Assembly of functional photosystem complexes in Rhodobacter sphaeroides incorporating carotenoids from the spirilloxanthin pathway

Shuang C. Chi, David J. Mothersole, Preston Dilbeck, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki, Hao Zhang, Pu Qian, Cvetelin Vasilev, Katie J. Grayson, Philip J. Jackson, Elizabeth C. Martin, Ying Li, Dewey Holten, C. Neil Hunter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

91 Scopus citations

Abstract

Carotenoids protect the photosynthetic apparatus against harmful radicals arising fromthe presence of both light and oxygen. They also act as accessory pigments for harvesting solar energy, and are required for stable assembly of many light-harvesting complexes. In the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter (Rba.) sphaeroides phytoene desaturase (CrtI) catalyses three sequential desaturations of the colourless carotenoid phytoene, extending the number of conjugated carbon-carbon double bonds, N, from three to nine and producing the yellow carotenoid neurosporene; subsequent modifications produce the yellow/red carotenoids spheroidene/spheroidenone (N = 10/11). Genomic crtI replacements were used to swap the native three-step Rba. sphaeroides CrtI for the four-step Pantoea agglomerans enzyme, which re-routed carotenoid biosynthesis and culminated in the production of 2,2′-diketo-spirilloxanthin under semi-aerobic conditions. The new carotenoid pathway was elucidated using a combination of HPLC and mass spectrometry. Premature termination of this new pathway by inactivating crtC or crtD produced strains with lycopene or rhodopin as major carotenoids. All of the spirilloxanthin series carotenoids are accepted by the assembly pathways for LH2 and RC-LH1-PufX complexes. The efficiency of carotenoid-to-bacteriochlorophyll energy transfer for 2,2′-diketo-spirilloxanthin (15 conjugated C=C bonds; N = 15) in LH2 complexes is low, at 35%. High energy transfer efficiencies were obtained for neurosporene (N =9; 94%), spheroidene (N = 10; 96%) and spheroidenone (N = 11; 95%),whereas intermediate valuesweremeasured for lycopene (N = 11; 64%), rhodopin (N = 11; 62%) and spirilloxanthin (N = 13; 39%). The variety and stability of these novel Rba. sphaeroides antenna complexesmake them useful experimentalmodels for investigating the energy transfer dynamics of carotenoids in bacterial photosynthesis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)189-201
Number of pages13
JournalBiochimica et Biophysica Acta - Bioenergetics
Volume1847
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2 2015

Keywords

  • Antenna
  • Bacterial photosynthesis
  • Carotenoid
  • Light harvesting
  • Membrane protein
  • Synthetic biology

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