Marine Drugs (May 2024)

Functional Characterization of the First <i>Bona Fide</i> Phytoene Synthase in Red Algae from <i>Pyropia yezoensis</i>

  • Cheng-Ling Li,
  • Jia-Qiu Pu,
  • Wei Zhou,
  • Chuan-Ming Hu,
  • Yin-Yin Deng,
  • Ying-Ying Sun,
  • Li-En Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md22060257
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 6
p. 257

Abstract

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The formation of phytoene by condensing two geranylgeranyl diphosphate molecules catalyzed by phytoene synthase (PSY) is the first committed and rate-limiting step in carotenoid biosynthesis, which has been extensively investigated in bacteria, land plants and microalgae. However, this step in macroalgae remains unknown. In the present study, a gene encoding putative phytoene synthase was cloned from the economic red alga Pyropia yezoensis—a species that has long been used in food and pharmaceuticals. The conservative motifs/domains and the tertiary structure predicted using bioinformatic tools suggested that the cloned PyPSY should encode a phytoene synthase; this was empirically confirmed by pigment complementation in E. coli. This phytoene synthase was encoded by a single copy gene, whose expression was presumably regulated by many factors. The phylogenetic relationship of PSYs from different organisms suggested that red algae are probably the progeny of primary endosymbiosis and plastid donors of secondary endosymbiosis.

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