The EMBO Journal
 
Advanced search
Journal home
Aims and scope
Current issue
Advance Online Publication
Web Focuses
Archive:-
Browse by issue
Browse by subject
Browse by category
Free online sample issue
Press releases
Authors & Referees
Editorial process
Guide for authors
Submit an article
Guide for referees
Editorial Team, Senior Advisors and Advisory Editorial Board
Contact Editorial office
Customer services
Subscribe
Order sample copy
Purchase articles
Reprints and permissions
Contact NPG
Advertising
EMBO
www.embo.org
Article
Subject Categories: Structural Biology | Membranes & Transport
The EMBO Journal (2002) 21, 3927–3935, doi: 10.1093/emboj/cdf410
Projection structure of the photosynthetic reaction centre−antenna complex of Rhodospirillum rubrum at 8.5 Å resolution
Stuart J. Jamieson1, 2, Peiyi Wang1, 2, Pu Qian1, 2, John Y. Kirkland1, Matthew J. Conroy1, C.Neil Hunter1 and Per A. Bullough1
1 Krebs Institute for Biomolecular Research, Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Firth Court, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
2 S.J.Jamieson, P.Wang and P.Qian contributed equally to this work

To whom correspondence should be addressed
Per A. Bullough, p.bullough@sheffield.ac.uk

Received 28 March 2002; Revised 13 June 2002; Accepted 13 June 2002.
Abstract
Two-dimensional crystals of the reaction-centre−light-harvesting complex I (RC−LH1) of the purple non- sulfur bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum have been formed from detergent-solubilized and purified protein complexes. Unstained samples of this intrinsic membrane protein complex have been analysed by electron cryomicroscopy (cryo EM). Projection maps were calculated to 8.5 Å from two different crystal forms, and show a single reaction centre surrounded by 16 LH1 subunits in a ring of approx115 Å diameter. Within each LH1 subunit, densities for the alpha- and beta-polypeptide chains are clearly resolved. In one crystal form the LH1 forms a circular ring, and in the other form the ring is significantly ellipsoidal. In each case, the reaction centre adopts preferred orientations, suggesting specific interactions between the reaction centre and LH1 subunits rather than a continuum of possible orientations with the antenna ring. This experimentally determined structure shows no evidence of any other protein components in the closed LH1 ring. The demonstration of circular or elliptical forms of LH1 indicates that this complex is likely to be flexible in the bacterial membrane.
Keywords: 2D crystals, electron cryomicroscopy, light-harvesting complex, photosynthesis, Rhodospirillum rubrum
Send to a friendEmail link to a friend
PDFDownload PDF
Full textFull text
Next article
Previous article
Table of contents
ToC alertRegister for table of contents by email
  Privacy policy Copyright © 2002 by the European Molecular Biology Organization