Structural analysis of a new carotenoid-binding protein: the C-terminal domain homolog of the OCP

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作者
Maria Agustina Dominguez-Martin
Michal Hammel
Sayan Gupta
Sigal Lechno-Yossef
Markus Sutter
Daniel J. Rosenberg
Yan Chen
Christopher J. Petzold
Corie Y. Ralston
Tomáš Polívka
Cheryl A. Kerfeld
机构
[1] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Environmental Genomics and Systems Biology and Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging Divisions
[2] Michigan State University,MSU
[3] Michigan State University,Department of Energy Plant Research Laboratory
[4] University of South Bohemia,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
[5] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Institute of Physics, Faculty of Science
[6] University of California,Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging Division and Molecular Foundry
[7] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Graduate Group in Biophysics
[8] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Biological Systems and Engineering Division
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The Orange Carotenoid Protein (OCP) is a water-soluble protein that governs photoprotection in many cyanobacteria. The 35 kDa OCP is structurally and functionally modular, consisting of an N-terminal effector domain (NTD) and a C-terminal regulatory domain (CTD); a carotenoid spans the two domains. The CTD is a member of the ubiquitous Nuclear Transport Factor-2 (NTF2) superfamily (pfam02136). With the increasing availability of cyanobacterial genomes, bioinformatic analysis has revealed the existence of a new family of proteins, homologs to the CTD, the C-terminal domain-like carotenoid proteins (CCPs). Here we purify holo-CCP2 directly from cyanobacteria and establish that it natively binds canthaxanthin (CAN). We use small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) to characterize the structure of this carotenoprotein in two distinct oligomeric states. A single carotenoid molecule spans the two CCPs in the dimer. Our analysis with X-ray footprinting-mass spectrometry (XFMS) identifies critical residues for carotenoid binding that likely contribute to the extreme red shift (ca. 80 nm) of the absorption maximum of the carotenoid bound by the CCP2 dimer and a further 10 nm shift in the tetramer form. These data provide the first structural description of carotenoid binding by a protein consisting of only an NTF2 domain.
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