User:Francielle Aguiar Gomes/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
| - | Rhodospirillum ''(Rsp.) rubrum'' is an anoxygenic phototrophic purple bacterium with a long history as a model for the study of bacterial photosynthesis and related metabolic processes. It is unique among purple bacteria by producing both rhodoquinone (RQ) and <scene name='96/969634/Ubiquinone/1'> | + | Rhodospirillum ''(Rsp.) rubrum'' is an anoxygenic phototrophic purple bacterium with a long history as a model for the study of bacterial photosynthesis and related metabolic processes. It is unique among purple bacteria by producing both rhodoquinone (RQ) and <scene name='96/969634/Ubiquinone/1'>ubiquinone</scene> (UQ) as electron carriers and bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) a esterified at the propionic acid side chain by geranylgeraniol (abbreviated as BChlaG) rather than phytol. |
The light-harvesting complexes (LHC) of photosynthetic purple sulfur and non-sulfur bacteria are responsible for the highly efficient collection and transfer of light energy to the photosynthetic reaction centres. This results in an initial separation of charge in the reaction centre (RC) and ultimately conversion of the light energy into a chemically useful form <ref>10.1002/j.1460-2075.1995.tb07041.x</ref>. | The light-harvesting complexes (LHC) of photosynthetic purple sulfur and non-sulfur bacteria are responsible for the highly efficient collection and transfer of light energy to the photosynthetic reaction centres. This results in an initial separation of charge in the reaction centre (RC) and ultimately conversion of the light energy into a chemically useful form <ref>10.1002/j.1460-2075.1995.tb07041.x</ref>. | ||
| - | ''Rsp. rubrum'' has a single pair of αβ-polypeptides in its core light-harvesting (LH1) complex and lacks both the peripheral light-harvesting (LH2) complex and reaction center (RC) cytochrome (Cyt) c subunit present in many purple bacteria; thus, ''Rsp. rubrum'' is one of the simplest phototrophic bacteria known, in terms of its photosynthetic light reactions. Because the entire Rsp. rubrum LH1 complex and a stable B820 LH1-subunit can be reconstituted using the αβ-polypeptides and pigment molecules | + | ''Rsp. rubrum'' has a single pair of αβ-polypeptides in its core light-harvesting (LH1) complex and lacks both the peripheral light-harvesting (LH2) complex and reaction center (RC) cytochrome (Cyt) c subunit present in many purple bacteria; thus, ''Rsp. rubrum'' is one of the simplest phototrophic bacteria known, in terms of its photosynthetic light reactions. Because the entire ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1 complex and a stable B820 LH1-subunit can be reconstituted using the αβ-polypeptides and pigment molecules. Both complexes have been intensively studied as models of the bacterial antenna apparatus and as such have provided a wealth of information on mechanisms of light energy acquisition, pigment−protein interactions and assembly of multicomponent complexes. <ref>10.1021/acs.biochem.1c00360</ref> |
== Inicial Structures == | == Inicial Structures == | ||
| - | + | For a long time, structures of both purified LH1 and the RC-associated core complex (LH1-RC) of ''Rsp. rubrum'' have not been obtained at high resolution, and no RC atomic structure was known. The 8.5 Å resolution projection of ''R. rubrum'' LHCl represents the first glimpse of the structural architecture of the fundamental building block of the photosynthetic membrane in purple BChla-containing bacteria. The crystals diffract beyond 8 Å and the projection map was calculated to 8.5 Å. The projection map shows 16 subunits in a 116 Å diameter ring with a 68 Å hole in the center. | |
[[Image:furier.png]] | [[Image:furier.png]] | ||
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[[Image:16fold.png]] | [[Image:16fold.png]] | ||
| - | Each of the 16 subunits contains three distinct domains. Assuming that the ring in our projection represents a 3 Da cylinder with outside diameter 116 Å, inside diameter 68 Å and length 45 Å (one membrane layer thick), this would correspond to a volume of 311000 Å^3. Assuming an average protein density of 0.77 Da/ | + | Each of the 16 subunits contains three distinct domains. Assuming that the ring in our projection represents a 3 Da cylinder with outside diameter 116 Å, inside diameter 68 Å and length 45 Å (one membrane layer thick), this would correspond to a volume of 311000 Å^3. Assuming an average protein density of 0.77 Da/A^3, this would give the cylinder a total mass of 266 kDa, corresponding to ~17 αβ-subunits with their associated bacteriochlorophylls and carotenoids, in reasonable agreement with our observation of 16 subunits <ref>10.1002/j.1460-2075.1995.tb07041.x</ref>. |
== Cryo-EM == | == Cryo-EM == | ||
| - | '''Cryogenic electron microscopy''' (cryo-EM) is a cryomicroscopy technique applied to samples cooled to cryogenic temperatures. For biological samples, structure is preserved by embedding in a glassy ice environment. An aqueous sample is applied to a mesh grid and frozen by immersion in liquid ethane or a mixture of liquid ethane and propane <ref>10.1017/S1431927608080781</ref>. This technique has advanced dramatically to become a viable tool for high-resolution structural biology research. The ultimate outcome of a | + | '''Cryogenic electron microscopy''' (cryo-EM) is a cryomicroscopy technique applied to samples cooled to cryogenic temperatures. For biological samples, structure is preserved by embedding in a glassy ice environment. An aqueous sample is applied to a mesh grid and frozen by immersion in liquid ethane or a mixture of liquid ethane and propane <ref>10.1017/S1431927608080781</ref>. This technique has advanced dramatically to become a viable tool for high-resolution structural biology research. The ultimate outcome of a cryo-EM study is an atomic model of a macromolecule or its complex with interacting partners. Recent advances in direct electron detectors as well as reconstruction single particle algorithms have led to the determination of the structure of macromolecular complexes ranging from 2 to 5 Å resolution. At these resolutions, also known as “near atomic” resolution, it is possible to infer all-atom structures de novo. |
| - | The first step in | + | The first step in cryo-EM structure determination is de novo structure determination, where an initial model can be built, given only one sequence and a reconstruction, when no other limited structural information is known. In the second stage, the model is optimized, where a wide range of class of methods for improving the fit of a model to the data and improving the geometry of a model. Finally, tools for model validation are described, in attempt to quantify the overall accuracy of a model given a reconstruction. |
[[Image:Structure1.png]] | [[Image:Structure1.png]] | ||
| - | An overview of three steps of atomic model determination from near-atomic resolution data. (Left) De novo building methods take primary sequence and map, and automatically produce a backbone model with sequence registered, identifying which regions in the map correspond to particular sequences. (Center) Model optimization takes an initial model—either produced from de novo building, or from a highresolution homologue—and optimizes the coordinates to better agree with the map, as well as adopt more physically realistic geometry. (Right) Model validation aims to assess—both globally and locally—the accuracy of a model, given experimental data. Such tools are useful not only for assessing overall accuracy but also for tuning parameters of optimization<ref>10.1016/bs.mie.2016.06.003</ref>. | + | An overview of three steps of atomic model determination from near-atomic resolution data. (Left) De novo building methods take primary sequence and map, and automatically produce a backbone model with sequence registered, identifying which regions in the map correspond to particular sequences. (Center) Model optimization takes an initial model—either produced from de novo building, or from a highresolution homologue—and optimizes the coordinates to better agree with the map, as well as adopt more physically realistic geometry. (Right) Model validation aims to assess—both globally and locally—the accuracy of a model, given experimental data. Such tools are useful not only for assessing overall accuracy but also for tuning parameters of optimization <ref>10.1016/bs.mie.2016.06.003</ref>. |
== Structure of Photosynthetic LH1-RC Super-complex of ''Rhodospirillum rubrum'' == | == Structure of Photosynthetic LH1-RC Super-complex of ''Rhodospirillum rubrum'' == | ||
| - | The cryo-EM structure of ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1-RC was determined at 2.76 Å resolution. The LH1 complex forms a closed, slightly elliptical double ring composed of 16 pairs of α(inner)β(outer)-polypeptides, 32 BChls aG and 16 all-trans-spirilloxanthins, as we can se on the Fig. 1. The RC of ''Rsp. rubrum'' is surrounded by the LH1 complex with only a few close contacts on the periplasmic surface with residues near Ser34 in the LH1 α-polypeptides. There is | + | The cryo-EM structure of ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1-RC was determined at 2.76 Å resolution. The LH1 complex forms a closed, slightly elliptical double ring composed of 16 pairs of α(inner)β(outer)-polypeptides, 32 BChls aG and 16 all-trans-spirilloxanthins, as we can se on the Fig. 1. The RC of ''Rsp. rubrum'' is surrounded by the LH1 complex with only a few close contacts on the periplasmic surface with residues near Ser34 in the LH1 α-polypeptides. There is no apparent strong interactions of ''Rsp. rubrum'' RC with your LH1 polypeptides (Figure 1 a-c) as occurs in Cyt c-bound LH1-RCs where the C-terminal domains of some LH1 α-polypeptides interact extensively with the Cyt c subunit. The BChl aG molecules in ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1 form an elliptical, partially overlapping ring with average Mg−Mg distances of 9.3 Å within a dimer and 8.5 Å between dimers (Figure 1c). |
| - | [[Image:Structure.png|300px|left|thumb| '''Fig. 1.''' Structure overview of the Rsp. rubrum LH1-RC complex. (a) Side view of the LH1-RC parallel to the membrane plane. (b) Top view of the LH1-RC from the periplasmic side of the membrane. (c) Tilted view of the cofactor arrangement. (d) Superposition of Cα carbons of the LH1 αβpolypeptides between Rsp. rubrum and Tch. tepidum (gray, PDB: 5Y5S). Color scheme: LH1-α, green; LH1-β, slate-blue; L-subunit, magenta; Msubunit, blue; BChl aG in LH1 and special pair, red sticks; Accessory BChl aG, cyan sticks; BPhe aG, light-pink sticks; Spirilloxanthin, yellow sticks; UQ10, blue sticks; RQ-10, green sticks; Fe, magenta ball. Phospholipids and detergents are omitted for clarity]] | + | [[Image:Structure.png|300px|left|thumb| '''Fig. 1.''' Structure overview of the ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1-RC complex. (a) Side view of the LH1-RC parallel to the membrane plane. (b) Top view of the LH1-RC from the periplasmic side of the membrane. (c) Tilted view of the cofactor arrangement. (d) Superposition of Cα carbons of the LH1 αβpolypeptides between ''Rsp. rubrum'' and <scene name='96/969634/Tch_tepidum/1'>''Tch. tepidum''</scene> (gray, PDB: 5Y5S). Color scheme: LH1-α, green; LH1-β, slate-blue; L-subunit, magenta; Msubunit, blue; BChl aG in LH1 and special pair, red sticks; Accessory BChl aG, cyan sticks; BPhe aG, light-pink sticks; Spirilloxanthin, yellow sticks; UQ10, blue sticks; RQ-10, green sticks; Fe, magenta ball. Phospholipids and detergents are omitted for clarity]] |
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| + | For a more comprehensive view of the structure of ''Rsp. rubrum'' LH1-RC, this molecule can be visualized in different ways, such as, for instance, by the shape of <scene name='96/969634/Backbone/1'>backbone</scene>, <scene name='96/969634/Ballandstick/1'>Ball and Stick</scene> or <scene name='96/969634/Spacefill/1'>spacefill</scene>. | ||
The geranylgeranyl side chains in the BChl aG associated with βpolypeptides form a tail-up conformation (as shown on the image below) with a much higher structural homogeneity compared with those of purple bacteria whose BChl a is esterified by a phytyl group. | The geranylgeranyl side chains in the BChl aG associated with βpolypeptides form a tail-up conformation (as shown on the image below) with a much higher structural homogeneity compared with those of purple bacteria whose BChl a is esterified by a phytyl group. | ||
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[[Image:Peri.png|300px|left|thumb| '''Fig. 2.''' Phospholipids, detergents, and channels in the LH1-RC complex. Top view (a) and side view (b) of the phospholipid and detergent distributions for CL (cyan), PG (magenta), PE (blue), and DDM (green). All proteins are shown in gray.]] | [[Image:Peri.png|300px|left|thumb| '''Fig. 2.''' Phospholipids, detergents, and channels in the LH1-RC complex. Top view (a) and side view (b) of the phospholipid and detergent distributions for CL (cyan), PG (magenta), PE (blue), and DDM (green). All proteins are shown in gray.]] | ||
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| - | This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes. | ||
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| - | <scene name='96/969634/Backbone/1'>backbone</scene> | ||
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| - | <scene name='96/969634/Ballandstick/1'>Ball and Stick</scene> | ||
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| - | <scene name='96/969634/Spacefill/1'>spacefill</scene> | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
Revision as of 11:56, 14 June 2023
Photosynthetic LH1-RC Super-complex of Rhodospirillum rubrum
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