A unique light-harvesting complex protein family, LHCE, is involved in far-red absorption by photosystems I and II in Euglena gracilis
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Photosynthetic organisms have evolved diverse strategies to adapt to fluctuating light conditions, balancing efficient light capture with photoprotection. In green algae and land plants, this involves specialized light-harvesting complexes (LHCs), non-photochemical quenching, and state transitions driven by dynamic remodeling of antenna proteins associated with PSI and PSII. Euglena gracilis, a flagellate with a secondary green plastid, represents a distantly related lineage whose light-harvesting regulation remains poorly understood. Although spectral shifts under different light regimes have been observed, their molecular basis has been unknown. Here, through integrated phylogenomic, proteomic, structural, and spectroscopic analyses, we identify a novel chlorophyll a far-red-absorbing antenna complex in E. gracilis, composed of euglenozoa-specific Lhce proteins. This LHCE antenna complex forms a pentameric complex under low light and transiently associates with PSII during far-red light exposure. It is structurally and functionally distinct from canonical LHCII trimers and absent in Viridiplantae. Additionally, PSI in E. gracilis is surrounded by an expanded belt of Lhce and LhcbM proteins around a minimal core. These findings reveal a unique mechanism for regulating PS antenna size in E. gracilis that is distinct from known models in plants and green algae, and highlight an alternative evolutionary strategy for light acclimation in organisms with secondary plastids.