Organisation, dynamics and biogenesis of a photosynthetic membrane

Lead Research Organisation: Queen Mary University of London
Department Name: Sch of Biological & Behavioural Sciences

Abstract

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Technical Summary

Cyanobacteria are the oldest oxygenic phototrophs on Earth. They convert solar energy and CO2 into bioenergy and oxygen that is indispensable for sustaining aerobic life in the atmosphere. The cyanobacterial thylakoid membrane represents a system that performs both oxygenic photosynthesis and respiration. The dynamic formation and architecture of cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes in response to environmental changes are of fundamental importance to the metabolic robustness and plasticity of cyanobacteria. Current understanding of the biogenesis and regulation of thylakoid membranes is still insufficient. This project is aimed at unravelling the molecular basis governing the biosynthesis, organisation and dynamics of thylakoid membranes in the model cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC7942 using multidisciplinary approaches, and elucidating the coordination between the dynamic organisation of thylakoid membranes and the regulation of bioenergetic electron flow. First, we will use fluorescent tagging combined with live-cell confocal microscopy, high-resolution AFM, Cryo-EM and proteomics to study the sequential synthesis, distribution and dynamics of photosynthetic/respiratory complexes in thylakoid membranes during thylakoid biogenesis. Secondly, we will determine the interactions of electron transport complexes and the dynamic assembly of photosynthetic/respiratory supercomplexes during thylakoid membrane biosynthesis and regulation using confocal/TIRF microscopy and quantitative proteomics. Moreover, we will explore the contributions of lipids to the thylakoid biogenesis and bioenergetic supercomplex formation using lipidome analysis, in specific the timing of lipid biosynthesis, the lipid composition and stoichiometry. This project will provide insights into the biogenesis and regulation of cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes and will empower synthetic biology tools to build artificial photosynthetic membranes and machinery for bioenergy development.

Planned Impact

This project represents fundamental science addressing the molecular basis of the biosynthesis and organisation of cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes. Thus, the primary impact is to the broad scientific community. However, the live-cell microscope and nanotechnology imaging and image analysis approaches developed will provide a resource that will be open to outside users and will be of interest to biotech industries. Moreover, advanced understanding of in vivo photosynthetic membrane biosynthesis will underpin the bottom-up design and engineering of artificial photosynthetic machinery using synthetic biology approaches for biofuel production.

- Academic and commercial communities of membrane biochemistry, microbiology, photosynthesis: We envisage considerable potential benefits of the fundamental outputs for those who work on cyanobacterial bioenergetics and membrane biogenesis. Knowledge derived from this project will be conceivably informative to the scientists who wish to engineer photosynthetic machinery for bioenergy development.

- Synthetic biology: We foresee that comprehensive knowledge of photosynthetic membrane biosynthesis will stimulate the design of synthetic biological strategies to construct bioenergetic modules in other organisms. The synthetic biology foundry - Liverpool GeneMill (BB/M00094X/1) has expressed interest in this project and will first conduct the engineering of photosynthetic complexes.

- Microscope manufacturers: The developed imaging technologies, including live-cell and time-lapse fluorescence imaging, high-resolution AFM imaging and affinity mapping, can be widely used to image many biological samples. The PI currently has collaborative projects with JPK Instrument and Bruker Nano Surfaces Division, which will profit from the AFM imaging approaches developed in this work. The technical development will greatly enhance the imaging capacity of Liverpool Centre for Cell Imaging (CCI), and benefit other users. CCI has a long-term working relationship with Zeiss Microscope, which will facilitate us to build industrial links and define the potential applications of the technical developments in this project.

- Biotechnology industries: This project has potential societal impacts on renewable energy and energy security. The PI has established the contact with Dr. David Parker, the Platform Leader Bio-Fuels Group at Shell Global Solutions, for exchanging the idea of engineering microorganisms for bioenergy production. Likewise, Unilever has expressed strong interest in cyanobacterial metabolisms and using cyanobacteria as cell factories to produce biofuels, high-value chemicals and pharmaceuticals.

- Scientific community: We expect to provide extensive training to the PDRA/technician in the multidisciplinary skills during this work. We will ensure the academic impact of this work through timely seminars and publications. We will present the outputs at workshops and international meetings. This programme will promote the national and international collaborations by sharing data and expertise.

- Outreach activities: The PI has collaborated with Nuffield Foundation to host summer replacement students. During this project, he will continue to offer placements for Nuffield Bursaries students with related projects. The PDRA will be involved in the Liverpool postdoc communities to deliver the scientific outputs. We will work with the Liverpool World Museum to develop exhibits showcasing this work.

- Intellectual property: The methodological and analytical approaches developed in this project may lead to the intellectual property. We will liaise with Liverpool Business Gateway to ensure the timely protection of intellectual property in this project.

Publications

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Description The work has led to significant insights into the mechanism by which thylakoid membranes are organised and assembled in cyanobacteria. Thylakoid membranes are a complex internal membrane system in these photosynthetic bacteria. The membrane is of particular interest and importance because it is the site of the photosynthetic light reactions, which capture solar energy and convert it to chemical energy, allowing for the removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and the release of oxygen. Papers on the organisation and assembly of the membrane are published (Nature Communications x 2). In addition, our work at QMUL, which is partially supported by this award, has led to a new model for the way in which specific proteins are targeted to the thylakoid membrane in cyanobacteria - we have evidence that indicates that signals in the mRNA molecules (rather than in the protein) are responsible for targeting photosynthetic proteins to the thylakoid membrane (Nature Plants, published 2020). This possibility will be tested with the help of further BBSRC funding (BB/W001012/1) which will also enable us to explore the organisation of thylakoid membrane biogenesis zones in cyanobacteria.
Exploitation Route Our work on protein targeting in cyanobacteria should open up new possibilities for "precision engineering" of cyanobacterial cells, potentially with importance for solar-powered biotechnology.
Sectors Energy,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology

 
Description Membrane protein targeting and assembly in cyanobacteria
Amount £456,447 (GBP)
Funding ID BB/W001012/1 
Organisation Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2021 
End 09/2024
 
Description ScyCode
Amount € 2,500,000 (EUR)
Funding ID ScyCode 
Organisation German Research Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country Germany
Start 01/2019 
End 12/2021