Biosynthesis of chlorophyllides from protoporphyrin IX
Details of the late stages of the biosynthetic pathway to chlorophyll differ in the plants and bacteria in which it has been studied. However, although the genes and enzymes vary, the chemical reactions involved are identical.
The chlorin ring system features a five-membered carbon ring created when one of the propionate groups of the porphyrin is cyclised to the carbon atom linking the original pyrrole rings C and D. A series of chemical steps catalysed by the enzyme Magnesium-protoporphyrin IX monomethyl ester cyclase gives the overall reaction
Reduction steps to chlorophyllide a
Two further transformations are required to produce chlorophyllide a. Both are reduction reactions: one converts a vinyl group to an ethyl group and the second adds two atoms of hydrogen to the pyrrole ring D, although the overall aromaticity of the macrocycle is retained. These reactions proceed independently and in some organisms the sequence is reversed. The enzyme divinyl chlorophyllide a 8-vinyl-reductase converts 3,8-divinylprotochlorophyllide to protochlorophyllide in reaction This is followed by the reaction in which the pyrrole ring D is reduced by the enzyme protochlorophyllide reductase This reaction is light-dependent but there is an alternative enzyme,, that uses reduced ferredoxin as its cofactor and is not dependent on light; it performs the a similar reaction but with the alternative substrate 3,8-divinylprotochlorophyllide In the organisms which use this alternative sequence of reduction steps, the process is completed by the reaction catalysed by an enzyme which can take a variety of substrates and perform the required vinyl-group reduction, for example in this case
From chlorophyllide ''a'' to chlorophyllide ''b''
is the enzyme that converts chlorophyllide a to chlorophyllide b by catalysing the overall reaction
completes the biosynthesis of chlorophyll a by catalysing the reaction This forms an ester of the carboxylic acid group in chlorophyllide a with the 20-carbon diterpene alcohol phytol. Chlorophyll b is made by the same enzyme acting on chlorophyllide b.
Use in the biosynthesis of bacteriochlorophylls
s are the light harvesting pigments found in photosynthetic bacteria: they do not produce oxygen as a side-product. There are many such structures but all are biosynthetically related by being derived from chlorophyllide a. Bacteriochlorophyll a is a typical example; its biosynthesis has been studied in Rhodobacter capsulatus and Rhodobacter sphaeroides. or 1-hydroxyethyl group in place of the acetyl group shown The first step is the reduction of the pyrrole ring B, giving the characteristic 18-electron aromatic system of many bacteriochlorophylls. This is carried out by the enzyme chlorophyllide a reductase, which catalyses the reaction. The next two steps convert the vinyl group first into a 1-hydroxyethyl group and then into the acetyl group of bacteriochlorophyllide a. The reactions are catalysed by chlorophyllide a 31-hydratase and bacteriochlorophyllide a dehydrogenase as follows: These three enzyme-catalysed reactions can occur in different sequences to produce bacteriochlorophyllide a ready for esterification to the final pigments for photosynthesis. The phytyl ester of bacteriochlorophyll a is not attached directly: rather, the initial intermediate is the ester with R=geranylgeranyl which is then subject to additional steps as three of the sidechain's alkene bonds are reduced.