The isocyclic ring (E-ring) is a common structural feature of chlorophylls. The E-ring is formed by two structurally unrelated Mg-protoporphyrin IX monomethylester (MPE) cyclase systems, oxygen-dependent (AcsF), and oxygen-independent (BchE) systems, which involve incorporation of an oxygen atom from molecular oxygen and water into the C-13 1 position of MPE, respectively. Which system operates in cyanobacteria that can thrive in a variety of anaerobic environments remains an open question. The cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has two acsF-like genes, sll1214 (chlA I ) and sll1874 (chlA II ), and three bchE-like genes, slr0905, sll1242, and slr0309. Five mutants lacking one of these genes were isolated. The ⌬chlA I mutant failed to grow under aerobic conditions with anomalous accumulation of a pigment with fluorescence emission peak at 595 nm, which was identified 3,8-divinyl MPE by high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. The growth defect of ⌬chlA I was restored by the cultivation under oxygen-limited (micro-oxic) conditions. MPE accumulation was also detected in ⌬chlA II grown under microoxic conditions, but not in any of the bchE mutants. The phenotype was consistent with the expression pattern of two chlA genes: chlA II was induced under micro-oxic conditions in contrast to the constitutive expression of chlA I . These findings suggested that ChlA I is the sole MPE cyclase system under aerobic conditions and that the induced ChlA II operates together with ChlA I under micro-oxic conditions. In addition, the accumulation of 3,8-divinyl MPE in the ⌬chlA mutants suggested that the reduction of 8-vinyl group occurs after the formation of E-ring in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.
Coproporphyrinogen III oxidase (CPO) catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of coproporphyrinogen III to form protoporphyrinogen IX in heme biosynthesis and is shared in chlorophyll biosynthesis in photosynthetic organisms. There are two analogous CPOs, oxygen-dependent (HemF) and oxygen-independent (HemN) CPOs, in various organisms. Little information on cyanobacterial CPOs has been available to date. In the genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 there is one hemF-like gene, sll1185, and two hemN-like genes, sll1876 and sll1917. The three genes were overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. Sll1185 showed CPO activity under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. While Sll1876 and Sll1917 showed absorbance spectra indicative of Fe-S proteins, only Sll1876 showed CPO activity under anaerobic conditions. Three mutants lacking one of these genes were isolated. The Deltasll1185 mutant failed to grow under aerobic conditions, with accumulation of coproporphyrin III. This growth defect was restored by cultivation under micro-oxic conditions. The growth of the Deltasll1876 mutant was significantly slower than that of the wild type under micro-oxic conditions, while it grew normally under aerobic conditions. Coproporphyrin III was accumulated at a low but significant level in the Deltasll1876 mutant grown under micro-oxic conditions. There was no detectable phenotype in Deltasll1917 under the conditions we examined. These results suggested that sll1185 encodes HemF as the sole CPO under aerobic conditions and that sll1876 encodes HemN operating under micro-oxic conditions, together with HemF. Such a differential operation of CPOs would ensure the stable supply of tetrapyrrole pigments under environments where oxygen levels fluctuate greatly.
The fifth ring (E-ring) of chlorophyll (Chl) a is produced by Mg-protoporphyrin IX monomethyl ester (MPE) cyclase. There are two evolutionarily unrelated MPE cyclases: oxygen-independent (BchE) and oxygen-dependent (ChlA/AcsF) MPE cyclases. Although ChlA is the sole MPE cyclase in Synechocystis PCC 6803, it is yet unclear whether BchE exists in cyanobacteria. A BLAST search suggests that only few cyanobacteria possess bchE. Here, we report that two bchE candidate genes from Cyanothece strains PCC 7425 and PCC 7822 restore the photosynthetic growth and bacteriochlorophyll production in a bchE-lacking mutant of Rhodobacter capsulatus. We termed these cyanobacterial bchE orthologs "chlE."
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