Abstract

Ferrochelatase (FeCh) is an essential enzyme catalyzing the synthesis of heme. Interestingly, in cyanobacteria, algae, and plants, FeCh possesses a conserved transmembrane chlorophyll a/b binding (CAB) domain that resembles the first and the third helix of light-harvesting complexes, including a chlorophyll-binding motif. Whether the FeCh CAB domain also binds chlorophyll is unknown. Here, using biochemical and radiolabeled precursor experiments, we found that partially inhibited activity of FeCh in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 leads to overproduction of chlorophyll molecules that accumulate in the thylakoid membrane and, together with carotenoids, bind to FeCh. We observed that pigments bound to purified FeCh are organized in an energy-dissipative conformation and further show that FeCh can exist in vivo as a monomer or a dimer depending on its own activity. However, pigmented FeCh was purified exclusively as a dimer. Separately expressed and purified FeCH CAB domain contained a pigment composition similar to that of full-length FeCh and retained its quenching properties. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that the CAB domain was acquired by a fusion between FeCh and a single-helix, high light-inducible protein early in the evolution of cyanobacteria. Following this fusion, the FeCh CAB domain with a functional chlorophyll-binding motif was retained in all currently known cyanobacterial genomes except for a single lineage of endosymbiotic cyanobacteria. Our findings indicate that FeCh from Synechocystis exists mostly as a pigment-free monomer in cells but can dimerize, in which case its CAB domain creates a functional pigment-binding segment organized in an energy-dissipating configuration.

Highlights

  • Ferrochelatase (FeCh) is an essential enzyme catalyzing the synthesis of heme

  • Using biochemical and radiolabeled precursor experiments, we found that partially inhibited activity of FeCh in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803 leads to overproduction of chlorophyll molecules that accumulate in the thylakoid membrane and, together with carotenoids, bind to FeCh

  • The FeCh enzyme equipped with the pigment-binding chlorophyll a/b binding (CAB) domain is apparently an old invention of cyanobacteria (Fig. 8)

Read more

Summary

The abbreviations used are: used are

FeCh, ferrochelatase; Chl, chlorophyll; MPP, N-methyl mesoporphyrin; CAB, chlorophyll a/b– binding; DDM, n-dodecyl ␤-D-maltoside; LHC, light-harvesting complex; Hlip, high light– inducible protein; ELIP, early light–inducible protein; PPIX, protoporphyrin. Apart from FeCh and the homologs of Hlips called one-helix proteins (OHPs), eukaryotes possess various two- and three-helix LHC-like proteins such as Lil proteins, early light-inducible proteins (ELIPs), and Psb (16 –21). The Chl and carotenoids bound to the CAB domain are organized in an energy-dissipative configuration, as previously reported for Hlips [24]. This is consistent with our phylogenetic analysis, suggesting that the FeCh CAB domain originates from a fusion between an ancient Hlip and FeCh enzyme early in cyanobacterial evolution

Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call