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Mutation analysis of Lhca1 antenna complex. Low energy absorption forms originate from pigment-pigment interactions

Authors :
Morosinotto, Tomas
Castelletti, Simona
Breton, Jacques
Bassi, Roberto
Croce, Roberta
Biophysics Photosynthesis/Energy
LaserLaB - Energy
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(39), 36253-36261. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc., Morosinotto, T, Castelletti, S, Breton, J, Bassi, R & Croce, R 2002, ' Mutation analysis of Lhca1 antenna complex : Low energy absorption forms originate from pigment-pigment interactions ', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 277, no. 39, pp. 36253-36261 . https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M205062200
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

The light harvesting complex Lhca1, one of the four gene products comprising the photosystem I antenna system, has been analyzed by site-directed mutagenesis with the aim of determining the chromophore(s) responsible for its long wavelength chlorophyll spectral form, a specific characteristic of the LHCI antenna complex. A family of mutant proteins, each carrying a mutation at a single chlorophyll-binding residue, was obtained and characterized by biochemical and spectroscopic methods. A map of the chromophores bound to each of the 10 chlorophyll-binding sites was drawn, and the energy levels of the Qy transition were determined in most cases. When compared with Lhcb proteins previously analyzed, Lhca1 is characterized by stronger interactions between individual chromophores as detected by both biochemical and spectroscopic methods; most mutations, although targeted to a single residue, lead to the loss of more than one chromophore and of conservative CD signals typical of chlorophyll-chlorophyll interactions. The lower energy absorption form (686 nm at 100K, 688 nm at room temperature), which is responsible for the red-shifted emission components at 690 and 701 nm, typical of Lhca1, is associated with a chlorophyll a/chlorophyll a excitonic interaction originating from a pigment cluster localized in the protein domain situated between helix C and the helix A/helix B cross. This cluster includes chlorophylls bound to sites A5-B5-B6 and a xanthophyll hound to site L2.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
277
Issue :
39
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....e80c36db05f5be36c85a3b8783765fd7