Structure of cryptophyte photosystem II-light-harvesting antennae supercomplex

Yu-Zhong Zhang,Kang Li, Bing-Yue Qin, Jian-Ping Guo, Quan-Bao Zhang, Dian-Li Zhao, Xiu-Lan Chen,Jun Gao, Lu-Ning Liu,Long-Sheng Zhao

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS(2024)

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摘要
Cryptophytes are ancestral photosynthetic organisms evolved from red algae through secondary endosymbiosis. They have developed alloxanthin-chlorophyll a/c2-binding proteins (ACPs) as light-harvesting complexes (LHCs). The distinctive properties of cryptophytes contribute to efficient oxygenic photosynthesis and underscore the evolutionary relationships of red-lineage plastids. Here we present the cryo-electron microscopy structure of the Photosystem II (PSII)-ACPII supercomplex from the cryptophyte Chroomonas placoidea. The structure includes a PSII dimer and twelve ACPII monomers forming four linear trimers. These trimers structurally resemble red algae LHCs and cryptophyte ACPI trimers that associate with Photosystem I (PSI), suggesting their close evolutionary links. We also determine a Chl a-binding subunit, Psb-gamma, essential for stabilizing PSII-ACPII association. Furthermore, computational calculation provides insights into the excitation energy transfer pathways. Our study lays a solid structural foundation for understanding the light-energy capture and transfer in cryptophyte PSII-ACPII, evolutionary variations in PSII-LHCII, and the origin of red-lineage LHCIIs. Cryptophytes are ancestral photosynthetic organisms. Here the authors report the cryo-EM structure of the PSII-ACPII from the cryptophyte Chroomonas placoidea, showing that cryptophyte PSII-ACPII consists of a PSII dimer and twelve ACPII monomers that are organised into four linear trimers.
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