Matching Items (5)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

153933-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 contains a NiFe-type bidirectional hydrogenase that is capable of using reducing equivalents to reduce protons and generate H¬2. In order to achieve sustained H2 production using this cyanobacterium many challenges need to be overcome. Reported H2 production from Synechocystis is of low rate

The unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 contains a NiFe-type bidirectional hydrogenase that is capable of using reducing equivalents to reduce protons and generate H¬2. In order to achieve sustained H2 production using this cyanobacterium many challenges need to be overcome. Reported H2 production from Synechocystis is of low rate and often transient. Results described in this dissertation show that the hydrogenase activity in Synechocystis is quite different during periods of darkness and light. In darkness, the hydrogenase enzyme acts in a truly bidirectional way and a particular H2 concentration is reached that depends upon the amount of biomass involved in H2 production. On the other hand, in the presence of light the enzyme shows only transient H2 production followed by a rapid and constitutive H2 oxidation. H2 oxidation and production were measured from a variety of Synechocystis strains in which components of the photosynthetic or respiratory electron transport chain were either deleted or inhibited. It was shown that the light-induced H2 oxidation is dependent on the activity of cytochrome b6f and photosystem I but not on the activity of photosystem II, indicating a channeling of electrons through cytochrome b6f and photosystem I. Because of the sequence similarities between subunits of NADH dehydrogenase I in E. coli and subunits of hydrogenase in Synechocystis, NADH dehydrogenase I was considered as the most likely candidate to mediate the electron transfer from hydrogenase to the membrane electron carrier plastoquinone, and a three-dimensional homology model with the associated subunits shows that structurally it is possible for the subunits of the two complexes to assemble. Finally, with the aim of improving the rate of H2 production in Synechocystis by using a powerful hydrogenase enzyme, a mutant strain of Synechocystis was created in which the native hydrogenase was replaced with the hydrogenase from Lyngbya aestuarii BL J, a strain with higher capacity for H2 production. H2 production was detected in this Synechocystis mutant strain, but only in the presence of external reductants. Overall, this study emphasizes the importance of redox partners in determining the direction of H2 flux in Synechocystis.
ContributorsDatta, Īpsitā (Author) / Vermaas, Willem Fj (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Rittmann, Bruce (Committee member) / Jones, Anne K (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
155917-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The evolution of photosynthesis caused the oxygen-rich atmosphere in which we thrive today. Although the reaction centers involved in oxygenic photosynthesis probably evolved from a protein like the reaction centers in modern anoxygenic photosynthesis, modern anoxygenic reaction centers are poorly understood. One such anaerobic reaction center is found in Heliobacterium

The evolution of photosynthesis caused the oxygen-rich atmosphere in which we thrive today. Although the reaction centers involved in oxygenic photosynthesis probably evolved from a protein like the reaction centers in modern anoxygenic photosynthesis, modern anoxygenic reaction centers are poorly understood. One such anaerobic reaction center is found in Heliobacterium modesticaldum. Here, the photosynthetic properties of H. modesticaldum are investigated, especially as they pertain to its unique photochemical reaction center.

The first part of this dissertation describes the optimization of the previously established protocol for the H. modesticaldum reaction center isolation. Subsequently, electron transfer is characterized by ultrafast spectroscopy; the primary electron acceptor, a chlorophyll a derivative, is reduced in ~25 ps, and forward electron transfer occurs directly to a 4Fe-4S cluster in ~650 ps without the requirement for a quinone intermediate. A 2.2-angstrom resolution X-ray crystal structure of the homodimeric heliobacterial reaction center is solved, which is the first ever homodimeric reaction center structure to be solved, and is discussed as it pertains to the structure-function relationship in energy and electron transfer. The structure has a transmembrane helix arrangement similar to that of Photosystem I, but differences in antenna and electron transfer cofactor positions explain variations in biophysical comparisons. The structure is then compared with other reaction centers to infer evolutionary hypotheses suggesting that the ancestor to all modern reaction centers could reduce mobile quinones, and that Photosystem I added lower energy cofactors to its electron transfer chain to avoid the formation of singlet oxygen.

In the second part of this dissertation, hydrogen production rates of H. modesticaldum are quantified in multiple conditions. Hydrogen production only occurs in cells grown without ammonia, and is further increased by removal of N2. These results are used to propose a scheme that summarizes the hydrogen-production metabolism of H. modesticaldum, in which electrons from pyruvate oxidation are shuttled through an electron transport pathway including the reaction center, ultimately reducing nitrogenase. In conjunction, electron microscopy images of H. modesticaldum are shown, which confirm that extended membrane systems are not exhibited by heliobacteria.
ContributorsGisriel, Christopher J (Author) / Redding, Kevin E (Thesis advisor) / Jones, Anne K (Committee member) / Allen, James P. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
156716-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
To mimic the membrane environment for the photosynthetic reaction center of the photoheterotrophic Heliobacterium modesticaldum, a proteoliposome system was developed using the lipids found in native membranes, as well as a lipid possessing a Ni(II)-NTA head group. The liposomes were also saturated with menaquinone-9 to provide further native conditions, given

To mimic the membrane environment for the photosynthetic reaction center of the photoheterotrophic Heliobacterium modesticaldum, a proteoliposome system was developed using the lipids found in native membranes, as well as a lipid possessing a Ni(II)-NTA head group. The liposomes were also saturated with menaquinone-9 to provide further native conditions, given that menaquinone is active within the heliobacterial reaction center in some way. Purified heliobacterial reaction center was reconstituted into the liposomes and a recombinant cytochrome c553 was decorated onto the liposome surface. The native lipid-attachment sequence of cytochrome c553 was truncated and replaced with a hexahistidine tag. Thus, the membrane-anchoring observed in vivo was simulated through the histidine tag of the recombinant cytochrome binding to the Ni(II)-NTA lipid's head group. The kinetics of electron transfer in this system was measured and compared to native membranes using transient absorption spectroscopy. The preferential-orientation of reconstituted heliobacterial reaction center was also measured by monitoring the proteoliposome system's ability to reduce a soluble acceptor, flavodoxin, in both whole and detergent-solubilized proteoliposome conditions. These data demonstrate that this proteoliposome system is reliable, biomimetic, and efficient for selectively testing the function of the photosynthetic reaction center of Heliobacterium modesticaldum and its interactions with both donors and acceptors. The recombinant cytochrome c553 performs similarly to native cytochrome c553 in heliobacterial membranes. These data also support the hypothesis that the orientation of the reconstituted reaction center is inherently selective for its bacteriochlorophyll special pair directed to the outer-leaflet of the liposome.
ContributorsJohnson, William Alexander (Author) / Redding, Kevin E (Thesis advisor) / Van Horn, Wade D (Committee member) / Jones, Anne K (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
136921-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Photosynthesis is a critical process that fixes the carbon utilized in cellular respiration. In higher plants, the immutans gene codes for a protein that is both involved in carotenoid biosynthesis and plastoquinol oxidation (Carol et al 1999, Josse et al 2003). This plastoquinol terminal oxidase (PTOX) is of great interest

Photosynthesis is a critical process that fixes the carbon utilized in cellular respiration. In higher plants, the immutans gene codes for a protein that is both involved in carotenoid biosynthesis and plastoquinol oxidation (Carol et al 1999, Josse et al 2003). This plastoquinol terminal oxidase (PTOX) is of great interest in understanding electron flow in the plastoquinol pool. In order to characterize this PTOX, polyclonal antibodies were developed. Expression of Synechococcus WH8102 PTOX in E. coli provided a useful means to harvest the protein required for antibody production. Once developed, the antibody was tested for limit of concentration, effectiveness in whole cell lysate, and overall specificity. The antibody raised against PTOX was able to detect as low as 10 pg of PTOX in SDS-PAGE, and could detect PTOX extracted from lysed Synechococcus WH8102. The production of this antibody could determine the localization of the PTOX in Synechococcus.
ContributorsKhan, Mohammad Iqbal (Author) / Moore, Thomas (Thesis director) / Redding, Kevin (Committee member) / Roberson, Robert (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-05
171900-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The growing global energy demand coupled with the need for a low-carbon economy requires innovative solutions. Microalgal oxygenic photosynthesis provides a sustainable platform for efficient capture of sunlight and storage of some of the energy in the form of reduced carbon derivatives. Under certain conditions, the photosynthetic reductant can be

The growing global energy demand coupled with the need for a low-carbon economy requires innovative solutions. Microalgal oxygenic photosynthesis provides a sustainable platform for efficient capture of sunlight and storage of some of the energy in the form of reduced carbon derivatives. Under certain conditions, the photosynthetic reductant can be shunted to molecular hydrogen production, yet the efficiency and longevity of such processes are insufficient. In this work, re-engineering of the heterodimeric type I reaction center, also known as photosystem I (PSI), in the green microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was shown to dramatically change algal metabolism and improve photobiological hydrogen production in vivo. First, an internal fusion of the small PsaC subunit of PSI harboring the terminal photosynthetic electron transport chain cofactors with the endogenous algal hydrogenase 2 (HydA2) was demonstrated to assemble on the PSI core in vivo, albeit at ~15% the level of normal PSI accumulation, and make molecular hydrogen from water oxidation. Second, the more physiologically active algal endogenous hydrogenase 1 (HydA1) was fused to PsaC in a similar fashion, resulting in improved levels of accumulation (~75%). Both algal hydrogenases chimeras remained extremely oxygen sensitive and benefited from oxygen removal methods. On the example of PSI-HydA1 chimera, it was demonstrated that the active site of hydrogenase can be reactivated in vivo after complete inactivation by oxygen without the need for new polypeptide synthesis. Third, the hydrogenase domain of Megasphaera elsdenii bacterial hydrogenase (MeHydA) was also fused with psaC, resulting in expression of a PSI-hydrogenase chimera at ~25% the normal level. The heterologous hydrogenase chimera could be activated with the algal maturation system, despite only 32 % sequence identity (43 % similarity). All constructs demonstrated diminished ability to reduce PSI electron acceptors (ferredoxin and flavodoxin) in vitro and indirect evidence indicated that this was true in vivo as well. Finally, chimeric design considerations are discussed in light of the models generated by Alphafold2 and how could they be used to further optimize stability of the PSI-hydrogenase chimeric complexes.
ContributorsKanygin, Andrey (Author) / Redding, Kevin E (Thesis advisor) / Jones, Anne K (Committee member) / Mazor, Yuval (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022