Abstract

In most photosynthetic organisms, the chlorin ring structure of chlorophyll a is formed by the reduction of the porphyrin D-ring by the dark-operative nitrogenase-like enzyme, protochlorophyllide reductase (DPOR). Subsequently, the chlorin B-ring is reduced in bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis to form a bacteriochlorin ring structure. Phenotypic analysis of mutants lacking one of three genes, bchX, bchY, or bchZ, which show significant sequence similarity to the structural genes of nitrogenase, suggests that a second nitrogenase-like enzyme is involved in the chlorin B-ring reduction. However, there is no biochemical evidence for this. Here, we report the reconstitution of chlorophyllide a reductase (COR) with purified proteins. Two Rhodobacter capsulatus strains that overexpressed Strep-tagged BchX and BchY were isolated. Strep-tagged BchX was purified as a single polypeptide, and BchZ was co-purified with Strep-tagged BchY. When BchX and BchY-BchZ components were incubated with chlorophyllide a, ATP, and dithionite under anaerobic conditions, chlorophyllide a was converted to a new pigment with a Qy band of longer wavelength at 734 nm (P734) in 80% acetone. The formation of P734 was dependent on ATP and dithionite. High performance liquid chromatography and mass spectroscopic analysis indicated that P734 is 3-vinyl bacteriochlorophyllide a, which is formed by the B-ring reduction of chlorophyllide a. These results demonstrate that the B-ring of chlorin is reduced by a second nitrogenase-like enzyme and that the sequential actions of two nitrogenase-like enzymes, DPOR and COR, convert porphyrin to bacteriochlorin. The evolutionary implications of nitrogenase-like enzymes to determine the ring structure of (bacterio)chlorophyll pigments are discussed.

Highlights

  • Bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a)2 is an important pigment for anoxygenic photosynthesis in photosynthetic bacteria

  • The first half of the biosynthetic pathway from 5-aminolevulinic acid to protoporphyrin IX is shared with heme biosynthesis, and the latter half, the so-called Mg-branch that starts with the insertion of a magnesium ion into the porphyrin ring, is specific to BChl a

  • Chlorophyllide a (Chlide a), the final product of these five reactions, has spectral properties identical to Chl a; that is, it absorbs red light with enough energy to perform oxygenic photosynthesis. These enzymes involved in BChl a biosynthesis, which are common to plants, have been biochemically studied as model enzymes for Chl a biosynthesis [13,14,15,16], as has LPOR, which is a key enzyme in the light-dependent greening of angiosperms [11, 12]

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Summary

A Second Nitrogenase-like Enzyme for Bacteriochlorophyll Biosynthesis

RECONSTITUTION OF CHLOROPHYLLIDE a REDUCTASE WITH PURIFIED X-PROTEIN (BchX) AND YZ-PROTEIN (BchY-BchZ) FROM. RHODOBACTER CAPSULATUS Jiro Nomata, Tadashi Mizoguchi, Hitoshi Tamiaki and Yuichi Fujita. Alerts: When this article is cited When a correction for this article is posted. This article cites 31 references, 9 of which can be accessed free at http://www.jbc.org/content/281/21/15021.full.html#ref-list-1

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
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