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The PshX subunit of the photochemical reaction center from Heliobacterium modesticaldum acts as a low-energy antenna.

Gregory S OrfChristopher J GisrielJesse GranstromPatricia L BakerKevin E Redding
Published in: Photosynthesis research (2021)
The anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Heliobacterium modesticaldum contains a photochemical reaction center protein complex (called the HbRC) consisting of a homodimer of the PshA polypeptide and two copies of a newly discovered polypeptide called PshX, which is a single transmembrane helix that binds two bacteriochlorophyll g molecules. To assess the function of PshX, we produced a ∆pshX strain of Hbt. modesticaldum by leveraging the endogenous Hbt. modesticaldum Type I-A CRISPR-Cas system to aid in mutant selection. We optimized this system by separating the homologous recombination and CRISPR-based selection steps into two plasmid transformations, allowing for markerless gene replacement. Fluorescence and low-temperature absorbance of the purified HbRC from the wild-type and ∆pshX strains showed that the bacteriochlorophylls bound by PshX have the lowest site energies in the entire HbRC. This indicates that PshX acts as a low-energy antenna subunit, participating in entropy-assisted uphill energy transfer toward the P800 special bacteriochlorophyll g pair. We further discuss the role that PshX may play in stability of the HbRC, its conservation in other heliobacterial species, and the evolutionary pressure to produce and maintain single-TMH subunits in similar locations in other reaction centers.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • crispr cas
  • wild type
  • genome editing
  • genome wide
  • quantum dots
  • escherichia coli
  • dna damage
  • dna repair
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • density functional theory
  • protein kinase