Abstract
The possible roles of mesohaem and mesobiliverdin as metabolic precursors of phycocyanobilin, the chromophore of phycocyanin, were studied in the unicellular rhodophyte Cyanidium caldarium. Dark-grown cells of this organism, which had been exposed to mesohaem, were either incubated in the dark with 5-aminolaevulinate, which results in excretion of bilins into the suspending medium, or incubated in the light, which results in synthesis of phycocyanin within the cells. By using 14C-labelling, either in the mesohaem or in the 5-aminolaevulinate administered, it was shown that mesohaem is not a precursor of phycocyanobilin in either dark or light systems. However, mesohaem was converted into mesobiliverdin in both systems, a phenomenon that is further evidence for the existence of an algal haem oxygenase. The data also showed that mesobiliverdin is not a precursor of phycocyanobilin. These results suggest that algal bilins are formed via haem degradation to biliverdin in the same way as mammalian bile pigments.