A structural investigation of the central chlorophyll a-binding sites in the minor Photosystem II antenna protein, Lhcb4
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Mutant proteins from light-harvesting complexes of higher plants may be
obtained by expressing modified apoproteins in Escherichia coli, and
reconstituting them in the presence of chlorophyll and carotenoid
cofactors. This method has allowed, in particular, the engineering of
mutant LHCs in which each of the residues coordinating the central Mg
atoms of the chlorophylls was replaced by noncoordinating amino acids
[Bassi, R., Croce, R., Cugini, D., and SandonĂ , D. (1999) Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 10056-10061]. The availability of these mutants is
of particular importance for determining the precise position of
absorption bands for the different chlorophyll molecules, as well as the
sequence of energy transfer events that occur within LHC complexes,
provided that the structural impact of each mutation is precisely
evaluated. Using resonance Raman spectroscopy, we have characterized the
pigment-protein interactions in the minor photosystem II antenna protein,
Lhcb4 (CP29), in which each of three of the four central chlorophyll a
molecules has been removed by such mutations. By comparing the spectra of
these mutants with those of the wild-type protein, the state of
interaction of the carbonyl group, the coordination state of the central
magnesium ion, and the dielectric constant (polarity) of the immediate
environment in the binding pocket of the chlorophyll a molecule were
defined for each cofactor binding site. In addition, the structural impact
of the absence of one chlorophyll a molecule and the quality of protein
folding were evaluated for each of these mutated polypeptides.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
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