Structural basis of light harvesting by carotenoids: peridinin-chlorophyll-protein from Amphidinium carterae
- PMID: 8650577
- DOI: 10.1126/science.272.5269.1788
Structural basis of light harvesting by carotenoids: peridinin-chlorophyll-protein from Amphidinium carterae
Abstract
Peridinin-chlorophyll-protein, a water-soluble light-harvesting complex that has a blue-green absorbing carotenoid as its main pigment, is present in most photosynthetic dinoflagellates. Its high-resolution (2.0 angstrom) x-ray structure reveals a noncrystallographic trimer in which each polypeptide contains an unusual jellyroll fold of the alpha-helical amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains. These domains constitute a scaffold with pseudo-twofold symmetry surrounding a hydrophobic cavity filled by two lipid, eight peridinin, and two chlorophyll a molecules. The structural basis for efficient excitonic energy transfer from peridinin to chlorophyll is found in the clustering of peridinins around the chlorophylls at van der Waals distances.
Comment in
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Form follows function when plants harvest light.Science. 1996 Jun 21;272(5269):1743-4. doi: 10.1126/science.272.5269.1743. Science. 1996. PMID: 8650571 No abstract available.
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