An additional component in the purified core light-harvesting complex (LH1) from wild-type purple photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum has been identified as an oxidized species of α-polypeptide by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. This component appears as a slightly earlier-eluting peak in the RP-HPLC chromatogram compared with the authentic α-polypeptide. The oxidation site has been determined to be the N-terminal methionine residue by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy, where the methionine is oxidized to methionine sulfoxide in a diastereoisomeric form. Interconversion between the oxidized and authentic α-polypeptides has been confirmed by selective oxidation and reduction. The oxidative modification of methionine is shown to have discernible effects on the ability to form B820 subunit with β-polypeptide and bacteriochlorophyll a, and on the stability of the reconstituted B820 subunit. Both the ability and the stability for the samples using the oxidized α-polypeptide are moderately reduced, indicating that the oxidation-induced conformational change in the N-terminal domain of α-polypeptide may affect the pigment-binding environment through a long-range interaction. The MALDI-TOF mass results also reveal that the N-terminus of α-polypeptide is formylated and no phosphorylation has occurred in this polypeptide.
CITATION STYLE
Wang, Z. Y., Shimonaga, M., Muraoka, Y., Kobayashi, M., & Nozawa, T. (2001). Methionine oxidation and its effect on the stability of a reconstituted subunit of the light-harvesting complex from Rhodospirillum rubrum. European Journal of Biochemistry, 268(12), 3375–3382. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1327.2001.02234.x
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