Acclimation of photosynthesis began with a Cu-binding superoxide detoxifying enzyme
Abstract
Plant acclimation is a growing scientific concept, at molecular, cellular and global scales. All photosynthetic organisms that created an oxic atmosphere on earth possess a gene of unknown function “Acclimation of Photosynthesis to the Environment 1”. Here we show that APE1 encodes a thylakoid-bound protein with a unique motif that binds copper and detoxifies the superoxide anion radical, O2 •−. Maturation of the recombinant APE1 protein from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii requires formation of cysteine disulfide bonds after copper binding or via a high affinity interaction with a copper chaperone (Plastid Copper Chaperone 1) that boosts its scavenging capacity for O2 •−. APE1 co-occurs in evolution with Photosystem II oxygen evolving proteins and it is the archaic O2 •− detoxifying enzyme for acclimating photosynthesis to an oxygenic environment.
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