Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1942459 Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus accumulates divinyl chlorophylls instead of monovinyl chlorophylls to harvest light energy. As well as this difference in its chromophore composition, some amino acid residues in its photosystem II D1 protein were different from the conserved amino acid residues in other photosynthetic organisms. We examined PSII complexes isolated from mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, in which chromophore and D1 protein were altered (Hisashi Ito and Ayumi Tanaka, 2011) to clarify the effects of chromophores/D1 protein composition on the excitation energy distribution. We prepared the mutants accumulating divinyl chlorophyll (DV mutant). The amino acid residues of V205 and G282 in the D1 protein were substituted with M205 and C282 in the DV mutant to mimic Prochlorococcus D1 protein (DV-V205M/G282C mutant). Isolated PSII complexes were analyzed by time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Energy transfer in CP47 was interrupted in PSII containing divinyl chlorophylls. The V205M/G282C mutation did not recover the energy transfer pathway in CP47, instead, the mutation allowed the excitation energy transfer from CP43 to CP47, which neighbors in the PSII dimer. Mutual orientation of the subcomplexes of PSII might be affected by the substitution. The changes of the energy transfer pathways would reduce energy transfer from antennae to the PSII reaction center, and allow Prochlorococcus to acquire light tolerance.

► We analyzed energy transfer in PSII containing 3,8-divinyl chlorophyll a (DV-Chl). ► Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopies were used. ► Energy transfer was interrupted in CP47 containing DV-Chl. ► Unique amino acids residues in Prochlorococcus interfered energy transfer from CP43 to D1. ► The unique residues accelerated energy transfer from CP43 to CP47 in the PSII dimer.

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