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Energy Source? Structure of Highly Efficient Light-harvesting
Molecules in Green Bacteria Determined
An international
team of scientists has determined the structure of the chlorophyll
molecules in green bacteria that are responsible for harvesting
light energy. The team's results one day could be used to
build artificial photosynthetic systems, such as those that
convert solar energy to electrical energy.
A research paper
about the discovery will be published on 4 May 2009 in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The scientists found that the chlorophylls
are highly efficient at harvesting light energy. "We
found that the orientation of the chlorophyll molecules make
green bacteria extremely efficient at harvesting light,"
said Donald Bryant, Ernest C. Pollard Professor of Biotechnology
at Penn State and one of the team's leaders. According to
Bryant, green bacteria are a group of organisms that generally
live in extremely low-light environments, such as in light-deprived
regions of hot springs and at depths of 100 meters in the
Black Sea. The bacteria contain structures called chlorosomes,
which contain up to 250,000 chlorophylls. "The ability
to capture light energy and rapidly deliver it to where it
needs to go is essential to these bacteria, some of which
see only a few photons of light per chlorophyll per day."
Because they have been so difficult to
study, the chlorosomes in green bacteria are the last class
of light-harvesting complexes to be characterized structurally
by scientists. Scientists typically characterize molecular
structures using X-ray crystallography, a technique that determines
the arrangement of atoms in a molecule and ultimately gives
information that can be used to create a picture of the molecule;
however, X-ray crystallography could not be used to characterize
the chlorosomes in green bacteria because the technique only
works for molecules that are uniform in size, shape, and structure.
"Each chlorosome in a green bacterium has a unique organization,"
said Bryant. "They are like little andouille sausages.
When you take cross-sections of andouille sausages, you see
different patterns of meat and fat; no two sausages are alike
in size or content, although there is some structure inside,
nevertheless. Chlorosomes in green bacteria are like andouille
sausages, and the variability in their compositions had prevented
scientists from using X-ray crystallography to characterize
the internal structure."
To get around this problem, the team used
a combination of techniques to study the chlorosome. They
used genetic techniques to create a mutant bacterium with
a more regular internal structure, cryo-electron microscopy
to identify the larger distance constraints for the chlorosome,
solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy
to determine the structure of the chlorosome's component chlorophyll
molecules, and modeling to bring together all of the pieces
and create a final picture of the chlorosome.
First, the team created a mutant bacterium
in order to determine why the chlorophyll molecules in green
bacteria became increasingly complex over evolutionary time.
To create the mutant, they inactivated three genes that green
bacteria acquired late in their evolution. The team suspected
that the genes were responsible for improving the bacteria's
light-harvesting capabilities. "Essentially, we went
backward in evolutionary time to an intermediate state in
order to understand, in part, why green bacteria acquired
these genes," Bryant said. The team found that the more
evolved, wild-type bacteria grow faster at all light intensities
than the mutant form. "Indeed, the reason that chlorophylls
became more complex was to increase light-harvesting efficiency,"
said Bryant.
Next, the team isolated chlorosomes from
the mutant and the wild-type forms of the bacteria and used
cryo-electron microscopy -- a type of electron microscopy
that is performed at super-cold cryogenic temperatures --
to take pictures of the chlorosomes. The pictures revealed
that chlorophyll molecules inside chlorosomes have a nanotube
shape. "They are like Russian dolls, with one concentric
tube fitting inside the next," said Bryant. "The
mutant bacterium's chlorosomes contain only one set of tubes,
whereas the wild-type chlorosomes contain many tubes, each
arranged in a unique pattern, like those andouille sausages."
The team then went a step further and
used solid-state NMR spectroscopy -- a technique in which
samples are spun very rapidly and exposed to a magnetic field
-- to look deep inside the chlorosome. This technique enables
researchers to understand the relationships between atomic
nuclei in a sample and, ultimately, to acquire structural
information about the molecules of interest.
"The NMR data revealed to us that
the individual chlorophyll molecules in green bacteria are
arranged in dimers -- molecules consisting of two identical
simpler molecules -- with their long hydrophobic, or water-repellent,
tails sticking out of either side," said Bryant. "We
also learned precisely how the chlorophyll molecules attach
to one another, and we were able to measure the distance between
chlorophyll molecules. The cryo-electron microscopy pictures
showed gross structural details and distances, and the NMR
results allowed us to quantify these distances as well, and
confirmed to us that what were were seeing was, in fact, stacks
of the chlorophyll molecules all lined up," he said.
The NMR results also enabled the scientists to determine that
the chlorophyll molecules in green bacteria are arranged in
helical spirals. In the mutant bacteria, the chlorophyll molecules
are positioned at a nearly 90-degree angle in relation to
the long axis of the nanotubes, whereas the angle is less
steep in the wild-type organism. "It's the orientation
of the chlorophyll molecules that is the most important thing
here," said Bryant. The last steps for the team were
to pull together all of their data and to create a detailed
computer model of the structure.
"At first it seems counterintuitive
that green bacteria have managed to evolve a better light-harvesting
system by increasing disorder in the chlorosome structure,"
said Bryant. "Most people would think that if you make
something that is more highly ordered, you'll end up with
something that works better. But this is clearly a case where
that isn't true. If all of the chlorophylls are identically
arranged in a chlorosome, then the energy from the photon,
once it is absorbed, is going to wander around over all of
those chlorophylls, which could take a long time. In the wild-type
form, you have these different domains where chlorophyll molecules
are located and, therefore, the ability of photon energy to
migrate becomes restricted. In other words, the energy in
an individual photon visits a smaller number of chlorophylls,
and that's an advantage to the organism because the energy
can get to where it needs to go faster. Speed is the name
of the game that green bacteria play with light. The organisms
have only a couple of nanoseconds for the energy to get someplace
useful or else the energy is going to be lost. The speed required
can be a problem for bacteria that receive only a few photons
of light per chlorophyll per day."
Bryant said that the team's results may
one day be used to build artificial photosynthetic systems
that convert solar energy to electricity. "The interactions
that lead to the assembly of the chlorophylls in chlorosomes
are rather simple, so they are good models for artificial
systems," he said. "You can make structures out
of these chlorophylls in solution just by having the right
solution conditions. In fact, people have done this for many
years; however, they haven't really understood the biological
rules for building larger structures. I won't say that we
completely understand the rules yet, but at least we know
what two of the structures are now and how they relate to
the biological system as a whole, which is a huge advance."
The team also includes researchers
from the Leiden Institute of Chemistry and the Groningen Biomolecular
Sciences and Biotechnology Institute in the Netherlands, and
the Max Planck Institute in Germany. This research was supported
by the United States Department of Energy.
Source: www.sciencedaily.com
Date: 5
May , 2009

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