals whereas the regions spanning the lipid bilayer remain inert to the labeling. Nanodiscs generally exhibit more protection of membrane proteins compared to detergent micelles and less shielding to those protein residues that exist outside the membrane. The combination of immobilizing the protein in Nanodiscs and footprinting with FPOP is a feasible approach to map extra-membrane protein surfaces, even at the amino-acid level, and to illuminate intrinsic membrane protein topology.
Co-reporter:Haijun Liu, Hao Zhang, Gregory S. Orf, Yue Lu, Jing Jiang, Jeremy D. King, Nathan R. Wolf, Michael L. Gross, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2016 Volume 55(Issue 7) pp:1003-1009
Publication Date(Web):February 5, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00013
Photosynthetic cyanobacteria make important contributions to global carbon and nitrogen budgets. A protein known as the orange carotenoid protein (OCP) protects the photosynthetic apparatus from damage by dissipating excess energy absorbed by the phycobilisome, the major light-harvesting complex in many cyanobacteria. OCP binds one carotenoid pigment, but the color of this pigment depends on conditions. It is orange in the dark and red when exposed to light. We modified the orange and red forms of OCP by using isotopically coded cross-linking agents and then analyzed the structural features by using liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry. Unequivocal cross-linking pairs uniquely detected in red OCP indicate that, upon photoactivation, the OCP N-terminal domain (NTD) and C-terminal domain (CTD) reorient relative to each other. Our data also indicate that the intrinsically unstructured loop connecting the NTD and CTD not only is involved in the interaction between the two domains in orange OCP but also, together with the N-terminal extension, provides a structural buffer system facilitating an intramolecular breathing motion of the OCP, thus helping conversion back and forth from the orange to red form during the OCP photocycle. These results have important implications for understanding the molecular mechanism of action of cyanobacterial photoprotection.
Co-reporter:Gregory S. Orf;Rafael G. Saer;Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki;Hao Zhang;Chelsea L. McIntosh;Jason W. Schultz;Liviu M. Mirica;
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2016 113(31) pp:E4486-E4493
Publication Date(Web):June 22, 2016
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1603330113
Co-reporter:Erica L.-W. Majumder;John D. Olsen;Pu Qian;Aaron M. Collins
Photosynthesis Research 2016 Volume 127( Issue 1) pp:117-130
Publication Date(Web):2016 January
DOI:10.1007/s11120-015-0179-9
The photosynthetic membranes of the filamentous anoxygenic phototroph Roseiflexus castenholzii have been studied with electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and biochemistry. Electron microscopy of the light-harvesting reaction center complex produced a 3D model that aligns with the solved crystal structure of the RC–LH1 from Thermochromatium tepidum with the H subunit removed. Atomic force microscopy of the whole membranes yielded a picture of the supramolecular organization of the major proteins in the photosynthetic electron transport chain. The results point to a loosely packed membrane without accessory antenna proteins or higher order structure.
Co-reporter:Nikki Cecil M. Magdaong, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Carrie Goodson, and Robert E. Blankenship
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2016 Volume 120(Issue 23) pp:5159-5171
Publication Date(Web):May 24, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b04307
Carotenoid-to-bacteriochlorophyll energy transfer has been widely investigated in bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a-containing light harvesting complexes. Blastochloris viridis utilizes BChl b, whose absorption spectrum is more red-shifted than that of BChl a. This has implications on the efficiency and pathways of carotenoid-to-BChl energy transfer in this organism. The carotenoids that comprise the light-harvesting reaction center core complex (LH1–RC) of B. viridis are 1,2-dihydroneurosporene and 1,2-dihydrolycopene, which are derivatives of carotenoids found in the light harvesting complexes of several BChl a-containing purple photosynthetic bacteria. Steady-state and ultrafast time-resolved optical spectroscopic measurements were performed on the LH1–RC complex of B. viridis at room and cryogenic temperatures. The overall efficiency of carotenoid-to-bacteriochlorophyll energy transfer obtained from steady-state absorption and fluorescence measurements were determined to be ∼27% and ∼36% for 1,2-dihydroneurosporene and 1,2-dihydrolycopene, respectively. These results were combined with global fitting and target analyses of the transient absorption data to elucidate the energetic pathways by which the carotenoids decay and transfer excitation energy to BChl b. 1,2-Dihydrolycopene transfers energy to BChl b via the S2 → Qx channel with kET2 = (500 fs)−1 while 1,2-dihydroneurosporene transfers energy via S1→ Qy (kET1 = (84 ps)−1) and S2 → Qx (kET2 = (2.2 ps)−1) channels.
Co-reporter:Aki Yoneda;Bruce J. Wittmann;Jeremy D. King
Photosynthesis Research 2016 Volume 129( Issue 2) pp:171-182
Publication Date(Web):2016 August
DOI:10.1007/s11120-016-0279-1
Acaryochloris species are a genus of cyanobacteria that utilize chlorophyll (chl) d as their primary chlorophyll molecule during oxygenic photosynthesis. Chl d allows Acaryochloris to harvest red-shifted light, which gives them the ability to live in filtered light environments that are depleted in visible light. Although genomes of multiple Acaryochloris species have been sequenced, their analysis has not revealed how chl d is synthesized. Here, we demonstrate that Acaryochloris sp. CCMEE 5410 cells undergo chlorosis by nitrogen depletion and exhibit robust regeneration of chl d by nitrogen repletion. We performed a time course RNA-Seq experiment to quantify global transcriptomic changes during chlorophyll recovery. We observed upregulation of numerous known chl biosynthesis genes and also identified an oxygenase gene with a similar transcriptional profile as these chl biosynthesis genes, suggesting its possible involvement in chl d biosynthesis. Moreover, our data suggest that multiple prochlorophyte chlorophyll-binding homologs are important during chlorophyll recovery, and light-independent chl synthesis genes are more dominant than the light-dependent gene at the transcription level. Transcriptomic characterization of this organism provides crucial clues toward mechanistic elucidation of chl d biosynthesis.
Co-reporter:Yue Lu, Hao Zhang, Weidong Cui, Rafael Saer, Haijun Liu, Michael L. Gross, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2015 Volume 54(Issue 49) pp:7261-7271
Publication Date(Web):November 17, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00959
We report a top-down proteomic analysis of the membrane-bound peripheral light-harvesting complex LH2 isolated from the purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The LH2 complex is coded for by the puc operon. The Rb. sphaeroides genome contains two puc operons, designated puc1BAC and puc2BA. Although previous work has shown consistently that the LH2 β polypeptide coded by the puc2B gene was assembled into LH2 complexes, there are contradictory reports as to whether the Puc2A polypeptides are incorporated into LH2 complexes. Furthermore, post-translational modifications of this protein offer the prospect that it could coordinate bacteriochlorophyll a (Bchl a) by a modified N-terminal residue. Here, we describe the components of the LH2 complex on the basis of electron-capture dissociation fragmentation to confirm the identity and sequence of the protein’s subunits. We found that both gene products of the β polypeptides are expressed and assembled in the mature LH2 complex, but only the Puc1A-encoded polypeptide α is observed here. The methionine of the Puc2B-encoded polypeptide is missing, and a carboxyl group is attached to the threonine at the N-terminus. Surprisingly, one amino acid encoded as an isoleucine in both the puc2B gene and the mRNA is found as valine in the mature LH2 complex, suggesting an unexpected and unusual post-translational modification or a specific tRNA recoding of this one amino acid.
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship
PNAS 2015 Volume 112 (Issue 45 ) pp:13751-13752
Publication Date(Web):2015-11-10
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1519063112
Co-reporter:Hao Zhang, Haijun Liu, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Mindy Prado, Jing Jiang, Michael L. Gross, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 1) pp:
Publication Date(Web):December 21, 2013
DOI:10.1021/bi401539w
The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) plays a photoprotective role in cyanobacterial photosynthesis similar to that of nonphotochemical quenching in higher plants. Under high-light conditions, the OCP binds to the phycobilisome (PBS) and reduces the extent of transfer of energy to the photosystems. The protective cycle starts from a light-induced activation of the OCP. Detailed information about the molecular mechanism of this process as well as the subsequent recruitment of the active OCP to the phycobilisome are not known. We report here our investigation on the OCP photoactivation from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by using a combination of native electrospray mass spectrometry (MS) and protein cross-linking. We demonstrate that native MS can capture the OCP with its intact pigment and further reveal that the OCP undergoes a dimer-to-monomer transition upon light illumination. The reversion of the activated form of the OCP to the inactive, dark form was also observed by using native MS. Furthermore, in vitro reconstitution of the OCP and PBS allowed us to perform protein chemical cross-linking experiments. Liquid chromatography–MS/MS analysis identified cross-linking species between the OCP and the PBS core components. Our result indicates that the N-terminal domain of the OCP is closely involved in the association with a site formed by two allophycocyanin trimers in the basal cylinders of the phycobilisome core. This report improves our understanding of the activation mechanism of the OCP and the structural binding site of the OCP during the cyanobacterial nonphotochemical quenching process.
Co-reporter:Guannan He, Hao Zhang, Jeremy D. King, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 30) pp:4924-4930
Publication Date(Web):July 11, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi5006464
The reaction center (RC) complex of the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum is composed of the Fenna–Matthews–Olson antenna protein (FMO) and the reaction center core (RCC) complex. The RCC complex has four subunits: PscA, PscB, PscC, and PscD. We studied the FMO/RCC complex by chemically cross-linking the purified sample followed by biochemical and spectroscopic analysis. Blue-native gels showed that there were two types of FMO/RCC complexes, which are consistent with complexes with one copy of FMO per RCC and two copies of FMO per RCC. Sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the samples after cross-linking showed that all five subunits of the RC can be linked by three different cross-linkers: bissulfosuccinimidyl suberate, disuccinimidyl suberate, and 3,3-dithiobis-sulfosuccinimidyl propionate. The interaction sites of the cross-linked complex were also studied using liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. The results indicated that FMO, PscB, PscD, and part of PscA are exposed on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. PscD helps stabilize FMO to the reaction center and may facilitate transfer of the electron from the RC to ferredoxin. The soluble domain of the heme-containing cytochrome subunit PscC and part of the core subunit PscA are located on the periplasmic side of the membrane. There is a close relationship between the periplasmic portions of PscA and PscC, which is needed for the efficient transfer of the electron between PscC and P840.
Co-reporter:Ying Zhang, Erica L.-W. Majumder, Hai Yue, Robert E. Blankenship, and Michael L. Gross
Biochemistry 2014 Volume 53(Issue 35) pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 20, 2014
DOI:10.1021/bi500420y
A lack of X-ray or nuclear magnetic resonance structures of proteins inhibits their further study and characterization, motivating the development of new ways of analyzing structural information without crystal structures. The combination of hydrogen–deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) data in conjunction with homology modeling can provide improved structure and mechanistic predictions. Here a unique diheme cytochrome c (DHCC) protein from Heliobacterium modesticaldum is studied with both HDX and homology modeling to bring some definition of the structure of the protein and its role. Specifically, HDX data were used to guide the homology modeling to yield a more functionally relevant structural model of DHCC.
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship;Harry A. Frank;Robert A. Niederman
Photosynthesis Research 2014 Volume 121( Issue 1) pp:1
Publication Date(Web):2014 July
DOI:10.1007/s11120-014-0012-x
Co-reporter:Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Haijun Liu, and Robert E. Blankenship
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2014 Volume 118(Issue 23) pp:6141-6149
Publication Date(Web):May 20, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jp5041794
The orange carotenoid protein (OCP) is a 35 kDa water-soluble protein involved in a photoprotective mechanism of the photosynthetic apparatus of cyanobacteria. The OCP protein contains a single molecule of the carotenoid 3′-hydroxyechinenone (3′-hECN). We have performed transient absorption studies at 77 K in the visible and near-infrared spectral ranges on 3′-hECN in solvent glass and in both inactive (orange) and active (red) forms of OCP. In the OCP the cryogenic temperature prohibited the protein from spontaneous conversion between activity stages and allowed us to study well-defined spectral forms of the protein. The studies show that each form of the OCP consists of two protein subpopulations having different photophysical properties of the bound 3′-hECN. At 77 K the inactive OCP reveals two lifetimes of the first excited state of 3′-hECN of 5.2 and 11 ps while in the active form of OCP these are 3.2 and 7.1 ps. We have also determined the energy of the first excited singlet state of 3′-hECN in long-lived subpopulations of both OCP forms at 77 K. This is 13,750 cm–1 in the inactive OCP and 12,300 cm–1 in the active OCP. Shortening of the lifetime and decrease of the energy of the first excited singlet state of 3′-hECN confirm the lengthening of the effective conjugation of the carotenoid upon the inactive-to-active conversion of OCP.
Co-reporter:Gregory S. Orf, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, and Robert E. Blankenship
The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 2014 Volume 118(Issue 8) pp:2058-2069
Publication Date(Web):February 3, 2014
DOI:10.1021/jp411020a
The Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) protein is a soluble light-harvesting, bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) containing antenna complex found in green sulfur bacteria. We have measured time-resolved fluorescence and transient absorption at variable laser intensities at 298 and 77 K using FMO protein from Chlorobaculum tepidum prepared in both oxidizing and reducing environments. Fitting of the spectroscopic data shows that high laser intensities (i.e., above 1013 photons × cm–2 delivered per laser pulse) distort the intrinsic decay processes in this complex. At high laser intensities, both oxidized and reduced FMO samples behave similarly, exhibiting high levels of singlet–singlet annihilation. At lower laser intensities, the reduced protein mainly displays a singlet excited state lifetime of 2 ns, although upon oxidation, a 60 ps lifetime dominates. We also demonstrate that the apparent quantum yield of singlet–triplet intersystem crossing in the reduced FMO complex is ∼11% in the most favorable low laser intensities, with this yield decreasing and the probability of singlet–singlet annihilation yield increasing as laser intensity increases. After correcting for stimulated emission effects in the experiments, the actual maximum triplet yield is calculated to be ∼27%. Experiments at 77 K demonstrate that BChl a triplet states in FMO are localized on pigments no. 4 or 3, the lowest energy pigments in the complex. This study allows for a discussion of how BChl triplets form and evolve on the picosecond-to-nanosecond time scale, as well as whether triplet conversion is a physiologically relevant process.
Co-reporter:Robert E Blankenship, Min Chen
Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 2013 Volume 17(Issue 3) pp:457-461
Publication Date(Web):June 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2013.03.031
•Efficiency of natural photosynthesis is reviewed.•Effects of expansion of the solar spectrum into the near infrared are discussed.•Penetration of sunlight light through the water column is discussed.•Effects of reduction of antenna size on light response curves are discussed.We consider two approaches for improving the efficiency of photosynthesis: the expansion of the solar spectrum that drives oxygenic photosynthesis and the reduction of antenna systems that couple to the photochemical reaction center. The first approach can possibly result in an increase of 19% in the number of photons available per unit area if the photosynthetically active radiation spectrum is expanded to 750 nm. The second approach can in principle shift the photosynthesis light response curve to significantly higher intensities, thereby reducing the amount of excess light, which is absorbed photons in excess of the number that can be utilized. The implementation of these approaches may lead to apparent improvement in photosynthetic efficiency in many but not all the cases.
Co-reporter:Jeremy D. King, Chelsea L. McIntosh, Christopher M. Halsey, Bryan M. Lada, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Jason W. Cooley, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2013 Volume 52(Issue 46) pp:
Publication Date(Web):October 23, 2013
DOI:10.1021/bi401163g
The metal sites of electron transfer proteins are tuned for function. The type 1 copper site is one of the most utilized metal sites in electron transfer reactions. This site can be tuned by the protein environment from +80 mV to +680 mV in typical type 1 sites. Accompanying this huge variation in midpoint potentials are large changes in electronic structure, resulting in proteins that are blue, green, or even red. Here, we report a family of blue copper proteins, the auracyanins, from the filamentous anoxygenic phototroph Chloroflexus aurantiacus that display the entire known spectral and redox variations known in the type 1 copper site. C. aurantiacus encodes four auracyanins, labeled A–D. The midpoint potentials vary from +83 mV (auracyanin D) to +423 mV (auracyanin C). The electronic structures vary from classical blue copper UV–vis absorption spectra (auracyanin B) to highly perturbed spectra (auracyanins C and D). The spectrum of auracyanin C is temperature-dependent. The expansion and divergent nature of the auracyanins is a previously unseen phenomenon.
Co-reporter:Haijun Liu;Hao Zhang;Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki;Mindy Prado;Guannan He;Michael L. Gross
Science 2013 Volume 342(Issue 6162) pp:1104-1107
Publication Date(Web):29 Nov 2013
DOI:10.1126/science.1242321
Complexing Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis operates through a series of protein complexes that harvest sunlight and turn it into chemical energy. The separate complexes—including photosystems I and II, phycobilisome antennae, and reaction centers—are understood for a number of photosynthetic organisms; however, the large-scale organization and interactions between them are less clear. Using protein cross-linking, Liu et al. (p. 1104) demonstrate how the individual components are organized when present as a megacomplex in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy indicated that the phycobilisomes transfer energy to both photosystems, which is consistent with their molecular arrangement.
Co-reporter:Gregory S. Orf
Photosynthesis Research 2013 Volume 116( Issue 2-3) pp:315-331
Publication Date(Web):2013 October
DOI:10.1007/s11120-013-9869-3
Chlorosomes are the distinguishing light-harvesting antenna complexes that are found in green photosynthetic bacteria. They contain bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c, d, e in natural organisms, and recently through mutation, BChl f, as their principal light-harvesting pigments. In chlorosomes, these pigments self-assemble into large supramolecular structures that are enclosed inside a lipid monolayer to form an ellipsoid. The pigment assembly is dictated mostly by pigment–pigment interactions as opposed to protein–pigment interactions. On the bottom face of the chlorosome, the CsmA protein aggregates into a paracrystalline baseplate with BChl a, and serves as the interface to the next energy acceptor in the system. The exceptional light-harvesting ability at very low light conditions of chlorosomes has made them an attractive subject of study for both basic and applied science. This review, incorporating recent advancements, considers several important aspects of chlorosomes: pigment biosynthesis, organization of pigments and proteins, spectroscopic properties, and applications to bio-hybrid and bio-inspired devices.
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship;Judy Musick;Jason Cooley;Susan Dutcher
Photosynthesis Research 2013 Volume 115( Issue 2-3) pp:215-218
Publication Date(Web):2013 July
DOI:10.1007/s11120-013-9847-9
The 16th International Congress on Photosynthesis will be held August 11–16, 2013 in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. The congress will include 15 plenary lectures, 21 scientific symposia, poster sessions, exhibitors, opening reception, final banquet, excursions and accompanying persons program. The congress is organized as an official event sponsored by the International Society of Photosynthesis Research.
Co-reporter:David Bina
Photosynthesis Research 2013 Volume 116( Issue 1) pp:11-19
Publication Date(Web):2013 September
DOI:10.1007/s11120-013-9878-2
Effect of chemical oxidation by ferricyanide on bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a) in the Fenna–Matthews–Olson protein (FMO) was studied using absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopy at ambient and cryogenic temperatures. Partially selective oxidation of pigments bound to the antenna complex was achieved and the probable absorption wavelength corresponding to the recently discovered bacteriochlorophyll No. 8 of 806 nm was obtained by comparative analysis of the effect of chemical oxidation and the effect of different isolation procedures. Formation of a stable product identified as a chlorophyll a derivative occurred upon chemical oxidation. This new pigment remained bound within the pigment–protein complex, and exhibited an efficient energy transfer to BChl a. Furthermore, complex effects of the pigment oxidation upon the fluorescence yield of the FMO protein were observed. Utility of this approach based on chemical modifications for the investigation of the native regulatory mechanisms involved in the energy transfer in the FMO protein is discussed.
Co-reporter:Yueyong Xin;Jie Pan;Aaron M. Collins;Su Lin
Photosynthesis Research 2012 Volume 111( Issue 1-2) pp:149-156
Publication Date(Web):2012 March
DOI:10.1007/s11120-011-9669-6
The light-harvesting core complex of the thermophilic filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Roseiflexus castenholzii is intrinsic to the cytoplasmic membrane and intimately bound to the reaction center (RC). Using ultrafast transient absorption and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy with selective excitation, energy transfer, and trapping dynamics in the core complex have been investigated at room temperature in both open and closed RCs. Results presented in this report revealed that the excited energy transfer from the BChl 800 to the BChl 880 band of the antenna takes about 2 ps independent of the trapping by the RC. The time constants for excitation quenching in the core antenna BChl 880 by open and closed RCs were found to be 60 and 210 ps, respectively. Assuming that the light harvesting complex is generally similar to LH1 of purple bacteria, the possible structural and functional aspects of this unique antenna complex are discussed. The results show that the core complex of Roseiflexus castenholzii contains characteristics of both purple bacteria and Chloroflexus aurantiacus.
Co-reporter:Jianzhong Wen, Hao Zhang, Michael L. Gross, and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2011 Volume 50(Issue 17) pp:
Publication Date(Web):March 30, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bi200239k
The nature and stoichiometry of pigments in the Fenna−Matthews−Olson (FMO) photosynthetic antenna protein complex were determined by native electrospray mass spectrometry. The FMO antenna complex was the first chlorophyll-containing protein that was crystallized. Previous results indicate that the FMO protein forms a trimer with seven bacteriochlorophyll a in each monomer. This model has long been a working basis to understand the molecular mechanism of energy transfer through pigment/pigment and pigment/protein coupling. Recent results have suggested, however, that an eighth bacteriochlorophyll is present in some subunits. In this report, a direct mass spectrometry measurement of the molecular weight of the intact FMO protein complex clearly indicates the existence of an eighth pigment, which is assigned as a bacteriochlorophyll a by mass analysis of the complex and HPLC analysis of the pigment. The eighth pigment is found to be easily lost during purification, which results in its partial occupancy in the mass spectra of the intact complex prepared by different procedures. The results are consistent with the recent X-ray structural models. The existence of the eighth bacteriochlorophyll a in this model antenna protein gives new insights into the functional role of the FMO protein and motivates the need for new theoretical and spectroscopic assignments of spectral features of the FMO protein.
Co-reporter:Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki;Masayuki Kobayashi
Photosynthesis Research 2011 Volume 107( Issue 2) pp:177-186
Publication Date(Web):2011 February
DOI:10.1007/s11120-011-9620-x
Light-harvesting complex 2 from the anoxygenic phototrophic purple bacterium Thermochromatium tepidum was purified and studied by steady-state absorption, fluorescence and flash photolysis spectroscopy. Steady-state absorption and fluorescence measurements show that carotenoids play a negligible role as supportive energy donors and transfer excitation to bacteriochlorophyll-a with low energy transfer efficiency of ~30%. HPLC analysis determined that the dominant carotenoids in the complex are rhodopin and spirilloxanthin. Carotenoid excited triplet state formation upon direct (carotenoid) or indirect (bacteriochlorophyll-a Qx band) excitation shows that carotenoid triplets are mostly localized on spirilloxanthin. In addition, no triplet excitation transfer between carotenoids was observed. Such specific carotenoid composition and spectroscopic results strongly suggest that this organism optimized carotenoid composition in the light-harvesting complex 2 in order to maximize photoprotective capabilities of carotenoids but subsequently drastically suppressed their supporting role in light-harvesting process.
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship;Wolfgang Junge;Anastasios Melis;Thomas A. Moore;David M. Kramer;Graham Fleming;Christopher C. Moser;Gary W. Brudvig;Daniel G. Nocera;M. R. Gunner;William W. Parson;Maria Ghirardi;David M. Tiede;Roger C. Prince;Arthur J. Nozik;Richard T. Sayre;Donald R. Ort;James Barber
Science 2011 Volume 332(Issue 6031) pp:805-809
Publication Date(Web):13 May 2011
DOI:10.1126/science.1200165
Abstract
Comparing photosynthetic and photovoltaic efficiencies is not a simple issue. Although both processes harvest the energy in sunlight, they operate in distinctly different ways and produce different types of products: biomass or chemical fuels in the case of natural photosynthesis and nonstored electrical current in the case of photovoltaics. In order to find common ground for evaluating energy-conversion efficiency, we compare natural photosynthesis with present technologies for photovoltaic-driven electrolysis of water to produce hydrogen. Photovoltaic-driven electrolysis is the more efficient process when measured on an annual basis, yet short-term yields for photosynthetic conversion under optimal conditions come within a factor of 2 or 3 of the photovoltaic benchmark. We consider opportunities in which the frontiers of synthetic biology might be used to enhance natural photosynthesis for improved solar energy conversion efficiency.
Co-reporter:Kuo-Hsiang Tang, Liying Zhu, Volker S. Urban, Aaron M. Collins, Pratim Biswas, and Robert E. Blankenship
Langmuir 2011 Volume 27(Issue 8) pp:4816-4828
Publication Date(Web):March 15, 2011
DOI:10.1021/la104532b
Chlorosomes, the peripheral light-harvesting antenna complex from green photosynthetic bacteria, are the largest and one of the most efficient light-harvesting antenna complexes found in nature. In contrast to other light-harvesting antennas, chlorosomes are constructed from more than 150 000 self-assembled bacteriochlorophylls (BChls) and contain relatively few proteins that play secondary roles. These unique properties have led to chlorosomes as an attractive candidate for developing biohybrid solar cell devices. In this article, we investigate the temperature and ionic strength effects on the viability of chlorosomes from the photosynthetic green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus using small-angle neutron scattering and dynamic light scattering. Our studies indicate that chlorosomes remain intact up to 75 °C and that salt induces the formation of large aggregates of chlorosomes. No internal structural changes are observed for the aggregates. The salt-induced aggregation, which is a reversible process, is more efficient with divalent metal ions than with monovalent metal ions. Moreover, with treatment at 98 °C for 2 min, the bulk of the chlorosome pigments are undamaged, while the baseplate is destroyed. Chlorosomes without the baseplate remain rodlike in shape and are 30−40% smaller than with the baseplate attached. Further, chlorosomes are stable from pH 5.5 to 11.0. Together, this is the first time such a range of characterization tools have been used for chlorosomes, and this has enabled elucidation of properties that are not only important to understanding their functionality but also may be useful in biohybrid devices for effective light harvesting.
Co-reporter:Jianzhong Wen, Jiro Harada, Kenny Buyle, Kevin Yuan, Hitoshi Tamiaki, Hirozo Oh-oka, Richard A. Loomis and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 26) pp:
Publication Date(Web):June 3, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi1006805
The Fenna−Matthews−Olson light-harvesting antenna (FMO) protein has been a model system for understanding pigment−protein interactions in the energy transfer process in photosynthesis. All previous studies have utilized wild-type FMO proteins from several species. Here we report the purification and characterization of the first FMO protein variant generated via replacement of the esterifying alcohol at the C-17 propionate residue of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a, phytol, with geranylgeraniol, which possesses three more double bonds. The FMO protein still assembles with the modified pigment, but both the whole cell absorption and the biochemical purification indicate that the mutant cells contain a much less mature FMO protein. The gene expression was checked using qRT-PCR, and none of the genes encoding BChl a-binding proteins are strongly regulated at the transcriptional level. The smaller amount of the FMO protein in the mutant cell is probably due to the degradation of the apo-FMO protein at different stages after it does not bind the normal pigment. The absorption, fluorescence, and CD spectra of the purified FMO variant protein are similar to those of the wild-type FMO protein except the conformations of most pigments are more heterogeneous, which broadens the spectral bands. Interestingly, the lowest-energy pigment binding site seems to be unchanged and is the only peak that can be well resolved in 77 K absorption spectra. The excited-state lifetime of the variant FMO protein is unchanged from that of the wild type and shows a temperature-dependent modulation similar to that of the wild type. The variant FMO protein is less thermally stable than the wild type. The assembly of the FMO protein and also the implications of the decreased FMO/chlorosome stoichiometry are discussed in terms of the topology of these two antennas on the cytoplasmic membrane.
Co-reporter:Xinliu Gao, Yueyong Xin, Patrick D. Bell, Jianzhong Wen and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 31) pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 8, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi100858k
The green photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, which belongs to the phylum of filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs, does not contain a cytochrome bc or bf type complex which is found in all other known groups of phototrophs. This suggests that a functional replacement exists to link the reaction center photochemistry to cyclic electron transfer as well as respiration. Earlier work identified a potential substitute of the cytochrome bc complex, now named alternative complex III (ACIII), which has been purified from C. aurantiacus, identified, and characterized. ACIII functions as a menaquinol:auracyanin oxidoreductase in the photosynthetic electron transfer chain, and a related but distinct complex functions in respiratory electron flow to a terminal oxidase. In this work, we focus on elucidating the structure of photosynthetic ACIII. We found that ACIII is an integral membrane protein complex of ∼300 kDa that consists of eight subunits of seven different types. Among them, there are four metalloprotein subunits, including a 113 kDa iron−sulfur cluster-containing polypeptide, a 25 kDa penta-heme c-containing subunit, and two 20 kDa monoheme c-containing subunits in the form of a homodimer. A variety of analytical techniques were employed in determining the ACIII substructure, including HPLC combined with ESI-MS, metal analysis, potentiometric titration, and intensity analysis of heme staining SDS−PAGE. A preliminary structural model of ACIII is proposed on the basis of the analytical data and chemical cross-linking in tandem with mass analysis using MALDI-TOF, as well as transmembrane and transit peptide analysis.
Co-reporter:Aaron M. Collins, Pu Qian, Qun Tang, David F. Bocian, C. Neil Hunter and Robert E. Blankenship
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 35) pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 2, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi101036t
Photosynthetic organisms have evolved diverse light-harvesting complexes to harness light of various qualities and intensities. Photosynthetic bacteria can have (bacterio)chlorophyll Qy antenna absorption bands ranging from ∼650 to ∼1100 nm. This broad range of wavelengths has allowed many organisms to thrive in unique light environments. Roseiflexus castenholzii is a niche-adapted, filamentous anoxygenic phototroph (FAP) that lacks chlorosomes, the dominant antenna found in most green bacteria, and here we describe the purification of a full complement of photosynthetic complexes: the light-harvesting (LH) antenna, reaction center (RC), and core complex (RC-LH). By high-performance liquid chromatography separation of bacteriochlorophyll and bacteriopheophytin pigments extracted from the core complex and the RC, the number of subunits that comprise the antenna was determined to be 15 ± 1. Resonance Raman spectroscopy of the carbonyl stretching region displayed modes indicating that 3C-acetyl groups of BChl a are all involved in molecular interactions probably similar to those found in LH1 complexes from purple photosynthetic bacteria. Finally, two-dimensional projections of negatively stained core complexes and the LH antenna revealed a closed, slightly elliptical LH ring with an average diameter of 130 ± 10 Å surrounding a single RC that lacks an H-subunit but is associated with a tetraheme c-type cytochrome.
Co-reporter:Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki
Photosynthesis Research 2010 Volume 106( Issue 3) pp:227-238
Publication Date(Web):2010 December
DOI:10.1007/s11120-010-9598-9
Ten naturally occurring chlorophylls (a, b, c2, d) and bacteriochlorophylls (a, b, c, d, e, g) were purified and studied using the optical spectroscopic techniques of both steady state and time-resolved absorption and fluorescence. The studies were carried out at room temperature in nucleophilic solvents in which the central Mg is hexacoordinated. The comprehensive studies of singlet excited state lifetimes show a clear dependency on the structural features of the macrocycle and terminal substituents. The wide-ranging studies of triplet state lifetime demonstrate the existence of an energy gap law for these molecules. The knowledge of the dynamics and the energies of the triplet state that were obtained in other studies allowed us to construct an energy gap law expression that can be used to estimate the triplet state energies of any (B)chlorophyll molecule from its triplet lifetime obtained in a liquid environment.
Co-reporter:Aaron M. Collins;Kevin E. Redding
Photosynthesis Research 2010 Volume 104( Issue 2-3) pp:283-292
Publication Date(Web):2010 June
DOI:10.1007/s11120-010-9554-8
In what appears to be a common theme for all phototrophs, heliobacteria exhibit complex modulations of fluorescence yield when illuminated with actinic light and probed on a time scale of μs to minutes. The fluorescence yield from cells of Heliobacterium modesticaldum remained nearly constant for the first 10–100 ms of illumination and then rose to a maximum level with one or two inflections over the course of many seconds. Fluorescence then declined to a steady-state value within about one minute. In this analysis, the origins of the fluorescence induction in whole cells of heliobacteria are investigated by treating cells with a combination of electron accepters, donors, and inhibitors of the photosynthetic electron transport, as well as varying the temperature. We conclude that fluorescence modulation in H. modesticaldum results from acceptor-side limitation in the reaction center (RC), possibly due to charge recombination between P800+ and A0−.
Co-reporter:W. Matthew Sattley
Photosynthesis Research 2010 Volume 104( Issue 2-3) pp:113-122
Publication Date(Web):2010 June
DOI:10.1007/s11120-010-9529-9
The complete annotated genome sequence of Heliobacterium modesticaldum strain Ice1 provides our first glimpse into the genetic potential of the Heliobacteriaceae, a unique family of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria. H. modesticaldum str. Ice1 is the first completely sequenced phototrophic representative of the Firmicutes, and heliobacteria are the only phototrophic members of this large bacterial phylum. The H. modesticaldum genome consists of a single 3.1-Mb circular chromosome with no plasmids. Of special interest are genomic features that lend insight to the physiology and ecology of heliobacteria, including the genetic inventory of the photosynthesis gene cluster. Genes involved in transport, photosynthesis, and central intermediary metabolism are described and catalogued. The obligately heterotrophic metabolism of heliobacteria is a key feature of the physiology and evolution of these phototrophs. The conspicuous absence of recognizable genes encoding the enzyme ATP-citrate lyase prevents autotrophic growth via the reverse citric acid cycle in heliobacteria, thus being a distinguishing differential characteristic between heliobacteria and green sulfur bacteria. The identities of electron carriers that enable energy conservation by cyclic light-driven electron transfer remain in question.
Co-reporter:Patrick D. Bell;Yueyong Xin
Photosynthesis Research 2009 Volume 102( Issue 1) pp:43-51
Publication Date(Web):2009 October
DOI:10.1007/s11120-009-9482-7
Cytochrome c6, (cyt c6) a soluble monoheme electron transport protein, was isolated and characterized from the chlorophyll d-containing cyanobacterium Acaryochoris marina, the type strain MBIC11017. The protein was purified using ammonium sulfate precipitation, ion exchange and gel filtration column chromatography, and fast performance liquid chromatography. Its molecular mass and pI have been determined to be 8.87 kDa and less than 4.2, respectively, by mass spectrometry and isoelectrofocusing (IEF). The protein has an alpha helical structure as indicated by CD (circular dichroism) spectroscopy and a reduction midpoint potential (Em) of +327 mV versus the normal hydrogen electrode (NHE) as determined by redox potentiometry. Its potential role in electron transfer processes is discussed.
Co-reporter:Mihwa Lee;Melissa C. del Rosario
JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry 2009 Volume 14( Issue 3) pp:329-345
Publication Date(Web):2009 March
DOI:10.1007/s00775-009-0473-0
Auracyanins A and B are two closely similar “blue” copper proteins produced by the filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Both proteins have a water-soluble 140-residue globular domain, which is preceded in the sequence by an N-terminal tail. The globular domains of auracyanins A and B have sequences that are 38% identical. The sequences of the N-terminal tails, on the other hand, are distinctly different, suggesting that auracyanins A and B occupy different membrane sites and have different functions. The crystal structure of auracyanin A has been solved and refined at 1.85 Å resolution. The polypeptide fold is similar to that of auracyanin B (Bond et al. in J Mol Biol 306:47–67, 2001), but the distribution of charged and polar residues on the molecular surface is different. The Cu-site dimensions of the two auracyanins are identical. This is unexpected, since auracyanin A has a shorter polypeptide loop between two of the Cu-binding residues, and the two proteins have significantly different EPR, UV–visible and resonance Raman spectra. The genes for the globular domains of auracyanins A and B have been cloned in a bacterial expression system, enabling purification of large quantities of protein. It is shown that auracyanin A is expressed only when C. aurantiacus cells are grown in light, whereas auracyanin B is expressed under dark as well as light conditions. The inference is that auracyanin A has a function in photosynthesis, and that auracyanin B has a function in aerobic respiration.
Co-reporter:Jianzhong Wen;Hao Zhang;Michael L. Gross
PNAS 2009 Volume 106 (Issue 15 ) pp:6134-6139
Publication Date(Web):2009-04-14
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0901691106
The high excitation energy-transfer efficiency demanded in photosynthetic organisms relies on the optimal pigment-protein
binding orientation in the individual protein complexes and also on the overall architecture of the photosystem. In green
sulfur bacteria, the membrane-attached Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) antenna protein functions as a “wire” to connect the large
peripheral chlorosome antenna complex with the reaction center (RC), which is embedded in the cytoplasmic membrane (CM). Energy
collected by the chlorosome is funneled through the FMO to the RC. Although there has been considerable effort to understand
the relationships between structure and function of the individual isolated complexes, the specific architecture for in vivo
interactions of the FMO protein, the CM, and the chlorosome, ensuring highly efficient energy transfer, is still not established
experimentally. Here, we describe a mass spectrometry-based method that probes solvent-exposed surfaces of the FMO by labeling
solvent-exposed aspartic and glutamic acid residues. The locations and extents of labeling of FMO on the native membrane in
comparison with it alone and on a chlorosome-depleted membrane reveal the orientation. The large differences in the modification
of certain peptides show that the Bchl a #3 side of the FMO trimer interacts with the CM, which is consistent with recent theoretical predictions. Moreover, the results
also provide direct experimental evidence to confirm the overall architecture of the photosystem from Chlorobaculum tepidum (C. tepidum) and give information on the packing of the FMO protein in its native environment.
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship
Photosynthesis Research 2007 Volume 94( Issue 2-3) pp:179-181
Publication Date(Web):2007 November
DOI:10.1007/s11120-007-9268-8
Co-reporter:Rafael Saer, Gregory S. Orf, Xun Lu, Hao Zhang, Matthew J. Cuneo, Dean A.A. Myles, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (September 2016) Volume 1857(Issue 9) pp:
Publication Date(Web):September 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2016.04.007
•A method for site-directed mutagenesis of residues in the FMO protein is described.•FMO mutants are a useful tool for studying the excitonic properties of the native protein.•Mutagenesis of FMO cysteines changes the absorbance properties of the protein.•Cys-modified FMO complexes retain their native structure.The Fenna–Matthews–Olson (FMO) pigment–protein complex in green sulfur bacteria transfers excitation energy from the chlorosome antenna complex to the reaction center. In understanding energy transfer in the FMO protein, the individual contributions of the bacteriochlorophyll pigments to the FMO complex's absorption spectrum could provide detailed information with which molecular and energetic models can be constructed. The absorption properties of the pigments, however, are such that their spectra overlap significantly. To overcome this, we used site-directed mutagenesis to construct a series of mutant FMO complexes in the model green sulfur bacterium Chlorobaculum tepidum (formerly Chlorobium tepidum). Two cysteines at positions 49 and 353 in the C. tepidum FMO complex, which reside near hydrogen bonds between BChls 2 and 3, and their amino acid binding partner serine 73 and tyrosine 15, respectively, were changed to alanine residues. The resulting C49A, C353A, and C49A C353A double mutants were analyzed with a combination of optical absorption and circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopies. Our results revealed changes in the absorption properties of several underlying spectral components in the FMO complex, as well as the redox behavior of the complex in response to the reductant sodium dithionite. A high-resolution X-ray structure of the C49A C353A double mutant reveals that these spectral changes appear to be independent of any major structural rearrangements in the FMO mutants. Our findings provide important tests for theoretical calculations of the C. tepidum FMO absorption spectrum, and additionally highlight a possible role for cysteine residues in the redox activity of the pigment–protein complex.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (202 K)Download as PowerPoint slide
Co-reporter:Robert E. Blankenship, Erica Wunderlich Majumder, Jeremy D. King
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (October 2012) Volume 1817(Supplement) pp:S29
Publication Date(Web):October 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2012.06.088
Co-reporter:Erica L.W. Majumder, Jeremy D. King, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (November–December 2013) Volume 1827(Issues 11–12) pp:1383-1391
Publication Date(Web):November–December 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2013.01.008
Co-reporter:Jing Jiang, Hao Zhang, Gregory S. Orf, Yue Lu, Wenxin Xu, Lucas B. Harrington, Haijun Liu, Cynthia S. Lo, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (November 2014) Volume 1837(Issue 11) pp:1904-1912
Publication Date(Web):November 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2014.07.023
Co-reporter:Aaron M. Collins, Christine Kirmaier, Dewey Holten, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (March 2011) Volume 1807(Issue 3) pp:262-269
Publication Date(Web):March 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2010.11.011
Co-reporter:Hao Zhang, Haijun Liu, Yue Lu, Nathan R. Wolf, Michael L. Gross, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (June 2016) Volume 1857(Issue 6) pp:734-739
Publication Date(Web):June 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2016.02.015
Co-reporter:Jing Jiang, Hao Zhang, Yisheng Kang, David Bina, Cynthia S. Lo, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (July 2012) Volume 1817(Issue 7) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 July 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2012.03.027
The water-soluble peridinin–chlorophyll a-proteins (PCPs) are one of the major light harvesting complexes in photosynthetic dinoflagellates. PCP contains the carotenoid peridinin as its primary pigment. In this study, we identified and characterized the PCP protein and the PCP gene organization in Symbiodinium sp. CS-156. The protein molecular mass is 32.7 kDa, revealing that the PCP is of the monomeric form. The intronless PCP genes are organized in tandem arrays. The PCP gene cassette is composed of 1095-bp coding regions and spacers in between. Despite the heterogeneity of PCP gene tandem repeats, we identified a single form of PCP, the sequence of which exactly matches the deduced sequence of PCP gene clone 7 (JQ395030) by LC–MS/MS analysis of tryptic digested PCP, revealing the mature PCP apoprotein is 312 amino acids in length. Pigment analysis showed a peridinin-to-Chl a ratio of 4. The peridinin-to-Chl a Qy energy transfer efficiency is 95% in this complex.Highlights► The PCP in the dinoflagellate Symbiodinium was characterized. ► PCP genes were cloned and are organized in intronless tandem arrays. ► The amino acid sequence of PCP was determined by mass spectrometry.
Co-reporter:Jianzhong Wen, Yusuke Tsukatani, Weidong Cui, Hao Zhang, Michael L. Gross, Donald A. Bryant, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (January 2011) Volume 1807(Issue 1) pp:157-164
Publication Date(Web):January 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2010.09.008
Co-reporter:Yueyong Xin, Yih-Kuang Lu, Raimund Fromme, Petra Fromme, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (February 2009) Volume 1787(Issue 2) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 February 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2008.11.010
The integral membrane protein complex, menaquinol:fumarate oxidoreductase (mQFR) has been purified, identified and characterized from the thermophilic green filamentous anoxygenic photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. The complex is composed of three subunits: a 74 kDa flavoprotein that contains a covalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide, a 28 kDa iron-sulfur cluster-containing polypeptide, and a 27 kDa transmembrane polypeptide, which is also the binding site of two b-type hemes and two menaquinones. The purified complex has an apparent molecular mass of 260 kDa by blue-native PAGE, which is indicative of a native homodimeric form. The isolated complex is active in vitro in both fumarate reduction and succinate oxidation. It has been analyzed by visible absorption, redox titration, chemical analysis and EPR spectroscopy. In addition, phylogenetic analysis shows that the QFR of both C. aurantiacus and Chlorobium tepidum are most closely related to those found in the delta-proteobacteria. The purified enzyme was crystallized and X-ray diffraction data obtained up to 3.2 Å resolution.
Co-reporter:Aaron M. Collins, Yueyong Xin, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (August 2009) Volume 1787(Issue 8) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 August 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2009.02.027
The light-harvesting–reaction center (LHRC) complex from the chlorosome-lacking filamentous anoxygenic phototroph (FAP), Roseiflexus castenholzii (R. castenholzii) was purified and characterized for overall pigment organization. The LHRC is a single complex that is comprised of light harvesting (LH) and reaction center (RC) polypeptides as well as an attached c-type cytochrome. The dominant carotenoid found in the LHRC is keto-γ-carotene, which transfers excitation to the long wavelength antenna band with 35% efficiency. Linear dichroism and fluorescence polarization measurements indicate that the long wavelength antenna pigments absorbing around 880 nm are perpendicular to the membrane plane, with the corresponding Qy transition dipoles in the plane of the membrane. The antenna pigments absorbing around 800 nm, as well as the bound carotenoid, are oriented at a large angle with respect to the membrane. The antenna pigments spectroscopically resemble the well-studied LH2 complex from purple bacteria, however the close association with the RC makes the light harvesting component of this complex functionally more like LH1.
Co-reporter:Rafael G. Saer, Valentyn Stadnytskyi, Nikki C. Magdaong, Carrie Goodson, Sergei Savikhin, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (April 2017) Volume 1858(Issue 4) pp:
Publication Date(Web):April 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2017.01.011
•The environment of each pigment in the FMO complex was perturbed by mutagenesis.•Each FMO mutant alters the optical properties of the complex in a specific manner.•Datasets obtained from the mutants were simulated with three different Hamiltonians.•Simulations of the mutant spectra fit the absorption data better than CD data.•Data from FMO mutants can be useful tools for future biophysical simulations.In this paper we report the steady-state optical properties of a series of site-directed mutants in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complex of Chlorobaculum tepidum, a photosynthetic green sulfur bacterium. The FMO antenna complex has historically been used as a model system for energy transfer due to the water-soluble nature of the protein, its stability at room temperature, as well as the availability of high-resolution structural data. Eight FMO mutants were constructed with changes in the environment of each of the bacteriochlorophyll a pigments found within each monomer of the homotrimeric FMO complex. Our results reveal multiple changes in low temperature absorption, as well as room temperature CD in each mutant compared to the wild-type FMO complex. These datasets were subsequently used to model the site energies of each pigment in the FMO complex by employing three different Hamiltonians from the literature. This enabled a basic approximation of the site energy shifts imparted on each pigment by the changed amino acid residue. These simulations suggest that, while the three Hamiltonians used in this work provide good fits to the wild-type FMO absorption spectrum, further efforts are required to obtain good fits to the mutant minus wild-type absorption difference spectra. This demonstrates that the use of FMO mutants can be a valuable tool to refine and iterate the current models of energy transfer in this system.
Co-reporter:Gregory S. Orf, Marcus Tank, Kajetan Vogl, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Donald A. Bryant, Robert E. Blankenship
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics (April 2013) Volume 1827(Issue 4) pp:493-501
Publication Date(Web):April 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.bbabio.2013.01.006
Co-reporter:Xinliu Gao, Yueyong Xin, Robert E. Blankenship
FEBS Letters (6 October 2009) Volume 583(Issue 19) pp:3275-3279
Publication Date(Web):6 October 2009
DOI:10.1016/j.febslet.2009.09.022
The surprising lack of the cytochrome bc1 complex in the filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus suggests that a functional replacement exists to link the cyclic electron transfer chain. Earlier work identified the alternative complex III (ACIII) as a substitute of cytochrome bc1 complex. Herein, the enzymatic activity of ACIII is studied. The results strongly support the view that the ACIII functions as menaquinol:auracyanin oxidoreductase in the C. aurantiacus electron transfer chain. Among all the substrates tested, auracyanin is the most efficient electron acceptor of ACIII, suggesting that ACIII directly transfers the electron to auracyanin instead of cytochrome c-554. The lack of sensitivity to common inhibitors of the cytochrome bc1 complex indicates a different catalytic mechanism for the ACIII complex.
Co-reporter:Martin F. Hohmann-Marriott, Robert E. Blankenship
FEBS Letters (6 March 2007) Volume 581(Issue 5) pp:800-803
Publication Date(Web):6 March 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.febslet.2007.01.078
Chlorosomes are specialized compartments that constitute the main light harvesting system of green sulfur bacteria (GSB) and some filamentous anoxygenic phototrophs (FAP). Chlorosome biogenesis promises to be a complex process requiring the generation of a unilayer membrane and the targeting of bacteriochlorophyll, carotenoids, quinones, and proteins to the chlorosome. The biogenesis of chlorosomes as well as their presence in two distinct bacterial groups, GSB and FAP, remains enigmatic. The photosynthetic machinery and overall metabolic characteristics of these two bacterial groups are very different, and horizontal gene transfer has been proposed to explain chlorosome distribution. Chlorosomes have been considered to be unique structures that require a specific assembly machinery. We propose that no special machinery is required for chlorosome assembly. Instead, it is suggested that chlorosomes are a special form of lipid body. We present a model for chlorosome biogenesis that combines aspects of lipid body biogenesis with established chlorosome characteristics and may help explain the presence of chlorosomes in two metabolically diverse organism groups.
Co-reporter:Kuo-Hsiang Tang, Volker S. Urban, Jianzhong Wen, Yueyong Xin, Robert E. Blankenship
Biophysical Journal (20 October 2010) Volume 99(Issue 8) pp:
Publication Date(Web):20 October 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2010.07.068
Green photosynthetic bacteria harvest light and perform photosynthesis in low-light environments, and contain specialized antenna complexes to adapt to this condition. We performed small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) studies to obtain structural information about the photosynthetic apparatus, including the peripheral light-harvesting chlorosome complex, the integral membrane light-harvesting B808-866 complex, and the reaction center (RC) in the thermophilic green phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Using contrast variation in SANS measurements, we found that the B808-866 complex is wrapped around the RC in Cfx. aurantiacus, and the overall size and conformation of the B808-866 complex of Cfx. aurantiacus is roughly comparable to the LH1 antenna complex of the purple bacteria. A similar size of the isolated B808-866 complex was suggested by dynamic light scattering measurements, and a smaller size of the RC of Cfx. aurantiacus compared to the RC of the purple bacteria was observed. Further, our SANS measurements indicate that the chlorosome is a lipid body with a rod-like shape, and that the self-assembly of bacteriochlorophylls, the major component of the chlorosome, is lipid-like. Finally, two populations of chlorosome particles are suggested in our SANS measurements.
Co-reporter:Jeremy D. King, Haijun Liu, Guannan He, Gregory S. Orf, Robert E. Blankenship
FEBS Letters (20 December 2014) Volume 588(Issue 24) pp:4561-4565
Publication Date(Web):20 December 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.febslet.2014.10.024
•Orange carotenoid protein (OCP) activation is altered by the Hofmeister series.•OCP can be activated by thiocyanate in the dark.•First circular dichroism spectra of OCPR.•Thiocyanate activated OCP quenches phycobilisomes.The effects of the Hofmeister series of ions on the activation of the orange carotenoid protein (OCP) from the inactive orange form to the active red form were tested. Kosmotropes led to lower OCP activation, whereas chaotropes led to greater OCP activation. Concentrations of thiocyanate exceeding 1.5 M dark activate the orange carotenoid protein to its red form. This chemically activated OCP was studied by UV–vis and circular dichroism spectroscopies. The chemically-activated OCP quenches the fluorescence of phycobilisomes in vitro, to a level comparable to that of the light-activated OCP.
Co-reporter:Hao Zhang, Weidong Cui, Michael L. Gross, Robert E. Blankenship
FEBS Letters (17 April 2013) Volume 587(Issue 8) pp:1012-1020
Publication Date(Web):17 April 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.febslet.2013.01.005
Native mass spectrometry (MS), or as is sometimes called “native electrospray ionization” allows proteins in their native or near-native states in solution to be introduced into the gas phase and interrogated by mass spectrometry. This approach is now a powerful tool to investigate protein complexes. This article reviews the background of native MS of protein complexes and describes its strengths, taking photosynthetic pigment–protein complexes as examples. Native MS can be utilized in combination with other MS-based approaches to obtain complementary information to that provided by tools such as X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy to understand the structure–function relationships of protein complexes. When additional information beyond that provided by native MS is required, other MS-based strategies can be successfully applied to augment the results of native MS.
Co-reporter:Xinliu Gao, Erica Wunderlich Majumder, Yisheng Kang, Hai Yue, Robert E. Blankenship
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics (15 July 2013) Volume 535(Issue 2) pp:197-204
Publication Date(Web):15 July 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.abb.2013.04.002
Co-reporter:Hai Yue, Yisheng Kang, Hao Zhang, Xinliu Gao, Robert E. Blankenship
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics (15 January 2012) Volume 517(Issue 2) pp:131-137
Publication Date(Web):15 January 2012
DOI:10.1016/j.abb.2011.11.012
Co-reporter:Jeremy D. King, Lucas Harrington, Bryan M. Lada, Guannan He, Jason W. Cooley, Robert E. Blankenship
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics (15 December 2014) Volume 564() pp:
Publication Date(Web):15 December 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.abb.2014.10.003
•We examined the role of the axial ligand in a perturbed copper center.•Auracyanin D is more sensitive to axial changes than other described copper sites.•Auracyanin D is less sensitive to the hydrogen bonding network of the Cys ligand.•The Q121L mutation can be used to test novel ligands through buffer exchange.•We tuned the copper center from +56 mV to +786 mV.Type-1 copper proteins participate in redox reactions and biological catalysis. Significant variation exists within the electronic structure of type-1 copper sites, producing both blue and green proteins. Classical, “blue” sites have been extensively studied, but “green” sites have been poorly characterized. We recently discovered a green copper protein, called auracyanin D. Here, we report a series of axial ligand mutations in auracyanin D, and characterize the resulting spectral and redox changes. The resulting mutants appear blue, green, and red and vary in redox potential from +56 mV to +786 mV. This is the largest change in redox potential to date for any type-1 center. We found that in this green protein, modifications of the axial ligand produce significantly larger changes than similar mutations in blue type-1 copper sites.
Co-reporter:Jing Jiang, Hao Zhang, Xun Lu, Yue Lu, ... Robert E. Blankenship
FEBS Letters (14 September 2015) Volume 589(Issue 19) pp:2713-2719
Publication Date(Web):14 September 2015
DOI:10.1016/j.febslet.2015.07.039
•The peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein (PCP) from photosynthetic dinoflagellates was analyzed.•Size-exclusion chromatography and small angle neutron scattering analysis indicated PCP exists as monomers.•Native mass spectrometry demonstrated two oligomeric states of PCP, with the monomeric PCP being dominant.•Trimerization may not be necessary for PCP to function as a light-harvesting complex.The peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein (PCP) is one of the major light harvesting complexes (LHCs) in photosynthetic dinoflagellates. We analyzed the oligomeric state of PCP isolated from the dinoflagellate Symbiodinium, which has received increasing attention in recent years because of its role in coral bleaching. Size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and small angle neutron scattering (SANS) analysis indicated PCP exists as monomers. Native mass spectrometry (native MS) demonstrated two oligomeric states of PCP, with the monomeric PCP being dominant. The trimerization may not be necessary for PCP to function as a light-harvesting complex.