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  • Title: Pigments induce folding of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein.
    Author: Paulsen H, Finkenzeller B, Kühlein N.
    Journal: Eur J Biochem; 1993 Aug 01; 215(3):809-16. PubMed ID: 8354287.
    Abstract:
    The conformational behaviour of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (LHCP), the apoprotein of the major light-harvesting complex (LHCII) of photosystem II in plants, has been studied. According to the circular dichroism in the ultraviolet range measured with isolated LHCII, the protein in the complex adopts a folded structure with a high content of alpha helix (about 60%), whereas the non-pigmented, solubilized protein has a less ordered structure (about 20% alpha helix). LHCP-pigment complexes that have been reconstituted from the overexpressed protein and isolated pigments in the presence of detergents display a protein CD signal similar to that of authentic LHCII, indicating that LHCP folds into the native structure during the reconstitution procedure. Renaturation of LHCP in these experiments is dependent on the presence of pigments and the formation of stable LHCP-pigment complexes. Pigment-induced engagement of LHCP in a compact structure has also been shown by two additional experimental approaches. (a) Upon complex formation, LHCP or its precursor (pLHCP) becomes resistant to trypsin digestion with the exception of an N-terminal segment of the protein; the same protection of LHCP is known to occur in intact thylakoids. (b) Pigment binding renders a cysteine residue within the N-proximal hydrophobic domain of the protein as well as a newly introduced cysteine four amino acid positions from the C terminus inaccessible to modification with a sulfhydryl-specific label whereas the N terminus stays susceptible to specific labelling. These observations support the notion that only the N terminus protrudes from a compact protein-pigment structure in LHCII. The fact that the major part of LHCP is trypsin-resistant in pigmented complexes reconstituted in the absence of a membrane or even lipids justifies caution in using protection against trypsin as a criterion for the integration of LHCP into the thylakoid membrane.
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