Experts Unlock Key to Photosynthesis
A new study shows how an electrical reaction in protein complex cytochrome b6f provides the energy that plants need to turn carbon dioxide into the carbohydrates and biomass that sustain the global food chain.
Photosynthesis is the foundation of life on Earth providing the food, oxygen and energy that sustains the biosphere and human civilisation.
Using a high-resolution structural model, the team found that the protein complex provides the electrical connection between the two light-powered chlorophyll-proteins (Photosystems I and II) found in the plant cell chloroplast that convert sunlight into chemical energy.
Lorna Malone, the first author of the study and a PhD student in the University of Sheffield’s Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, said: “Our study provides important new insights into how cytochrome b6f utilises the electrical current passing through it to power up a ‘proton battery’. This stored energy can then be then used to make ATP, the energy currency of living cells. Ultimately this reaction provides the energy that plants need to turn carbon dioxide into the carbohydrates and biomass that sustain the global food chain.”
Credit: At09kg / Wikimedia Commons
“Previous studies have shown that by manipulating the levels of this complex we can grow bigger and better plants. With the new insights we have obtained from our structure we can hope to rationally redesign photosynthesis in crop plants to achieve the higher yields we urgently need to sustain a projected global population of 9-10 billion by 2050.”
The research was conducted in collaboration with the Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology at the University of Leeds using their cryo-electron microscope facilities.
Researchers now aim to establish how cytochrome b6f is controlled by a myriad of regulatory proteins and how these regulators affect the function of this complex.
Contacts and sources:
University of Sheffield
Citation: Cryo-EM structure of the spinach cytochrome b6 f complex at 3.6 Å resolution. Lorna A. Malone, Pu Qian, Guy E. Mayneord, Andrew Hitchcock, David A. Farmer, Rebecca F. Thompson, David J. K. Swainsbury, Neil A. Ranson, C. Neil Hunter, Matthew P. Johnson. Nature, 2019; DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1746-6
Source: http://www.ineffableisland.com/2019/11/experts-unlock-key-to-photosynthesis.html
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Chris
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This is not unlike solar power. Where two dissimilar doped plates are next to each other and the introduction of ultraviolet radiation does work on the loose electrons to carry them from one location to another.
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dave jr
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The way I read it, it is very much unlike solar power. With solar power, the dislodged electron is a one off event, over and done, adding to the panels’ degradation.
Imagine a ‘living’ solar panel where cytochrome b6f and chloroplasts convert sunlight to electricity to be harvested directly, before the hydrocarbon formation and with little degradation.
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geran
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An “ordinary” tree is more complex than a car factory. It can make its own food, grow, reproduce, and heal itself. All instructions are in its DNA and passed on to the next generation.
From photosynthesis, it makes a variety of hydrocarbon cells, and then transports them to where they are needed–new roots, new leaves, new bark, or seeds.
And we still don’t understand how it does it all!
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Andy Rowlands
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Very interesting, if this study does prove what they hope, and with the increasing CO2 stimulating better growth as well, the combination should enable even higher yields than we already have.
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HerbbRose
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It worries me when people studying a system they don’t understand perceive a “problem”and try to fix it. Perhaps photorespiration is how a plant exhales.
Should we begin putting more CO2 into the air to provide the the food that theses plants will need to grow faster?
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