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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5585-5595, Vol .
186, No . 17
The
Reaction Center H Subunit Is Not Required for High Levels of Light-Harvesting
Complex 1 in Rhodospirillum rubrum Mutants
Domenico Lupo and Robin Ghosh*
Department of Bioenergetics, Institute of Biology, University of Stuttgart,
Stuttgart, Germany
Received 5 January 2004/ Accepted 24 May 2004
The gene (puhA) encoding the H subunit of the reaction center
(RC) was deleted by site-directed interposon mutagenesis by using a
kanamycin resistance cassette lacking transcriptional terminators to
eliminate polar effects in both the wild-type strain
Rhodospirillum rubrum S1 and the carotenoid-less strain R .
rubrum G9 . The puhA interposon mutants were incapable of
photoheterotrophic growth but grew normally under aerobic chemoheterotrophic
conditions . Absorption spectroscopy and sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the RCs were
absent . In minimal medium and also in modified medium containing
succinate and fructose, the light-harvesting 1 complex (LH1) levels
of the S1-derived mutants were about 70 to 100% of the wild-type
levels in the same media . The correct assembly of LH1 in the membrane
and the pigment-pigment interaction were confirmed by near-infrared
circular dichroism spectroscopy . LH1 formation was almost absent
when the carotenoid-less G9-derived puhA mutants were grown
in standard minimal medium, suggesting that carotenoids may
stabilize LH1 . In the fructose-containing medium, however, the LH1
levels of the G9 mutants were 70 to 100% of the parental strain
levels . Electron micrographs of thin sections of R . rubrum
revealed photosynthetic membranes in all mutants grown in succinate-fructose
medium . These studies indicate that the H subunit of the RC is
necessary neither for maximal formation of LH1 nor for photosynthetic
membrane formation but is essential for functional RC assembly .
It is well established that in phototrophic purple bacteria the
photosynthetic unit is expressed in a specialized intracytoplasmic
membrane (ICM) (16, 18) and is composed of
a reaction center (RC) surrounded by a light-harvesting complex (1,
17, 44) . Although most
phototrophic bacteria contain two kinds of light-harvesting
complexes, light-harvesting complex 1 (LH1) and light-harvesting
complex 2 (LH2), only one of these, LH1, is in intimate contact with
the RC . Recent structural studies (6, 20,
22, 25, 31,
36, 37, 43,
59-61) have indicated that the component
ß
dimers of LH1, each of which binds two bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)
molecules and at least one molecule of carotenoid, form a ring
around the RC . For Rhodospirillum rubrum (33,
37, 59, 61) and
Blastochloris viridis (previously called Rhodopseudomonas
viridis) (60), both of which contain only a
single light-harvesting complex, LH1 appears to completely surround
the RC . In Rhodobacter sphaeroides, however, recent electron
micrographic evidence (36) has suggested that the
LH1 in this organism may not be completely closed, although the low
resolution of the data in this study may not have been sufficient to
allow a definite conclusion to be drawn . In all cases, however, it
appears that the assembly of RCs and LH1 in vivo is always perfectly
coordinated, and neither biochemical nor spectroscopic evidence has
indicated the presence of empty LH1 rings or incorrectly assembled
RCs . A continuing puzzle, therefore, concerns the mechanism of
assembly of this coordinately regulated supramolecular aggregate .
Genetic studies with Rhodobacter sphaeroides (14,
56), Rhodobacter capsulatus (2,
64-66), and R . rubrum (9)
have indicated that the genes of the puh operon play an
important role in the targeting of the RCs to the LH1 and also in the
assembly of the LH1 per se . Early studies by Sockett and coworkers (57)
indicated that the H subunit of the RC plays a major role in LH1
assembly . Thus, Sockett et al . (57) deleted the
puhA gene together with a small part of the upstream flanking
region in Rhodobacter sphaeroides, which prevented the
formation of LH1 . This group proposed that the H subunit, which is
the only RC subunit to be expressed at low levels under aerobic
conditions, may form an assembly point for the LH1 . Subsequently,
however, Young et al . showed that in Rhodobacter capsulatus (65)
the upstream gene flanking puhA, previously designated
orf1696 and now designated lhaA, is also involved in
enhancing LH1 formation (65, 66),
as are the two open reading frames immediately downstream of
the puhA gene . In particular, Beatty and coworkers showed that
the downstream genes, designated orf214 and orf162b in
Rhodobacter capsulatus, are expressed as an operon (2,
64) and that deletion of either gene reduces the
levels of LH1 and RC formation to less than 20% of the wild-type
levels . The homology of the genes flanking puhA and the
similarity of the gene organization in Rhodobacter sphaeroides,
Rhodobacter capsulatus, and R . rubrum are striking (4),
so that similar functions for these genes are implied . Independently,
Cheng and coworkers (9) deleted the puhA
gene of R . rubrum and part of the flanking upstream gene,
G115 (which shows homology to lhaA), and on the basis of
their results suggested that the H subunit is important for LH1
formation . In the latter study, however, the G115-puhA deletion
mutants still expressed about 30% of the wild-type LH1 levels
under semiaerobic conditions, suggesting that these genes may not be
necessary for LH1 formation . This group also proposed that in R .
rubrum the H subunit plays a major role in the formation of the
ICM, which was reduced in the G115-puhA deletion mutants grown
semiaerobically .
In this study we reexamined the role of puhA in the assembly
of LH1 and RCs in R . rubrum by precisely deleting the puhA
gene without affecting the open reading frames of the flanking genes .
We found that in the H-subunit deletion mutants, in contrast to
the conclusions of Cheng and coworkers (9), puhA is not
necessarily important for high-level LH1 formation (i.e., the level
present during photoheterotrophic growth in low light) or for ICM
formation under particular growth conditions . In contrast to
Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus, growth
of R . rubrum with a special medium (M2SF), containing both
succinate and fructose, allows high-level expression of the
photosynthetic membranes with associated LH1 at levels previously
observed only in anaerobic phototrophic cultures (23,
28) . This medium provides a unique tool for
examining the phenotypes of mutants with lesions in genes involved in
photosynthesis and was employed here for the first time for this
purpose . In addition, we deleted puhA using the wild-type
strain R . rubrum S1 and the carotenoid-less strain R .
rubrum G9 . A comparison of the results for these two strains
indicated that carotenoids have a stabilizing role for LH1 formation
in the absence of the H subunit .
Growth of bacteria. Bacterial strains and plasmids are listed
in Table 1 . Escherichia coli cultures were
grown in Luria-Bertani medium (52) at 37°C .
Antibiotics were added as required at the following concentrations:
ampicillin (sodium salt), 100 µg/ml; kanamycin sulfate, 50 µg/ml; and
tetracycline HCl, 10 µg/ml . R . rubrum strains were grown at
30°C in Sistrom minimal medium A (M medium, containing 20 mM
potassium succinate and with 0.7 mM glutamic acid and 0.3 mM aspartic
acid added) as described previously (56), and
antibiotics were added as required at the following concentrations:
kanamycin sulfate, 20 µg/ml; and tetracycline HCl, 4 µg/ml .
Alternatively, R . rubrum strains were grown in M2S (M medium
with 40 mM NH4+ succinate instead of potassium
succinate, 40 mM potassium phosphate, and 20 mM HEPES) or M2SF (M2S
medium containing, in addition, 0.3% [16.7 mM] fructose) (23) .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids used in this study.
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Cultures were cultivated phototrophically in closed bottles (Pyrex)
by using M medium at 30°C . R . rubrum was grown chemoheterotrophically
in the dark in 250-ml baffled Erlenmeyer flasks in one of the
media described above (100 ml) at 30°C with shaking at 150 rpm
(Lab-Therm; 2-cm throw; Adolf Kühner Inc., Basel, Switzerland) .
For anaerobic, photoheterotrophic growth on M agar plates, an
anaerobic jar (Oxoid) and a controlled CO2-H2 atmosphere
(GasPak; Oxoid no . BR 038B) were used .
Molecular biological techniques. Plasmid DNA was isolated by
using kits obtained from QIAGEN and Bio-Rad and was cloned by
standard procedures (52) . For Southern
hybridization, DNA fragments were transferred to nylon filters
(Hybond-N; Pharmacia) as described previously (52) and
were detected by using chemiluminescence with digoxigenin-labeled
probes as described by the manufacturer (Roche Diagnostics) .
PCR production of the puh operon. Cosmid pSC21-7 with
a 20-kb insert, carrying the puh operon (Fig . 1),
was isolated by complementation of a putative bchL mutant of
R . rubrum S1 (50) . The insert could be excised as
three HindIII fragments, two of which were subsequently subcloned
into pBsKSII(+) to obtain plasmids pBsH2 and pBsH3 (Table 1) .
The 3.6-kb HindIII fragment encoding the puh operon (described
previously [4]) was cloned into pBsH2 . This cloning was
confirmed initially by PCR amplification of a 321-bp fragment with
PCR primers derived from the puh promoter sequence described
by Bérard et al . (4, 5) . The
primers used for PCR were 5'-CTGGCCGATGAAACGGTC-3' and
5'-ATTCATGAGAAGGCCTCC-3', and the PCR was performed by using the
AmpliTaq kit protocol (Perkin-Elmer), as follows: 30 cycles of
initial denaturation at 94°C, 1 min of annealing at 52°C, and
polymerization for 1 min at 72°C . DNA sequence analysis was used for
final confirmation .
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FIG . 1 . Construction map for deletion of the puhA gene . The
approximate position and relevant restriction sites of the puh
operon (4) on the pVK100-derived cosmid pSC21-7 are
indicated at the top . The lower part of the figure shows a magnification
of the 3.6-kb fragment present in pBsH2, which encodes the puhA
operon used for deletion of the puhA open reading frame and
insertion of the kanamycin cassette, which yielded pBsPUHK1 and
pBsPUHK2, respectively . Plasmids pRKGP and pRK GP
used in the complementation experiment are also shown . Relevant scale
bars are shown . Abbreviations: B, BamHI; RI, EcoRI; S,
SalI; P, PstI; H, HindIII; Nt, NotI; Ml,
MluI; Bt, BstEII; Sph, SphI; Ec4, Eco47III.
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Generation of puhA deletion mutants. The puhA
gene (771 bp) on pBsH2 was digested with MluI (53 bp downstream of
the puhA ATG start codon) and BstEII (23 bp upstream of the
puhA TAA stop codon) to remove a 695-bp fragment . The 5.9-kb
fragment was blunt ended with the Klenow polymerase fragment and
ligated to a blunt-ended kanamycin cassette (npt gene) . The
kanamycin cassette was obtained on a 1.5-kb HindIII-SalI fragment
from Tn5 (3) and was subcloned in pBsLGKAN to obtain
plasmids pBsPUHK1 and pBsPUHK2, which contained the kanamycin
gene in the same direction and in the opposite direction with respect
to the direction of puh transcription, respectively (Fig.
1) . Subsequent restriction digestion of both plasmids
with HindIII yielded puh-derived fragments (4.4 kb), which were
blunt ended with the Klenow polymerase fragment and then ligated
to EcoRI-restricted and blunt-ended pSUP202 (55) to
obtain plasmids pSUPPK1 and pSUPPK2, respectively . These plasmids
were transferred separately to either R . rubrum S1 or R .
rubrum G9 by triparental conjugation with E . coli RR28 (29)
by using helper plasmid pRK2013 (19) in E . coli
RR28 and the filter-mating technique (63) . The
transconjugants, containing a chromosomal insertion, were selected on
the basis of kanamycin resistance under aerobic dark conditions .
Double-crossover recombinants containing the puhA-npt construct
were selected on the basis of the Kanr Tets
phenotype and were confirmed by Southern hybridization .
Complementation of mutants. The 3.6-kb fragment was cloned
into pRK404 (13) at the blunt-ended BamHI site to
obtain plasmid pRKOPUH1and was transferred to the R . rubrum puhA
deletion mutants by triparental conjugation as described above . In a
further construction, a 2.4-kb HindIII-EcoRI fragment containing
full-length G115-puhA was inserted into pRK404 to obtain
plasmid pRKGP (Fig . 1) . Finally, G115 was N-terminally
truncated by removing an SphI-Eco47III fragment, which removed
approximately 58% (259 amino acids) of the protein . The truncated
HindIII-EcoRI fragment inserted into pRK404 was designated pRK GP .
Isolation of chromatophores (ICM). The chromatophore was
prepared as described previously (24), with the
following modifications . Cells from semiaerobic cultures (500 ml)
grown in M2SF to an optical density at 660 nm (path length, 1 cm) of
3 were harvested at 4°C and washed with 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer
(pH 7.0) (50P7) . The washed cell paste was resuspended in 8 volumes
of 50P7, and the cells were disrupted by three passages through a
French press-type apparatus (Emulsiflex C5; Avestin, Ottawa, Canada)
in the presence of a few grains of DNase I and the protease inhibitor
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (100 µM) . The lysate was centrifuged
once at 3,000 x g to
remove unbroken cells and then recentrifuged at 40,000
x g at 4°C for 20 min to remove cell
fragments . The resulting supernatant (water-soluble proteins and ICM)
was then centrifuged at 100,000 x
g for 1 h at 4°C to obtain a supernatant (containing
water-soluble proteins) and a pellet (containing the ICM fraction) .
The pellet was washed once in 50P7 containing 5 mM EDTA by
homogenization and recentrifuged . Finally, the pellet was resuspended
in 2 ml of 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), frozen in liquid nitrogen, and
stored at –85°C .
Absorption spectra. The absorption spectrum of intact cells
and the absorption spectrum of chromatophores were determined by
using 2-mm-path-length cuvettes with a Jasco V-560 UV/VIS
spectrophotometer equipped with a photodiode detector for turbid
samples . Intact cells were measured after suspension in M medium
containing 80% glycerol . For the absorption measurements equal
amounts of cells and chromatophores were employed by adjusting the
concentrations to obtain the same absorption at 660 nm (turbidity) or
at 275 nm (amount of protein) .
SDS-PAGE. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed by the method of Laemmli (41)
by using 12.5% acrylamide gels . In general, samples (20 µg of
protein) were precipitated by addition of 3 volumes of methanol
before solubilization in SDS-PAGE sample buffer . This step was
effective in reducing the BChl and lipid contents of the samples,
which could affect the final gel resolution . The gels were stained
with Coomassie brilliant blue R250 (Pharmacia) . Heme staining was
performed as described by Goodhew et al . (27) .
Protein determination was performed by the modified Lowry method of
Peterson (46) by using bovine serum albumin as the
standard .
Near-IR CD spectroscopy. Near-infrared (near-IR) circular
dichroism (CD) spectra were recorded at room temperature by using a
Jasco 715 spectropolarimeter and a near-IR-sensitive photomultiplier
(bandwidth, 1 nm) . Samples having an A880 or A873
of 1 (path length, 1 mm) were used; the corresponding volume was
diluted in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) containing 10 mM sodium ascorbate .
Data were corrected by smoothing after subtraction of the baseline
value .
ESR spectroscopy. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectra of
chromatophores were recorded at room temperature with a Bruker ESP
300 pulsed-ESR spectrometer . Both the light-induced signal and the
dark signal were measured with samples (in 4-mm quartz capillaries)
having the same absorption at 880 nm (or 873 nm) . The samples were
illuminated with a 150-W halogen light source . The ESR parameters
were as follows: microwave frequency, 9.45 GHz; frequency, 100
kHz; power, 20 dB (2 mW); field width, 50 G; conversion time, 80 ms;
field modulation intensity, 8 Gpp; and gain, 2
x 104 .
Electron micrographs. Cells obtained after cultivation with
M2SF (as described above) were fixed with 2% glutaraldehyde, stained
with 1% (wt/vol) OsO4, dehydrated by using a series of
acetone extractions, and embedded in Spurr's resin (58) .
Ultrathin sections were cut with a Leica UCT ultramicrotome and
counterstained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and micrographs
were recorded with a Zeiss EM10 electron microscope at 60 kV .
Gene deletion and Southern hybridization analysis. The
genotypes of the S1-derived puh-npt double recombinants
SPUHK1 and SPUHK2 and the G9-derived recombinants GPUHK1 and GPUHK2
were confirmed by Southern hybridization by using a NotI/EcoRI
fragment (1.7 kb) containing the intact puhA gene and flanking
regions (818 bp upstream and 77 bp downstream of puhA) and the
isolated npt gene (1.5-kb HindIII/SalI fragment) as probes (data
not shown) .
Phenotypes of the deletion mutants. The double recombinants
derived from S1, SPUHK1 and SPUHK2, appeared to be pale pink when
they were grown aerobically in the dark on M agar plates, whereas the
double recombinants derived from G9, GPUHK1 and GPUHK2, were
essentially colorless . All mutants were incapable of photosynthetic
growth but showed growth kinetics characteristic of the parental
strains when they were grown aerobically . Initially, absorption
spectra of the parental strains and the deletion mutants (Fig.
2) were obtained by using cell cultures grown
semiaerobically in M (Sistrom) medium . M medium is essentially
comparable to the modified medium of Ormerod et al . (45)
employed by Cheng and coworkers (9), but it contains
succinate instead of malate as the sole carbon source . For the
deletion mutants obtained from S1, the absorption maximum (wavelength,
880 nm) due to LH1 was at least 70 to 90% of the absorption
maximum observed for the wild-type strain . We noted that, as reported
previously (23), the wild-type LH1 levels under semiaerobic
growth conditions in M medium were only about 20% of the levels
observed in the same medium when organisms were grown photosynthetically .
The corresponding maximum (wavelength, 873 nm) for the deletion
mutants obtained from G9 was essentially absent . For all deletions
the absorption maxima at 760 and 802 nm arising from the bacteriopheophytin
and accessory BChl of the RC in the wild type were absent . Above
we describe modified Sistrom media (M2S and M2SF) (31)
which enhance the levels of BChl and photosynthetic membranes in
cells grown semiaerobically in the dark compared to the levels in
cells grown under anaerobic, phototrophic conditions . For S1
and G9 growth in M2S led to approximately 3.7- and 10-fold increases
in the levels of LH1, respectively, as judged from the LH1 absorption
maximum, compared to the levels observed for M medium, whereas growth
in M2SF (M2S containing 0.3% fructose) led to levels of LH1 and
implicitly photosynthetic membrane production essentially equivalent
to those observed for photoheterotrophic cultures grown under low
light conditions . We noted that in contrast to Rhodobacter
sphaeroides and Rhodobacter capsulatus, in which the ICM
composition is very variable, it is well established that the ICM
composition in R . rubrum is remarkably constant under all
growth conditions (12, 30) . This enabled
us to estimate the ICM levels on the basis of the near-IR absorption
of the LH1 complex . In M2S, the LH1 near-IR maxima for both S1- and
G9-derived puhA mutants were approximately 26 to 38% (±5%)
of the maxima for the parental strain (Table 2), whereas
in M2SF, the LH1 near-IR intensities of S1 and G9 were enhanced
approximately 5- and 14-fold, respectively, compared to the
intensities observed in M medium . Strikingly, the LH1 near-IR
intensities of both S1- and G9-derived mutants grown in M2SF were
approximately 70 to 100% (±5%) of the wild-type intensities (Table
2) . For all of the mutants the peak at 802 nm
corresponding to the accessory BChl a of the RC was not detectable,
indicating that the RC was absent . The small peak at 760 nm
observed for SPUHK1 cannot be interpreted at the present time, but we
noted that it was also observable in the spectrum obtained by Wong et
al . (64) from an LH2– (originating from a lesion
in pucC) puhA mutant of Rhodobacter capsulatus .
Finally, the relative absorption intensity of the LH1 maximum at 880
nm (or 873 nm) was independent of the orientation of the kanamycin
cassette with respect to the direction of transcription of the
puh operon . Thin sections (Fig . 3) of all puhA
deletion mutants and their parental strains showed similar levels of
ICM with essentially identical diameters and cellular distributions
when organisms were grown semiaerobically with M2SF .
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FIG . 2 . Absorption spectra of total cells grown in different growth
media . (A) Absorption spectra obtained for S1 (solid line) and mutants
SPUHK1 (dashed line) and SPUHK2 (dotted line) . (B) Absorption spectra
for G9 (solid line), ST2 (solid line), and the puhA deletion
mutants GPUHK1 (dashed line) and GPUHK2 (dotted line) . The spectra were
obtained with equal amounts of cells (A660 with 1-cm
light path, 2.5) suspended in M medium containing 80% (vol/vol)
glycerol . A 2-mm-path-length quartz cell was employed for measurement .
The growth media used are indicated . The peak heights were determined by
extrapolating the A660 (due only to turbidity) to 880
nm and then subtracting the value obtained from the measured 880-nm (or
873-nm) peak.
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| TABLE 2 . Relative amounts of the LH1 complexes in different culture
media
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FIG . 3 . Electron micrographs of puhA deletion mutants and
parental strains . The arrows indicate the ICM . Bars = 0.25 µm . All
cultures were grown semiaerobically by using M2SF (see Materials and
Methods).
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Complementation. All deletion mutants could be complemented by
plasmid pRKOPUH1, which contained the complete puh operon (G115,
puhA, I2372, and I3087), as well as withpRKGP,
which contained only G115-puhA, and pRK GP,
which contained only puhA, and produced colonies with the Kanr
Tetr phenotype capable of photoheterotrophic growth . In
all cases absorption spectra of the complemented strains showed
absorption maxima at 760 and 802 nm due to the presence of intact RC
complexes (data not shown) . In addition, the ratios of the intensity
of the near-IR LH1 absorption maximum to the intensities of the RC at
760 and 802 nm were identical to those of the parental strains,
showing that the LH1-to-RC stoichiometry had been restored . The
intensity of the near-IR peak at 880 nm, corresponding to LH1,
obtained for the complemented mutants derived from R . rubrum
S1 was 70% [SPUHK1(pRKOPUH1)] to 90% [SPUHK2(pRKOPUH1)] of that of
the parental strain . This was also true when pRKGP was employed for
complementation (Table 2) . However, the
corresponding intensities of the near-IR peak at 873 nm obtained from
the complemented strains GPUHK1(pRKOPUH1) and GPUHK2(pRKOPUH1) grown
phototrophically were only about 50% of that of the parental strain,
R . rubrum G9, indicating once again that there was a
stabilizing effect due to the carotenoids . Under semiaerobic
conditions in M2SF both SPUHK1(pRKGP) and S1(pRKGP) showed almost the
same LH1 levels as the corresponding strains in the absence of a
plasmid .
However, compared to the growth rate of wild-type strain S1, the
growth rates of SPUHK1(pRKGP) and S1(pRKGP) showed a lag phase of up
to 10 h before growth commenced (data not shown) . To test the
possibility that establishment of rare plasmid-chromosome
recombinants might be responsible for the 10-h lag phase, we
repeatedly (three times) employed inocula from cultures in the late
exponential phase for further cultivation . The latter cultures also
showed the characteristic 10-h lag phase, suggesting that
plasmid-chromosome recombination had not occurred . We believe that
the 10-h lag phase is due to the overexpression of G115 (the pRK
derivatives are present at levels of about 10 copies per cell in
R . rubrum [51]), which hydropathy analysis indicated
is an integral membrane protein containing 12 putative transmembrane
-helices
(4), as complementation with pRK GP
did not show any lag phase under either aerobic or anaerobic
conditions . In E . coli it is often observed that high to
medium expression of integral membrane proteins leads to toxicity
effects (53) . The similar levels of LH1 observed
for SPUHK1(pRKGP) and SPUHK1(pRK GP)
show that the overexpression of G115, which has been implicated
in LH1 assembly (66), is not important for the puhA
complementation described here .
Characterization of isolated chromatophores. Chromatophores
were isolated from parental strains and mutants grown in M2SF . The
isolated pellets from all mutants showed the intense pigmentation of
the parental strains . The absorption spectra of resuspended
chromatophores (equal amounts of membrane protein) from all of the
mutants corresponded exactly to those of the parental strains with
respect to the positions of the peak maxima of BChl and carotenoids
(data not shown) . The relative intensities of the individual spectral
component LH1 Qy and the carotenoid main peak (Table
3) were also about 80 to 90% (±10%) of the
wild-type intensities . The isolated chromatophores of the mutants
showed little or no intensity at either 760 or 802 nm due to the RC .
An independent determination of the BChl content of S1 under
semiaerobic conditions in M2SF yielded a value (32.7 ± 4.4 nmol of
BChl/mg of protein) almost identical to that reported by Cheng et al .
(9) (34.1 ± 4.73 nmol of BChl/mg of protein) .
However, in contrast to the findings of Cheng et al . (9),
who obtained values of 9.52 nmol of BChl/mg of protein for their
G115-puhA mutant grown under semiaerobic conditions in modified
medium of Ormerod et al . (45), semiaerobic
cultures of SPUHK1 and SPUHK2 grown in M2SF in this study yielded
values of 32.66 ± 16 and 23.25 ± 7.22 nmol of BChl/mg of protein,
respectively, corresponding to 99% and 71% of the wild-type values,
respectively . As expected, the percentage of variation observed for
the BChl determination is very close to the LH1 variation (for a
comparison with the parental strain under the same growth conditions)
determined for the 880-nm absorption maximum (Table 3) .
An analysis of BChl extraction data for the G9-derived strains showed
a similar correlation (data not shown) . In addition, both protein
determination and spectral analysis confirmed that the
pigment-to-protein ratio of the mutants was approximately 90% that of
the parental strains . SDS-PAGE analysis of the isolated
chromatophores revealed that in all cases the 21- and 24-kDa bands
corresponding to the L and M subunits of the RC, respectively, were
not detectable in the mutants (Fig . 4) . Precise
densitometric analysis showed that the very weak band at
approximately 30 kDa had a lower molecular mass than the H subunit
and was therefore assigned to another component which serendipitously
migrated at the same position (data not shown) . A protein with a
molecular mass of approximately 31 kDa, which stained positively for
heme and was assigned to cytochrome c1 (40),
was present at the same level in the mutants and in the parental
strains . Interestingly, the SDS-PAGE profile of all of the mutant
chromatophores, particularly those derived from R . rubrum G9,
showed a strongly enhanced intensity for a 40-kDa protein, which
might correspond to the predicted G115 gene product .
| TABLE 3 . Relative amounts of the LH1 BCh1 and carotenoids in isolated
chromatophoresa
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FIG . 4 . SDS-PAGE analysis of isolated chromatophores of parental strains
and mutants . Each lane contained 20 µg of protein and was stained with
Coomassie brilliant blue . Growth conditions (aerobic [aer] and anaerobic
[an]) are indicated where appropriate . The positions of the known
protein components, including the H, M, and L subunits of the RC, as
well as cytochrome c1 (C1) of the
cytochrome bc1 complex and the LH1 (
and ß polypeptides were not resolved in this system), are indicated . The
question mark indicates the position of an unknown protein with a mass
corresponding to that of G115 (LhaA).
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The SDS-PAGE profiles of the water-soluble fractions of the parental
and mutant strains were essentially identical, with the exception of
an additional 30-kDa band observed only for the mutants (data not
shown) . We attributed this band to the npt gene product as it
was also observed for the water-soluble fraction of the
carotenoid-less mutant ST2, which was derived by Tn5
mutagenesis of S1 (62) .
The microscopic integrity of LH1 and associated pigments was
analyzed by near-IR CD, which has previously been shown to be a
fingerprint for pigment-pigment interactions in the Qy region
(10, 24, 26,
47, 54) . The near-IR CD spectra of
isolated chromatophores from S1 grown anaerobically and
semiaerobically (Fig . 5A) were essentially
identical, having a peak maximum at 875 nm, a crossover point at 886
nm, and a peak minimum at 899 nm, which are characteristic of native
LH1 . The minor differences observed in the region which crossed over
at 880 nm were due to the effects of slight differences in light
scattering in different measurements and are within the usual
experimental error observed for the same preparation . In addition, a
small S-shaped signal with a peak maximum at 807 nm, a crossover
point at 813 nm, and a peak minimum at 820 nm, which were due to the
RC (47), was also observed . Chromatophores
isolated from both SPUHK1 and SPUHK2 grown semiaerobically with M2SF
exhibited essentially an identical S-shaped signal in the 880-nm
region due to the LH1, but the S-shaped signal at approximately 800
nm due to the RC was absent . The peak and trough intensities of the
near-IR CD spectra obtained by using equivalent amounts of
chromatophores (adjusted to an A880 or A873
[path length, 1 mm] of 1) were approximately equal . The
carotenoid-less parental strain G9 grown anaerobically and ST2 grown
semiaerobically in M2SF also yielded near-IR CD spectra that had the
same features and relative intensities as the spectra of S1, although
the maximum, crossover point, and minimum of the CD signal due to LH1
were blue shifted by approximately 10 nm, as expected from the
absorption maximum of the LH1 Qy band (Fig .
5B) . The CD spectra of the LH1 were identical to those reported
previously (24) . We included strain ST2 here to
eliminate possible differences in the LH1 near-IR CD spectrum arising
from undefined random mutations in G9 . As observed for the CD spectra
of S1 mutants, the CD spectra of the G9 mutants GPUHK1 and GPUHK2
showed the same general features as the features observed for the
parental strain for the LH1 region, but the signal due to RC was
absent . However, the relative intensities of the near-IR CD spectra
of the isolated chromatophores of the mutants were only approximately
70% of those of G9, suggesting that the carotenoids had a stabilizing
effect .
|
FIG . 5 . Near-IR CD spectra of isolated chromatophores obtained from
parental strains and puhA deletion mutants . (A) Spectra obtained
from S1 grown anaerobically (solid line) and semiaerobically (solid
line), as well as from deletion mutants SPUHK1 (dashed line) and SPUHK2
(dashed line) . (B) Spectra obtained from G9 grown anaerobically (solid
line), ST2 grown semiaerobically (solid line), and puhA deletion
mutants GPUHK1 (dashed line) and GPUHK2 (dashed line) . Equal amounts,
corresponding to an A880 (or A873)
with a 1-mm light path of 1, were employed to obtain the measurements.
|
|
In the study of Cheng et al . (9) low-temperature ESR
spectroscopy of total cells obtained from cultures of G115-puhA
deletion mutants of R . rubrum R5 revealed a small amount
(about 8% of the wild-type level) of a reversible light-inducible
signal due to the special pair of the RC (39) . We
also performed ESR spectroscopy of isolated chromatophores, although
we performed our analysis at room temperature . With chromatophores
from S1, G9, and ST2 grown both anaerobically and semiaerobically in
M2SF, the presence of RC was confirmed by light-inducible ESR
spectra (data not shown) . In contrast, no light-induced ESR signal
due to RC was observed for chromatophores from any of the mutants
grown under semiaerobic conditions, although the attainable
signal-to-noise ratio was too low to accurately determine an RC
signal that was less than 10% of the wild-type signal . However, even
low functional expression of RC should allow mutants to be
photosynthetically competent, which was not observed even after more
than 3 weeks of anaerobic incubation under high light conditions
In early studies in which point mutations were used to eliminate
functional LH1 assembly in Rhodobacter capsulatus, Garcia et
al . (21), Richter et al . (49), Bylina et
al . (7), and Dörge et al . (15)
indicated that the LH1 is not essential for RC formation . However, in
many of these studies it was also shown that nonassembled
or ß polypeptides were still present in the ICM, thus leaving their
possible role in RC assembly uncertain . The study of Richter and
Drews (48), who deleted either the pufA or
pufB gene, showed the same result, although in this study the
presence of a membrane-located ß polypeptide was also demonstrated .
However, Jones and coworkers (34, 35)
demonstrated unambiguously that a pufBALMX LH2–
deletion mutant could be complemented by a plasmid containing only
pufLM so that the cells became photosynthetically competent and
the absorption spectrum was characteristic only of functional RC
complexes . This indicates that at least in Rhodobacter capsulatus
and Rhodobacter sphaeroides and probably in all phototrophic
bacteria the assembly of the RC into the membrane does not require
the presence of an LH1 in the membrane or expression of the pufBA
genes . Similarly, it seems that the formation of the LH1 does not
require the presence of an intact RC . Thus, deletion of the L and M
subunits of the RC appeared to have no effect upon the expression and
assembly of the LH1 in Rhodobacter sphaeroides (32)
or R . rubrum (R . Saegesser, R . Bachofen, and R . Ghosh,
unpublished data), although a reduction of 55% was observed for an LM
deletion mutant of Rhodobacter capsulatus (38) .
On the other hand, in all of the organisms mentioned above, deletion
of the H subunit causes a significant reduction in the levels of LH1
when the organisms are grown in standard minimal media . In all cases,
deletion of the H subunit almost abolished assembly of the RC
into the membrane (9, 57, 64) .
The studies of Beatty and coworkers (2,
64-66), in particular, showed that not
only puhA but also all of the puh operon genes, as well
as the upstream gene lhaA, may be involved in regulating LH1
formation . It is important to note that all studies so far have shown
that the levels of the pufBA and pufBALM transcripts
remain unchanged in puh deletion mutants compared to the
levels in the wild type (8, 57,
64), indicating that the regulation of LH1
assembly occurs posttranslationally .
An important aspect of our study is that we constructed puhA
deletion mutants using a kanamycin cassette lacking a transcriptional
terminator . The npt gene used was obtained from Tn5, in
which it is the first gene of an operon that includes npt, a
streptomycin resistance gene, and a bleomycin resistance gene (42) .
In addition and in contrast to the studies of Sockett et al . (57)
and Cheng et al . (9), we inserted the npt
interposon precisely into the puhA gene without affecting the
upstream flanking regions encoding the LhaA homolog, G115, which has
been shown to be important for LH1 formation in Rhodobacter
capsulatus (65, 66) . Also,
by employing strains with and without carotenoids, we examined the
role of this component in LH1 formation with respect to the function
of the H subunit .
The puhA deletion mutants derived from both the wild-type strain
R . rubrum S1 and the carotenoid-less strain R . rubrum G9
were incapable of photosynthetic growth, which is consistent with
the results obtained for precise transcriptionally neutral puhA
deletion mutants of Rhodobacter capsulatus (64) .
When grown in standard minimal (Sistrom) medium (56),
the absorption, near-IR CD, and ESR spectra of the R . rubrum puhA
mutants showed that the RC signal was undetectable . Interestingly,
only the R . rubrum S1-derived puhA deletion mutants
showed an LH1 peak, whose level was almost 70 to 90% of the wild-type
level under the same growth conditions, suggesting that the
carotenoids present in these strains had a stabilizing effect . The
amount of LH1 per cell (i.e., the amount normalized to the cell
density) observed for Sistrom medium-grown S1 puhA mutants is
approximately 2.5- to 3-fold higher than that observed by Cheng et
al . (9) for their G115-puhA deletion mutant .
The lower level observed by Cheng et al . (9) was
therefore probably due to the absence of G115 (lhaA) in
their strain, as a similar low level was observed for a
transcriptionally neutral lhaA mutant of Rhodobacter capsulatus
(66) . However, in the latter strain, LH1 levels that
were about 20% of the wild-type level were also observed for a
transcriptionally neutral puhA mutant (64) .
The lower level observed in Rhodobacter capsulatus may have
been due to the different genetic background, or the presence of LH2
might have stabilized the formation of LH1 in the absence of puhA
in that strain . When organisms were grown semiaerobically in M2SF
containing succinate and fructose, the LH1 levels in both S1- and
G9-derived deletion mutants reached almost wild-type levels, although
the characteristic 802-nm peak due to the RC remained undetectable .
These results clearly demonstrate that the H subunit is not critical
for maximal LH1 formation under certain growth conditions . In
addition, it should be mentioned that all puhA deletion
mutants obtained here and grown in M2SF had amounts of ICM structures
corresponding to the amount of LH1 formed . Thus, the H subunit is
also not important for ICM formation under certain growth conditions .
The presence of the characteristic absorption maximum for LH1 for
the puhA deletion mutants grown in either M2S or M2SF deserves
further discussion . In all of the structural and biophysical studies
performed with purified LH1 or RC-LH1 complexes in our laboratory so
far (26, 59, 61), we
have observed without exception that the absorption maximum at either
880 nm (for the wild-type strain R . rubrum S1) or 873 nm (for
the carotenoid-less strain R . rubrum G9) is always correlated
with a perfectly assembled closed ring of
ß(BChl)2
dimers . It has also been demonstrated that this is true for LH1
reconstituted with phospholipids (59), and we
believe that it is true for the in vivo situation . However, it is
known that the absorption spectrum may not be sensitive enough to
indicate if the microscopic pigment-pigment interaction is really
identical to that of the wild type . To resolve this question, we
employed near-IR CD spectroscopy, which is exquisitely sensitive to
details of pigment-pigment interactions not indicated by a simple
absorption spectrum . Thus, the near-IR CD spectra of the puhA
deletion mutants grown in M2SF showed that the LH1 show only minor,
if any, differences compared to the LH1 of the wild-type parental
strains, indicating that the H subunit has little or no effect upon
the assembly of the LH1 even at the microscopic level of
pigment-pigment interaction .
In fact, in all of the studies of LH1 assembly in Rhodobacter
capsulatus performed with the puh operon so far, a wild-type
LH1 absorption spectrum, albeit at low level, was observed for
almost every transcriptionally neutral deletion mutant with a
mutation in puh operon genes (64-66);
the only exception was a deletion mutant of orf162b, which
showed levels of LH1 corresponding to about 15% of the wild-type
level (2) . This implies that none of the components
are truly essential for LH1 formation but serve only to enhance it .
This may not be true for Rhodobacter sphaeroides, however, as
Sockett and coworkers (57) demonstrated that their
lhaA-puhA deletion mutant lacked LH1 completely, and at least
the
polypeptide could not be detected by using an anti-LH1
antibody .
The present study was the first study to examine the effect of
carotenoids on the formation of LH1 in puh deletion mutants .
In cultures grown semiaerobically in Sistrom medium, the effect of
carotenoids is striking: in the presence of carotenoids puhA
deletion mutants show a low level of LH1 comparable to that seen in
the corresponding strains of Rhodobacter capsulatus, whereas
in the absence of carotenoids no LH1 formation is observed . When the
M2S and M2SF growth media were employed, increased levels of LH1 were
observed for all puhA mutants, and the level in M2SF was
comparable to the level obtained for the parental strain . These
results clearly show that carotenoids have a stabilizing effect upon
LH1 formation .
In all other studies so far in which Rhodobacter capsulatus
(64) or Rhodobacter sphaeroides (57)
has been used, deletion of puhA led to large reductions in the
LH1 levels compared to the wild-type levels . Thus, puhA
appeared to be important but not essential for LH1 formation . The
situation seems to be different in wild-type carotenoid-containing
R . rubrum, in which similar levels of LH1 were observed in both
the parental (S1) and puhA deletion strains when both minimal
medium (M medium) and M2SF were used . Thus, in carotenoid-containing
strains, it seems that the presence of puhA is largely
unimportant for LH1 formation . In the absence of carotenoids,
however, the LH1 levels are always reduced (and in minimal medium
abolished) compared to the levels in the corresponding
carotenoid-containing strains, indicating that these molecules have
an important stabilizing role . To our knowledge, this study is the
first study to document the influence of carotenoids upon the
phenotype of a puh operon deletion mutant and adds an
additional level of complexity to the factors governing LH1 formation
in vivo . Further studies to examine the effects of carotenoids on the
phenotypes of other puh operon deletion mutants are in
progress .
We thank Michael Schweikert of the Department of Zoology, University
of Stuttgart, for advice concerning electron microscopy . We also
thank Wolfgang Schmidt (Institute of Physics, University of
Stuttgart) for his help with the ESR spectroscopy, Andreas Kuhn for
providing near-IR CD facilities, and Holger Jeske for stimulating
discussions .
We acknowledge the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant
5002-39816), which financed the initial part of the work, and the
German Ministry for Science and Technology (BEO/BMBF) (grant 0311820)
and the Landesgraduiertenförderung (grant 7631.2-01/2) for financial
assistance .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Bioenergetics, Institute of Biology, University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring
57, D-70550 Stuttgart, Germany . Phone: 49-711-685-5047 . Fax: 49-711-685-5096 . robin.ghosh@po.uni-stuttgart.de.
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