chlorophyll-a and phycocyanobilin

chlorophyll-a has been researched along with phycocyanobilin* in 8 studies

Other Studies

8 other study(ies) available for chlorophyll-a and phycocyanobilin

ArticleYear
Identification of significant residues for intermediate accumulation in phycocyanobilin synthesis.
    Photochemical & photobiological sciences : Official journal of the European Photochemistry Association and the European Society for Photobiology, 2022, Volume: 21, Issue:4

    Phycocyanobilin, the primary pigment of both light perception and light-harvesting in cyanobacteria, is synthesized from biliverdin IXα (BV) through intermediate 18

    Topics: Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll A; Isoleucine; Oxidoreductases; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin

2022
A biliverdin-binding cyanobacteriochrome from the chlorophyll d-bearing cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina.
    Scientific reports, 2015, Jan-22, Volume: 5

    Cyanobacteriochromes (CBCRs) are linear tetrapyrrole-binding photoreceptors in cyanobacteria that absorb visible and near-ultraviolet light. CBCRs are divided into two types based on the type of chromophore they contain: phycocyanobilin (PCB) or phycoviolobilin (PVB). PCB-binding CBCRs reversibly photoconvert at relatively long wavelengths, i.e., the blue-to-red region, whereas PVB-binding CBCRs reversibly photoconvert at shorter wavelengths, i.e., the near-ultraviolet to green region. Notably, prior to this report, CBCRs containing biliverdin (BV), which absorbs at longer wavelengths than do PCB and PVB, have not been found. Herein, we report that the typical red/green CBCR AM1_1557 from the chlorophyll d-bearing cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina can bind BV almost comparable to PCB. This BV-bound holoprotein reversibly photoconverts between a far red light-absorbing form (Pfr, λmax = 697 nm) and an orange light-absorbing form (Po, λmax = 622 nm). At room temperature, Pfr fluoresces with a maximum at 730 nm. These spectral features are red-shifted by 48~77 nm compared with those of the PCB-bound domain. Because the absorbance of chlorophyll d is red-shifted compared with that of chlorophyll a, the BV-bound AM1_1557 may be a physiologically relevant feature of A. marina and is potentially useful as an optogenetic switch and/or fluorescence imager.

    Topics: Biliverdine; Chlorophyll; Cyanobacteria; Light; Photoreceptors, Microbial; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Protein Binding

2015
Retrograde bilin signaling enables Chlamydomonas greening and phototrophic survival.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2013, Feb-26, Volume: 110, Issue:9

    The maintenance of functional chloroplasts in photosynthetic eukaryotes requires real-time coordination of the nuclear and plastid genomes. Tetrapyrroles play a significant role in plastid-to-nucleus retrograde signaling in plants to ensure that nuclear gene expression is attuned to the needs of the chloroplast. Well-known sites of synthesis of chlorophyll for photosynthesis, plant chloroplasts also export heme and heme-derived linear tetrapyrroles (bilins), two critical metabolites respectively required for essential cellular activities and for light sensing by phytochromes. Here we establish that Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, one of many chlorophyte species that lack phytochromes, can synthesize bilins in both plastid and cytosol compartments. Genetic analyses show that both pathways contribute to iron acquisition from extracellular heme, whereas the plastid-localized pathway is essential for light-dependent greening and phototrophic growth. Our discovery of a bilin-dependent nuclear gene network implicates a widespread use of bilins as retrograde signals in oxygenic photosynthetic species. Our studies also suggest that bilins trigger critical metabolic pathways to detoxify molecular oxygen produced by photosynthesis, thereby permitting survival and phototrophic growth during the light period.

    Topics: Bile Pigments; Biliverdine; Biocatalysis; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; Chlorophyll; Chloroplasts; Gene Expression Profiling; Gene Expression Regulation, Plant; Gene Regulatory Networks; Genes, Plant; Heme; Heme Oxygenase (Decyclizing); Iron; Light; Mutation; Oxidoreductases; Phenotype; Phototrophic Processes; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Pigmentation; Plants, Genetically Modified; Signal Transduction; Subcellular Fractions

2013
Assembly of synthetic locked phycocyanobilin derivatives with phytochrome in vitro and in vivo in Ceratodon purpureus and Arabidopsis.
    The Plant cell, 2012, Volume: 24, Issue:5

    Phytochromes are photoreceptors with a bilin chromophore in which light triggers the conversion between the red light-absorbing form, Pr, and the far-red-light-absorbing form, Pfr. Here we performed in vitro and in vivo studies using locked phycocyanobilin derivatives, termed 15 Z anti phycocyanobilin (15ZaPCB) and 15 E anti PCB (15EaPCB). Recombinant bacterial and plant phytochromes incorporated either chromophore in a noncovalent or covalent manner. All adducts were photoinactive. The absorption spectra of the 15ZaPCB and 15EaPCB adducts were comparable with those of the Pr and Pfr form, respectively. Feeding of 15EaPCB, but not 15ZaPCB, to protonemal filaments of the moss Ceratodon purpureus resulted in increased chlorophyll accumulation, modulation of gravitropism, and induction of side branches in darkness. The effect of locked chromophores on phytochrome responses, such as induction of seed germination, inhibition of hypocotyl elongation, induction of cotyledon opening, randomization of gravitropism, and gene regulation, were investigated in wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana and the phytochrome-chromophore-deficient long hypocotyl mutant hy1. All phytochrome responses were induced in darkness by 15EaPCB, not only in the mutant but also in the wild type. These studies show that the 15Ea stereochemistry of the chromophore results in the formation of active Pfr-like phytochrome in the cell. Locked chromophores might be used to investigate phytochrome responses in many other organisms without the need to isolate mutants. The induction of phytochrome responses in the hy1 mutant by 15EaPCB were however less efficient than by red light irradiation given to biliverdin-rescued seeds or seedlings.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Bryopsida; Chlorophyll; Molecular Sequence Data; Molecular Structure; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Phytochrome

2012
Differing involvement of sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol in photosystem II in two species of unicellular cyanobacteria.
    European journal of biochemistry, 2004, Volume: 271, Issue:4

    Sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerol (SQDG) is involved in the maintenance of photosystem II (PSII) activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii[Minoda, A., Sato, N., Nozaki, H., Okada, K., Takahashi, H., Sonoike, K. & Tsuzuki, M. et al. (2002) Eur. J. Biochem.269, 2353-2358]. To understand the spread of the taxa in which PSII interacts with SQDG, especially in cyanobacteria, we produced a mutant defective in the putative sqdB gene responsible for SQDG synthesis from two cyanobacteria, Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC7942. The mutant of PCC6803, designated SD1, lacked SQDG synthetic ability and required SQDG supplementation for its growth. After transfer from SQDG-supplemented to SQDG-free conditions, SD1 showed decreased net photosynthetic and PSII activities on a chlorophyll (Chl) basis with a decrease in the SQDG content. Moreover, the sensitivity of PSII activity to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and atrazine was increased in SD1. However, SD1 maintained normal amounts of cytochrome b559 and D1 protein (the subunits comprising the PSII complex) on a Chl basis, indicating that the PSII complex content changed little, irrespective of a decrease in the SQDG content. These results suggest that the role of SQDG is the conservation of the PSII properties in PCC6803, consistent with the results obtained with C. reinhardtii. In contrast, the SQDG-null mutant of PCC7942 showed the normal level of PSII activity with little effect on its sensitivity to PSII herbicides. Therefore, the difference in the SQDG requirement for PSII is species-specific in cyanobacteria; this could be of use when investigating the molecular evolution of the PSII complex.

    Topics: Atrazine; Chlorophyll; Chlorophyll A; Culture Media; Cyanobacteria; Cytochrome b Group; Diuron; Genes, Bacterial; Glycolipids; Herbicides; Lipids; Membrane Lipids; Mutagenesis, Insertional; Photosynthesis; Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins; Photosystem II Protein Complex; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Pyrroles; Species Specificity; Tetrapyrroles; Thylakoids

2004
Regulation of the distribution of chlorophyll and phycobilin-absorbed excitation energy in cyanobacteria. A structure-based model for the light state transition.
    Plant physiology, 2002, Volume: 130, Issue:3

    The light state transition regulates the distribution of absorbed excitation energy between the two photosystems (PSs) of photosynthesis under varying environmental conditions and/or metabolic demands. In cyanobacteria, there is evidence for the redistribution of energy absorbed by both chlorophyll (Chl) and by phycobilin pigments, and proposed mechanisms differ in the relative involvement of the two pigment types. We assayed changes in the distribution of excitation energy with 77K fluorescence emission spectroscopy determined for excitation of Chl and phycobilin pigments, in both wild-type and state transition-impaired mutant strains of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Action spectra for the redistribution of both Chl and phycobilin pigments were very similar in both wild-type cyanobacteria. Both state transition-impaired mutants showed no redistribution of phycobilin-absorbed excitation energy, but retained changes in Chl-absorbed excitation. Action spectra for the Chl-absorbed changes in excitation in the two mutants were similar to each other and to those observed in the two wild types. Our data show that the redistribution of excitation energy absorbed by Chl is independent of the redistribution of excitation energy absorbed by phycobilin pigments and that both changes are triggered by the same environmental light conditions. We present a model for the state transition in cyanobacteria based on the x-ray structures of PSII, PSI, and allophycocyanin consistent with these results.

    Topics: Chlorophyll; Cyanobacteria; Light; Models, Biological; Mutation; Photosynthesis; Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Pyrroles; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Tetrapyrroles

2002
Chlorophyll b and phycobilins in the common ancestor of cyanobacteria and chloroplasts.
    Nature, 1999, Jul-08, Volume: 400, Issue:6740

    Photosynthetic organisms have a variety of accessory pigments, on which their classification has been based. Despite this variation, it is generally accepted that all chloroplasts are derived from a single cyanobacterial ancestor. How the pigment diversity has arisen is the key to revealing their evolutionary history. Prochlorophytes are prokaryotes which perform oxygenic photosynthesis using chlorophyll b, like land plants and green algae (Chlorophyta), and were proposed to be the ancestors of chlorophyte chloroplasts. However, three known prochlorophytes (Prochloron didemni, Prochlorothrix hollandica and Prochlorococcus marinus) have been shown to be not the specific ancestors of chloroplasts, but only diverged members of the cyanobacteria, which contain phycobilins but lack chlorophyll b. Consequently it has been proposed that the ability to synthesize chlorophyll b developed independently several times in prochlorophytes and in the ancestor of chlorophytes. Here we have isolated the chlorophyll b synthesis genes (chlorophyll a oxygenase) from two prochlorophytes and from major groups of chlorophytes. Phylogenetic analyses show that these genes share a common evolutionary origin. This indicates that the progenitors of oxygenic photosynthetic bacteria, including the ancestor of chloroplasts, had both chlorophyll b and phycobilins.

    Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Animals; Arabidopsis; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; Chlorophyll; Chloroplasts; Cyanobacteria; Eukaryota; Evolution, Molecular; Molecular Sequence Data; Oxygenases; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Phylogeny; Prochloron; Prochlorothrix; Pyrroles; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Tetrapyrroles

1999
The effect of N-methylprotoporphyrin IX on the synthesis of photosynthetic pigments in Cyanidium caldarium. Further evidence for the role of haem in the biosynthesis of plant billins.
    The Biochemical journal, 1982, Nov-15, Volume: 208, Issue:2

    N-Methylprotoporphyrin IX strongly inhibits synthesis of phycocyanobilin, but not chlorophyll a, in the dark. In the light, both phycocyanin and chlorophyll a synthesis are inhibited in parallel. These results are consistent with the intermediacy of haem in algal bilin synthesis and suggest a control mechanism for chlorophyll a synthesis, previously unknown.

    Topics: Aminolevulinic Acid; Chlorophyll; Darkness; Light; Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes; Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins; Phycobilins; Phycocyanin; Pigments, Biological; Plant Proteins; Porphyrins; Protoporphyrins; Pyrroles; Rhodophyta; Tetrapyrroles

1982