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DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf9178
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Light-dependent chlorophyll f synthase is a highly divergent paralog of PsbA of photosystem II

Ming Yang Ho,Gaozhong Shen,Daniel P. Canniffe,Chuanxi Zhao,Donald A. Bryant

Photosystem II
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
2016
Sometimes, red light means grow Some cyanobacteria are able to use the far-red end of the light spectrum by synthesizing chlorophyll f pigments. Introducing the protein responsible for chlorophyll f synthesis into crop plants could potentially expand the range of wavelengths that such plants use during photosynthesis and thereby increase their growth efficiency. Ho et al. identified chlorophyll f synthase (ChlF) in two cyanobacteria that are acclimatized to grow using far-red light. Introducing the ChlF-encoding gene into a model cyanobacterium allowed the organism to synthesize chlorophyll f. Similarities between ChlF and a core protein of photosystem II suggest that they have a close evolutionary relationship, and ChlF may even represent a more primitive photochemical reaction center. Science , this issue p. 886
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    Light-dependent chlorophyll f synthase is a highly divergent paralog of PsbA of photosystem II” is a paper by Ming Yang Ho Gaozhong Shen Daniel P. Canniffe Chuanxi Zhao Donald A. Bryant published in 2016. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.