Publications by authors named "Liina Kangur"

The resilience of biological systems to fluctuating environmental conditions is a crucial evolutionary advantage. In this study, we examine the thermo- and piezo-stability of the LH1-RC pigment-protein complex, the simplest photosynthetic unit, in three species of phototropic purple bacteria, each containing only this core complex. Among these species, Blastochloris viridis and Blastochloris tepida utilize bacteriochlorophyll b as the main light-harvesting pigment, while Rhodospirillum rubrum relies on bacteriochlorophyll a.

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Much of the thermodynamic parameter values that support life are set by the properties of proteins. While the denaturing effects of pressure and temperature on proteins are well documented, their precise structural nature is rarely revealed. This work investigates the destabilization of multiple Ca binding sites in the cyclic LH1 light-harvesting membrane chromoprotein complexes from two Ca-containing sulfur purple bacteria by hydrostatic high-pressure perturbation spectroscopy.

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The denaturation of globular proteins by high pressure is frequently associated with the release of internal voids and/or the exposure of the hydrophobic protein interior to a polar aqueous solvent. Similar evidence with respect to membrane proteins is not available. Here, we investigate the impact of hydrostatic pressures reaching 12 kbar on light-harvesting 2 integral membrane complexes of purple photosynthetic bacteria using two types of innate chromophores in separate strategic locations: bacteriochlorophyll-a in the hydrophobic interior and tryptophan at both protein-solvent interfacial gateways to internal voids.

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Flexible color adaptation to available ecological niches is vital for the photosynthetic organisms to thrive. Hence, most purple bacteria living in the shade of green plants and algae apply bacteriochlorophyll pigments to harvest near infra-red light around 850-875 nm. Exceptions are some Ca-containing species fit to utilize much redder quanta.

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An increased robustness against high temperature and the much red-shifted near-infrared absorption spectrum of excitons in the LH1-RC core pigment-protein complex from the thermophilic photosynthetic purple sulfur bacterium Thermochromatium tepidum has recently attracted much interest. In the present work, thermal and hydrostatic pressure stability of the peripheral LH2 and core LH1-RC complexes from this bacterium were in parallel investigated by various optical spectroscopy techniques applied over a wide spectral range from far-ultraviolet to near-infrared. In contrast to expectations, very distinct robustness of the complexes was established, while the sturdiness of LH2 surpassed that of LH1-RC both with respect to temperatures between 288 and 360 K, and pressures between 1 bar and 14 kbar.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The experiments revealed that the lipid environment surrounding membrane proteins significantly stabilizes the reaction center, as evidenced by differing pressure thresholds for breaking hydrogen bonds compared to purified forms of the protein.
  • * Findings also indicated that the emission decay patterns of excited states changed under pressure, suggesting a dependence on the lipid environment and potential distortion of natural photochemistry when certain chemicals are added to the protein solution.
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  • The study investigates how ultrafast fluorescence barospectroscopy reveals the mechanisms behind primary charge separation in a specific bacterial reaction center mutant under varying hydrostatic pressure conditions.
  • It finds that increasing pressure (up to 10 kbar) enhances the rate of primary charge separation while decreasing the rate of electron transfer to secondary acceptors, indicating a complex relationship between pressure and charge dynamics.
  • The results suggest a revised model of charge separation that includes charge recombination and highlights that the increased rate of electron transfer is due to changes in electronic coupling energy rather than activation energy.
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We used elastic incoherent neutron scattering (EINS) to find out if structural changes accompanying local hydrogen bond rupture are also reflected in global dynamical response of the protein complex. Chromatophore membranes from LH2-only strains of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, with spheroidenone or neurosporene as the major carotenoids, were subjected to high hydrostatic pressure at ambient temperature. Optical spectroscopy conducted at high pressure confirmed rupture of tertiary structure hydrogen bonds.

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Human butyrylcholinesterase is a nonspecific enzyme of clinical, pharmacological and toxicological significance. Although the enzyme is relatively stable, its activity is affected by numerous factors, including pressure. In this work, hydrostatic pressure dependence of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence in native and salted human butyrylcholinesterase was studied up to the maximum pressure at ambient temperature of about 1200 MPa.

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Using the native bacteriochlorophyll a pigment cofactors as local probes, we investigated the response to external hydrostatic high pressure of reaction center membrane protein complexes from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Wild-type and engineered complexes were used with a varied number (0, 1 or 2) of hydrogen bonds that bind the reaction center primary donor bacteriochlorophyll cofactors to the surrounding protein scaffold. A pressure-induced breakage of hydrogen bonds was established for both detergent-purified and membrane-embedded reaction centers, but at rather different pressures: between 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research focuses on the LH1 integral membrane complex from Rhodobacter sphaeroides to explore how hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) stabilize membrane proteins.
  • The study involved applying hydrostatic pressure to observe changes in bacteriochlorophyll chromophores within the LH1 complexes, revealing that membrane-bound complexes resist high pressure better than detergent-solubilized ones.
  • Results indicated that specific H-bonds play a critical role in stability, and the presence of a reaction center enhances the resilience of the LH1 complex, offering insights into the structural design of photosynthetic systems.
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The bacteriochlorophyll a-containing LH2 and LH3 antenna complexes are the integral membrane proteins that catalyze the photosynthetic process in purple photosynthetic bacteria. The LH2 complex from Rhodobacter sphaeroides shows characteristic strong absorbance at 800 and 850 nm due to the pigment molecules confined in two separate areas of the protein. In the LH3 complex from Rhodopesudomonas acidophila the corresponding bands peak at 800 and 820 nm.

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Mammalian metallothioneins (MTs) are involved in cellular metabolism of zinc and copper and in cytoprotection against toxic metals and reactive oxygen species. MT-3 plays a specific role in the brain and is down-regulated in Alzheimer's disease. To evaluate differences in metal binding, we conducted direct metal competition experiments with MT-3 and MT-2 using electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy (ESI-MS).

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Article Synopsis
  • Cox17 is a vital and conserved protein that acts as a copper chaperone for cytochrome c oxidase, but its structure and metal-binding capabilities are not fully understood.* -
  • Research shows that porcine Cox17 can bind four Cu+ ions cooperatively and forms a stable Cu4S6-type cluster, with significant binding specificity for copper over other metals like silver.* -
  • The binding process involves a conformational change in Cox17, which can exist in various oxidation states; it can release metals through both oxidative and non-oxidative mechanisms, emphasizing its role in transferring multiple copper ions to other proteins.*
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