Structural and functional differentiation of the light-harvesting protein Lhcb4 during land plant diversification.
Journal
Physiologia plantarum
ISSN: 1399-3054
Titre abrégé: Physiol Plant
Pays: Denmark
ID NLM: 1256322
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
May 2019
May 2019
Historique:
received:
04
02
2019
revised:
06
03
2019
accepted:
07
03
2019
pubmed:
13
3
2019
medline:
4
6
2019
entrez:
13
3
2019
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
About 475 million years ago, plants originated from an ancestral green alga and evolved first as non-vascular and later as vascular plants, becoming the primary producers of biomass on lands. During that time, the light-harvesting complex II (LHCII), responsible for sunlight absorption and excitation energy transfer to the photosystem II (PSII) core, underwent extensive differentiation. Lhcb4 is an ancestral LHCII that, in flowering plants, differentiated into up to three isoforms, Lhcb4.1, Lhcb4.2 and Lhcb4.3. The pivotal position of Lhcb4 in the PSII-LHCII supercomplex (PSII-LHCIIsc) allows functioning as linker for either S- or M-trimers of LHCII to the PSII core. The increased accumulation of Lhcb4.3 observed in PSII-LHCIIsc of plants acclimated to moderate and high light intensities induced us to investigate, whether this isoform has a preferential localization in a specific PSII-LHCIIsc conformation that might explain its light-dependent accumulation. In this work, by combining an improved method for separation of different forms of PSII-LHCIIsc from thylakoids of Pisum sativum L. grown at increasing irradiances with quantitative proteomics, we assessed that Lhcb4.3 is abundant in PSII-LHCIIsc of type C
Substances chimiques
Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes
0
Photosystem II Protein Complex
0
Plant Proteins
0
Protein Isoforms
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
336-350Subventions
Organisme : Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research
ID : Futuro in Ricerca 2013, RBFR1334SB
Informations de copyright
© 2019 Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society.