Plant Physiol.
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Plant Physiology 60:422-429 (1977)
© 1977 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Analysis of the Subunit Structure of Protochlorophyllide Holochrome by Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis 1

Ora D. Canaani and Kenneth Sauer

a Laboratory of Chemical Biodynamics and Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720

The subunit structures of protochlorophyllide holochrome (PCH) and chlorophyllide holochrome (CH) were studied by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. PCH from leaves of dark-grown (Phaseolus vulgaris var. red kidney) is a polymeric pigment-protein complex of approximately 600,000 daltons. It is composed of 12 to 14 polypeptides of 45,000 daltons, when examined prior to and immediately following photoconversion. The protochlorophyllide or chlorophyllide pigment molecules are associated with these polypeptides. Subsequent to photoconversion, the absorption maximum of newly formed chlorophyllide shifts from 678 nm to 674 nm upon standing in darkness. Following the 678 to 674 spectral shift, the chlorophyllide is associated with a polypeptide with a molecular weight of 16,000 daltons. In addition, sucrose gradient centrifugation of PCH and CH under nondenaturing conditions indicates that during the course of the dark spectroscopic shift, the 600,000 dalton CH undergoes dissociation into a small chlorophyllide protein. The dissociation of CH, the change in the molecular weight of the chlorophyllide polypeptide from 45,000 to 16,000 daltons, as well as the dark spectroscopic shift are temperature-dependent and blocked below 0 C. It was also found that each holochrome molecule of 600,000 daltons contains at least four protochlorophyllide pigment molecules.


1 This work was supported by the United States Energy Research and Development Administration.







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Copyright © 1977 by the American Society of Plant Biologists