Synthesis of C8-vinyl chlorophylls d and f impairs far-red light photoacclimation and growth under far-red light

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Synthesis of C8-vinyl chlorophylls d and f impairs far-red light photoacclimation and growth under far-red light

Authors

Chaudhary, A. K.; Fuchs, L. K.; Pawlak, K.; Dykes, G. F.; Goodacre, R.; Nürnberg, D. J.; Canniffe, D. P.

Abstract

The inducible biosynthesis of chlorophylls d and f enables a subset of specialised cyanobacteria to perform oxygenic photosynthesis under far-red light--in the absence of visible wavelengths--via a process termed far-red light photoacclimation. These pigments, like the more common chlorophylls a and b, typically carry an ethyl substituent at the C8 position of the macrocycle, formed by reduction of a vinyl group by an 8-vinyl reductase enzyme. Here, we disrupted the gene encoding BciB, an 8-vinyl reductase found in the majority of cyanobacteria, in Chroococcidiopsis thermalis PCC 7203, a model for the study of far-red light photoacclimation. Disruption of bciB results in the synthesis of 8-vinyl chlorophyll a when the cells are grown in white light; on switching to far-red light, synthesis of 8V-forms of chlorophylls d and f, which have not been detected in nature, are synthesised in this strain. The bciB mutant exhibits sensitivity to high irradiance under both light regimes. Pigment analysis and whole-cell absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy reveal decreased synthesis of far-red absorbing chlorophylls, reduced photosystem assembly and an impaired acclimation to far-red light, and transmission electron microscopy demonstrates altered thylakoid membrane morphology in the mutant when compared to the wild type. These results demonstrate the importance of 8-vinyl group reduction for acclimation to far-red light.

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