Počet záznamů: 1  

Pigment structure in the violaxanthin-chlorophyll-a-binding protein VCP

  1. 1.
    0479490 - BC 2018 RIV NL eng J - Článek v odborném periodiku
    Llansola-Portoles, M.J. - Litvín, Radek - Ilioaia, C. - Pascal, A.A. - Bína, David - Robert, B.
    Pigment structure in the violaxanthin-chlorophyll-a-binding protein VCP.
    Photosynthesis Research. Roč. 134, č. 1 (2017), s. 51-58. ISSN 0166-8595. E-ISSN 1573-5079
    Grant CEP: GA ČR(CZ) GP14-01377P
    Institucionální podpora: RVO:60077344
    Klíčová slova: resonance raman-spectroscopy * light-harvesting complex * cis-trans isomers * beta-carotene
    Obor OECD: Biophysics
    Impakt faktor: 3.091, rok: 2017

    Resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to evaluate pigment-binding site properties in the violaxanthin-chlorophyll-a-binding protein (VCP) from Nannochloropsis oceanica. The pigments bound to this antenna protein are chlorophyll-a, violaxanthin, and vaucheriaxanthin. The molecular structures of bound Chl-a molecules are discussed with respect to those of the plant antenna proteins LHCII and CP29, the crystal structures of which are known. We show that three populations of carotenoid molecules are bound by VCP, each of which is in an all-trans configuration. We assign the lower-energy absorption transition of each of these as follows. One violaxanthin population absorbs at 485 nm, while the second population is red-shifted and absorbs at 503 nm. The vaucheriaxanthin population absorbs at 525 nm, a position red-shifted by 2138 cm(-1) as compared to isolated vaucheriaxanthin in n-hexane. The red-shifted violaxanthin is slightly less planar than the blue-absorbing one, as observed for the two central luteins in LHCII, and we suggest that these violaxanthins occupy the two equivalent binding sites in VCP at the centre of the cross-brace. The presence of a highly red-shifted vaucheriaxanthin in VCP is reminiscent of the situation of FCP, in which (even more) highly red-shifted populations of fucoxanthin are present. Tuning carotenoids to absorb in the green-yellow region of the visible spectrum appears to be a common evolutionary response to competition with other photosynthetic species in the aquatic environment.
    Trvalý link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0275476

     
     
Počet záznamů: 1  

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