4.7 Article

Developing a structure-function model for the cryptophyte phycoerythrin 545 using ultrahigh resolution crystallography and ultrafast laser spectroscopy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 344, Issue 1, Pages 135-153

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2004.09.044

Keywords

photosynthesis; cryptophyte; ultrahigh resolution X-ray crystallography; phycoerythrin; energy transfer

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Cryptophyte algae differ from cyanobacteria and red algae in the architecture of their photosynthetic light harvesting systems, even though all three are evolutionarily related. Central to cryptophyte light harvesting is the soluble antenna protein phycoerythrin 545 (PE545). The ultrahigh resolution crystal structure of PE545, isolated from a unicellular cryptophyte Rhodomonas CS24, is reported at both 1.1Angstrom and 0.97Angstrom resolution, revealing details of the conformation and environments of the chromophores. Absorption, emission and polarized steady state spectroscopy (298 K, 77 K), as well as ultrafast (20 fs time resolution) measurements of population dynamics are reported. Coupled with complementary quantum chemical calculations of electronic transitions of the bilins, these enable assignment of spectral absorption characteristics to each chromophore in the structure. Spectral differences between the tetrapyrrole pigments due to chemical differences between bilins, as well as their binding and interaction with the local protein environment are described. Based on these assignments, and considering customized optical properties such as strong coupling, a model for light harvesting by PE545 is developed which explains the fast, directional harvesting of excitation energy. The excitation energy is funnelled from four peripheral pigments ( beta158,beta82) into a central chromophore dimer (beta50/beta61) in similar to1 ps. Those chromophores, in turn, transfer the excitation energy to the red absorbing molecules located at the periphery of the complex in similar to4 ps. A final resonance energy transfer step sensitizes just one of the alpha19 bilins on a time scale of 22 ps. Furthermore, it is concluded that binding of PE545 to the thylakoid membrane is not essential for efficient energy transfer to the integral membrane chlorophyll alpha-containing complexes associated with PS-II. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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