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1.
Three distinct systems (I, II, and III) for catalysis of heme attachment to c-type apocytochromes are known. The CcsA and Ccs1 proteins are required in system II for the assembly of bacterial and plastid cytochromes c. A tryptophan-rich signature motif (WWD), also occurring in CcmC and CcmF found in system I, and three histidinyl residues, all strictly conserved in CcsA suggest a function in heme handling. Topological analysis of plastid CcsA in bacteria using the PhoA and LacZalpha reporters placed the WWD motif, the conserved residues His(212) and His(347) on the lumen side of the membrane, whereas His(309) was assigned a location on the stromal side. Functional analysis of CcsA through site-directed mutagenesis enabled the designation of the initiation codon of the ccsA gene and established the functional importance of the WWD signature motif and the absolute requirement of all three histidines for the assembly of plastid c-type cytochromes. In a ccsA mutant, a 200-kDa Ccs1-containing complex is absent from solubilized thylakoid membranes, suggesting that CcsA operates together with Ccs1. We propose a model where the WWD motif and histidine residues function in relaying heme from stroma to lumen and we postulate the existence of a cytochrome c assembly machinery containing CcsA, Ccs1 and additional components.  相似文献   

2.
Summary: Heme is the prosthetic group for cytochromes, which are directly involved in oxidation/reduction reactions inside and outside the cell. Many cytochromes contain heme with covalent additions at one or both vinyl groups. These include farnesylation at one vinyl in hemes o and a and thioether linkages to each vinyl in cytochrome c (at CXXCH of the protein). Here we review the mechanisms for these covalent attachments, with emphasis on the three unique cytochrome c assembly pathways called systems I, II, and III. All proteins in system I (called Ccm proteins) and system II (Ccs proteins) are integral membrane proteins. Recent biochemical analyses suggest mechanisms for heme channeling to the outside, heme-iron redox control, and attachment to the CXXCH. For system II, the CcsB and CcsA proteins form a cytochrome c synthetase complex which specifically channels heme to an external heme binding domain; in this conserved tryptophan-rich “WWD domain” (in CcsA), the heme is maintained in the reduced state by two external histidines and then ligated to the CXXCH motif. In system I, a two-step process is described. Step 1 is the CcmABCD-mediated synthesis and release of oxidized holoCcmE (heme in the Fe+3 state). We describe how external histidines in CcmC are involved in heme attachment to CcmE, and the chemical mechanism to form oxidized holoCcmE is discussed. Step 2 includes the CcmFH-mediated reduction (to Fe+2) of holoCcmE and ligation of the heme to CXXCH. The evolutionary and ecological advantages for each system are discussed with respect to iron limitation and oxidizing environments.  相似文献   

3.
Simon J  Hederstedt L 《The FEBS journal》2011,278(22):4179-4188
Organisms employ one of several different enzyme systems to mature cytochromes c. The biosynthetic process involves the periplasmic reduction of cysteine residues in the heme c attachment motif of the apocytochrome, transmembrane transport of heme b and stereospecific covalent heme attachment via thioether bonds. The biogenesis System II (or Ccs system) is employed by β-, δ- and ε-proteobacteria, Gram-positive bacteria, Aquificales and cyanobacteria, as well as by algal and plant chloroplasts. System II comprises four (sometimes only three) membrane-bound proteins: CcsA (or ResC) and CcsB (ResB) are the components of the cytochrome c synthase, whereas CcdA and CcsX (ResA) function in the generation of a reduced heme c attachment motif. Some ε-proteobacteria contain CcsBA fusion proteins constituting single polypeptide cytochrome c synthases especially amenable for functional studies. This minireview highlights the recent findings on the structure, function and specificity of individual System II components and outlines the future challenges that remain to our understanding of the fascinating post-translational protein maturation process in more detail.  相似文献   

4.
Chloroplasts contain up to two c-type cytochromes, membrane-anchored cytochrome f and soluble cytochrome c6. To elucidate the post-translational events required for their assembly, acetate-requiring mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that have combined deficiencies in both plastid-encoded cytochrome f and nucleus-encoded cytochrome c6 have been identified and analyzed. For strains ct34 and ct59, where the phenotype displays uniparental inheritance, the mutations were localized to the chloroplast ccsA gene, which was shown previously to be required for heme attachment to chloroplast apocytochromes. The mutations in another eight strains were localized to the nuclear genome. Complementation tests of these strains plus three previously identified strains of the same phenotype (ac206, F18, and F2D8) indicate that the 11 ccs strains define four nuclear loci, CCS1-CCS4. We conclude that the products of the CCS1-CCS4 loci are not required for translocation or processing of the preproteins but, like CcsA, they are required for the heme attachment step during assembly of both holocytochrome f and holocytochrome c6. The ccsA gene is transcribed in each of the nuclear mutants, but its protein product is absent in ccs1 mutants, and it appears to be degradation susceptible in ccs3 and ccs4 strains. We suggest that Ccsl may be associated with CcsA in a multisubunit "holocytochrome c assembly complex," and we hypothesize that the products of the other CCS loci may correspond to other subunits.  相似文献   

5.
The Ccs1 gene, encoding a highly divergent novel component of a system II type c-type cytochrome biogenesis pathway, is encoded by the previously defined CCS1 locus in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. phoA and lacZalpha bacterial topological reporters were used to deduce a topological model of the Synechocystis sp. 6803 Ccs1 homologue, CcsB. CcsB, and therefore by analogy Ccs1, possesses a large soluble lumenal domain at its C terminus that is tethered in the thylakoid membrane by three closely spaced transmembrane domains in the N-terminal portion of the protein. Molecular analysis of ccs1 alleles reveals that the entire C-terminal soluble domain is essential for Ccs1 function and that a stromal loop appears to be important in vivo, at least for maintenance of Ccs1. Site-directed mutational analysis reveals that a single histidine (His(274)) within the last transmembrane domain, preceding the large lumenal domain, is required for c-type cytochrome assembly, whereas an invariant cysteine residue (Cys(199)) is shown to be non-essential. Ccs1 is proposed to interact with other Ccs components based on its reduced accumulation in ccs2, ccs3, ccs4, and ccsA strains.  相似文献   

6.
In this report we provide data, for the first time, demonstrating the conversion of the heme moiety of certain cytochrome P-450 and P-420 preparations, to biliverdin, catalyzed by heme oxygenase. We have used purified preparations of cytochromes P-450c, P-450b, P-450/P-420c, or P-450/P-420b as substrates in a heme oxygenase assay system reconstituted with heme oxygenase isoforms, HO-2 or HO-1, NADPH-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase, biliverdin reductase, NADPH, and Emulgen 911. With cytochrome P-450b or P-450/P-420b preparations, a near quantitative conversion of degraded heme to bile pigments was observed. In the case of cytochrome P-450/P-420c approximately 70% of the degraded heme was accounted for as bilirubin but only cytochrome P-420c was appreciably degraded. The role of heme oxygenase in this reaction was supported by the following observations: (i) bilirubin formation was not observed when heme oxygenase was omitted from the assay system; (ii) the rate of degradation of the heme moiety was at least threefold greater with heme oxygenase and NADPH-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase than that observed with reductase alone; and (iii) the presence of Zn- or Sn-protoporphyrins (2 microM), known competitive inhibitors of heme oxygenase, resulted in 70-90% inhibition of bilirubin formation.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome b5 is required for the cytochrome P-450 LM2 catalyzed oxidation of the anesthetic methoxyflurane. The ability of cytochrome b5 to support methoxyfluorane oxidation is affected by treatment with diethylpyrocarbonate, a reagent that at neutral pH is relatively specific for histidine residues. This inactivation of cytochrome b5 is reversed with hydroxylamine, which also suggests but does not prove histidine involvement. The studies reported in this paper were undertaken to determine whether histidine modification was involved in the decrease in effectiveness of cytochrome b5, or whether the inactivation could be attributed to modification of another amino acid. Our experiments demonstrate that diethylpyrocarbonate inactivates detergent-solubilized cytochrome b5 by modifying the axial histidines and displacing the heme. Because of the unexpected ease with which diethylpyrocarbonate displaced the heme from cytochrome b5, this same process was investigated in two other hemoproteins, cytochrome c and myoglobin. Diethylpyrocarbonate could not dissociate the heme from cytochrome c, whereas the heme was lost from myoglobin even more readily than from cytochrome b5.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c maturation involves heme transport and covalent attachment of heme to the apoprotein. The 5' end of the ccsB gene, which is involved in the maturation process and resembles the ccs1 gene from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, was replaced by a chloramphenicol resistance cartridge in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The resulting Delta(M1-A24) mutant lacking the first 24 ccsB codons grew only under anaerobic conditions. The mutant retained about 20% of the wild-type amount of processed cytochrome f with heme attached, apparently assembled in a functional cytochrome b(6)f complex. Moreover, the mutant accumulated unprocessed apocytochrome f in its membrane fraction. A pseudorevertant was isolated that regained the ability to grow under aerobic conditions. The locus of the second-site mutation was mapped to ccsB, and the mutation resulted in the formation of a new potential start codon in the intergenic region, between the chloramphenicol resistance marker and ccsB, in frame with the remaining part of ccsB. In this pseudorevertant the amount of holocyt f increased, whereas that of unprocessed apocytochrome f decreased. We suggest that the original deletion mutant Delta(M1-A24) expresses an N-terminally truncated version of the protein. The stable accumulation of unprocessed apocytochrome f in membranes of the Delta(M1-A24) mutant may be explained by its association with truncated and only partially functional CcsB protein resulting in protection from degradation. Our attempt to delete the first 244 codons of ccsB in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was not successful, suggesting that this would lead to a lack of functional cytochrome b(6)f complex. The results suggest that the CcsB protein is an apocytochrome chaperone, which together with CcsA may constitute part of cytochrome c lyase.  相似文献   

9.
At least two features of the crystal structures of the cytochrome b6f complex from the thermophilic cyanobacterium, Mastigocladus laminosus and a green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, have implications for the pathways and mechanism of charge (electron/proton) transfer in the complex: (i) The narrow 11 x 12 A portal between the p-side of the quinone exchange cavity and p-side plastoquinone/quinol binding niche, through which all Q/QH2 must pass, is smaller in the b6f than in the bc1 complex because of its partial occlusion by the phytyl chain of the one bound chlorophyll a molecule in the b6f complex. Thus, the pathway for trans-membrane passage of the lipophilic quinone is even more labyrinthine in the b6f than in the bc1 complex. (ii) A unique covalently bound heme, heme cn, in close proximity to the n-side b heme, is present in the b6f complex. The b6f structure implies that a Q cycle mechanism must be modified to include heme cn as an intermediate between heme bn and plastoquinone bound at a different site than in the bc1 complex. In addition, it is likely that the heme bn-cn couple participates in photosytem I-linked cyclic electron transport that requires ferredoxin and the ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase. This pathway through the n-side of the b6f complex could overlap with the n-side of the Q cycle pathway. Thus, either regulation is required at the level of the redox state of the hemes that would allow them to be shared by the two pathways, and/or the two different pathways are segregated in the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
The evolutionary relationship of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) to some gastropod myoglobins suggests that IDO may undergo autoxidation in vivo such that one or more currently unidentified electron donors are required to maintain IDO heme iron in the active, ferrous state. To evaluate this hypothesis we have used yeast knockout mutants in combination with a recently developed yeast growth assay for IDO activity in vivo to demonstrate a role for cytochrome b(5) and cytochrome b(5) reductase in maintaining IDO activity in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
The de novo design and synthesis of ruthenium-labeled cytochrome b5 that is optimized for the measurement of intracomplex electron transfer to cytochrome c are described. A single cysteine was substituted for Thr-65 of rat liver cytochrome b5 by recombinant DNA techniques [Stayton, P. S., Fisher, M. T., & Sligar, S. G. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13544-13548]. The single sulfhydryl group on T65C cytochrome b5 was then labeled with [4-(bromomethyl)-4'-methylbipyridine] (bisbipyridine)ruthenium2+ to form Ru-65-cyt b5. The ruthenium group at Cys-65 is only 12 A from the heme group of cytochrome b5 but is not located at the binding site for cytochrome c. Laser excitation of the complex between Ru-65-cyt b5 and cytochrome c results in electron transfer from the excited state Ru(II*) to the heme group of Ru-65-cyt b5 with a rate constant greater than 10(6) s-1. Subsequent electron transfer from the heme group of Ru-65-cyt b5 to the heme group of cytochrome c is biphasic, with a fast-phase rate constant of (4 +/- 1) x 10(5) s-1 and a slow-phase rate constant of (3 +/- 1) x 10(4) s-1. This suggests that the complex can assume two different conformations with different electron-transfer properties. The reaction becomes monophasic and the rate constant decreases as the ionic strength is increased, indicating dissociation of the complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We recently characterized a novel heme biogenesis pathway required for heme c(i)' covalent binding to cytochrome b6 in Chlamydomonas named system IV or CCB (cofactor assembly, complex C (b6f), subunit B (PetB)). To find out whether this CCB pathway also operates in higher plants and extend the knowledge of the c-type cytochrome biogenesis, we studied Arabidopsis insertion mutants in the orthologs of the CCB genes. The ccb1, ccb2, and ccb4 mutants show a phenotype characterized by a deficiency in the accumulation of the subunits of the cytochrome b6f complex and lack covalent heme binding to cytochrome b6. These mutants were functionally complemented with the corresponding wild type cDNAs. Using fluorescent protein reporters, we demonstrated that the CCB1, CCB2, CCB3, and CCB4 proteins are targeted to the chloroplast compartment of Arabidopsis. We have extended our study to the YGGT family, to which CCB3 belongs, by studying insertion mutants of two additional members of this family for which no mutants were previously characterized, and we showed that they are not functionally involved in the CCB system. Thus, we demonstrate the ubiquity of the CCB proteins in chloroplast heme c(i)' binding.  相似文献   

13.
Dreher C  Prodöhl A  Weber M  Schneider D 《FEBS letters》2007,581(14):2647-2651
In vivo and in vitro requirements for the formation of cytochrome b(6) were examined to analyze the mechanisms of transmembrane b-type cytochrome formation. After heterologous expression of spinach cytochrome b(6), formation of the holo-cytochrome was observed within the E. coli inner membrane. The transmembrane orientation of cytochrome b(6) appeared not to be critical for heme binding and holo-cytochrome formation. Furthermore, in vitro reconstitution of cytochrome b(6) was possible under oxidizing as well as under reducing conditions. Taken together these observations strongly indicate that transmembrane b-type cytochromes can spontaneously assemble in vitro as well as in a membrane.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Studies have indicated that specific heme delivery to apocytochrome c is a critical feature of the cytochrome c biogenesis pathways called system I and II. To determine directly the heme requirements of each system, including whether other metal porphyrins can be incorporated into cytochromes c, we engineered Escherichia coli so that the natural system I (ccmABCDEFGH) was deleted and exogenous porphyrins were the sole source of porphyrins (Delta hemA). The engineered E. coli strains that produced recombinant system I (from E. coli) or system II (from Helicobacter) facilitated studies of the heme concentration dependence of each system. Using this exogenous porphyrin approach, it was shown that in system I the levels of heme used are at least fivefold lower than the levels used in system II, providing an important advantage for system I. Neither system could assemble holocytochromes c with other metal porphyrins, suggesting that the attachment mechanism is specific for Fe protoporphyrin. Surprisingly, Zn and Sn protoporphyrins are potent inhibitors of the pathways, and exogenous heme competes with this inhibition. We propose that the targets are the heme binding proteins in the pathways (CcmC, CcmE, and CcmF for system I and CcsA for system II).  相似文献   

16.
G Howe  S Merchant 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(8):2789-2801
Cytochrome c6 functions in the thylakoid lumen to catalyze electron transfer from reduced cytochrome f of the cytochrome b6f complex to P700+ of photosystem I. The biogenesis of mature cyt c6 from cytosolically translated pre-apocytochrome c6 involves numerous post-translational modifications including the proteolytic removal of a transit sequence and the covalent attachment of heme to two cysteinyl thiols on the apoprotein. Here, we report on the characterization of a previously unrecognized class of non-allelic mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that are blocked at the conversion of apocyt c6 to holocyt c6. The mutants are acetate requiring since they are also deficient in cyt f, cyt b and the Rieske FeS protein. Pulse-chase studies indicate that heme attachment is not required for the two-step processing of pre-apocytochrome c6 to apocyt c6, but is required for the stability of the mature protein. This is in contrast to the biosynthesis of mitochondrial cyt c1 where heme attachment is required for the second processing step. We propose that the assembly of both holocytochrome c6 and the cytochrome b6f complex are dependent on common gene products, possibly those involved in heme delivery or metabolism. This is the first suggestion that multiple loci are involved in the biosynthesis of both plastidic c-type cytochromes.  相似文献   

17.
Bacterial c -type cytochrome maturation is dependent on a complex enzymic machinery. The key reaction is catalysed by cytochrome c haem lyase (CCHL) that usually forms two thioether bonds to attach haem b to the cysteine residues of a haem c binding motif (HBM) which is, in most cases, a CX2CH sequence. Here, the HBM specificity of three distinct CCHL isoenzymes (NrfI, CcsA1 and CcsA2) from the Epsilonproteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes was investigated using either W. succinogenes or Escherichia coli as host organism. Several reporter c -type cytochromes were employed including cytochrome c nitrite reductases (NrfA) from E. coli and Campylobacter jejuni that differ in their active-site HBMs (CX2CK or CX2CH). W. succinogenes CcsA2 was found to attach haem to standard CX2CH motifs in various cytochromes whereas other HBMs were not recognized. NrfI was able to attach haem c to the active-site CX2CK motif of both W. succinogenes and E. coli NrfA, but not to NrfA from C. jejuni . Different apo-cytochrome variants carrying the CX15CH motif, assumed to be recognized by CcsA1 during maturation of the octahaem cytochrome MccA, were not processed by CcsA1 in either W. succinogenes or E. coli . It is concluded that the dedicated CCHLs NrfI and CcsA1 attach haem to non-standard HBMs only in the presence of further, as yet uncharacterized structural features. Interestingly, it proved impossible to delete the ccsA2 gene from the W. succinogenes genome, a finding that is discussed in the light of the available genomic, proteomic and functional data on W. succinogenes c -type cytochromes.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome b562 is a periplasmic Escherichia coli protein; previous work has shown that heme can be attached covalently in vivo as a consequence of introduction of one or two cysteines into the heme-binding pocket. A heterogeneous mixture of products was obtained, and it was not established whether the covalent bond formation was catalyzed or spontaneous. Here, we show that coexpression from plasmids of a variant of cytochrome b562 containing a CXXCH heme-binding motif with the E. coli cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) proteins results in an essentially homogeneous product that is a correctly matured c-type cytochrome. Formation of the holocytochrome was accompanied by substantial production of its apo form, in which, for the protein as isolated, there is a disulfide bond between the two cysteines in the CXXCH motif. Following addition of heme to reduced CXXCH apoprotein, spontaneous covalent addition of heme to polypeptide occurred in vitro. Strikingly, the spectral properties were very similar to those of the material obtained from cells in which presumed uncatalyzed addition of heme (i.e. in the absence of Ccm) had been observed. The major product from uncatalyzed heme attachment was an incorrectly matured cytochrome with the heme rotated by 180 degrees relative to its normal orientation. The contrast between Ccm-dependent and Ccm-independent covalent attachment of heme indicates that the Ccm apparatus presents heme to the protein only in the orientation that results in formation of the correct product and also that heme does not become covalently attached to the apocytochrome b562 CXXCH variant without being handled by the Ccm system in the periplasm. The CXXCH variant of cytochrome b562 was also expressed in E. coli strains deficient in the periplasmic reductant DsbD or oxidant DsbA. In the DsbA- strain under aerobic conditions, c-type cytochromes were made abundantly and correctly when the Ccm proteins were expressed. This contrasts with previous reports indicating that DsbA is essential for cytochrome c biogenesis in E. coli.  相似文献   

19.
The three-dimensional structure of the cytochrome b(6)f complex disclosed the unexpected presence of a new heme c(i) [Stroebel, D., Choquet, Y., Popot, J.-L., and Picot, D. (2003) Nature 426, 413-418; Kurisu, G., Zhang, H., Smith, J. L., and Cramer, W. A. (2003) Science 302, 1009-1014]. Here we present a biochemical, spectroscopic, and mutagenesis study of this unusual heme binding in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. As predicted by the structure data, we identify a Cys(35)-containing proteolytic fragment (Tyr(25)-Lys(111)) from cytochrome b(6) as a peptide that covalently binds a heme. Resonance Raman spectra of cyt b(6)f complexes show particular frequencies in nu(2), nu(3), nu(4), and nu(8) regions that identify this extra heme as a ferrous c'-like heme under a five-coordinated high-spin state. The set of frequencies is consistent with a coordination by either a water molecule or a hydroxide ion. Other changes in resonance Raman bands, observed in the mid- and low-frequency regions, point to a modification in conformation and/or environment of at least one b heme methyl and/or propionate group. Site-directed mutagenesis of apocytochrome b(6), leading to a Cys(35)Val substitution, generates Chlamydomonas strains that are unable to assemble cytochrome b(6)f complexes. On the basis of the mutant phenotype, we discuss the participation, in the covalent binding of heme c(i), of the nuclear CCB factors that we identified previously as controlling the apo to holo conversion of cytochrome b(6) [Kuras, R., de Vitry, C., Choquet, Y., Girard-Bascou, J., Culler, D., Büschlen, S., Merchant, S., and Wollman, F.-A. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 32427-32435].  相似文献   

20.
The redox properties, the site of action of the inhibitor NQNO, and the question of interheme transfer in the chloroplast cytochrome b6 have been examined with regard to the role of the b6-f complex in quinol oxidation and H+ translocation. (i) The two hemes of the cytochrome ba and bp, have similar (delta Em less than or equal to 50 mV) oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials that are pH-independent in the range pH 6.5-8.0 (Em7 = -40 mV) but are pH dependent below this range with an estimated pK = 6.7. (ii) Only half of cytochrome b6, the stromal-side heme, ba, was reducible by NADPH and ferredoxin. (iii) The 2-3-fold increase (to 0.60 +/- 0.09 heme/600 Chl) in the amplitude of flash-induced cytochrome reduction caused by NQNO was not affected when heme ba was initially reduced, implying that NQNO affects flash reduction at the site of heme bp. (iv) Multiple light flashes did not increase the amplitude of b6 reduction in the presence or absence of NQNO or show binary oscillations. Together with localization of a site of action of NQNO near heme bp, these data provide no evidence for efficient electron transfer from heme bp to heme ba as specified by the Q cycle model. (v) NQNO interaction with heme bp does not block its oxidation, since reoxidation of the flash-reduced cytochrome in its presence or absence was 4-5 times faster (t1/2 approximately 30 ms) when heme ba was reduced. The faster oxidation of the photoreduced cytochrome after NADPH-Fd reduction of heme ba indicates that the oxidation of ba and bp may be cooperative.  相似文献   

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