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- photosynthesis2
- 5-aminolevulinic acid1
- adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl)1
- bacterial genetics1
- bacteriochlorophyll1
- bilin1
- biosynthesis1
- Blastochloris viridis1
- carotenoid1
- Chlorobaculum tepidum1
- chlorophyll1
- cobalamin1
- coenzyme F4301
- energy metabolism1
- green sulfur bacterium1
- heme1
- heme d11
- photosynthetic pigment1
- precorrin1
- Rhodobacter sphaeroides1
- tetrapyrrole1
- uroporphyrinogen III1
- vitamin B121
Microbiology
2 Results
- JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Biosynthesis of the modified tetrapyrroles—the pigments of life
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 20p6888–6925Published online: April 2, 2020- Donald A. Bryant
- C. Neil Hunter
- Martin J. Warren
Cited in Scopus: 99Modified tetrapyrroles are large macrocyclic compounds, consisting of diverse conjugation and metal chelation systems and imparting an array of colors to the biological structures that contain them. Tetrapyrroles represent some of the most complex small molecules synthesized by cells and are involved in many essential processes that are fundamental to life on Earth, including photosynthesis, respiration, and catalysis. These molecules are all derived from a common template through a series of enzyme-mediated transformations that alter the oxidation state of the macrocycle and also modify its size, its side-chain composition, and the nature of the centrally chelated metal ion. - MicrobiologyOpen Access
A paralog of a bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis enzyme catalyzes the formation of 1,2-dihydrocarotenoids in green sulfur bacteria
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 293Issue 39p15233–15242Published online: August 20, 2018- Daniel P. Canniffe
- Jennifer L. Thweatt
- Aline Gomez Maqueo Chew
- C. Neil Hunter
- Donald A. Bryant
Cited in Scopus: 5Chlorobaculum tepidum, a green sulfur bacterium, utilizes chlorobactene as its major carotenoid, and this organism also accumulates a reduced form of this monocyclic pigment, 1′,2′-dihydrochlorobactene. The protein catalyzing this reduction is the last unidentified enzyme in the biosynthetic pathways for all of the green sulfur bacterial pigments used for photosynthesis. The genome of C. tepidum contains two paralogous genes encoding members of the FixC family of flavoproteins: bchP, which has been shown to encode an enzyme of bacteriochlorophyll biosynthesis; and bchO, for which a function has not been assigned.