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A giant chlorophyll–protein complex induced by iron deficiency in cyanobacteria

Research Authors
E. J. Boekema, A. Hifney2, A. E. Yakushevska, M. Piotrowski, W. Keegstra, S. Berry, K.-P. Michel, E. K. Pistorius2 & J. Kruip
Research Abstract

Cyanobacteria are abundant throughout most of the world's water bodies and contribute significantly to global primary productivity through oxygenic photosynthesis. This reaction is catalysed by two membrane-bound protein complexes, photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII), which both contain chlorophyll-binding subunits functioning as an internal antenna1. In addition, phycobilisomes act as peripheral antenna systems, but no additional light-harvesting systems have been found under normal growth conditions. Iron deficiency, which is often the limiting factor for cyanobacterial growth in aquatic ecosystems2, leads to the induction of additional proteins such as IsiA (ref. 3). Although IsiA has been implicated in chlorophyll storage, energy absorption and protection against excessive light, its precise molecular function and association to other proteins is unknown. Here we report the purification of a specific PSI–IsiA supercomplex, which is abundant under conditions of iron limitation. Electron microscopy shows that this supercomplex consists of trimeric PSI surrounded by a closed ring of 18 IsiA proteins binding around 180 chlorophyll molecules. We provide a structural characterization of an additional chlorophyll-containing, membrane-integral antenna in a cyanobacterial photosystem.

Research Journal
Nature 412, (16 August 2001) | doi:10.1038/35089104; Received 6 June 2001; Accepted 29 June 2001
Research Rank
1
Research Year
2001
Research Pages
PP. 745-748