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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p. 5210-5220, Vol. 186, No. 16
0021-9193/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.186.16.5210-5220.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,1 Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 168022
Received 16 March 2004/ Accepted 14 May 2004
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-carotene desaturase (crtQ/CT1414),
-carotene desaturase (crtU/CT0323), carotenoid 1',2'-hydratase (crtC/CT0301), and carotenoid cis-trans isomerase (crtH/CT0649). Three mutants (CT0180, CT1357, and CT1416 mutants) did not exhibit a discernible phenotype. The carotenoid biosynthetic pathway in C. tepidum is similar to that in cyanobacteria and plants by converting phytoene into lycopene using two plant-like desaturases (CrtP and CrtQ) and a plant-like cis-trans isomerase (CrtH) and thus differs from the pathway known in all other bacteria. In contrast to the situation in cyanobacteria and plants, the construction of a crtB mutant completely lacking carotenoids demonstrates that carotenoids are not essential for photosynthetic growth of green sulfur bacteria. However, the bacteriochlorophyll a contents of mutants lacking colored carotenoids (crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants) were decreased from that of the wild type, and these mutants exhibited a significant growth rate defect under all light intensities tested. Therefore, colored carotenoids may have both structural and photoprotection roles in green sulfur bacteria. The ability to manipulate the carotenoid composition so dramatically in C. tepidum offers excellent possibilities for studying the roles of carotenoids in the light-harvesting chlorosome antenna and iron-sulfur-type (photosystem I-like) reaction center. The phylogeny of carotenogenic enzymes in green sulfur bacteria and green filamentous bacteria is also discussed. |
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The first committed step in the biosynthesis of C40 carotenoids is the head-to-head condensation of two C20 geranylgeranyl diphosphate molecules by phytoene synthase to form phytoene (7, 12). Phytoene is then converted to all-trans-lycopene by one of two principal pathways: (i) desaturation and cis-trans isomerization by a single enzyme, CrtI (which may produce all-trans-neurosporene in some microorganisms), or (ii) desaturation to cis-
-carotene by CrtP, desaturation of cis-
-carotene to cis-lycopene by CrtQ, and finally cis-trans isomerization by CrtH to produce all-trans-lycopene (7, 12, 30). The CrtI-dependent pathway is found in fungi and most prokaryotes, whereas the CrtP/CrtQ/CrtH-dependent pathway until now has been found only in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms (cyanobacteria, algae, and plants). Cyclization, catalyzed by a lycopene cyclase, may then take place at one or both ends of lycopene. Neurosporene, lycopene, and their cyclization products, can be modified by additional enzymes in various organisms to produce a plethora of different carotenoids (7, 12, 52).
Green sulfur bacteria are obligately photoautotrophic and strictly anaerobic, and they form a distinct phylogenetic group (29, 44). These bacteria contain very large and unique antenna complexes, called chlorosomes, whose major pigment is BChl c, d, or e (8, 9). The major and characteristic carotenoids of green sulfur bacteria are chlorobactene (
,
-carotene) and isorenieratene (
,
-carotene), and these carotenoids are unusual by having aromatic
end groups (38, 39, 52). Aromatic carotenoids with
end groups are otherwise found only in some actinomycetes and a few sponges (Reniera spp.) (7, 12).
Because it is naturally transformable (19) and because its genome has been sequenced (15), Chlorobium tepidum (57) has emerged as the principal model organism for studies of green sulfur bacteria. Much has already been learned about the biosynthesis of BChl c in this organism by bioinformatic and gene inactivation approaches (22-24), and one objective of the present study was to study the biosynthesis and functions of carotenoids in the same organism by similar approaches. The major carotenoid in C. tepidum is chlorobactene; minor carotenoids are
-carotene, 1',2'-dihydrochlorobactene, 1',2'-dihydro-
-carotene, OH-chlorobactene, and the laurate esters of both OH-chlorobactene glucoside and OH-
-carotene glucoside (53). In C. tepidum, about 90% of the cellular carotenoids are located in the chlorosomes (20, 54). These carotenoids are not easily removed by detergent treatment of isolated chlorosomes (21). This observation suggests that the majority of the carotenoids are located in the chlorosome interior. The predominant carotenoids associated with isolated reaction center complexes are OH-carotenoid glucoside laurate esters; therefore, these carotenoids probably play a specific role in the reaction center (54).
By using a combination of genome analysis and gene inactivation in C. tepidum, we have elucidated the biosynthetic pathway leading to chlorobactene and OH-chlorobactene (Fig. 1). We have also established that the enzymes converting phytoene to lycopene are related to those in the lineage of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms (cyanobacteria, algae, and plants), which raises some interesting evolutionary issues. The observation that carotenoid biosynthesis can be completely eliminated in C. tepidum shows that, in principle, the remaining unidentified carotenogenic enzymes can also be identified by gene inactivation.
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FIG. 1. Proposed pathway of carotenoid biosynthesis in C. tepidum. The HPLC peak numbers are shown in parentheses after the chemical names. All genes shown in this scheme have been inactivated. Geranylgeranyl-PP, geranylgeranyl diphosphate.
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Construction of crt mutants.
C. tepidum mutants were obtained by natural transformation and homologous recombination as previously described (19, 25). All DNA constructs used for transformation were made entirely in vitro either by megaprimer PCR (CT0323, CT0807, CT1386, and CT1414) or by ligation of PCR products with a plasmid fragment (CT0180, CT0301, CT0649, CT1357, and CT1416) as described previously (25) using the primers listed in Table S1 in the supplemental material (Fig. 2). Transformants were analyzed for segregation by PCR as previously described (25) using the primers listed in Table S2 in the supplemental material. All primers used for PCR were derived from the genome sequence of C. tepidum (15) using MacVector software (version 7.0; Genetics Computer Group, Madison, Wis.). An aadA marker conferring spectinomycin and streptomycin resistance was used for all constructs and was obtained from plasmid pSRA2 (26) in the case of megaprimer PCR constructs and from plasmid pSRA81 in the case of ligation constructs. Plasmid pSRA81 (3,685 bp) was made as follows. A fragment containing aadA was generated by PCR using primers aadAFS (5'-GGTCCAGAACGTCGACCGAACGCA-3') and aadABX (5'-GCGGCGTCGGCTCGAGCGAATTG-3') and plasmid pHP45
(48) as the template (the SalI site in aadAFS and the XhoI site in aadABX are underlined). This fragment was digested with SalI and XhoI and cloned into pUC19 digested with SalI. A plasmid with the following configuration was selected and named pSRA81: HindIII-SphI-PstI-SalI-aadA-XbaI-BamHI-AvaI-KpnI-EcoRI (aadA is transcribed from left to right in this orientation). The EcoRI-PstI fragment from pSRA81 containing aadA contains 1,038 bp.
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FIG. 2. Maps illustrating the DNA constructs used to inactivate genes. The small labeled arrows indicate the binding sites of the primers used to generate PCR products. The gene-inactivating constructs were made by fusion of the PCR products with a fragment containing the aadA antibiotic resistance marker by megaprimer PCR or by ligation. See text and reference 25 for details.
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Pigments were identified by a combination of elution time, absorption spectrum, and molecular mass analysis and by comparison to the previously determined carotenoid composition of wild-type C. tepidum (53). The chromophores used for identification (all-trans isomers) and absorption maxima were as follows: chlorobactene and
-carotene, 436 (shoulder), 461, and 491 nm; lycopene, 447, 472, and 503 nm; neurosporene, 417, 440, and 469 nm;
-carotene, 380, 401, and 425 nm; phytoene, 276 (shoulder), 287, and 298 nm; BChl c, 435 and 667 nm; and BChl a, 364, 602, and 770 nm. Absorption coefficients (in liters per gram per centimeter) used for quantification (22, 51) follow: for chlorobactene and
-carotene, 265 at a wavelength of 490 nm; for glucoside derivatives of OH-chlorobactene and OH-
-carotene, 198 at 490 nm; for glucoside laurate ester derivatives of OH-chlorobactene and OH-
-carotene, 158 at 490 nm; for lycopene, 345 at 470 nm; for
-carotene, 256 at 400 nm; for phytoene, 125 at 287 nm; for BChl c, 86 at 667 nm; and for BChl a, 60 at 770 nm. Retention times and masses of individual pigments are given below (see Table 1).
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TABLE 1. Pigment composition of wild-type and mutant strains of C. tepidum
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The incomplete genome sequence of Chloroflexus aurantiacus was also surveyed using data available from the websites of the Joint Genome Institute (Walnut Creek, Calif.) (http://www.jgi.doe.gov) and the National Center for Biotechnology Information (Bethesda, Md.) (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). Full-length homologs of one CrtB-type phytoene synthase, one CrtI-type phytoene desaturase (ORF2 in Fig. 3C), one CrtO-type carotenoid ketolase (ORF1 in Table S3 in the supplemental material), and one CrtY-type lycopene cyclase were found. In addition, truncated homologs of one CrtI-type carotenoid desaturase (ORF3 in Fig. 3C) and one CrtP-type carotenoid desaturase (ORF4 in Table S3 in the supplemental material) were also found. (For detailed sequence information and accession numbers, see Table S3 in the supplemental material.)
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FIG. 3. Unrooted neighbor-joining phylogenetic trees of different enzymes and proteins. (A) CrtB-type phytoene synthases; (B) CrtU-type ß-carotene and -carotene desaturases; (C) CrtI-type phytoene desaturases, CrtH-type cis-trans isomerases, and related proteins; and (D) CrtP- and CrtQ-type desaturases. Bootstrap values were calculated on the basis of 1,000 replicates; only values less than 70% are shown. The sequences used were obtained from the following organisms: Arabidopsis thaliana, Rubrivivax gelatinosus, Brevibacterium linens, Chlorobium tepidum, Chloroflexus aurantiacus, Erwinia herbicola, "Gloeobacter violaceus" strain PCC 7421, Mycobacterium aurum, Myxococcus xanthus, Nostoc (formerly Anabaena) sp. strain PCC 7120, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, Streptomyces griseus, Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942, Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, and Trichodesmium erythraeum. For further information on the protein sequences, see Table S3 in the supplemental material.
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Pigment analysis of the wild type and crt mutants of C. tepidum. The levels of BChl c in cells in the wild type and all mutants were very similar as judged from the absorption spectrum of intact cells (data not shown). In addition, no significant changes were observed in the absorption properties of BChl c in intact cells of the mutants. Thus, the absence of carotenoids did not have an effect on BChl c biosynthesis or on the aggregation of BChl c in chlorosomes. The only effect detected on pigmentation other than carotenoids was observed in the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants; the BChl a level of each of these mutants was about 65% of that of the wild type (Table 1). These three crt mutants lack a carotenoid chromophore absorbing in the same wavelength range as the carotenoids of the wild type and the other mutants.
A detailed analysis of the carotenoid composition of cells of the wild type and mutants is shown in Fig. 4 and 5 and in Table 1. The major carotenoid in the wild type was chlorobactene, in addition to smaller amounts of phytoene,
-carotene, 1',2'-dihydro-
-carotene, 1',2'-dihydrochlorobactene, OH-chloro-bactene, OH-chlorobactene glucoside, OH-chlorobactene glucoside laurate, and OH-
-carotene glucoside laurate. A trace amount of neurosporene was also found, but lycopene and
-carotene were not detected.
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FIG. 4. HPLC chromatograms of cell extracts of the wild-type and mutant strains of C. tepidum with detection wavelengths of 270 nm (- - - -), 400 nm ( ), and 490 nm (). The amount of extract injected corresponded to about 10 µg of BChl c. Peaks are identified in Table 1. Other peaks are as follows: peak 13, OH- -carotene glucoside (35.6 min); peak 14, OH-chlorobactene glucoside (30.3 min); peak 15, chlorobiumquinone 7 (44.8 min); peak 16, 1'-hydroxymenaquinone 7 (44.5 min); peak 17, menaquinone 7 (52.5 min); peak 18, 1,2-dihydro- -carotene (54.2 min); and peak 19, 1,2-dihydrolycopene (51.8 min).
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FIG. 5. HPLC chromatograms of cell extracts of the wild-type and mutant strains of C. tepidum with a detection wavelength of 490 nm. See the legend to Fig. 4 and text for details.
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-carotene, it was logical to identify CT0807 as crtP, encoding a phytoene desaturase that produces
-carotene and to identify CT1414 as crtQ, encoding a
-carotene desaturase that produces lycopene. The CT1414 mutant also accumulated small amounts of phytoene and a compound that was tentatively identified as 1,2-dihydro-
-carotene.
The dominant carotenoid in a cell extract of the CT0649 mutant was all-trans-lycopene (eluting at 50.2 min; absorption maxima of 474, 472, and 503 nm; Fig. 4). Another component eluting at 49.9 min had the same mass as lycopene and absorption maxima of 445, 467, and 499 nm and was tentatively identified as a cis isomer of lycopene. Small amounts of phytoene, chlorobactene,
-carotene, and 1,2-dihydrolycopene were also found. Evidence of OH-lycopene or derivatives of OH-lycopene was not found. These observations strongly suggest that CT0649 encodes a CrtH-type lycopene cis-trans isomerase if one considers the following. Desaturation of
-carotene by CrtQ produces a cis-lycopene and most likely takes place in the cytoplasmic membrane (7, 12). A mutant lacking crtH may therefore be expected to accumulate cis-lycopene, because all known lycopene cyclases act only on all-trans-lycopene (30). Although cis-lycopene is relatively stable by itself, it is readily isomerized to all-trans-lycopene when exposed to light and a photosensitizing molecule like BChls (30). However, most of the cis-lycopene produced in the CT0649 mutant is probably translocated to the chlorosome without being isomerized prior to translocation. Once in the chlorosome, this cis-lycopene is photoisomerized to all-trans-lycopene due to photosensitization by BChl c but is then unavailable for further enzymatic modification. Although it was not explicitly shown that lycopene in the CT0649 mutant accumulated in the chlorosomes, it was shown that phytoene in the CT0807 mutant predominantly accumulated in the chlorosomes (data not shown), thus suggesting that most carotenoids in all crt mutants are correctly translocated to the chlorosomes. A small proportion of the cis-lycopene produced in the CT0649 mutant is probably photoisomerized in the cytoplasmic membrane before being translocated to the chlorosome and thus would be available to lycopene cyclase and other enzymes. This probably accounts for the small amounts of chlorobactene and
-carotene found in the CT0649 mutant.
The CT0301 mutant lacked OH-chlorobactene and OH-
-carotene and their derivatives; therefore, the CT0301 gene was identified as crtC, which encodes a carotenoid 1',2'-hydratase. The CT0323 mutant lacked chlorobactene and all its derivatives and accumulated only
-carotene and its derivatives. The CT0323 gene was thus identified as crtU encoding
-carotene desaturase. No changes in the carotenoid composition of the CT0180, CT1357, and CT1416 mutants were detected, which means that these three genes probably do not function in carotenoid biosynthesis.
Upon careful analysis of the HPLC traces, an unidentified component named F (for flexirubin-like) with an elution time of 49.3 min and absorption peaks at 285, 325, and 453 nm was found (Fig. 6). This component F was found in the CT1386, CT0807, CT1414, CT0323, and CT0649 mutants but was not unambiguously identified in the CT0301 and CT0180 mutants or in the wild type due to masking by carotenoids. However, previous analyses using different HPLC systems suggest that component F is also present in the wild type (N.-U. Frigaard, unpublished data). The absorption band around 453 nm resembles that of a conjugated system of nine double bonds, and due to the lack of fine structure, the spectral data suggest the presence of at least one carbonyl group (51). Component F is not likely to be a carotenoid, because it was present in the CT1386 mutant (which lacks phytoene synthase) and because no homolog of the CT1386 gene that could encode an alternative carotene synthase is present in C. tepidum. The absorption spectrum and chromatographic properties of component F resemble those of the flexirubin-type pigments found in some Cytophaga, Flavobacterium, and Flexibacter species (1, 51), to which C. tepidum is distantly related on the basis of 16S rRNA and whole-genome phylogeny (15). Flexirubin-type pigments are not derived from isoprenoid precursors and consist of a polyenoic acid chromophore terminated by a hydroxyphenyl group and esterified with an alkyl-substituted phenol group of the resorcinol type. The function of these pigments is not known. If component F has a specific absorption coefficient of about 200 liters g1 cm1 at a wavelength of 453 nm, cell extracts of C. tepidum contain roughly 1 mg of component F per g of BChl c. Analyses show that component F is present in isolated chlorosomes (data not shown).
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FIG. 6. Absorption spectrum of an unidentified component (the F component) found in C. tepidum. The absorption spectrum was obtained from the HPLC detector at the time of elution. There were three peaks at 285, 325, and 453 nm.
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Effects of crt mutations on the growth of C. tepidum. No effects on cell morphology in the crt mutants were observed by light microscopy (data not shown). This contrasts with observations of Chlorobium phaeobacteroides, which forms filaments when cells are treated with the carotenoid biosynthesis inhibitor 2-hydroxybiphenyl (4, 5). Thus, filament formation is probably due to secondary effects of the inhibitor on cell morphology and division. Chlorosomes are apparently formed normally in the C. tepidum mutants, since chlorosomes similar to wild-type chlorosomes were isolated from the crtB and crtP mutants (data not shown). Chlorosomes from the crtP mutant contained most of the phytoene present in the cells, demonstrating that this carotenoid precursor is translocated to the chlorosomes, as are most of the carotenoids in the wild type.
Figure 7 shows the growth rates of the wild type and various crt mutants of C. tepidum at three different light intensities. The growth rates of four mutants (crtU, crtH, CT0180, and CT1416 mutants) showed no significant deviation from the wild-type growth rate at any light intensity (data for the CT0180 and CT1416 mutants not shown). The growth rate of the crtC mutant differed from the wild-type growth rate only at the lowest light intensity (10 µmol of photons m2 s1; limiting for growth in all strains), when it grew only about 60% as fast as the wild type. The growth rates of the three other mutants (crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants) were significantly lower than the wild-type growth rate at all light intensities. At the lowest light intensity, the growth rates of the crtP and crtQ mutants were about 40% that of the wild type, and the growth rate of the crtB mutant was only about 25% that of the wild type. At increasing light intensities, the growth rates of the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants were higher but did not reach the wild-type growth rate, even at the highest light intensity examined (588 µmol of photons m2 s1), when these mutants grew about 65% as fast as the wild type.
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FIG. 7. Growth rates of the wild-type and mutant strains of C. tepidum at various light intensities. The light intensities used were 10 (black bars), 76 (shaded bars), and 588 (white bars) µmol of photons m2 s1. The data are the means ± standard deviations (error bars) from at least four separate experiments. WT, wild type.
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-carotene to chlorobactene; this enzyme is related to but distinct from the enzyme found in actinomycetes. A CrtC enzyme, similar to that in purple bacteria, hydrates both
-carotene and chlorobactene. Since hydrated species of lycopene or earlier intermediates in the pathway were not found in the wild type or any mutant, CrtC apparently cannot efficiently hydrate these species. There appears to be little or no feedback inhibition or obligatory multienzyme complex formation in this pathway, since the genetic inactivation of one enzyme did not significantly affect the apparent activity of the remaining enzymes or the total carotenoid content (Table 1).
Four enzymes are still unidentified in the proposed pathway in Fig. 1. These unidentified enzymes include the glucosyltransferase and a laurate transferase that are required to produce the OH-carotenoid glucoside laurate esters (53). It is noteworthy that the enzymes that form the glucoside laurate esters seem to have higher affinity for
-carotene than chlorobactene, since the ratio of chlorobactene to
-carotene ranges from 10 to 20, whereas the ratio of OH-chlorobactene glucoside laurate to OH-
-carotene glucoside laurate ranges from 1 to 2.
Another enzymatic activity not yet completely understood is the carotenoid 1,2-saturase, which produces 1',2'-dihydrochlorobactene and 1',2'-dihydro-
-carotene (53). In C. tepidum, 1',2'-dihydrochlorobactene can be a major carotenoid species under certain growth conditions, such as prolonged incubation (N.-U. Frigaard, unpublished data) or low light intensities (10). The only other organism in which 1,2-dihydrocarotenoids have been detected is Blastochloris (formerly Rhodopseudomonas) viridis (41). The major carotenoid in this organism is 1',2'-dihydroneurosporene, and 1,2-dihydrocarotenoids may constitute up to 94% of the total carotenoids. Insufficient DNA sequences are currently available from the photosynthesis gene cluster of Blastochloris viridis to allow a detailed comparison with the C. tepidum sequences.
Two paralogous genes (bchP/CT2256 and bchO/CT1232) in C. tepidum encode putative geranylgeraniol reductases related to the BchP enzyme involved in BChl a biosynthesis in purple bacteria (15, 23). The bchP and bchO genes have been insertionally inactivated in C. tepidum to produce two independent mutants (A. Gomez Maqueo Chew, N.-U. Frigaard, and D. A. Bryant, unpublished data). Both the bchP and bchO mutants produce altered BChl a and Chl a species that are consistent with the products of these genes functioning in reduction of the geranylgeranyl tail of (B)Chls. Additionally, the bchP and bchO mutants are deficient in 1',2'-dihydrochlorobactene. Thus, it appears that BchP and BchO, in some as yet poorly understood but interdependent manner, are responsible for the saturation of the isoprenoid moiety of both BChl a, Chl a, and carotenoids in C. tepidum. Since it is not simple to distinguish between the phenotypic effects of modified (B)Chls and modified carotenoids in the bchP and bchO mutants, these mutants were not further characterized in this work. Further studies with these mutants to resolve these issues are in progress.
The only other important carotenogenic enzyme not yet identified in C. tepidum is lycopene cyclase. The genome does not encode any homolog of the three known types of lycopene cyclases (50). Interestingly, some cyanobacteria also lack an identifiable lycopene cyclase. Given the similarity of many of the carotenogenic enzymes and other proteins involved in photosynthesis between C. tepidum and cyanobacteria (23), the possibility that C. tepidum and some cyanobacteria share a novel type of lycopene cyclase is intriguing. Since four cyanobacteria in Fig. 3B (Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120, "Gloeobacter violaceus," and Trichodesmium erythraeum) also lack an identifiable lycopene cyclase, the possibility that the CrtU homologs of these cyanobacteria could function as lycopene cyclases is interesting. Consistent with this suggestion, other cyanobacteria that have an identifiable lycopene cyclase (for example, three Prochlorococcus marinus strains and Synechococcus sp. strain WH8102) lack homologs of CrtU (based on information available from the CyanoBase database).
Carotenoid biosynthesis in green filamentous bacteria.
The only organisms other than green sulfur bacteria that contain chlorosomes and BChl c are the green filamentous bacteria, represented by Chloroflexus aurantiacus (28, 32). However, the biosynthetic pathway leading to lycopene and its cyclization products in Chloroflexus aurantiacus appears to be different from the pathway in C. tepidum. The portion of the Chloroflexus aurantiacus genome that has been sequenced contains one or possibly two genes encoding homologs of CrtI-type carotene desaturases and possibly one gene encoding a homolog of a CrtP-type desaturase, but it does not encode a homolog of the carotenoid cis-trans isomerase. Chloroflexus aurantiacus may thus employ a classical bacterial CrtI-dependent phytoene desaturation (see introduction). Alternatively, Chloroflexus aurantiacus may employ a hybrid pathway like Nostoc sp. strain PCC 7120, which uses a CrtP-like phytoene desaturase that produces
-carotene and a
-carotene desaturase related to CrtI proteins (sometimes denoted CrtQ or CrtQa [Fig. 3C]) (2, 40, 50). The major carotenoids in Chloroflexus aurantiacus, ß-carotene and
-carotene, are apparently formed by a classical bacterial lycopene cyclase of the CrtY family. Under oxic conditions, carotenoids that contain 4-oxo-ß end groups, including echinenone (4-oxo-ß-carotene) and myxobactone (4-oxo-OH-
-carotene glucoside) (14, 31, 47), are probably formed by a CrtO ketolase similar to those in cyanobacteria (16). (The GenBank accession numbers of all the Chloroflexus aurantiacus protein sequences mentioned in this paragraph are listed in Table S3 in the supplemental material.)
Effect of carotenoid composition on growth of C. tepidum. The growth rates of two mutants with altered carotenoid composition (crtU and crtH mutants) were not significantly different from those of the wild type at any light intensity (Fig. 7). Thus, the absence of aromatic carotenoids (chlorobactene and its derivatives) in the crtU mutant was not a significant disadvantage under the growth conditions tested. Likewise, elimination of most of the cyclic carotenoids and the accumulation of lycopene in the crtH mutant did not significantly affect the growth of this strain. The absence of hydroxylated carotenoids and their derivatives (glucosides and fatty acid glucoside esters) in the crtC mutant appeared to cause a growth deficiency only at limiting light intensity (10 µmol of photons m2 s1). This could be due to reduced carotenoid level or efficiency of the reaction centers, because most of the hydroxylated carotenoids and their derivatives are associated with the reaction centers (54). In contrast, growth was impaired in the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants under all light intensities examined (Fig. 7). These three mutants share the common property that they lack colored carotenoids, i.e., carotenoids with a chromophore consisting of nine or more conjugated double bonds. The wild type and all crt mutants with no growth rate phenotype have colored carotenoids (see chemical structures in Fig. 1).
It is not yet clear what causes the decreased growth rates of the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants. It is also not clear whether the cause of the decreased growth rate under low light intensities is the same as the cause for the decreased growth rate under high light intensities. However, it is striking that the three mutants with decreased growth rates (crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants) also have decreased BChl a levels (Table 1). Although BChl a is not the major light-harvesting pigment, it is essential for the transfer of excitation energy from the major light-harvesting pigment (BChl c) in the chlorosome to the reaction center. Thus, the decreased growth rates could be due to less efficient energy conservation because of decreased BChl a levels. How the absence of certain carotenoids could cause a decrease in the BChl a level is not known, but there may be structural or functional requirements for such carotenoids in the BChl a-containing CsmA protein in the chlorosome baseplate (13, 43, 49) or in the reaction center (54) or both. Both spectroscopic analyses (3, 6, 42) and chemical analyses (13, 43) suggest that BChl a and carotenoids are intimately associated in the chlorosome baseplate and that the CsmA protein probably binds to at least one carotenoid molecule. Other analyses also suggest a correlation between colored carotenoids, BChl a, and CsmA. Chlorosomes isolated from C. phaeobacteroides and Chloroflexus aurantiacus grown in the presence of the phytoene desaturase inhibitor 2-hydroxybiphenyl are almost completely devoid of colored carotenoids, and the levels of BChl a and CsmA in such cells are decreased by roughly 35 to 60% (4, 5, 17). Analogously, when crtI is inactivated in the purple bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides (which then accumulates colorless phytoene), formation of light-harvesting complex 2 is blocked, whereas formation of light-harvesting complex 1 is not (11, 37, 46).
Another possibility is that excited triplet states of BChls accumulate in the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants and that these BChl triplets cause damage to the photosynthetic apparatus. Quenching of BChl triplets requires a carotenoid with a minimum of nine conjugated double bonds (18). Such carotenoids are absent only in the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants, and these mutants should thus accumulate increased levels of BChl c and BChl a excited triplet states. Both BChl c and BChl a triplets have been detected in both cells and isolated chlorosomes of green sulfur bacteria (3, 6, 42). BChl triplets are known to be detrimental for photosynthetic organisms under aerobic conditions because of singlet O2 formation (18). However, this cannot explain the growth deficiency of the crtB, crtP, and crtQ mutants, because they grow only under strictly anaerobic conditions. Nevertheless, accumulation of high levels of BChl c and BChl a triplets in C. tepidum may damage the cells in a yet unidentified manner.
Although carotenoids may certainly play a role in light harvesting in natural environments, it is unlikely that the growth defects observed here at low light intensity are due to reduced light harvesting in the mutants lacking colored carotenoids. The tungsten lamps used to provide the illumination in the growth experiments emit relatively little light with wavelengths shorter than 600 nm. In order to explore the roles of carotenoids in light harvesting, future studies will systematically study the growth behavior of the mutants under different light regimens.
Evolution of carotenogenic enzymes. It is not clear why two different biosynthetic pathways for lycopene exist in nature nor is it clear what advantages each may present over the other. The lycopene biosynthetic enzymes (CrtP, CrtQ, and CrtH) in green sulfur bacteria and cyanobacteria are obviously related, although very distantly (Fig. 3C and D), and they have thus far been found only in these two bacterial groups (photosynthetic eukaryotes aside). It is therefore likely that these enzymes originated in a common ancestor of modern-day green sulfur bacteria and cyanobacteria and were inherited vertically. This common ancestor probably contained an ancestral form of a type I photosynthetic reaction center (33), since the CrtP, CrtQ, and CrtH enzymes occur only in organisms containing type I reaction centers.
cis carotenoids appear to perform important functions in reaction centers (34). It has been suggested that all reaction centers contain 15-cis carotenoid isomers, which can be generated by thermal isomerization of the corresponding all-trans isomers (34). In addition, photosystem I from cyanobacteria contains 9-cis carotenoids, which are not found in type II reaction centers (27, 34). The presence or absence of 9-cis carotenoids in green sulfur bacterial reaction centers has not been conclusively demonstrated. Since 9-cis carotenoids are not easily formed by thermal isomerization, the enzymatic formation of cis carotenoids other than the 15-cis isomers may have provided a selective advantage to the ancestral type I reaction center. Because the CrtI-dependent biosynthetic pathway for lycopene does not produce cis-isomer intermediates, we propose that the evolution of the CrtP/CrtQ/CrtH-dependent pathway is linked to the postulated advantage of having particular cis carotenoids in the ancestral type I reaction centers.
On the basis of sequence similarity, CrtH and CrtI are distantly related (Fig. 3C), and CrtH probably evolved from the much more widespread CrtI (50). Analogously, on the basis of sequence similarity, CrtP, CrtQ, and CrtU are distantly related (50). CrtP and CrtQ probably arose by an ancient gene duplication event. Sandmann has proposed that CrtU originated in actinomycetes and that CrtP and CrtQ evolved from CrtU after horizontal transfer to cyanobacteria (50). However, given that the function of CrtU in green sulfur bacteria and actinomycetes is the same but that CrtU proteins from green sulfur bacteria and cyanobacteria are more similar structurally, it seems unlikely that CrtU has been exchanged horizontally between actinomycetes and cyanobacteria. We therefore propose that the divergence of CrtP/CrtQ and CrtU occurred in an ancestor of the green sulfur bacteria.
We thank Francis X. (Buddy) Cunningham, Jr. (University of Maryland), for supplying the herbicide MPTA, Kazuhito Inoue (Kanagawa University, Kanagawa, Japan) for sharing unpublished DNA sequences from Blastochloris viridis, and Harry A. Frank (University of Connecticut) for discussions on carotenoids.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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