Carotenoid assembly regulates quinone diffusion and the Roseiflexus castenholzii reaction center-light harvesting complex architecture

Elife. 2023 Sep 22:12:e88951. doi: 10.7554/eLife.88951.

Abstract

Carotenoid (Car) pigments perform central roles in photosynthesis-related light harvesting (LH), photoprotection, and assembly of functional pigment-protein complexes. However, the relationships between Car depletion in the LH, assembly of the prokaryotic reaction center (RC)-LH complex, and quinone exchange are not fully understood. Here, we analyzed native RC-LH (nRC-LH) and Car-depleted RC-LH (dRC-LH) complexes in Roseiflexus castenholzii, a chlorosome-less filamentous anoxygenic phototroph that forms the deepest branch of photosynthetic bacteria. Newly identified exterior Cars functioned with the bacteriochlorophyll B800 to block the proposed quinone channel between LHαβ subunits in the nRC-LH, forming a sealed LH ring that was disrupted by transmembrane helices from cytochrome c and subunit X to allow quinone shuttling. dRC-LH lacked subunit X, leading to an exposed LH ring with a larger opening, which together accelerated the quinone exchange rate. We also assigned amino acid sequences of subunit X and two hypothetical proteins Y and Z that functioned in forming the quinone channel and stabilizing the RC-LH interactions. This study reveals the structural basis by which Cars assembly regulates the architecture and quinone exchange of bacterial RC-LH complexes. These findings mark an important step forward in understanding the evolution and diversity of prokaryotic photosynthetic apparatus.

Keywords: Roseiflexus castenholzii; carotenoid; filamentous anoxygenic phototroph; light harvesting complex; molecular biophysics; plant biology; quinone exchange; reaction center; structural biology.

Plain language summary

Photosynthesis is a biological process that converts energy from sunlight into a form of chemical energy that supports almost all life on Earth. Over the course of evolution, photosynthesis has gone from being only performed by bacteria to appearing in algae and green plants. While this has given rise to a range of different machineries for photosynthesis, the process always begins the same way: with a structure called the reaction center-light harvesting (RC-LH) complex. Two pigments in the light-harvesting (LH) region – known as chlorophyll and carotenoids – absorb light energy and transfer it to another part of the complex known as the quinone-type reaction center (RC). This results in the release of electrons that interact with a molecule called quinone converting it to hydroquinone. The electron-bound hydroquinone then shuttles to other locations in the cell where it initiates further steps that ultimately synthesize forms of chemical energy that can power essential cellular processes. In photosynthetic bacteria, hydroquinone must first pass through a ring structure in the light harvesting region in order to leave the reaction center. Previous studies suggest that carotenoids influence the architecture of this ring, but it remains unclear how this may affect the ability of hydroquinone to move out of the RC-LH complex. To investigate, Xin, Shi, Zhang et al. used a technique called cryo-electron microscopy to study the three-dimensional structure of RC-LH complexes in one of the first bacterial species to employ photosynthesis, Roseiflexus castenholzii. The experiments found that fully assembled complexes bind two groups of carotenoids: one nestled in the interior of the LH ring and the other on the exterior. The exterior carotenoids work together with bacteriochlorophyll molecules to form a closed ring that blocks hydroquinone from leaving the RC-LH complex. To allow hydroquinone to leave, two groups of regulatory proteins, including a cytochrome and subunit X, then disrupt the structure of the ring to ‘open’ it up. These findings broaden our knowledge of the molecules involved in photosynthesis. A better understanding of this process may aid the development of solar panels and other devices that use RC-LH complexes rather than silicon or other inorganic materials to convert energy from sunlight into electricity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Carotenoids*
  • Cytoplasm
  • Quinones*

Substances

  • quinone
  • Quinones
  • Carotenoids

Supplementary concepts

  • Roseiflexus castenholzii

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.w6m905qv4

Grants and funding

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.