AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyanobacteria utilize large antenna complexes called phycobilisomes for light harvesting, with diverse phycobiliproteins enhancing their photosynthetic efficiency.
  • The biosynthesis of the blue-green-absorbing phycourobilin, a crucial adaptation for cyanobacteria in deep ocean waters, was previously uncharacterized until the discovery of the enzyme RpcG, which catalyzes its formation.
  • The unique trichromatic phycocyanin, R-PC V, absorbs light across a wide range of wavelengths and likely optimizes energy transfer in phycobilisomes, supporting cyanobacteria's adaptation to their aquatic environment.

Article Abstract

Most cyanobacteria harvest light with large antenna complexes called phycobilisomes. The diversity of their constituting phycobiliproteins contributes to optimize the photosynthetic capacity of these microorganisms. Phycobiliprotein biosynthesis, which involves several post-translational modifications including covalent attachment of the linear tetrapyrrole chromophores (phycobilins) to apoproteins, begins to be well understood. However, the biosynthetic pathway to the blue-green-absorbing phycourobilin (lambda(max) approximately 495 nm) remained unknown, although it is the major phycobilin of cyanobacteria living in oceanic areas where blue light penetrates deeply into the water column. We describe a unique trichromatic phycocyanin, R-PC V, extracted from phycobilisomes of Synechococcus sp. strain WH8102. It is evolutionarily remarkable as the only chromoprotein known so far that absorbs the whole wavelength range between 450 and 650 nm. R-PC V carries a phycourobilin chromophore on its alpha-subunit, and this can be considered an extreme case of adaptation to blue-green light. We also discovered the enzyme, RpcG, responsible for its biosynthesis. This monomeric enzyme catalyzes binding of the green-absorbing phycoerythrobilin at cysteine 84 with concomitant isomerization to phycourobilin. This reaction is analogous to formation of the orange-absorbing phycoviolobilin from the red-absorbing phycocyanobilin that is catalyzed by the lyase-isomerase PecE/F in some freshwater cyanobacteria. The fusion protein, RpcG, and the heterodimeric PecE/F are mutually interchangeable in a heterologous expression system in Escherichia coli. The novel R-PC V likely optimizes rod-core energy transfer in phycobilisomes and thereby adaptation of a major phytoplankton group to the blue-green light prevailing in oceanic waters.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2666581PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M809784200DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Cyanobacteria utilize large antenna complexes called phycobilisomes for light harvesting, with diverse phycobiliproteins enhancing their photosynthetic efficiency.
  • The biosynthesis of the blue-green-absorbing phycourobilin, a crucial adaptation for cyanobacteria in deep ocean waters, was previously uncharacterized until the discovery of the enzyme RpcG, which catalyzes its formation.
  • The unique trichromatic phycocyanin, R-PC V, absorbs light across a wide range of wavelengths and likely optimizes energy transfer in phycobilisomes, supporting cyanobacteria's adaptation to their aquatic environment.
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