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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.M202002200 on May 3, 2002
J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 28, 25160-25169, July 12, 2002
The Binding of Xanthophylls to the Bulk Light-harvesting Complex
of Photosystem II of Higher Plants
A SPECIFIC REQUIREMENT FOR CAROTENOIDS WITH A 3-HYDROXY- -END
GROUP*
Denise
Phillip ,
Stephan
Hobe§,
Harald
Paulsen§,
Peter
Molnar¶ ,
Hideki
Hashimoto**, and
Andrew J.
Young 
From the School of Biological and Earth Sciences,
John Moores University, Byrom Street, Liverpool L3 3AF, United Kingdom,
the § Institute für Allgemeine Botanik,
Johannes-Gutenberg Universität Mainz, Mainz D-55099, Germany, the
¶ Department of Medical Chemistry, University Medical School,
Pecs, P. O. Box 99, H-7601 Hungary, and the
** Department of Physics, Osaka City University, Osaka
560-0043, Japan
Received for publication, February 28, 2002, and in revised form, May 2, 2002
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ABSTRACT |
The pigment composition of the light-harvesting
complexes (LHCs) of higher plants is highly conserved. The bulk complex
(LHCIIb) binds three xanthophyll molecules in combination with
chlorophyll (Chl) a and b. The structural
requirements for binding xanthophylls to LHCIIb have been examined
using an in vitro reconstitution procedure. Reassembly of
the monomeric recombinant LHCIIb was performed using a wide range of
native and nonnative xanthophylls, and a specific requirement for the
presence of a hydroxy group at C-3 on a single -end group was
identified. The presence of additional substituents (e.g.
at C-4) did not interfere with xanthophyll binding, but they could not,
on their own, support reassembly. cis isomers of
zeaxanthin, violaxanthin, and lutein were not bound, whereas
all-trans-neoxanthin and different chiral forms of lutein and zeaxanthin were incorporated into the complex. The C-3 and C-3'
diols lactucaxanthin (a carotenoid native to many plant LHCs) and
eschscholtzxanthin (a retro-carotenoid) both behaved very differently from lutein and zeaxanthin in that they would not support
complex reassembly when used alone. Lactucaxanthin could, however, be
bound when lutein was also present, and it showed a high affinity for
xanthophyll binding site N1. In the presence of lutein, lactucaxanthin
was readily bound to at least one lutein-binding site, suggesting that
the ability to bind to the complex and initiate protein folding may be
dependent on different structural features of the carotenoid molecule.
The importance of carotenoid end group structure and ring-to-chain
conformation around the C-6-C-7 torsion angle of the carotenoid
molecule in binding and complex reassembly is discussed.
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INTRODUCTION |
In contrast to the algae and photosynthetic bacteria, the
carotenoid composition of higher plant photosynthetic tissues is highly
conserved (1). Under conditions of low irradiance, three xanthophylls, namely lutein
((3R,3'R)- , -caroten-3,3'-diol), violaxanthin
((3S,5R,6S,3'S,5'R,6'S)-5,6,5',6'-diepoxy-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydro- , -carotene-3,3'-diol), and 9'-cis neoxanthin
((3S,5R,6R,3'S,5'R,6'S)-5',6'-epoxy-6,7-didehydro-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydro- , -carotene-3,5,3'-triol) together with the carotene, -carotene ( , -carotene), are
typically found. In addition, the leaves of some species may contain
small amounts of one or more of the following carotenoids:
lutein-5,6-epoxide (5,6-epoxy-5,6-dihydro- , -caroten-3,3'-diol),
lactucaxanthin ((3S,3'S,6S,6'S)- , -caroten-3,3'-diol),
and -carotene ( , -carotene). The xanthophyll composition may
alter in the short term when tissues are exposed to high irradiances by
the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin into zeaxanthin
((3R,3'R)- , -carotene-3,3'-diol) and
antheraxanthin (5,6-epoxy-5,6-dihydro- , -carotene-3,3'-diol) (the
xanthophyll cycle; see Ref. 2 for a recent review). Changes in the
carotenoid composition may also be observed over the long term, again
in response to growth irradiance (sun/shade response). This may alter the xanthophyll cycle pool size but may also bring about alterations to
the relative amounts of some carotenoids (e.g. the ratios of -carotene/ -carotene or lactucaxanthin/lutein), perhaps simply reflecting changes to the pigment antenna bed and reaction center (so-called "regulation of light harvesting") (3) and/or changes to
the biosynthetic flux to form the , - or , -carotenoids.
The precise location of these pigments within the photosynthetic
apparatus of higher plants has been determined by a number of studies
in recent years (e.g. Refs. 4-7). The xanthophylls are
associated with the various chlorophyll
(Chl)1
a/b light-harvesting complexes of photosystems I
and II (LHCI and LHCII, respectively). The major light-harvesting
complex of photosystem II, LHCIIb, contains the bulk of chlorophyll and
xanthophylls. The three-dimensional structure of this complex,
determined at a resolution of 3.4 Å, revealed the presence of two
xanthophylls occupying a central position in the complex (8). These two molecules were both tentatively identified as lutein (on the basis of
the pigment stoichiometry of the complex) and have been assigned to
binding sites L1 and L2 in the complex. It is, however, generally accepted that this particular pigment-protein complex has four binding
sites (L1, L2, N1, and V1), one of which (V1) apparently binds its
pigment rather loosely in vitro (7) and may in fact only be
occupied in vivo in plants maintained at high irradiances (9). The precise location of N1 is not known but is thought to be in a
domain located between helix C and the A and B cross-helix (10). In
addition, the fourth (xanthophyll cycle) binding site may not always be
fully occupied, especially in conditions of low irradiance (9). The
apparent strength of binding of these xanthophylls to native LHC has
been determined (7). The pigments show affinity to the native
(trimeric) complex in the order Chl b > neoxanthin > Chl a > lutein > zeaxanthin > violaxanthin. This affinity can alter upon
monomerization of the complex (e.g. neoxanthin is tightly
bound to trimeric LHCIIb but not to monomers of the complex, suggesting
that it occupies a site in the interior of the trimeric array). In
contrast, violaxanthin appears to be loosely bound to LHCIIb,
suggesting a location (V1) on the periphery of the complex. The
relative affinity of violaxanthin is increased upon monomerization of
the complex.
In vitro reconstitution has proved to be a powerful tool in
the study of pigment-protein complexes in higher plants (11, 12), algae
(13), bacteria (14), and crustaceans (15). The technique was first
employed in the study of pigment binding in LHCIIb by Plumley and
Schmidt (11). Reconstitution was achieved using denatured thylakoid
polypeptides from dark-adapted spinach and a pigment mixture (also
extracted from spinach) containing Chls a and b
and native xanthophylls (i.e. lutein, neoxanthin, and
violaxanthin). Paulsen et al. (12) overexpressed the 28-kDa polypeptide from pea in Escherichia coli, enabling the
production of large amounts of homogenous protein. Initial experiments
demonstrated that maximum yields of reconstituted complex were obtained
using a mixture containing native xanthophylls and Chls a
and b. Complexes were also successfully produced using Chls
a and b in combination with only two of the three
native xanthophylls and also using lutein as the only xanthophyll
molecule. Yields of these complexes, however, were poor, and the
complexes were less stable than the complex assembled using the full
native complement of pigments. These studies indicated that lutein was
an essential component for the assembly of LHCIIb. More recent evidence
suggests that, in vivo, there is some plasticity with regard
to the specificity of xanthophyll binding and that some plants
deficient in lutein are indeed viable (16). In vitro, some
specificity for the preferential binding of lutein to reconstituted
LHCIIb has been shown (10, 17).
The aim of the present investigation was to determine which structural
features of the xanthophyll molecule facilitated reassembly of LHCIIb.
In this investigation, a low stringency (detergent exchange) method was
employed (12). The ability of a range of xanthophylls with different
structural features including chain length, end group type and
substituents, and in-chain substitutions together with a number of
geometric and optical isomers to facilitate reassembly of LHCIIb was determined.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
Overexpression of pLHCP in E. coli--
Plasmids were
constructed using standard techniques as previously described (12). The
bacterial host was E. coli strain JM101 (Stratagene,
Heidelberg, Germany).
Isolation of Overexpressed LHCP from Bacteria--
The method
used was that of Paulsen et al. (12). Routinely, bacteria
that had been transformed to accumulate LHCP from pea were grown at
37 °C in 100-ml flasks until the culture density gave an
A550 of 0.4-0.5. Bacteria were cultured in
Luria-Bertani medium: 1% (w/v) Bactotryptone
(Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK), 0.5% (w/v) Bactoyeast (Oxoid,
Basingstoke, UK), and 1% (w/v) NaCl (Merck) to which ampicillin (50 µg ml 1) was added. Expression of LHCP was induced by
the addition of isopropyl- -D-thiogalactopyranoside (1 mM). After a further 4 h at 37 °C, the culture was
cooled to 0 °C and centrifuged at 5000 × g for 5 min. Isolation of LHCP was carried out as detailed by Paulsen et
al. (12), except that Igepal CA-630 (ICN Biomedicals) was
substituted for Nonidet P-40. Unless stated otherwise, all chemicals
were purchased from Sigma.
Isolation of Pigments--
Xanthophylls were isolated from a
range of natural sources. Prior to use, they were purified using a
combination of TLC (silica and MgO), column chromatography, and HPLC.
Final concentrations were quantified by UV-visible spectroscopy
(HP8453; Agilent Technologies, Stockport, UK) using the appropriate
extinction coefficient. Chls a and b were
purchased from Sigma. cis isomers of lutein violaxanthin and
zeaxanthin and chiral-isomers of lutein and zeaxanthin were isolated
using a combination of TLC, column chromatography, and HPLC.
Identification was made on the basis of Rf and TR values together with UV-visible spectral
characteristics in comparison with authenticated standards. Unless
otherwise stated, all carotenoids are all-trans. Structures
of the compounds used in this study are given in Figs.
1 (carotenoids native to plant LHC) and
2 (nonnative carotenoids).

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Fig. 1.
Structures of native
all-trans-xanthophylls and selected cis
isomers used in the reconstitution of LHCIIb. All
xanthophylls supported reassembly of LHCIIb unless otherwise indicated.
*, failed to support complex reassembly; , only supports complex
reassembly when used in combination with lutein (see "Results" for
details).
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Fig. 2.
Structures of nonnative
all-trans-xanthophylls used in the reconstitution of
LHCIIb. All xanthophylls supported reassembly of LHCIIb unless
otherwise indicated. *, failed to support complex reassembly.
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Reconstitution of Pigment-Protein Complexes--
The low
stringency method of Paulsen et al. (18) was used unless
otherwise stated. LHCP (4 µg) was solubilized in buffer composed of
100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 11), 5 mM 6-aminocaproic
acid, 1 mM benzamidine, 12.5% (w/v) sucrose, and 2% (w/v)
lithium dodecyl sulfate. The mixture was heated to 100 °C for 5 min.
After cooling, dithiothreitol was added to a final concentration of 1 mM. Pigment mixes containing 50 µg of Chls a
and b (1:1) and 4.0 µg of xanthophyll were dissolved in 2 µl of ethanol (giving a Chl/xanthophyll ratio of 12.5). This was
introduced to the LHCP, and the solution was mixed. All procedures were
carried out in glass test tubes on ice. Octyl glucoside was added to
the solution to a final concentration of 1% (w/v) with vigorous
mixing. The solution was allowed to stand for a minimum of 5 min. The
majority of the dodecyl sulfate was precipitated by the addition of 200 mM KCl. The solution was centrifuged (10,000 × g, 3 min), and the supernatant was retained. The
reconstituted complex was isolated and purified by carrying out
nondenaturing PAGE on the supernatant (see below).
The high stringency protocol of Plumley and Schmidt (11) was also
performed as follows. Isolated LHCIIb polypeptides or delipidated
thylakoid polypeptides were resuspended in solubilization buffer
(polypeptide concentration and solubilization composition was the same
as used in the low stringency protocol detailed above). Following
heating at 100 °C for 5 min and subsequent cooling, pigments (in
ethanol) were introduced to the solubilized protein (see above for
concentrations). Reconstitution was achieved by freezing the mixture at
20 °C. A series of three freeze-thaw cycles (6-12 h of freezing
followed by 15 min of thawing) was employed to complete the
reconstitution process. Reconstituted complexes were isolated as
detailed below.
Partially Denaturing PAGE and SDS-PAGE--
Partially denaturing
PAGE was carried out at 4 °C using discontinuous gels and the buffer
system of Laemmli (in which lithium dodecyl sulfate replaced SDS in the
electrode buffer) as previously described (19). Electrophoresis was
carried using a Sigma midget vertical gel system with water cooling.
Gels were run at 100 V until the free pigment band had migrated ~7 cm
into the resolving gel.
Following partially denaturing PAGE, pigmented complexes were cut from
the gel using a scalpel. The complex was electroeluted from the gel
using the Blue Tank (Isco). The electrophoresis tank contained buffer
with the same composition as that used during partially denaturing
PAGE. The nanotraps contained the same buffer that had undergone a
10-fold dilution. Electroelution was carried out for 20-30 min with a
current of 2 mA/trap. When electroelution was complete, room
temperature absorption spectra were obtained using an Agilent
Technologies 8453 spectrophotometer (Stockport, UK).
Fully denaturing PAGE was carried out as previously described (12).
Green bands were excised from partially denaturing gels and heated to
100 °C for 2 min. The band was then placed in the gel slot of an
SDS-polyacrylamide gel. SDS replaced lithium dodecyl sulfate in the
electrode buffer.
Preparation of Delipidated Thylakoids--
Thylakoids were
prepared from spinach by the method of Berthold et al. (20).
Acetone delipidation of the thylakoids was carried out as described by
Plumley and Schmidt (11). Reconstitution of solubilized delipidated
thylakoids was carried out using the detergent exchange technique
described above.
HPLC of Pigments in Complexes--
Where more than one
xanthophyll was used in the reconstitution mixture, HPLC analysis of
the pigment content of the complex was carried out to determine the
ratio of bound xanthophylls. Pigments were extracted from gel slices
using the method of Martinson and Plumley (21). Pigments in the complex
were separated using an HPLC system (Spherisorb ODS2 column; 250 × 4.6 mm, Phenomenex, Macclesfield, UK) with an Agilent Technologies
HP1040 diode array detector and Gynkotek 480 pump (Dionex Ltd., Leeds,
UK). The solvent system used was as described in Ref. 6.
Estimation of Chls a and b and Xanthophylls--
Pigment-protein
complexes were excised from gel slices following partially denaturing
PAGE. Pigments were carefully extracted using acetone/ethanol (1:1,
v/v), partitioned into diethyl ether, and washed several times with
water. Following extraction the solvent was evaporated using
oxygen-free nitrogen. Samples were resuspended in acetone and
quantitative analysis of Chls a and b and
xanthophylls was carried out using the method of Lichtenthaler and
Wellburn (22). The yield of reassembled complex was calculated as a
percentage of the recovery of total bound chlorophyll in the
reassembled complex as a function of the level obtained in the complex
reassembled with native xanthophylls.
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RESULTS |
Binding of Native Xanthophylls--
A comparison of the
procedures for the in vitro reconstitution of the 28-kDa
polypeptide from pea overexpressed in E. coli and the high
stringency procedure utilizing solubilized spinach thylakoid
polypeptides was initially performed. A 1:1 ratio of Chls a
and b (50 µg) and a mixture of native xanthophylls (1.7 µg of lutein, 0.9 µg of 9'-cis neoxanthin, 1.4 µg of
violaxanthin) were used, giving a Chl/xanthophyll ratio of 12.5:1. In
the present study, the resulting stoichiometry of the reassembled
complex using all three procedures was comparable with ratios of Chl
a/b in the range 1.11-1.18:1 and a ratio of
Chl/xanthophyll of 4:1 (Table I). These
are very close to that of native spinach LHCIIb (purified by
isoelectric focusing) in which the ratio of Chl
a/b was 1.22:1 and the ratio of Chl/xanthophyll
was 4.1:1. The room temperature absorption spectra of the complex
reconstituted using a mixture of xanthophylls by the low stringency
technique is almost identical to that seen for native LHCIIb (Fig.
3). Hobe et al. (17) have
previously demonstrated the use of the low stringency procedure to
reassemble LHCIIb with single xanthophylls, including relatively
unstable Chl a/b complexes containing lutein,
zeaxanthin, violaxanthin, or 9'-cis neoxanthin. This
particular method was chosen for the remainder of this study, since it
permitted a systematic analysis of the structural requirements for
xanthophyll binding employing a range of carotenoids, many of which
resulted in the formation of relatively unstable pigment-protein
complexes.
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Table I
Comparison of different techniques for reassembly of a mixture of
native xanthophylls (see "Results" for details) in reconstituted
LHCII (10, 12) and in thylakoids (11) (n = 6 ± S.E.)
The xanthophyll stoichiometry is reported per 12 Chl molecules, and the
S.E. never exceeded 6% of the mean.
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Fig. 3.
Room temperature absorption spectra of native
LHCIIb isolated by isoelectric focusing (dashed
line) and LHCIIb reconstituted with a stoichiometric
mixture of native xanthophylls (see "Experimental
Procedures" for details) (solid line).
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With the exception of lactucaxanthin (see below), all of the
xanthophylls native to the photosynthetic tissues of higher plants were
able to support reassembly of LHCIIb when used alone with Chls
a and b, using the low stringency procedure.
Yields of the reassembled complex were, however, always lower than that
achieved for the mixture of native xanthophylls (see above) at ~60%
for lutein, zeaxanthin, and antheraxanthin and dropping to only
40-45% for violaxanthin and 9'-cis neoxanthin (Table
II). The relatively poor efficacy
demonstrated by violaxanthin and 9'-cis neoxanthin was
reflected in a reduction in the ratio of Chl a/b,
especially with 9'-cis neoxanthin, as previously reported
(17). However, other low yielding complexes (e.g. with
capsanthin; Table III) had a normal ratio
for Chl a/b, so that efficiencies of complex reassembly and Chl stoichiometry are not linked. For carotenoids other
than lutein and zeaxanthin, the xanthophyll stoichiometry was generally
in the range of 2.3-2.7 per monomer, possibly reflecting partial
filling of one binding site (probably N1 (21)). The room temperature
difference absorption spectra for selected single xanthophyll Chl
a/b complexes are shown in Fig.
4, A and B. The spectra for the lutein complex in particular is almost identical to
that of the complex reassembled with a mixture of native xanthophylls. The difference spectra (native LHC minus reassembled complex) reveals
only very small changes in intensity of absorption in the Soret region
(Fig. 4A). In contrast, the difference spectra for complexes
reassembled with other native xanthophylls reveal more marked changes
in their UV-visible spectra (Fig. 4, A and B).
The spectrum of the complex reconstituted with violaxanthin (Fig.
4A) shows marked changes in the Qy transition region at 650 (decrease), 661 (increase), and 678 nm (decrease). The spectra from the
zeaxanthin, 9'-cis neoxanthin (both Fig. 4B), and
antheraxanthin (Fig. 4A) complexes are similar, with marked
changes at 648 (decrease), 662 (increase), and 682 nm (decrease). These
spectra also reveal changes in the Soret region of the spectrum that
are more profound than that seen in either the native or the lutein-Chl
a/b complex, with decreases in absorption at 470 nm (violaxanthin) and 487-488 nm (zeaxanthin, antheraxanthin, and
9'-cis-neoxanthin).
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Table II
Stoichiometry of LHCIIb reconstituted using single native xanthophylls
and Chls a and b using the low stringency (12) procedure (n = 6 ± S.E.)
The xanthophyll stoichiometry is reported per 12 Chl molecules. The
yield of reassembled complex is calculated as a percentage of the
native xanthophyll mixture.
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Table III
Stoichiometry of LHCIIb reconstituted using single nonnative
xanthophylls and Chls a and b using the low stringency (12) procedure
The xanthophyll stoichiometry is reported per 12 Chl molecules
(n = 6 ± S.E.). The yield of reassembled complex
is calculated as a percentage of the native xanthophyll mixture.
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Fig. 4.
Room temperature difference spectra of native
LHCIIb minus LHCIIb reconstituted with single native xanthophylls.
A, lutein (thin solid
line), violaxanthin (thick solid
line), and antheraxanthin (dashed
line). B, zeaxanthin (solid
line) and 9'-cis neoxanthin (dashed
line).
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The epoxide group at C-5-C-6 appears to be an important structural
feature of the carotenoid molecule, since the furanoid derivatives
(produced by acid treatment of isolated xanthophylls) of violaxanthin
and antheraxanthin (namely auroxanthin
(3,3'-dihydroxy-5,8,5',8'-diepoxy- -carotene) and mutatoxanthin
(3,3'-dihydroxy-5,8-epoxy- -carotene), respectively), in which the
epoxide group is rearranged to C-5-C-8 (i.e.
2,5-dihydrofurans), failed to support reconstitution. A number of other
epoxides failed to support reassembly of the complex (see below).
The diol lactucaxanthin, which is common in the LHC of a number of
plants (e.g. lettuce (6)) but not pea from which the apoprotein was cloned, would not support complex assembly when used as
the only xanthophyll. In addition, it would not support reassembly of
the complex using thylakoids isolated from either spinach or lettuce.
Lactucaxanthin could, however, be incorporated into LHCIIb provided
that lutein was also present (see below). Neither -carotene nor the
acyclic carotene lycopene supported reassembly of the complex.
Binding of Geometric Isomers and Stereoisomers of
Xanthophylls--
The pigment-protein complexes of photosynthetic
organisms show a high degree of selectivity toward certain geometric
forms of carotenoids. In the present study, the ability of selected geometric isomers of lutein, zeaxanthin, and violaxanthin to support reassembly of LHCIIb was examined (see Fig. 1 for structures). In
contrast to the all-trans configurations, the
9-cis and 13-cis forms of violaxanthin and
zeaxanthin and 13-cis lutein all failed to support
reassembly. A mixture of di-cis isomers (unidentified) of
zeaxanthin also failed in this respect. Neoxanthin is naturally present
as the 9'-cis form in the photosynthetic tissues of higher plants (23), and this can support reassembly of the complex (albeit
with low efficiency, ~40%). The all-trans form of
neoxanthin (isolated from nonphotosynthetic tissues of plants)
supported reconstitution with a similar yield to the cis
form, suggesting that both isomeric forms of this carotenoid can bind
to LHC, although it is not clear whether they can occupy the same
binding site.
Native LHCIIb binds the 3R,3'R form of zeaxanthin
and the 3R,3'R,6'R form of lutein.
In vitro, all three chiral forms of zeaxanthin (namely the
3R,3'S, 3S,3'S, and
3R,3'R forms) all supported reconstitution with
identical yields (~60% of the native xanthophyll mixture). In
addition, the 3R,3'S,6'S
diastereoisomer of lutein and 3'-epilutein (3R,3'S,6'R) were as effective as the
native form of this carotenoid in supporting reassembly of the complex.
Binding of Nonnative Xanthophylls--
The first series of
xanthophylls studied were a range of compounds possessing a C-3-hydroxy
-end group. The monohydroxycarotenoids, -cryptoxanthin
((3R)- , -caroten-3-ol) and -cryptoxanthin
((3R,6'R)- , -caroten-3-ol), both supported
reassembly of LHCIIb, with a ratio of Chl a/b
similar to other reassembled complexes (in the range of 1.18-1.20:1)
but with a relatively low yield at 32-34% (Table III). The difference spectra are shown in Fig. 5A
and reveal marked changes from the native complex and that reassembled
with a mixture of native xanthophylls (cf. Fig. 4). Of more
interest is a comparison of their difference spectra with those
obtained for their dihydroxy equivalents, namely lutein and zeaxanthin,
which reveal profound changes in the intensity of absorbance primarily
in the Soret region (~456 nm). The difference spectra for a number of
other carotenoids including capsanthin ((3R,3'S,5'R)-3,3'-dihydroxy- , -caroten-6'-one)
are almost identical to these (data not shown). For capsanthin, the
predicted shift of the absorption in the Soret region (due to the
red-shifted absorbance of the carotenoid at ~470 nm compared with
native xanthophylls) was not observed. In contrast, the spectrum (Fig.
5B) obtained for the ketocarotenoid astaxanthin
((3S,3'S)-3,3'-dihydroxy- , -carotene-4,4'-dione) reveals an additional significant increase in absorption at 470 nm,
reflecting its inherent spectral properties. The two monocyclic 3-hydroxycarotenoids tested (namely gelliodesxanthin
(3-hydroxy-4-oxo-3',4'-didehydro-2'-apo- -caroten-2'-al) and
rubixanthin ((3R)- , -caroten-3-ol)) both supported
reassembly of the complex.

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Fig. 5.
Room temperature difference spectra of native
LHCIIb minus LHCIIb reconstituted with single nonnative
xanthophylls. A, -cryptoxanthin (dashed
line), -cryptoxanthin (solid line).
B, astaxanthin.
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The diols isozeaxanthin ( , -carotene-4,4'-diol), with hydroxy
groups at C-4 and C-4', and the retro-carotenoid diol
eschscholtzxanthin (4',5'-didehydro-4,5'-retro- , -carotene-3,3'-diol)
failed to support reassembly. The presence of a hydroxy at
C-4 does not hinder binding so that the tetrol crustaxanthin
( , -carotene-3,4,3',4'-tetrol) supported a low yield of complex
(Table III). The resulting complex had a room temperature absorption
spectrum almost identical to that of the zeaxanthin complex (data not
shown). The presence of a keto group at C-4 in adonirubin
((3S)-3-hydroxy- , -caroten-4,4'-dione) and
3-hydroxyechinenone ((3S)-3-hydroxy- , -caroten-4-one)
and at C-4 and C-4' in astaxanthin does not affect the ability
of these xanthophylls to bind to LHCIIb. Thus, the presence of end group substituents at C-4 (e.g. hydroxy or keto groups)
additional to the hydroxy groups at C-3 and C-3' does not appear
to affect the ability of the carotenoid to bind to the apoprotein.
A range of other carotenoids possessing a 3-hydroxy -end group also
supported reassembly of LHCIIb. These included the
acetylenic algal carotenoid, fucoxanthin
(3S,5R,6S,3'S,5'R,6'R)-5,6-epoxy-3,3',5'-trihydroxy-6',7'-didehydro-5,6,7,8,5',6'-hexahydro- , -caroten-8-one-3'-acetate), capsanthin, didehydroastaxanthin
((3S,3'S)-3,3'-dihydroxy-7,8-didehydro- , -carotene-4,4'-dione), cucurbitaxanthin A
((3R,3'S,5'R,6'R)-3',6'-epoxy-5',6'-dihydro- , -carotene-3,5'-diol), and cucurbitaxanthin B
((3S,5R,6S,3'S,5'R,6'R)-5,6,3',6'-diepoxy-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydro- , -carotene-3,5'-diol). Both loroxanthin
((3R,3'R,6'R)-3,19,3'-trihydroxy- , -carotene) and siphonaxanthin
((3R,3'R,6'R)-3,19,3'-trihydroxy-7,8-dihydro- , -carotene), which possess in-chain methoxy groups at C-19, also supported complex reassembly.
In contrast to these compounds, carotenoids that lack hydroxy groups at
C-3 and C-3' such as the ketocarotenoids canthaxanthin ( , -carotene-4,4'-dione) and echinenone ( , -caroten-4-one)
and the retro-carotenoid rhodoxanthin
(4',5'-didehydro-4',5'-retro- , -carotene-3,3'-dione) do
not support complex reassembly when used alone with Chls a and b. The di-C-3-C-6 epoxide cycloviolaxanthin
((3S,5R,6R,3'S,5'R,6'R)-3,6,3',6'-diepoxy-5,6,5',6'-tetrahydro- , -carotene-5,5'-diol), which has hydroxy groups at C-5 and C-5', also failed to support reconstitution.
Competition between Xanthophylls for Binding Sites--
The
possible interaction between different xanthophylls in the
reconstitution procedure was examined. A general observation was that
the presence of two xanthophylls in the reconstitution mix resulted in
an increase in yield (compared with that achieved with a single
xanthophyll) until the ratio of lutein/nonnative xanthophyll was <1:3.
For nonnative xanthophylls such as crustaxanthin, -cryptoxanthin,
and astaxanthin the ratio of lutein/nonnative xanthophyll in the
resulting complex was ~2:1, regardless of the ratio of xanthophylls
employed in the reconstitution mixture. When this ratio was
significantly increased, the yield of reconstituted complex decreased.
The affinity of the complex to astaxanthin, crustaxanthin, and
-cryptoxanthin shown in Fig. 6 is
almost identical to that seen for 9'-cis neoxanthin (data
not shown, but see Ref. 17), suggesting that they can also occupy the
third binding site (N1).

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Fig. 6.
Binding affinity for selected single
xanthophylls in combination with lutein to LHCP: lactucaxanthin ( ),
crustaxanthin ( ), -cryptoxanthin ( ),
and astaxanthin ( ). Data are mean values from at least six
separate determinations ± S.E.
|
|
As seen above, lactucaxanthin does not, when presented as the only
xanthophyll, support the in vitro reassembly of LHCIIb. However, when a mixture consisting of lutein and lactucaxanthin was
used, lactucaxanthin was readily incorporated into the complex. Indeed,
yields of the resulting lutein-lactucaxanthin complex were actually
higher than those achieved with lutein alone at 65-75% of the control
(Table III). However, when levels of lutein were low in the
reconstitution mixture, the resulting yields of the assembled complex
(to 18-40%) and the ratio of Chl a/b dropped markedly so that the presence of lactucaxanthin or absence of lutein
apparently inhibited protein folding. This is consistent with the
failure of lactucaxanthin to support complex reassembly as the sole
carotenoid (see above). The ratio of lutein/lactucaxanthin in the
complex reflected the ratio of the two xanthophylls provided in the
reconstitution mix (r2 = 0.979) but saturated at
a ratio of ~2.5:1.0 when lutein was provided in a 3-fold excess (Fig.
6). The stoichiometry of the complexes produced (consistent at ~2.7
per LHC monomer) reveals that two lutein and one lactucaxanthin or two
lactucaxanthin and one lutein can be readily incorporated into a stable
complex. This is consistent with the behavior of lutein and zeaxanthin (see above (17)). Furthermore, the data suggest that lactucaxanthin is
not discriminated against in two binding sites, whereas the other site
has a much higher preference for lutein. However, the shape of the
curve shown in Fig. 6 reveals a complex pattern of behavior for
lactucaxanthin, and it is difficult to interpret further. Whereas it is
clear that lactucaxanthin can be bound to the specific carotenoid
binding sites in LHCIIb, its presence on its own does not permit
complex assembly.
The behavior of lactucaxanthin was in marked contrast to the binding of
several other (nonnative) carotenoids (e.g. astaxanthin, crustaxanthin, and  cryptoxanthin) when used in combination with lutein (Fig. 6). These showed similar behavior to that previously reported for neoxanthin (17), clearly showing binding to one carotenoid-binding site, namely N1. Notably, canthaxanthin (and some
other carotenoids) failed to bind to the complex even in the presence
of lutein, indicating a degree of structural specificity (probably
related to the lack of a substituent at C-3) of binding in each of the
three carotenoid binding sites. Their presence did, however, reduce the
yield of complex compared with lutein alone (Table III). In all
complexes prepared using combinations of carotenoids, a strong
preference for lutein was exhibited at all times, suggesting that sites
L1 and L2 show a strong preference for this particular carotenoid (and
zeaxanthin (17)).
 |
DISCUSSION |
The data obtained in the current study reveal that for all three
procedures available for reconstitution of LHCIIb from higher plants, a
maximum of three molecules of xanthophyll are bound per monomer of
reassembled LHCIIb. The pigment composition of the complex reassembled
using a mixture of native xanthophylls resulted in a pigment
stoichiometry almost identical to that of native LHCIIb (Table I). The
resulting room temperature UV-visible absorption spectra were identical
for complexes produced from all procedures and nearly identical to that
of native spinach LHCIIb. The use of the low stringency procedure for
the reassembly of the complexes permitted a study of single-xanthophyll
Chl a/b complexes. A similar observation was made
by Hobe and colleagues (17), although the ratio of Chl
a/b is consistently higher in the present study.
Variations in the stoichiometry for complexes reassembled with single
xanthophylls were seen (Tables I-III) and have been previously
reported (10, 17, 24). Such variation may simply reflect a low affinity
of xanthophylls for one or more of the binding sites (especially N1
(24)). The data support the hypothesis that monomeric LHCIIb possesses
three carotenoid binding sites (see Refs. 7 and 10). The proposed
fourth binding site (V1; Refs. 7 and 9) was not occupied by any
carotenoids using this in vitro reconstitution procedure,
suggesting that its occupancy is indeed dependent upon the trimeric,
in vivo, state, and is perhaps inter- rather than
intracomplex in nature (7). Indeed, in vivo, under
light-limiting conditions, it is possible that not all of the
xanthophyll-cycle binding sites are fully occupied (7).
An important observation from the current study was that the use of
lutein as the sole xanthophyll resulted in a pigment-protein complex
that was almost identical to the native complex both in terms of
pigment stoichiometry and absorption spectrum. The use of the low
stringency procedure also permitted the assembly of a stable Chl
a/b complex using 9'-cis
neoxanthin as the single xanthophyll, which, in an earlier study,
could only be bound to the complex in the presence of lutein (10).
9'-cis-neoxanthin displays a high affinity to native
trimeric but not monomeric LHCIIb, suggesting that it occupies a
site on the inner face of the trimeric complex (7). The data here
suggest that its structure does not preclude it from occupying L1 and
L2, although there is a clear preference for lutein when present (17).
The absorption spectra of complexes reassembled with 9'-cis
neoxanthin and with zeaxanthin are almost identical (Fig. 1).
Croce and colleagues (10) observed that complexes reassembled with
zeaxanthin had a substantially increased ratio of Chl a/b compared with both the native and lutein
complexes at 2.3:1. This was interpreted as evidence of
zeaxanthin-mediated interference with the binding sites for Chl
b in LHCIIb due to differences in the ring-to-chain
conformation between lutein and zeaxanthin. However, this was not seen
in the present study, possibly as the result of the use of the
particular reconstitution procedure employed, and the zeaxanthin
complex had a ratio of Chl a/b of 1.18:1, typical of that seen for native LHCIIb (see Table I).
Both lutein and zeaxanthin were incorporated at ~1.9 molecules per
monomer in these single xanthophyll complexes. In contrast, the
stoichiometry of the complexes reassembled with antheraxanthin, violaxanthin, and 9'-cis-neoxanthin was consistently higher
at ~2.3-2.7 per monomer, suggesting that a third binding site (N1) is at least partly occupied. Unlike the mixture of native xanthophylls, no single carotenoid could be bound in a ratio of three molecules per
monomer (Tables I and II). This supports the observation that lutein
and zeaxanthin are discriminated against for in N1 because of their
structures. Occupancy of N1 is not required for complex reassembly (or
subsequent stability (26, 27)), but binding of neoxanthin greatly
improves the complex yield. Carotenoids with a C-5-C-6 epoxide, but
not the C-3-C-6, on at least one end group can occupy N1, as can the
diol lactucaxanthin (see below). Thus, carotenoids that only possess
hydroxy groups on a -end group at C-3 and/or C-3' apparently cannot
bind to this third xanthophyll binding site on LHCIIb. This suggests
that zeaxanthin may, in fact, be excluded from a binding site that may
be readily occupied by violaxanthin or antheraxanthin, although Jahns
et al. (24) demonstrated that violaxanthin can be converted
into zeaxanthin by violaxanthin deepoxidase at both L2 and N1 (but not L1).
Assuming that one end group is a 3-hydroxy -type, the structure of
the second end group of the carotenoid molecule appears to be much less
important. Thus, capsanthin, which has a -end group at one end of
the molecule, supports reassembly of LHCIIb. In addition, monocyclic
xanthophylls (e.g. rubixanthin) and the monohydroxycarotenoids (e.g. -cryptoxanthin, a major
constituent of the lut1 mutant of Arabidopsis
(16)) can occupy L1 (and either L2 or N1) and initiate protein folding,
albeit with a much reduced yield of complex.
Monoepoxides (e.g. lutein-5,6-epoxide) support
reconstitution with a similar yield and stoichiometry to that seen with
the diepoxide violaxanthin. Lutein-5,6-epoxide is found in the
photosynthetic tissues of many plants (28), including Cuscuta
reflexa (29), in which it appears to replace 9'-cis
neoxanthin in situ. The data presented here indicate that
this epoxide can occupy N1.
The inability of carotenoid furanoids to bind to LHCII was first
observed by Plumley and Schmidt (11). The structure of auroxanthin is
such that the ring-to-chain conformation is fixed in a near-planar
position with little opportunity for rotation of the end group. This
implies that the conformation of a carotenoid molecule may be a key
factor in facilitating binding to the complex, or it may indicate that
the carotenoid molecule must be able to rotate its end group relative
to the chromophore (either during binding or protein folding; see below
for further discussion). The x-ray structure of LHCIIb shows a clear
twisting of the of lutein molecule (8), and carotenoids reassembled
into bacterial LHC are known to adopt a conformation appropriate to
their function in terms of energy transfer (30). The data presented
here suggest that the difuranoid auroxanthin (implicated in
fluorescence quenching (31)), if formed in vivo, may not
bind to (monomeric) LHCIIb, but this does not preclude its binding or
association with trimeric complexes.
End Group Structure and Ring-to-chain Conformation--
The diol
lactucaxanthin is a major component of the LHC of some plant species
(notably lettuce (1, 6)), levels of which (under conditions of low
irradiance) may readily exceed that of lutein.2 The LHC pool size of
lutein plus lactucaxanthin is relatively constant regardless of the
growth conditions (6).2 Since the xanthophyll binding sites
L1 and L2 are conserved in all LHC proteins, the failure of
lactucaxanthin to support reassembly of the complex when used on its
own was unexpected. We have demonstrated that lactucaxanthin clearly
cannot support complex reassembly on its own but can successfully
compete with lutein in competition studies (Fig. 6). This demonstrates
that lactucaxanthin can in fact readily bind to at least two
xanthophyll binding sites, namely N1 and at least one of the
lutein-binding sites. The inability of lactucaxanthin to permit complex
assembly suggests that it is omitted from L1, occupancy of which is
obligatory for protein folding (26, 27), and instead occupies L2.
Binding saturates at approximately two molecules of lutein per molecule
of lactucaxanthin for each complex (assuming 12 Chl per LHC),
indicating that lactucaxanthin readily occupies N1, whereas lutein is
excluded. Overall, the behavior of lactucaxanthin is unlike that of any
other xanthophyll examined in either this or an earlier study (17) and
is not readily explained. Identical behavior is seen using the
recombinant protein and thylakoids prepared from lettuce (which
naturally possess lactucaxanthin) or spinach.
The ability of lactucaxanthin to partially substitute for (but not
replace) lutein in LHC is also seen in whole plants. Treatment of
lettuce with the substituted triethylamine
2-(4-methylphenoxytriethylamine) (a selective inhibitor of
-cyclase) significantly alters the relative levels of
lactucaxanthin and lutein, and the LHCIIb reveals that an absolute
maximum of about two lactucaxanthin molecules are bound for every
lutein molecule (very similar to that seen in the reconstitution
studies described here). Again, this indicates that N1 and L2 can be
fully occupied by lactucaxanthin but that replacement of lutein by
lactucaxanthin in L1 is not permitted (neoxanthin was present in
substoichiometric amounts in these plants.2
The failure of lactucaxanthin to permit LHC assembly is an important
observation, and as a result, it is interesting to consider the
structures of these xanthophylls very carefully. The structural differences between the diols zeaxanthin, lutein, and lactucaxanthin at
first appear to be relatively minor, since all three posses hydroxy
groups at C-3 and C-3'. Lactucaxanthin possess -end groups at both
ends of the molecule, whereas zeaxanthin has two -end groups, and
lutein has one - and one -end group. This is reflected in the
conjugated chain lengths of the molecules and the overall shape of the
carotenoid, in particular the ring-to-chain conformation around
C-6-C-7. The structures of the end groups found in zeaxanthin and
lactucaxanthin (from MNDO-AM1 optimization (32)) revealed marked
differences in the bond angles and dihedral (torsion) angles, especially in the cyclohexene ring region of the molecule (Fig. 7). The most stable structure of the
-end groups found in zeaxanthin (and lutein) had a
C-5-C-6-C-7-C-8 dihedral angle of 48.7 °, compared with
+124.5° for the -end groups of lactucaxanthin. The predicted
stable end group structure of lactucaxanthin (depicted as type B in
Fig. 7) is therefore very different from that seen in other native
xanthophylls that can bind to L1 (which possess type A structures on at
least one end group). Note that the structures of the -end groups
found in lutein (3'R,6'R) and lactucaxanthin (3S,6S,3'S,6'S) are very
different. The torsion angle that describes the ring-to-chain
conformation around C-6-C-7 in lactucaxanthin is unique. The most
striking difference in the adiabatic potential energy curves for this
torsion angle is that the end groups found in lutein, zeaxanthin, and
violaxanthin all possess relatively symmetrical potential energy
curves, but that calculated for lactucaxanthin is
asymmetrical.3 Furthermore,
lactucaxanthin is only stable over a very narrow range of the C-6-C-7
torsion angle and is not able to twist around its end groups
(e.g. as might occur during protein folding). Such differences in structure may account for the quite different behavior exhibited by these carotenoids in their ability to promote complex assembly in vitro.

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Fig. 7.
Stable end group structures predicted by
MNDO-AM1 molecular orbital calculations (32).
1, type A for the 3-hydroxy end group found in
zeaxanthin, antheraxanthin, and lutein; 2, type A for the
C-5-C-6 epoxide 3-hydroxy end group of antheraxanthin and
violaxanthin; 3, type B for the 3-hydroxy end group
of lactucaxanthin. C-5, C-6, C-7, and C-8 carbon atoms and oxygen atoms
are shaded for clarity. Hydrogen atoms are omitted for
simplicity.
|
|
The behavior of the retro-dihydroxycarotenoid
eschscholtzxanthin in failing to facilitate reassembly of LHCIIb
further highlights the issue of carotenoid shape (especially the
ring-to-chain conformation around C-6-C-7) as being an important
factor in binding (33). Whereas its stable structure has not been
determined, the conjugated double bond system is shifted so that the
C-4-C-5 and C-6-C-7 double bonds are effectively co-planar, so that
twisting of the molecule between ring and chain is thought not to occur
(34).
The observations made in this study suggest that the structural
requirements in order to facilitate protein folding in complex reassembly may be different from those required for binding to the
protein per se. Thus, the carotenoid molecule should possess a 3-hydroxy -end group (type A; Fig. 7) in order to permit
reassembly (and subsequent stabilization) of the complex. The
observation that monohydroxyxanthophylls, which have a -end group
structure identical to that found in zeaxanthin, can support reassembly of LHCIIb supports this view. Once this requirement is satisfied, other
carotenoids can be bound, presumably on a site peripheral to the
complex, but even then certain carotenoids may still not be bound
(e.g. canthaxanthin).
Native plant LHC exhibits (with the exception of 9'-cis
neoxanthin) a strong preference for binding all-trans
xanthophylls. Native LHCIIb (spinach) contains only trace amounts of
cis isomers of lutein, principally the 13,13' and
15-cis forms (35). This stereoselectivity is probably
related to the different photochemistry exhibited in situ by
all-trans and cis forms of these pigments (36).
Attempts to bind central cis isomers of lutein and
di-cis isomers of zeaxanthin to LHCIIb in the current study
were, however, unsuccessful, although both all-trans- and
9'-cis-neoxanthin did produce stable Chl
a/b complexes. trans cis isomerization of xanthophylls may occur in
situ in the light-harvesting complexes of plants as a result of
triplet-excited state photoisomerization, with Chls acting as the
sensitizer (37). Indeed, the reversible formation of
13-cis-violaxanthin from the all-trans form in
parallel to deepoxidation upon illumination of leaves has been reported (37, 38). This particular xanthophyll isomer is not bound to LHCIIb
in vitro, while the all-trans form is readily
bound (see also Ref. 10), suggesting that the cis form may
be excluded from the (monomeric) complex on formation.
The ability of LHCIIb to bind nonnative carotenoids has been previously
demonstrated, and this study further reveals a plasticity inherent in
other pigment-protein complexes. For example, total pigment extracts
from the algae from Euglena gracilis (containing neoxanthin
and diadinoxanthin
(5,6-epoxy-7',8'-didehydro-5,6-dihydro- , -carotene-3,3'-diol)) and
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (containing loroxanthin) have been used in heterologous reconstitution of spinach light-harvesting complexes (39). More recently, capsanthin (which supports in vitro reassembly of LHCIIb; see above) has been shown to be a functional component (at ~36% of total carotenoid) of transformed plants of Nicotiana benthamiana (25).
Whereas the carotenoid composition of plant light-harvesting complexes
is highly conserved, the complexes themselves exhibit a high degree of
plasticity in terms of their ability to bind carotenoids, provided that
these molecules possess a 3-hydroxy- -end group. Both the presence of
key functional groups and the overall shape of the carotenoid molecule,
especially ring-to-chain conformation, are important factors governing
binding to LHCIIb and subsequent complex reassembly.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
This work was supported in part by a John Moores
University research grant (to D. P.).The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement" in
accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Supported by a grant from OTKA T 032882 (Hungarian National
Research Foundation).

To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.
44-151-231-2173; Fax: 44-151-207-3224; E-mail:
a.j.young@livjm.ac.uk.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, May 3, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M202002200
2
D. Phillip, unpublished data.
3
A. J. Young, D. Phillip, and H. Hashimoto,
unpublished data.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
The abbreviations used are:
Chl, chlorophyll;
HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography;
LHC, light-harvesting
complex;
LHCIIb, major light-harvesting complex of photosystem II of
higher plants.
 |
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