A new method is described for the isolation of subunits of the light-harvesting complex from Rhodospirillum rubrum (wild type and the G-9 mutant) in yields that approach 100%. The procedure involved treating membrane vesicles with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid-Triton X-100 to remove components other than the light-harvesting complex and reaction center. In the preparation from wild-type cells, a benzene extraction was then employed to remove carotenoid and ubiquinone. The next step involved a careful addition of the detergent n-octyl beta-D-glucopyranoside, which resulted in a quantitative shift of the long-wavelength absorbance maximum from 873 to 820 nm. This latter complex was then separated from reaction centers by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. The pigment-protein complex, now absorbing at 820 nm, contained two polypeptides of about 6-kilodalton molecular mass (referred to as alpha and beta) in a 1:1 ratio and two molecules of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) for each alpha beta pair. This complex is much smaller in size than the original complex absorbing at 873 nm but probably is an associated form such as alpha 2 beta 2 X 4BChl or alpha 3 beta 3 X 6BChl. The 820-nm form could be completely shifted back to a form once again having a longer wavelength lambda max near 873 nm by decreasing the octyl glucoside concentration. Thus, the complex absorbing at 820 nm appears to be a subunit form of the original 873-nm complex.
The light-harvesting complex of Rhodospirillum rubrum was reversibly dissociated into its component parts: bacteriochlorophyll and two 6-kilodalton polypeptides. The dissociation of the complex by n-octyl beta-D-glucopyranoside was accompanied by a shift of the absorbance maximum from 873 to 820 nm (a stable intermediate form) and finally to 777 nm. In the latter state, bacteriochlorophyll was shown to be free from the protein. Complexes absorbing at 820 and 873 nm could be re-formed from the fully dissociated state with over 80% yield by dilution of the detergent. Absorbance and circular dichroism properties of the re-formed B820 complex were essentially identical with those of B820 formed from chromatophores. Phospholipids and higher concentrations of complex were required to obtain the in vivo circular dichroism spectrum for reassociated B873. Reconstitution of the light-harvesting complexes from separately isolated alpha- and beta-polypeptides and bacteriochlorophyll was also demonstrated. Absorbance and circular dichroism spectra of these complexes were identical with those of complexes formed by the reassociation of the dissociated complex. Bacteriochlorophyll and the beta-polypeptide alone formed a complex that had an absorbance at 820 nm, but an 873-nm complex could not be formed without addition of the alpha-polypeptide. The alpha-polypeptide alone with bacteriochlorophyll did not form any red-shifted complex. In preliminary structure-function studies, some analogues of bacteriochlorophyll were also tested for reconstitution.
Measurements of polarized fluorescence and CD were made on light-harvesting complex 1 and a subunit form of this complex from Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Rhodobacter capsulatus. The subunit form of LH1, characterized by a near-infrared absorbance band at approximately 820 nm, was obtained by titration of carotenoid-depleted LH1 complexes with the detergent n-octyl beta-D-glucopyranoside as reported by Miller et al. (1987) [Miller J. F., Hinchigeri, S. B., Parkes-Loach, P. S., Callahan, P. M., Sprinkle, J. R., & Loach, P. A. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 5055-5062]. Fluorescence polarization and CD measurements at 77 K suggest that this subunit form must consist of an interacting bacteriochlorophyll a dimer in all three bacterial species. A small, local decrease in the polarization of the fluorescence is observed upon excitation at the blue side of the absorption band of the B820 subunit. This decrease is ascribed to the presence of a high-energy exciton component, perpendicular to the main low-energy exciton component. From the extent of the depolarization, we estimate the oscillator strength of the high-energy component to be at most 3% of the main absorption band. The optical properties of B820 are best explained by a Bchl a dimer that has a parallel or antiparallel configuration with an angle between the Qy transition dipoles not larger than 33 degrees. The importance of this structure is emphasized by the results showing that core antennas from three different purple bacteria have a similar structure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Biohybrid antenna systems have been constructed that contain synthetic chromophores attached to 31mer analogues of the bacterial photosynthetic core light-harvesting (LH1) β-polypeptide. The peptides are engineered with a Cys site for bioconjugation with maleimide-terminated chromophores, which include synthetic bacteriochlorins (BC1, BC2) with strong near-infrared absorption and commercial dyes Oregon green (OGR) and rhodamine red (RR) with strong absorption in the blue-green to yellow-orange regions. The peptides place the Cys 14 (or 6) residues before a native His site that binds bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl-a) and, like the native LH proteins, have high helical content as probed by single-reflection IR spectroscopy. The His residue associates with BChl-a as in the native LH1 β-polypeptide to form dimeric ββ-subunit complexes [31mer(-14Cys)X/BChl](2), where X is one of the synthetic chromophores. The native-like BChl-a dimer has Q(y) absorption at 820 nm and serves as the acceptor for energy from light absorbed by the appended synthetic chromophore. The energy-transfer characteristics of biohybrid complexes have been characterized by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence and absorption measurements. The quantum yields of energy transfer from a synthetic chromophore located 14 residues from the BChl-coordinating His site are as follows: OGR (0.30) < RR (0.60) < BC2 (0.90). Oligomeric assemblies of the subunit complexes [31mer(-14Cys)X/BChl](n) are accompanied by a bathochromic shift of the Q(y) absorption of the BChl-a oligomer as far as the 850-nm position found in cyclic native photosynthetic LH2 complexes. Room-temperature stabilized oligomeric biohybrids have energy-transfer quantum yields comparable to those of the dimeric subunit complexes as follows: OGR (0.20) < RR (0.80) < BC1 (0.90). Thus, the new biohybrid antennas retain the energy-transfer and self-assembly characteristics of the native antenna complexes, offer enhanced coverage of the solar spectrum, and illustrate a versatile paradigm for the construction of artificial LH systems.
The spectroscopic properties of the light-harvesting complex of Rhodospirillum rubrum, B873, and a detergent-isolated subunit form, B820, are presented. Absorption and circular dichroism spectra suggest excitonically interacting bacteriochlorophyll alpha (BChl alpha) molecules give B820 its unique spectroscopic properties. Resonance Raman results indicate that BCHl alpha is 5-coordinate in both B820 and B873 but that the interactions with the BChl C2 acetyl in B820 and B873 are different. The reactivity of BChl alpha in B820 in light and oxygen, or NaBH4, suggests that it is exposed to detergent and the aqueous environment. Excited-state lifetimes of the completely dissociated 777-nm-absorbing form [1.98 ns in 4.5% octyl glucoside (OG)], the intermediate subunit B820 (0.72 ns in 0.8% OG), and the in vivo like reassociated B873 (0.39 ns in 0.3% OG) were measured by single-photon counting. The fluorescence decays were exponential when emission was detected at wavelengths longer than 864 nm. An in vivo like B873 complex, as judged by its spectroscopic properties, can be formed from B820 without the presence of a reaction center.
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