A Soluble Carotenoid Protein Involved in Phycobilisome-Related Energy Dissipation in Cyanobacteria
Autor: | Adjélé Wilson, Diana Kirilovsky, Jean-Marc Verbavatz, Imre Vass, Cheryl A. Kerfeld, Ghada Ajlani |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Photosynthetic reaction centre
Light Photosystem II Recombinant Fusion Proteins Molecular Sequence Data Restriction Mapping macromolecular substances Plant Science Biology Cyanobacteria Polymerase Chain Reaction Bacterial Proteins Botany Phycobilisomes polycyclic compounds Research Articles DNA Primers Photosystem Base Sequence Orange carotenoid protein Synechocystis food and beverages Cell Biology biology.organism_classification Chloroplast Kinetics Mutagenesis Thylakoid Biophysics Phycobilisome Carrier Proteins Energy Metabolism |
Zdroj: | The Plant Cell. 18:992-1007 |
ISSN: | 1532-298X 1040-4651 |
DOI: | 10.1105/tpc.105.040121 |
Popis: | Photosynthetic organisms have developed multiple protective mechanisms to survive under high-light conditions. In plants, one of these mechanisms is the thermal dissipation of excitation energy in the membrane-bound chlorophyll antenna of photosystem II. The question of whether or not cyanobacteria, the progenitor of the chloroplast, have an equivalent photoprotective mechanism has long been unanswered. Recently, however, evidence was presented for the possible existence of a mechanism dissipating excess absorbed energy in the phycobilisome, the extramembrane antenna of cyanobacteria. Here, we demonstrate that this photoprotective mechanism, characterized by blue light-induced fluorescence quenching, is indeed phycobilisome-related and that a soluble carotenoid binding protein, ORANGE CAROTENOID PROTEIN (OCP), encoded by the slr1963 gene in Synechocystis PCC 6803, plays an essential role in this process. Blue light is unable to quench fluorescence in the absence of phycobilisomes or OCP. The fluorescence quenching is not DeltapH-dependent, and it can be induced in the absence of the reaction center II or the chlorophyll antenna, CP43 and CP47. Our data suggest that OCP, which strongly interacts with the thylakoids, acts as both the photoreceptor and the mediator of the reduction of the amount of energy transferred from the phycobilisomes to the photosystems. These are novel roles for a soluble carotenoid protein. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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