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1.

Background

The carboxysome is a bacterial microcompartment that consists of a polyhedral protein shell filled with ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO), the enzyme that catalyzes the first step of CO2 fixation via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To analyze the role of RubisCO in carboxysome biogenesis in vivo we have created a series of Halothiobacillus neapolitanus RubisCO mutants. We identified the large subunit of the enzyme as an important determinant for its sequestration into α-carboxysomes and found that the carboxysomes of H. neapolitanus readily incorporate chimeric and heterologous RubisCO species. Intriguingly, a mutant lacking carboxysomal RubisCO assembles empty carboxysome shells of apparently normal shape and composition.

Conclusions/Significance

These results indicate that carboxysome shell architecture is not determined by the enzyme they normally sequester. Our study provides, for the first time, clear evidence that carboxysome contents can be manipulated and suggests future nanotechnological applications that are based upon engineered protein microcompartments.  相似文献   

2.
Cyanobacteria, including members of the genus Prochlorococcus, contain icosahedral protein microcompartments known as carboxysomes that encapsulate multiple copies of the CO(2)-fixing enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) in a thin protein shell that enhances the catalytic performance of the enzyme in part through the action of a shell-associated carbonic anhydrase. However, the exact mechanism by which compartmentation provides a catalytic advantage to the enzyme is not known. Complicating the study of cyanobacterial carboxysomes has been the inability to obtain homogeneous carboxysome preparations. This study describes the first successful purification and characterization of carboxysomes from the marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus MED4. Because the isolated P. marinus MED4 carboxysomes were free from contaminating membrane proteins, their protein complement could be assessed. In addition to the expected shell proteins, the CsoS1D protein that is not encoded by the canonical cso gene clusters of α-cyanobacteria was found to be a low-abundance shell component. This finding and supporting comparative genomic evidence have important implications for carboxysome composition, structure, and function. Our study indicates that carboxysome composition is probably more complex than was previously assumed based on the gene complements of the classical cso gene clusters.  相似文献   

3.
Cyanobacteria and some chemoautotrophic bacteria are able to grow in environments with limiting CO2 concentrations by employing a CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM) that allows them to accumulate inorganic carbon in their cytoplasm to concentrations several orders of magnitude higher than that on the outside. The final step of this process takes place in polyhedral protein microcompartments known as carboxysomes, which contain the majority of the CO2-fixing enzyme, RubisCO. The efficiency of CO2 fixation by the sequestered RubisCO is enhanced by co-localization with a specialized carbonic anhydrase that catalyzes dehydration of the cytoplasmic bicarbonate and ensures saturation of RubisCO with its substrate, CO2. There are two genetically distinct carboxysome types that differ in their protein composition and in the carbonic anhydrase(s) they employ. Here we review the existing information concerning the genomics, structure and enzymology of these uniquely adapted carbonic anhydrases, which are of fundamental importance in the global carbon cycle.  相似文献   

4.
The widely accepted models for the role of carboxysomes in the carbon-concentrating mechanism of autotrophic bacteria predict the carboxysomal carbonic anhydrase to be a crucial component. The enzyme is thought to dehydrate abundant cytosolic bicarbonate and provide ribulose 1.5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) sequestered within the carboxysome with sufficiently high concentrations of its substrate, CO(2), to permit its efficient fixation onto ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate. In this study, structure and function of carboxysomes purified from wild type Halothiobacillus neapolitanus and from a high CO(2)-requiring mutant that is devoid of carboxysomal carbonic anhydrase were compared. The kinetic constants for the carbon fixation reaction confirmed the importance of a functional carboxysomal carbonic anhydrase for efficient catalysis by RubisCO. Furthermore, comparisons of the reaction in intact and broken microcompartments and by purified carboxysomal RubisCO implicated the protein shell of the microcompartment as impeding diffusion of CO(2) into and out of the carboxysome interior.  相似文献   

5.
The carboxysome is a bacterial organelle that functions to enhance the efficiency of CO2 fixation by encapsulating the enzymes ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) and carbonic anhydrase. The outer shell of the carboxysome is reminiscent of a viral capsid, being constructed from many copies of a few small proteins. Here we describe the structure of the shell protein CsoS1A from the chemoautotrophic bacterium Halothiobacillus neapolitanus. The CsoS1A protein forms hexameric units that pack tightly together to form a molecular layer, which is perforated by narrow pores. Sulfate ions, soaked into crystals of CsoS1A, are observed in the pores of the molecular layer, supporting the idea that the pores could be the conduit for negatively charged metabolites such as bicarbonate, which must cross the shell. The problem of diffusion across a semiporous protein shell is discussed, with the conclusion that the shell is sufficiently porous to allow adequate transport of small molecules. The molecular layer formed by CsoS1A is similar to the recently observed layers formed by cyanobacterial carboxysome shell proteins. This similarity supports the argument that the layers observed represent the natural structure of the facets of the carboxysome shell. Insights into carboxysome function are provided by comparisons of the carboxysome shell to viral capsids, and a comparison of its pores to the pores of transmembrane protein channels.  相似文献   

6.
The carboxysome is a bacterial organelle that functions to enhance the efficiency of CO2 fixation by encapsulating the enzymes ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) and carbonic anhydrase. The outer shell of the carboxysome is reminiscent of a viral capsid, being constructed from many copies of a few small proteins. Here we describe the structure of the shell protein CsoS1A from the chemoautotrophic bacterium Halothiobacillus neapolitanus. The CsoS1A protein forms hexameric units that pack tightly together to form a molecular layer, which is perforated by narrow pores. Sulfate ions, soaked into crystals of CsoS1A, are observed in the pores of the molecular layer, supporting the idea that the pores could be the conduit for negatively charged metabolites such as bicarbonate, which must cross the shell. The problem of diffusion across a semiporous protein shell is discussed, with the conclusion that the shell is sufficiently porous to allow adequate transport of small molecules. The molecular layer formed by CsoS1A is similar to the recently observed layers formed by cyanobacterial carboxysome shell proteins. This similarity supports the argument that the layers observed represent the natural structure of the facets of the carboxysome shell. Insights into carboxysome function are provided by comparisons of the carboxysome shell to viral capsids, and a comparison of its pores to the pores of transmembrane protein channels.  相似文献   

7.
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are polyhedral organelles found in an increasingly wide variety of bacterial species. These structures, typified by carboxysomes of cyanobacteria and many chemoautotrophs, function to compartmentalize important reaction sequences of metabolic pathways. Unlike their eukaryotic counterparts, which are surrounded by lipid bilayer membranes, these microbial organelles are bounded by a thin protein shell that is assembled from multiple copies of a few different polypeptides. The main shell proteins form hexamers whose edges interact to create the thin sheets that form the facets of the polyhedral BMCs. Each hexamer contains a central pore hypothesized to mediate flux of metabolites into and out of the organelle. Because several distinctly different metabolic processes are found in the various BMCs studied to date, it has been proposed that a common advantage to packaging these pathways within shell-bound compartments is to optimize the concentration of volatile metabolites in the BMC by maintaining an interior pH that is lower than that of the cytoplasm. We have tested this idea by recombinantly fusing a pH-sensitive green fluorescent protein (GFP) to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO), the major enzyme component inside the carboxysome. Our results suggest that the carboxysomal pH is similar to that of its external environment and that the protein shell does not constitute a proton barrier. The explanation for the sundry BMC functions must therefore be sought in the characteristics of the pores that traverse their shells.Clearly, the subcellular organization of bacteria is much more complex than was once assumed (reviewed in references 17 and 26), and many bacteria are able to compartmentalize metabolic processes into distinct organelles. Among these, the bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) have garnered attention because the genetic potential to form these structures, which consist entirely of protein, is widespread among the bacteria (1). BMCs have been credited with enhancing the activity of the enzyme(s) they contain by providing a unique environment with optimized substrate concentrations or pH, facilitating metabolite channeling, or protecting the cell by sequestering toxic intermediates (1). Based on comparative genomic and biochemical analyses, the interiors of BMCs in various bacteria are populated by different complements of enzymes, suggesting that, collectively, these organelles play a role in a multitude of metabolic pathways. The bounding shells of all BMCs, on the other hand, appear to be built from multimeric assemblies of proteins that belong to the same two families (pfam 00936 and pfam 03319) (7, 11, 12, 29, 30, 32). Despite some structural differences between individual members of the two main shell protein types, the central pores in the pentamers and hexamers formed by these proteins have been implicated in mediating metabolite traffic across the BMC shell and, in some cases, may actively regulate transfer of substrates and products across the shell through a gating mechanism (12, 30). The variations in pore sizes and surface properties between individual BMC shell proteins likely reflect differences in interactions with the metabolites that pass through them and beg the question about functional differences among BMCs and between BMC protein shells and the lipid bilayer-based membranes of eukaryotic organelles.The carboxysome, the first BMC to be discovered (25), is found in all cyanobacteria and in many nonphotosynthetic chemoautotrophs, exemplified by the aerobic sulfur bacterium Halothiobacillus neapolitanus and its relatives. Its interior is filled with ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) (25), the enzyme that is crucial for carbon assimilation by these bacteria because it catalyzes the fixation of inorganic carbon onto the organic acceptor molecule, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate. The enzyme is a relatively inefficient catalyst; it has a high Km for its substrate, CO2, a low turnover number, and is also able to fix O2 through a competing, unproductive reaction. The carboxysome compensates for these shortcomings by providing a microcompartment that enhances the catalytic efficiency of RubisCO. Cytosolic bicarbonate is thought to enter the carboxysome freely through the many pores in the shell, but it cannot be used by RubisCO. The action of the carboxysomal carbonic anhydrase that is cosequestered with RubisCO rapidly converts HCO3 to the RubisCO substrate, CO2 (5, 19, 28). The carboxysome shell retards diffusion of CO2 out of the organelle (5) and thereby contributes to the generation of an elevated steady-state concentration of CO2 in the vicinity of the RubisCO active site, a condition that favors the carboxylation reaction. In addition, the carboxysomal shell may reduce the concentration of the competing RubisCO substrate O2 by excluding it from the microcompartment interior (3, 14). Quantitative modeling of CO2 fixation in cyanobacteria supports the role of the shell as a barrier for CO2 diffusion out of the carboxysome (21). Measurements of CO2 hydration rates in purified intact and disrupted carboxysomes suggest that access of CO2 to the interior of the organelle is likewise limited by the shell (5).The shells of other BMCs have also been proposed to influence the flux of metabolites into and out of the microcompartment interior. The Pdu BMC of Salmonella enterica, which participates in the B12-dependent degradation of propanediol, prevents the toxic intermediate propionaldehyde from diffusing into the cytoplasm (6, 24). The Eut BMC, also found in S. enterica, is thought to encapsulate several enzymes of the ethanolamine utilization pathway, in which acetaldehyde is a central intermediate. The shell of the Eut BMC is also postulated to prevent loss of a crucial metabolite, in this case acetaldehyde, from the interior by diffusion (22). Acetaldehyde, which like propionaldehyde is volatile, is thought to be captured within the Eut BMC not to protect cellular structures from damage but to prevent escape of this important intermediate from the cell (20). In an effort to identify a common mechanism for BMC function, Penrod and Roth (20) made the intriguing suggestion that all BMCs may constitute compartments with an interior pH that is lower than that of the surrounding cytoplasm. Such an environment would promote the conversion of aldehydes in the Pdu and Eut BMCs to less volatile acetals, which are less likely to escape the downstream pathway enzymes localized in the BMC interior. In the carboxysomes of autotrophic bacteria, a lower pH would presumably favor higher concentrations of CO2 by shifting the equilibrium from HCO3 toward CO2.This unifying model of BMC function necessitates the assumption that the BMC shell resists passage of protons out of the compartment to maintain a pH gradient. Although it is not known whether a thin protein layer can impede proton diffusion, one needs only to look at the mechanism of proton discrimination described for the pores of aquaporins (2, 31) to imagine that the multiple pores in the BMC shell might likewise fulfill the structural requirements of a proton permeability barrier.An extended discussion of this model at a recent symposium on BMCs (at the 109th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in 2009) prompted us to design a study that directly determined if the BMC shell is able to maintain a lumen pH that is different from that of its surrounding medium.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are polyhedral bodies, composed entirely of proteins, that function as organelles in bacteria; they promote subcellular processes by encapsulating and co-localizing targeted enzymes with their substrates. The best-characterized BMC is the carboxysome, a central part of the carbon-concentrating mechanism that greatly enhances carbon fixation in cyanobacteria and some chemoautotrophs. Here we report the first structural insights into the carboxysome of Prochlorococcus, the numerically dominant cyanobacterium in the world's oligotrophic oceans. Bioinformatic methods, substantiated by analysis of gene expression data, were used to identify a new carboxysome shell component, CsoS1D, in the genome of Prochlorococcus strain MED4; orthologs were subsequently found in all cyanobacteria. Two independent crystal structures of Prochlorococcus MED4 CsoS1D reveal three features not seen in any BMC-domain protein structure solved to date. First, CsoS1D is composed of a fused pair of BMC domains. Second, this double-domain protein trimerizes to form a novel pseudohexameric building block for incorporation into the carboxysome shell, and the trimers further dimerize, forming a two-tiered shell building block. Third, and most strikingly, the large pore formed at the 3-fold axis of symmetry appears to be gated. Each dimer of trimers contains one trimer with an open pore and one whose pore is obstructed due to side-chain conformations of two residues that are invariant among all CsoS1D orthologs. This is the first evidence of the potential for gated transport across the carboxysome shell and reveals a new type of building block for BMC shells.  相似文献   

9.
Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are self-assembling organelles that sequester segments of biochemical pathways within a protein shell. Given their functional diversity, BMCs constitute a rich source of metabolic modules for applications in synthetic biology. The carboxysome, the cyanobacterial BMC for CO2 fixation, has attracted significant attention as a target for installation into chloroplasts and serves as the foundation for introducing other types of BMCs into plants. Carboxysome assembly involves a series of protein-protein interactions among at least six gene products to form a metabolic core, around which the shell assembles. This complexity creates significant challenges for the transfer, regulation, and assembly of carboxysomes, or any of the myriad of functionally distinct BMCs, into heterologous systems. To overcome this bottleneck, we constructed a chimeric protein in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus that structurally and functionally replaces four gene products required for carboxysome formation. The protein was designed based on protein domain interactions in the carboxysome core. The resulting streamlined carboxysomes support photosynthesis. This strategy obviates the need to regulate multiple genes and decreases the genetic load required for carboxysome assembly in heterologous systems. More broadly, the reengineered carboxysomes represent a proof of concept for a domain fusion approach to building multifunctional enzymatic cores that should be generally applicable to the engineering of BMCs for new functions and cellular contexts.  相似文献   

10.
The carbon dioxide (CO2)-concentrating mechanism of cyanobacteria is characterized by the occurrence of Rubisco-containing microcompartments called carboxysomes within cells. The encapsulation of Rubisco allows for high-CO2 concentrations at the site of fixation, providing an advantage in low-CO2 environments. Cyanobacteria with Form-IA Rubisco contain α-carboxysomes, and cyanobacteria with Form-IB Rubisco contain β-carboxysomes. The two carboxysome types have arisen through convergent evolution, and α-cyanobacteria and β-cyanobacteria occupy different ecological niches. Here, we present, to our knowledge, the first direct comparison of the carboxysome function from α-cyanobacteria (Cyanobium spp. PCC7001) and β-cyanobacteria (Synechococcus spp. PCC7942) with similar inorganic carbon (Ci; as CO2 and HCO3) transporter systems. Despite evolutionary and structural differences between α-carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes, we found that the two strains are remarkably similar in many physiological parameters, particularly the response of photosynthesis to light and external Ci and their modulation of internal ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate, phosphoglycerate, and Ci pools when grown under comparable conditions. In addition, the different Rubisco forms present in each carboxysome had almost identical kinetic parameters. The conclusions indicate that the possession of different carboxysome types does not significantly influence the physiological function of these species and that similar carboxysome function may be possessed by each carboxysome type. Interestingly, both carboxysome types showed a response to cytosolic Ci, which is of higher affinity than predicted by current models, being saturated by 5 to 15 mm Ci. This finding has bearing on the viability of transplanting functional carboxysomes into the C3 chloroplast.Cyanobacteria inhabit a diverse range of ecological habitats, including both freshwater and marine ecosystems. The flexibility to occupy these different habitats is thought to come in part from the carbon-concentrating mechanism (CCM) present in all species (Badger et al., 2006). The CCM comprises inorganic carbon (Ci; as carbon dioxide [CO2] and HCO3) transporters for Ci uptake and protein microbodies called carboxysomes for CO2 concentration and fixation by Rubisco (Badger and Price, 2003). The CCM is believed to have evolved in response to changes in the absolute and relative levels of CO2 and oxygen (O2) in the atmosphere during the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis in cyanobacteria (Price et al., 2008).There are two main phylogenetic groups within the cyanobacteria based on Rubisco and carboxysome phylogenies; α-cyanobacteria have α-carboxysomes with Form-IA Rubisco, whereas β-cyanobacteria have β-carboxysomes with Form-IB Rubisco (Tabita, 1999; Badger et al., 2002). Rubisco large subunit protein sequences from these two groups are closely related but nevertheless, distinguishable (Supplemental Fig. S1). In general, α-cyanobacteria and β-cyanobacteria occupy a quite different range of ecological habitats. The α-cyanobacteria are mostly marine organisms, with the majority of species living in the open ocean (Badger et al., 2006). Marine α-cyanobacteria live in very stable environments with high pH (pH 8.2) and dissolved carbon levels but low nutrients. They are characterized by small cells, very small genomes (1.6–2.8 Mb), and a few constitutively expressed carbon uptake transporters (Rae et al., 2011; Beck et al., 2012). They have been described as low flux, low energy cyanobacteria with a minimal CCM (Badger et al., 2006). Although these species are slow growing, oceanic cyanobacteria contribute as much as one-half of oceanic primary productivity (Liu et al., 1997, 1999; Field et al., 1998), suggesting that they may contribute up to 25% to net global productivity every year.In comparison, β-cyanobacteria occupy a much more diverse range of habitats, including freshwater, estuarine, and hot springs and never reach the same levels of global abundance (Badger et al., 2006). They are characterized by larger cells, larger genomes (2.2–3.6 Mb), and an array of carbon uptake transporters, including those transporters induced under low Ci (Rae et al., 2011, 2013). In addition to these broadly defined α-groups and β-groups, there are small numbers of α-cyanobacteria that have been termed transitional strains (Price, 2011; Rae et al., 2011). These species (e.g. Cyanobium spp. PCC7001, Synechococcus spp. WH5701, and Cyanobium spp. PCC6307; Supplemental Fig. S1) live in marginal marine and freshwater environments and have a number of characteristics similar to β-cyanobacteria. For example, they have a more diverse range of Ci uptake systems and a significantly larger genome than closely related α-cyanobacteria, and it has been suggested that the additional genes encoding transport systems were acquired by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from β-cyanobacteria (Rae et al., 2011).Although the carboxysomes from α-cyanobacteria and β-cyanobacteria are very similar in overall structure, in that they share an outer protein shell of common phylogenetic origin (Kerfeld et al., 2005), they are distinguished from each other largely by differences in the proteins, which seem to make up or interact with the interior of the carboxysome compartment (Supplemental Table S1). This finding suggests that their different structures today have arisen through periods of common and convergent evolution. Certain carboxysome shell proteins from α-carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes show regions of significant sequence homology. These proteins are denoted as CsoS1 to CsoS4 (in α-cyanobacteria) and CcmKLO (in β-cyanobacteria), and the homologous regions have been termed bacterial microcompartment domains (Kerfeld et al., 2010; Rae et al., 2013). Proteins with these domains are also found in bacterial microcompartments in proteobacteria. However, other identified carboxysome proteins do not show any sequence homology between α-carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes but may perform similar functional roles. For example, carbonic anhydrase activity is essential for carboxysome function, but its activity seems to be provided by a range of different proteins (β-CcaA, β-CcmM, and α-CsoSCA; Kupriyanova et al., 2013). Similarly, β-CcmM and α-CsoS2 could play similar roles in organizing the interface between the shell and Rubisco within the carboxysomes (Gonzales et al., 2005; Long et al., 2007).The functioning of a carboxysome relies on a number of biochemical properties associated with the protein microbody structure. These properties include the biochemical/kinetic properties of Rubisco contained within carboxysomes, the conductance of the carboxysome shell to the influx of substrate ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) and the efflux of the carboxylation product phosphoglycerate (PGA), the conductance of the shell to the influx of bicarbonate and the efflux of CO2, and lastly, the manner in which bicarbonate is converted to CO2 within the carboxysomes. α-Carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes have the potential to differ in each of these properties. The flux of phosphorylated sugars across the shell has been postulated to be mediated by the pores in the hexameric shell proteins (Yeates et al., 2010; Kinney et al., 2011), which although similar, do differ between the two carboxysomes types. Bicarbonate and CO2 uptake processes are less well-defined but probably involve aspects of the way in which unique shell interface proteins interact with Rubisco, which also differs in that CsoS2 and CsoSCA are probably the interacting proteins involved in α-carboxysomes (Espie and Kimber, 2011), whereas CcmM and β-carboxysomal CA are variably involved in β-carboxysomes (Long et al., 2010). Finally, the Form-IA and Form-IB Rubisco proteins at the heart of carboxylation, although similar, have the potential to show different kinetic properties. Although Form-IB Rubiscos from β-cyanobacteria are well-characterized, the Form-IA counterparts have received very little attention. In addition, the CCM of very few strains of cyanobacteria have been studied at the level of biochemistry and physiology, and they have been almost exclusively β-cyanobacteria. As a result, there are significant gaps in our knowledge about the similarities and differences in functional traits between α-cyanobacterial and β-cyanobacterial strains. One important question that remains to be answered is whether α-carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes have intrinsic differences in their biochemical properties that influence the nature of the CCM, which is established within each broad cell type.Because of the difficulties in isolating and assaying intact carboxysomes in vitro, the characterization of biochemical properties of carboxysomes is not easily addressed. One way forward is to study the properties of the CCM in detail in a model representative strain from each group and compare their characteristics to contrast the intracellular function of α-cell types and β-cell types. In the past, it has been restricted because of the difficulties in growing many of the open ocean α-cyanobacteria and their very different natures in relation to inorganic transporter composition. However, the availability of α-cyanobacteria transition strains, which grow well in the laboratory, has provided an opportunity to address this question. The α-cyanobacteria Cyanobium spp. PCC7001 (hereafter Cyanobium spp.), in particular, grows in standard freshwater media (BG11) and has growth and photosynthetic performance properties that closely match the model β-cyanobacteria, Synechococcus spp. PCC7942 (hereafter Synechococcus spp.); for this reason, Cyanobium spp. is ideal for a balanced comparison of the in vivo physiological properties of α-carboxysomes and β-carboxysomes in two species with relatively similar Ci-uptake properties.Genome analysis of both strains indicates that Cyanobium spp. have many of the same carbon uptake systems present in Synechococcus spp. (Rae et al., 2011). In using two strains with such similar transport capacities, we aimed to shed light on aspects of the functional properties of carboxysomes in each strain and how these properties affect the operation of the CCM in α-cyanobacteria and β-cyanobacteria. Using both membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) and silicon oil centrifugation, we investigated Ci pool sizes and CO2 uptake rates in both species for cells grown at high and low CO2. Comparative Rubisco properties and photosynthetic rates of each species were determined, and intracellular pools of RuBP and PGA were measured. In addition, we characterized a number of cellular properties to determine differences in the biochemical environments in which each carboxysome type exists. Together, the results provide a unique functional comparison of two distinct carboxysome types from phylogenetically disparate cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Cyanobacteria have evolved a unique carbon fixation organelle known as the carboxysome that compartmentalizes the enzymes RuBisCO and carbonic anhydrase. This effectively increases the local CO2 concentration at the active site of RuBisCO and decreases its relatively unproductive side reaction with oxygen. Carboxysomes consist of a protein shell composed of hexameric and pentameric proteins arranged in icosahedral symmetry. Facets composed of hexameric proteins are connected at the vertices by pentameric proteins. Structurally homologous pentamers and hexamers are also found in heterotrophic bacteria where they form architecturally related microcompartments such as the Eut and Pdu organelles for the metabolism of ethanolamine and propanediol, respectively. Here we describe two new high-resolution structures of the pentameric shell protein CcmL from the cyanobacteria Thermosynechococcus elongatus and Gloeobacter violaceus and provide detailed analysis of their characteristics and comparison with related shell proteins.  相似文献   

12.
A significant portion of the total carbon fixed in the biosphere is attributed to the autotrophic metabolism of prokaryotes. In cyanobacteria and many chemolithoautotrophic bacteria, CO(2) fixation is catalyzed by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO), most if not all of which is packaged in protein microcompartments called carboxysomes. These structures play an integral role in a cellular CO(2)-concentrating mechanism and are essential components for autotrophic growth. Here we report that the carboxysomal shell protein, CsoS3, from Halothiobacillus neapolitanus is a novel carbonic anhydrase (epsilon-class CA) that has an evolutionary lineage distinct from those previously recognized in animals, plants, and other prokaryotes. Functional CAs encoded by csoS3 homologues were also identified in the cyanobacteria Prochlorococcus sp. and Synechococcus sp., which dominate the oligotrophic oceans and are major contributors to primary productivity. The location of the carboxysomal CA in the shell suggests that it could supply the active sites of RuBisCO in the carboxysome with the high concentrations of CO(2) necessary for optimal RuBisCO activity and efficient carbon fixation in these prokaryotes, which are important contributors to the global carbon cycle.  相似文献   

13.
Four genes encoding carboxysome shell peptides (csoS1A, csoS1B, csoS1C, csoS2), the genes encoding the large and small subunits of RuBisCO (cbbL, cbbS), and three unidentified ORFs constitute an operon in Thiobacillus neapolitanus. An unidentified ORF 1.54 kb in size is predicted from sequence analysis to encode a protein with a molecular mass of approximately 57 kDa. When this ORF was expressed in Escherichia coli under the control of its endogenous ribosome-binding site, no peptide product was observed. In order to correlate this ORF with a carboxysome peptide, the ORF was overexpressed in E. coli by cloning it into pProExHTb, a prokaryotic expression vector containing an E. coli ribosome binding site. When antibodies raised against the recombinant protein were used to probe an immunoblot containing carboxysome peptides, a 60-kDa peptide was recognized. The peptide was subsequently named CsoS3. CsoS3 is a minor component of the carboxysome; a peptide of this size is commonly not observed or is very faint on Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gels of purified carboxysomes. Immunogold labeling established CsoS3 to be a component of the carboxysome shell.  相似文献   

14.
The carboxysome is a bacterial organelle found in all cyanobacteria; it encapsulates CO2 fixation enzymes within a protein shell. The most abundant carboxysome shell protein contains a single bacterial microcompartment (BMC) domain. We present in vivo evidence that a hypothetical protein (dubbed CcmP) encoded in all β-cyanobacterial genomes is part of the carboxysome. We show that CcmP is a tandem BMC domain protein, the first to be structurally characterized from a β-carboxysome. CcmP forms a dimer of tightly stacked trimers, resulting in a nanocompartment-containing shell protein that may weakly bind 3-phosphoglycerate, the product of CO2 fixation. The trimers have a large central pore through which metabolites presumably pass into the carboxysome. Conserved residues surrounding the pore have alternate side-chain conformations suggesting that it can be open or closed. Furthermore, CcmP and its orthologs in α-cyanobacterial genomes form a distinct clade of shell proteins. Members of this subgroup are also found in numerous heterotrophic BMC-associated gene clusters encoding functionally diverse bacterial organelles, suggesting that the potential to form a nanocompartment within a microcompartment shell is widespread. Given that carboxysomes and architecturally related bacterial organelles are the subject of intense interest for applications in synthetic biology/metabolic engineering, our results describe a new type of building block with which to functionalize BMC shells.  相似文献   

15.
In cyanobacteria and many chemolithotrophic bacteria, the CO(2)-fixing enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) is sequestered into polyhedral protein bodies called carboxysomes. The carboxysome is believed to function as a microcompartment that enhances the catalytic efficacy of RubisCO by providing the enzyme with its substrate, CO(2), through the action of the shell protein CsoSCA, which is a novel carbonic anhydrase. In the work reported here, the biochemical properties of purified, recombinant CsoSCA were studied, and the catalytic characteristics of the carbonic anhydrase for the CO(2) hydration and bicarbonate dehydration reactions were compared with those of intact and ruptured carboxysomes. The low apparent catalytic rates measured for CsoSCA in intact carboxysomes suggest that the protein shell acts as a barrier for the CO(2) that has been produced by CsoSCA through directional dehydration of cytoplasmic bicarbonate. This CO(2) trap provides the sequestered RubisCO with ample substrate for efficient fixation and constitutes a means by which microcompartmentalization enhances the catalytic efficiency of this enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Bally J  Job C  Belghazi M  Job D 《PloS one》2011,6(9):e25289

Background

Recombinant chloroplasts are endowed with an astonishing capacity to accumulate foreign proteins. However, knowledge about the impact on resident proteins of such high levels of recombinant protein accumulation is lacking.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here we used proteomics to characterize tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plastid transformants massively accumulating a p-hydroxyphenyl pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) or a green fluorescent protein (GFP). While under the conditions used no obvious modifications in plant phenotype could be observed, these proteins accumulated to even higher levels than ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), the most abundant protein on the planet. This accumulation occurred at the expense of a limited number of leaf proteins including Rubisco. In particular, enzymes involved in CO2 metabolism such as nuclear-encoded plastidial Calvin cycle enzymes and mitochondrial glycine decarboxylase were found to adjust their accumulation level to these novel physiological conditions.

Conclusions/Significance

The results document how protein synthetic capacity is limited in plant cells. They may provide new avenues to evaluate possible bottlenecks in recombinant protein technology and to maintain plant fitness in future studies aiming at producing recombinant proteins of interest through chloroplast transformation.  相似文献   

17.
Spatial segregation of metabolism, such as cellular-localized CO2 fixation in C4 plants or in the cyanobacterial carboxysome, enhances the activity of inefficient enzymes by selectively concentrating them with their substrates. The carboxysome and other bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) have drawn particular attention for bioengineering of nanoreactors because they are self-assembling proteinaceous organelles. All BMCs share an architecturally similar, selectively permeable shell that encapsulates enzymes. Fundamental to engineering carboxysomes and other BMCs for applications in plant synthetic biology and metabolic engineering is understanding the structural determinants of cargo packaging and shell permeability. Here we describe the expression of a synthetic operon in Escherichia coli that produces carboxysome shells. Protein domains native to the carboxysome core were used to encapsulate foreign cargo into the synthetic shells. These synthetic shells can be purified to homogeneity with or without luminal proteins. Our results not only further the understanding of protein-protein interactions governing carboxysome assembly, but also establish a platform to study shell permeability and the structural basis of the function of intact BMC shells both in vivo and in vitro. This system will be especially useful for developing synthetic carboxysomes for plant engineering.A key enzyme in photosynthesis is the CO2 fixation enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). Rubisco not only fixes CO2, resulting in carbon assimilation, but it can also fix O2, leading to photorespiration. Suppressing the unwanted oxygenase activity of Rubisco by sequestering Rubisco with a source of CO2 is Nature’s solution to this substrate discrimination problem. While C4 plants compartmentalize CO2 fixation in specific cells (Hibberd et al., 2008; Parry et al., 2011), cyanobacteria have evolved a specialized organelle composed entirely of protein to encapsulate Rubisco—the carboxysome.The carboxysome is just one type of bacterial microcompartment (BMC), widespread, functionally diverse bacterial organelles (Axen et al., 2014). All BMCs consist of an enzymatic core surrounded by a selectively permeable protein shell (Kerfeld et al., 2005; Tanaka et al., 2008; Chowdhury et al., 2014; Kerfeld and Erbilgin, 2015). While the encapsulated enzymes differ among functionally distinct BMCs, they share an architecturally similar shell composed of three types of proteins: BMC-H, BMC-T, and BMC-P forming hexamers, pseudohexamers, and pentamers, respectively (Kerfeld and Erbilgin, 2015). These constitute the building blocks of a self-assembling, apparently icosahedral shell with a diameter ranging from 40 to 400 nm (Shively et al., 1973a,b, 1998; Price and Badger, 1991; Bobik et al., 1999; Iancu et al., 2007, 2010; Petit et al., 2013; Erbilgin et al., 2014). Recent studies have also shown that in the biogenesis of BMCs an encapsulation peptide (EP) (Fan and Bobik, 2011; Kinney et al., 2012; Aussignargues et al., 2015; Jakobson et al., 2015), a short (approximately 18 residues) amphipathic α-helix mediates interactions between a subset of core protein and the shell (Fan and Bobik, 2011; Choudhary et al., 2012; Kinney et al., 2012; Lawrence et al., 2014; Lin et al., 2014; Aussignargues et al., 2015). Indeed, because they are self-assembling organelles composed entirely of protein, BMCs hold great promise for diverse applications in bioengineering and development of bionanomaterials (Frank et al., 2013; Chowdhury et al., 2014; Chessher et al., 2015; Kerfeld and Erbilgin, 2015); the key features of BMCs include selective permeability, spatial colocalization of enzymes, the establishment of private cofactor pools, and the potentially beneficial effects of confinement on protein stability. For example, introducing carboxysomes into plants could provide a saltational enhancement of crop photosynthesis (Price et al., 2013; Zarzycki et al., 2013; Lin et al., 2014; McGrath and Long, 2014).The β-carboxysome, which sequesters form 1B Rubisco, has been an important model system for the study of the structural basis of carboxysome function, assembly, and engineering (Kerfeld et al., 2005; Tanaka et al., 2008; Cameron et al., 2013; Aussignargues et al., 2015; Cai et al., 2015). Beta-carboxysomes assemble from the inside out (Cameron et al., 2013; Gonzalez-Esquer et al., 2015). Two proteins that are absolutely conserved and unique to β-carboxysomes, CcmM and CcmN, play essential roles in this process: CcmM crosslinks Rubisco through its C-terminal Rubisco small subunit-like domains (SSLDs; pfam00101); CcmM and CcmN interact through their N-terminal domains; and C-terminal EP of CcmN interacts with the carboxysome shell.Here we describe a system for producing synthetic β-carboxysome shells and encapsulating nonnative cargo. We constructed a synthetic operon composed of ccmK1, ccmK2, ccmL, and ccmO, genes encoding, respectively, two BMC-H proteins, a BMC-P protein, and a BMC-T protein of the carboxysome shell of the halotolerant cyanobacterium, Halothece sp. PCC 7418 (Halo hereafter). Recombinant shells composed of all four proteins were produced and purified. We also demonstrated that the terminal α-helices of CcmK1 and CcmK2 are not, as had been proposed (Samborska and Kimber, 2012), required for the shell formation, and that the synthetic shell is a single-layered protein membrane. Cargo could be targeted to the interior of the synthetic shells using either the EP of CcmN or the N-terminal domain of CcmM; the latter observation provides new insight into the organization of the β-carboxysome. Our results not only further the understanding of protein-protein interactions governing carboxysome assembly but also provide a platform to study carboxysome shell permeability. These results will be useful in guiding the design and optimization of carboxysomes and other BMCs for introduction into plants.  相似文献   

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Distinct types of carboxysomes were distinguished in Synechococcus PCC 7942: electron-clear, electron-intermediate, carboxysomes with internal electron-clear areas, typical electron-dense and bar-shaped carboxysomes. Immunogold location with antibodies against the Rubisco large subunit showed specific label in all carboxysomes. The positive correlation between electron-density, the density of immunogold label, and the percentage of labeled structures within each type support a model of carboxysome biogenesis whereby electron-clear evolve to electron-intermediate and then to electron-dense carboxysomes by the progressive sequestering of Rubisco molecules. Cells responded to limitation in CO2 supply by increasing carboxysome frequency and the proportion of typical electron-dense carboxysomes, the extent of the response depending on the degree of limitation. The time course of carboxysome expression during transfers between different conditions of CO2 supply indicated that, under our experimental conditions, there were different levels of response, depending on the degree of limitation. The first level occured at atmospheric levels of CO2 and involved changes in the affinity of the CCM and in carboxysome, which occurred simultaneously. More severe limitation of CO2 supply affected carboxysomes exclusively, without further improvement in the affinity of the CCM.  相似文献   

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