Start Publications Heat shock lipid in cyanobacteria during heat/light-acclimation
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Heat shock lipid in cyanobacteria during heat/light-acclimation

Year: 2005

Journal: Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 436 (2005) 346-354, 20111221

Authors: Zsolt Balogi , Zsolt Török , Gabor Balogh , Katalin Josvay , Natalia Shigapova , Elizabeth Vierling , Laszlo Vi­gh , Ibolya Horvath

Organizations: a Institute of Biochemistry, Biological Research Centre, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-6701 Szeged, Hungary b Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA

Parallel with the heat/light-induced thylakoid microdomain reorganization and thermal stabilization of photosynthesis we observed an increase in the level of the highly saturated monoglucosyldiacylglycerol (MGlcDG) in Synechocystis cells. The unusually high microviscosity obtained in thylakoid MGlcDG liposomes by monitoring DPH anisotropy was in good agreement with its exceptionally high acyl chain saturation. The MGlcDG membranes remained stable even at extreme high temperatures. Strikingly, in monolayer experiments, out of the Wve thylakoid polar lipids tested, MGlcDG expressed the strongest interaction with the thylakoidstabilizing small Hsp from Synechocystis, Hsp17. The preferential interaction of Hsp17 with non-bilayer phase forming lipids supports our notion that sHsps counteract the formation of thermally induced local non-bilayer structures [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99 (2002) 13504] and thus implicated in microdomain organization and in the preservation of functional integrity of thylakoid membranes challenged by heat stress in the light. We also suggest that the highly saturated MGlcDG functions as a "heat shock lipid" and is of potential importance in the development of acquired thermotolerance of heat/light-primed cyanobacterial thylakoids.