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Plant Physiology 98:1003-1010 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Molecular Biology and Gene Regulation

Regulation of Phycobilisome Structure and Gene Expression by Light Intensity 1

Robert M. de Lorimier2, Russell L. Smith3 and S. Edward Stevens, Jr.4

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802

The cyanobacterium Agmenellum quadruplicatum PR-6 (Synechococcus sp PCC 7002) was grown turbidostatically in white light at three levels of irradiance: 20, 200, and 1260 microeinsteins per square meter per second. Phycobilisomes were isolated from each culture and analyzed by absorbance, gel electrophoresis, and electron microscopy. The ratio of phycocyanin to allophycocyanin decreased 1.8-fold from the lowest to highest irradiance. This change was due entirely to an approximately 2.5-fold decrease in one structural unit of rod domains, the complex of phycocyanin, and a 33-kilodalton linker polypeptide (LR33). For a given irradiance, phycobilisomes from cells grown on ammonium as the nitrogen source had 10 to 20% more phycocyanin than those from nitrate cultures. Total RNA was isolated from all cultures and probed with gene fragments specific to phycocyanin and allophycocyanin subunits and LR33. The relative level of RNAs encoding phycocyanin and allophycocyanin was found to vary with light intensity in parallel with the phycobiliprotein ratio. Hence, the light-harvesting capacity of phycobilisomes is directly regulated by relative levels of phycobiliprotein mRNA. The LR33 transcript occurs as a 3' extension on about 10% of phycocyanin transcripts. The ratio of RNA encoding LR33 to that encoding phycocyanin did not vary with irradiance, although the protein ratio changed 1.7- to twofold between extremes. Based on these and other observations, we propose that the LR33 protein is constitutively synthesized at a rate higher than that required to complex with available phycocyanin.


2 Present address: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Stanley/Donner ASU, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.

3 Present address: Department of Chemistry, Box 19065, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019.

4 Present address: Department of Biology, 509 Life Sciences Building, Memphis State University, Memphis, TN 38152.

1 Supported by grant No. DMB-8510770 from the National Science Foundation.




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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Plant Biologists