4.4 Article

The structural basis of far-red light absorbance by allophycocyanins

Journal

PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESEARCH
Volume 147, Issue 1, Pages 11-26

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11120-020-00787-y

Keywords

Photosynthesis; Phycobiliproteins; Phycobilisomes; Far-red light photoacclimation; Low-light photoacclimation; Site-directed mutagenesis; Phycocyanobilin

Categories

Funding

  1. U. S. National Science Foundation [MCB-1613022]
  2. Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC), an Energy Frontier Research Center - DOE, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC 0001035]
  3. NIH [P410GM103311]

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Phycobilisomes (PBS) are the major light-harvesting antenna in cyanobacteria, composed of colorless linkers and pigment-binding phycobiliproteins, capable of absorbing orange-red and far-red light. Paralogous forms of AP have been identified recently, which can absorb far-red light and are used in two types of photoacclimation. Through site-specific mutagenesis, it was discovered that the protein environment surrounding the PCB on the AP alpha subunit is responsible for the far-red light absorbance of FRL-APs.
Phycobilisomes (PBS), the major light-harvesting antenna in cyanobacteria, are supramolecular complexes of colorless linkers and heterodimeric, pigment-binding phycobiliproteins. Phycocyanin and phycoerythrin commonly comprise peripheral rods, and a multi-cylindrical core is principally assembled from allophycocyanin (AP). Each AP subunit binds one phycocyanobilin (PCB) chromophore, a linear tetrapyrrole that predominantly absorbs in the orange-red region of the visible spectrum (600-700 nm). AP facilitates excitation energy transfer from PBS peripheral rods or from directly absorbed red light to accessory chlorophylls in the photosystems. Paralogous forms of AP that bind PCB and are capable of absorbing far-red light (FRL; 700-800 nm) have recently been identified in organisms performing two types of photoacclimation: FRL photoacclimation (FaRLiP) and low-light photoacclimation (LoLiP). The FRL-absorbing AP (FRL-AP) from the thermophilic LoLiP strainSynechococcussp. A1463 was chosen as a platform for site-specific mutagenesis to probe the structural differences between APs that absorb in the visible region and FRL-APs and to identify residues essential for the FRL absorbance phenotype. Conversely, red light-absorbing allophycocyanin-B (AP-B; similar to 670 nm) from the same organism was used as a platform for creating a FRL-AP. We demonstrate that the protein environment immediately surrounding pyrrole ring A of PCB on the alpha subunit is mostly responsible for the FRL absorbance of FRL-APs. We also show that interactions between PCBs bound to alpha and beta subunits of adjacent protomers in trimeric AP complexes are responsible for a large bathochromic shift of about similar to 20 nm and notable sharpening of the long-wavelength absorbance band.

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