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Genes for the type-I reaction center and galactolipid synthesis are required for chlorophyll a accumulation in a purple photosynthetic bacterium. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Anoxygenic photosynthesis includes two types: type-I and type-II reaction centers, with type-I using both bacteriochlorophyll and chlorophyll, while type-II relies solely on bacteriochlorophyll.
  • Researchers aimed to modify the type-II bacterium Rhodovulum sulfidophilum to produce chlorophyll a by introducing the enzyme chlorophyll synthase, but no accumulation was observed due to a lack of necessary proteins.
  • By also incorporating genes for the type-I reaction center and components needed for its assembly, the team successfully yielded detectable amounts of chlorophyll a, indicating that type-I systems help in chlorophyll a accumulation and may require specific lipids for function.

Article Abstract

Anoxygenic photosynthesis is diversified into two classes: chlorophototrophy based on a bacterial type-I or type-II reaction center (RC). Whereas the type-I RC contains both bacteriochlorophyll and chlorophyll, type-II RC-based phototrophy relies only on bacteriochlorophyll. However, type-II phototrophic bacteria theoretically have the potential to produce chlorophyll a by the addition of an enzyme, chlorophyll synthase, because the direct precursor for the enzyme, chlorophyllide a, is produced as an intermediate of BChl a biosynthesis. In this study, we attempted to modify the type-II proteobacterial phototroph Rhodovulum sulfidophilum to produce chlorophyll a by introducing chlorophyll synthase, which catalyzes the esterification of a diterpenoid group to chlorophyllide a thereby producing chlorophyll a. However, the resulting strain did not accumulate chlorophyll a, perhaps due to absence of endogenous chlorophyll a-binding proteins. We further heterologously incorporated genes encoding the type-I RC complex to provide a target for chlorophyll a. Heterologous expression of type-I RC subunits, chlorophyll synthase, and galactolipid synthase successfully afforded detectable accumulation of chlorophyll a in Rdv. sulfidophilum. This suggests that the type-I RC can work to accumulate chlorophyll a and that galactolipids are likely necessary for the type-I RC assembly. The evolutionary acquisition of type-I RCs could be related to prior or concomitant acquisition of galactolipids and chlorophylls.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcae076DOI Listing

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