SOLAR DAILY
ASU team throws new light on photosynthetic supercomplex structure
by Staff Writers
Tempe AZ (SPX) Jun 03, 2019

Overall structure of the PSI-IsiA supercomplex just published in Nature Molecular and Structural Biology.

A team of scientists from Arizona State University has taken a significant step closer to unlocking the secrets of photosynthesis, by determining the structure of a very large photosynthetic supercomplex.

This important discovery is laid out in their paper published in Nature Structural and Molecular Biology. The paper is titled "The structure of the stress induced photosystem I - IsiA antenna supercomplex."

"Supercomplexes are associations between antennae proteins and photochemical reaction centers that exist in all photosynthetic organisms," explained Yuval Mazor, an assistant professor in the School of Molecular Sciences and the Biodesign Institute's Center for Applied Structural Discovery. "This particular one comes from cyanobacteria, the class (phyla) of bacteria in which oxygenic photosynthesis first appeared (a few billion years ago) and later evolved, into all types of oxygenic photosynthesis that we know today."

Mazor's team includes Hila Toporik, a postdoctoral fellow, and Jin Li, a graduate student; and a collaboration with Assistant Professor Po-Lin Chiu, who all belong to the School of Molecular Sciences and the Center for Applied Structural Discovery, as well as Dewight Williams, an associate research scientist in the John M. Cowley Center for High Resolution Electron Microscopy.

Plants, algae and cyanobacteria use photosynthesis to produce oxygen and reduced carbon, like carbohydrates, which builds and fuels our entire biosphere. There are two pigment-protein complexes that orchestrate the primary light reactions in oxygenic photosynthesis: photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII). Understanding how these photosystems work their magic is one of the long-sought goals of science.

Physicist and Nobel laureate Richard Feynman once famously stated, "It is very easy to answer many fundamental biological questions; you just look at the thing!" Indeed, the central idea behind structural biology is that once one is able to "look" at "things" in great enough detail to discern their atomic structures, one will naturally be able to answer how and why the components and players of complex biological processes work the way they do.

In the past few years, single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) in particular has triggered a revolution in structural biology and has become a newly dominant discipline. Cryo-EM allows researchers to take a look at biological structures that were simply not accessible just a few years ago, and is now exposing structures of unprecedented complexity in great detail.

Indeed it is this technique utilized by the experts in the School of Molecular Sciecnes and The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at ASU that has enabled the elucidation of the structure of the PSI-IsiA complex. In the lab, this particular super-complex is produced by cyanobacteria under low iron environment or excessive light fluxes. However, in the "real world" iron exists at very low concentrations and high light can be the rule rather than the exception, so ultimately PSI-IsiA is a very common form of photosystem I, one of the two essential engines of photosynthesis.

The complex is unique in size, the largest photosynthetic supercomplex with a known molecular structure, and in complexity with more than 700 different molecules (mostly light-harvesting molecules) making up the complete structure.

There are 591 chlorophylls in the PSI-IsiA supercomplex, by far the largest number of bound pigments in any of the photosynthetic super-complexes with known structures.

The ability of cyanobacteria to express this complex when they are under stress plays an important role in their survival under these conditions. This complex also represents a large class of antennae that are very common in marine cyanobacteria, which are responsible for a considerable fraction of the total global photosynthesis output (estimates vary between 15% and 25%). Mazor emphasizes that their work was done on a common laboratory strain, not on one of the marine species.

The current structure uncovers the most crucial details of this enormous machine. As the first example from the cyanobacterial branch of the membrane embedded antenna proteins, it lays a path for evaluating the light-harvesting and photoprotection mechanism (from excess or fluctuating light conditions) in cyanobacteria.

Understanding the complexity and functions of the IsiA photosynthetic supercomplex will ultimately help to ensure that we have a stable energy supply on Earth, undoubtedly one of the central challenges of the 21st century.


Related Links
Arizona State University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
Home automation using solar energy
Los Angeles CA (SPX) May 27, 2019
Home automation is the new buzz in the field of Internet of Things(IoT). In fact, it is considered as the basic step towards the next-gen automated lifestyle. What this home automation is all about? Move ahead in the post to read more. b>Home Automation - The complete picture br> /b> A lot of devices play a role in our day to day activities at home - curtains, windows, lights, fans, air conditioners, switches, kettles, cookers, lights, TV and entertainment devices, and many more. Usually, we dec ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Pentagon calls Turkey plan to buy Russian missiles 'devastating'

Syrian air defence fires at 'enemy missiles' in Damascus: state media

Erdogan offers Trump working group on Russian missiles

Washington says 'possible' Ankara will reject Russian missiles

SOLAR DAILY
Britain's Royal Air Force tests miniature missile decoys on Typhoon jets

Raytheon nabs $38.2M contract for Army TOW missiles

US approves missile sales to S.Korea, Japan

Israeli missile hits Quneitra, Syria reports casualties

SOLAR DAILY
Amazon says drone deliveries coming 'within months'

Insitu nabs $47.9M to deliver ScanEagle drones to four U.S. allies in Asia

Northrop Grumman nabs $65M for drones for Navy, Australia

'Neural Lander' uses AI to land drones smoothly

SOLAR DAILY
AFRL demonstrates world's first daytime free-space quantum communication enabled by adaptive optics

Navy to transfer future satcom programs to Air Force

Future narrowband satellite capability to transfer to Air Force

Viasat Contracted to Deliver the World's First Link 16-Capable Low Earth Orbit (LEO) Spacecraft

SOLAR DAILY
Making DoD's Vast Logistics Enterprise More Resilient

Navy awards $22.7M to BAE for three 57mm MK 110 gun mounts

Raytheon awarded $101.3M to build anti-tank missiles for U.S. Army

Expediting Software Certification for Military Systems, Platforms

SOLAR DAILY
Citing Iran, Trump bypasses Congress to sell arms to Saudis, UAE

New criticism over French arms shipments to Saudi Arabia

Break-in at sensitive Indian military office near Paris: prosecutor

Erdogan expects F-35 jets 'sooner or later' despite Russian missiles purchase

SOLAR DAILY
Pentagon confirms push to hide USS John McCain from Trump

US warns China on behaviour towards its Asian neighbours

Ukraine's Zelensky to visit Brussels next week

US-China anchors' face-off lets down fans

SOLAR DAILY
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems