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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Carotenoids and the Assembly of Light-harvesting Complexes

Harald Paulsen

subject

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyChemistryorganic chemicalsfood and beveragesmacromolecular substancesbiology.organism_classificationPhotosynthesisbiological factorsTransmembrane proteinLight-harvesting complexRhodobacter sphaeroidesBiochemistrypolycyclic compoundsLipid bilayerCarotenoidBiogenesisFunction (biology)

description

Carotenoids are constitutive components of all light-harvesting complexes in plants and many such complexes in bacteria. In the crystal structures of several light-harvesting complexes, carotenoids are seen to span the lipid bilayer and connect components of the complex on both membrane surfaces and/or to mediate the interaction of transmembrane protein helices. This important stabilizing function suggests that these pigments are also actively involved in the assembly of light-harvesting complexes. Verification of this notion appears too ambitious a goal at present, as the question of how the pigment-protein complexes of the photosynthetic apparatus are assembled is still open. However, information is emerging about which light-harvesting complexes depend on the presence of carotenoids during their assembly, and which carotenoids are specifically required. This information comes from experiments in which allor some carotenoids are missing during biogenesis of the photosynthetic apparatus, due either to inhibitors of carotenoid biosynthesis or mutations in carotenoid biosynthesis pathways. Further information comes from reconstitution experiments in vitro in which light-harvesting complexes are assembled from their apoproteins and a pigment mixture containing a restricted or heterologous selection of carotenoids.

https://doi.org/10.1007/0-306-48209-6_7