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Helical allophycocyanin nanotubes absorb far-red light in a thermophilic cyanobacterium.

Christopher J GisrielEduard EliasGaozhong ShenNathan T SoulierDavid A FlesherM R GunnerGary W BrudvigRoberta CroceDonald A Bryant
Published in: Science advances (2023)
To compete in certain low-light environments, some cyanobacteria express a paralog of the light-harvesting phycobiliprotein, allophycocyanin (AP), that strongly absorbs far-red light (FRL). Using cryo-electron microscopy and time-resolved absorption spectroscopy, we reveal the structure-function relationship of this FRL-absorbing AP complex (FRL-AP) that is expressed during acclimation to low light and that likely associates with chlorophyll a-containing photosystem I. FRL-AP assembles as helical nanotubes rather than typical toroids due to alterations of the domain geometry within each subunit. Spectroscopic characterization suggests that FRL-AP nanotubes are somewhat inefficient antenna; however, the enhanced ability to harvest FRL when visible light is severely attenuated represents a beneficial trade-off. The results expand the known diversity of light-harvesting proteins in nature and exemplify how biological plasticity is achieved by balancing resource accessibility with efficiency.
Keyphrases
  • transcription factor
  • electron microscopy
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • molecular docking
  • genome wide
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  • quantum dots