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1.
The control of chlorophyll (Chl) synthesis in angiosperms depends on the light-operating enzyme protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR). The interruption of Chl synthesis during darkness requires suppression of the synthesis of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), the first precursor molecule specific for Chl synthesis. The inactivation of glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR), the first enzyme in tetrapyrrole biosynthesis, accomplished the decreased ALA synthesis by the membrane-bound protein FLUORESCENT (FLU) and prevents overaccumulation of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) in the dark. We set out to elucidate the molecular mechanism of FLU-mediated inhibition of ALA synthesis, and explored the role of each of the three structural domains of mature FLU, the transmembrane, coiled-coil and tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domains, in this process. Efforts to rescue the FLU knock-out mutant with truncated FLU peptides revealed that, on its own, the TPR domain is insufficient to inactivate GluTR, although tight binding of the TPR domain to GluTR was detected. A truncated FLU peptide consisting of transmembrane and TPR domains also failed to inactivate GluTR in the dark. Similarly, suppression of ALA synthesis could not be achieved by combining the coiled-coil and TPR domains. Interaction studies revealed that binding of GluTR and POR to FLU is essential for inhibiting ALA synthesis. These results imply that all three FLU domains are required for the repression of ALA synthesis, in order to avoid the overaccumulation of Pchlide in the dark. Only complete FLU ensures the formation of a membrane-bound ternary complex consisting at least of FLU, GluTR and POR to repress ALA synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Fluorescent in blue light (FLU) is a negative regulator involved in dark repression of 5‐aminolevulinic acid (ALA) synthesis and interacts with glutamyl‐tRNA reductase (GluTR), the rate‐limiting enzyme of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. In this study, we investigated FLU‘s regulatory function in light‐exposed FLU‐overexpressing (FLUOE) Arabidopsis lines and under fluctuating light intensities in wild‐type (WT) and flu seedlings. FLUOE lines suppress ALA synthesis in the light, resulting in reduced chlorophyll content, but more strongly in low and high light than in medium growth light. This situation indicates that FLU's impact on chlorophyll biosynthesis depends on light intensity. FLU overexpressors contain strongly increased amounts of mainly membrane‐associated GluTR. These findings correlate with FLU‐dependent localization of GluTR to plastidic membranes and concomitant inhibition, such that only the soluble GluTR fraction is active. The overaccumulation of membrane‐associated GluTR indicates that FLU binding enhances GluTR stability. Interestingly, under fluctuating light, the leaves of flu mutants contain less chlorophyll compared with WT and become necrotic. We propose that FLU is basically required for fine‐tuned ALA synthesis. FLU not only mediates dark repression of ALA synthesis, but functions also to control balanced ALA synthesis under variable light intensities to ensure the adequate supply of chlorophyll.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR) catalyzes the first step of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis in plants, archaea and most bacteria. The catalytic mechanism of the enzyme was elucidated both by biochemical data and the determination of the high-resolution crystal structure of the enzyme from the archaeon Methanopyrus kandleri in complex with a competitive inhibitor. The dimeric enzyme has an unusual V-shaped architecture where each monomer consists of three domains linked by a long `spinal' α-helix. The central catalytic domain specifically recognizes the glutamate moiety of the substrate. It bears a conserved cysteine poised to nucleophilically attack the activated aminoacyl bond of glutamyl-tRNA. Subsequently, the thioester intermediate is reduced to the product glutamate-1-semialdehyde via hydride transfer from NADPH supplied by the second domain. A structure-based sequence alignment indicates that catalytically essential amino acids are conserved throughout all GluTRs. Thus the catalytic mechanism derived for M. kandleri is common to all including plant GluTRs. Mutations described to influence the catalytic efficiency of the barley enzyme can therefore be explained. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

5.
5-Aminolevulinic acid (ALA) synthesis has been shown to be the rate limiting step of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. Glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR) is the first committed enzyme of plant ALA synthesis and is controlled by interacting regulators, such as heme and the FLU protein. Induced inactivation of the HEMA1 gene encoding GluTR by RNAi expression in tobacco resulted in a reduced activity of Mg chelatase and Fe chelatase indicating a feed-forward regulatory mechanism that links ALA synthesis posttranslationally with late enzymes of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis (Hedtke et al., 2007). Here, the regulatory impact of GluTR was investigated by overexpression of AtHEMA1 in Arabidopsis and tobacco plants. Light-dependent ALA synthesis cannot benefit from an up to 7-fold induced expression of GluTR in Arabidopsis. While constitutive AtHEMA1 overexpression in tobacco stimulates ALA synthesis by 50-90% during light-exposed growth of seedlings, no increase in heme and chlorophyll contents is observed. HEMA1 overexpression in etiolated and dark-grown Arabidopsis and tobacco seedlings leads to additional accumulation of protochlorophyllide. As excessive accumulation of GluTR does not correlate with increased ALA formation, it is hypothesized that ALA synthesis is additionally limited by other effectors that balance the allocation of ALA with the activity of enzymes of chlorophyll and heme biosynthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR) is the first enzyme committed to tetrapyrrole biosynthesis by the C5-pathway. This enzyme transforms glutamyl-tRNA into glutamate-1-semi-aldehyde, which is then transformed into 5-amino levulinic acid by the glutamate-1-semi-aldehyde 2,1-aminomutase. Binding of heme to GluTR seems to be relevant to regulate the enzyme function. Recombinant GluTR from Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans an acidophilic bacterium that participates in bioleaching of minerals was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified as a soluble protein containing type b heme. Upon control of the cellular content of heme in E. coli, GluTR with different levels of bound heme was obtained. An inverse correlation between the activity of the enzyme and the level of bound heme to GluTR suggested a control of the enzyme activity by heme. Heme bound preferentially to dimeric GluTR. An intact dimerization domain was essential for the enzyme to be fully active. We propose that the cellular levels of heme might regulate the activity of GluTR and ultimately its own biosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
The bacteria that metabolize agarose use multiple enzymes of complementary specificities to hydrolyze the glycosidic linkages in agarose, a linear polymer comprising the repeating disaccharide subunit of neoagarobiose (3,6-anhydro-l-galactose-α-(1,3)-d-galactose) that are β-(1,4)-linked. Here we present the crystal structure of a glycoside hydrolase family 50 exo-β-agarase, Aga50D, from the marine microbe Saccharophagus degradans. This enzyme catalyzes a critical step in the metabolism of agarose by S. degradans through cleaving agarose oligomers into neoagarobiose products that can be further processed into monomers. The crystal structure of Aga50D to 1.9 Å resolution reveals a (β/α)8-barrel fold that is elaborated with a β-sandwich domain and extensive loops. The structures of catalytically inactivated Aga50D in complex with non-hydrolyzed neoagarotetraose (2.05 Å resolution) and neoagarooctaose (2.30 Å resolution) provide views of Michaelis complexes for a β-agarase. In these structures, the d-galactose residue in the −1 subsite is distorted into a 1S3 skew boat conformation. The relative positioning of the putative catalytic residues are most consistent with a retaining catalytic mechanism. Additionally, the neoagarooctaose complex showed that this extended substrate made substantial interactions with the β-sandwich domain, which resembles a carbohydrate-binding module, thus creating additional plus (+) subsites and funneling the polymeric substrate through the tunnel-shaped active site. A synthesis of these results in combination with an additional neoagarobiose product complex suggests a potential exo-processive mode of action of Aga50D on the agarose double helix.  相似文献   

8.
The synthesis of δ-aminolevulinic acid (δ-ALA) is a key step in the regulation of tetrapyrrole synthesis. To study the developmentally and circadian-clock controlled mechanism that co-ordinates synthesis of chlorophylls and chlorophyll-binding proteins, δ-ALA-synthesising capacity was analysed in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) primary leaves grown under dark/light or constant light conditions. The δ-ALA-forming activity oscillated within 24 h with a maximum at the transition of dark to light and a minimum 12 h later, indicating the involvement of the circadian oscillator during development. The capacity for δ-ALA synthesis increased transiently in the middle of barley primary leaves. The δ-ALA-forming-activity correlated well with the previously published steady-state level of mRNA for light-harvesting chlorophyll-binding proteins in space and time; this supports the view of a co-ordinate synthesis of chlorophyll and pigment-binding proteins. Steady-state levels of mRNAs encoding the three enzymes of the δ-ALA-synthesising pathway and of proteins for glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR) and glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase (GSA AT; EC 5.4.3.8) were analysed for their developmental and circadian expression in barley leaves. The contents of GluTR mRNA and protein cycled parallel to the changes in δ-ALA-forming activity. The levels of GSA AT mRNA oscillated in an opposite phase, but the protein content did not show substantial oscillation under diurnal and circadian growth conditions. No circadian oscillation was detected for glutamyl tRNA synthase (GluRS; EC 6.1.1.17). Maximal GluTR mRNA content and protein was observed in the middle (segments 3 and 4) of the barley primary leaves. The developmentally controlled expression of GluTR therefore differs from that of GSA AT and GluRS, but resembles the capacity for δ-ALA synthesis in a barley leaf gradient. These data indicate that the oscillating, light-dependent and spatial expression of GluTR mRNA might contribute to the regulated formation of the chlorophyll precursor δ-ALA. Received: 29 April 1996 / Accepted 11 December 1996  相似文献   

9.
The cGMP phosphodiesterase of rod photoreceptor cells, PDE6, is the key effector enzyme in phototransduction. Two large catalytic subunits, PDE6α and -β, each contain one catalytic domain and two non-catalytic GAF domains, whereas two small inhibitory PDE6γ subunits allow tight regulation by the G protein transducin. The structure of holo-PDE6 in complex with the ROS-1 antibody Fab fragment was determined by cryo-electron microscopy. The ∼11 Å map revealed previously unseen features of PDE6, and each domain was readily fit with high resolution structures. A structure of PDE6 in complex with prenyl-binding protein (PrBP/δ) indicated the location of the PDE6 C-terminal prenylations. Reconstructions of complexes with Fab fragments bound to N or C termini of PDE6γ revealed that PDE6γ stretches from the catalytic domain at one end of the holoenzyme to the GAF-A domain at the other. Removal of PDE6γ caused dramatic structural rearrangements, which were reversed upon its restoration.  相似文献   

10.
The metabolite 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) is an early committed intermediate in the biosynthetic pathway of heme and chlorophyll formation. In plants, 5-aminolevulinic acid is synthesized via a two-step pathway in which glutamyl-tRNA(Glu) is reduced by glutamyl-tRNA(Glu) reductase (GluTR) to glutamate 1-semialdehyde, followed by transformation to 5-aminolevulinic acid catalyzed by glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase. Using an Escherichia coli cell-based high-throughput assay to screen small molecule libraries, we identified several chemical classes that specifically inhibit heme/chlorophyll biosynthesis at this point by demonstrating that the observed cell growth inhibition is reversed by supplementing the medium with 5-aminolevulinic acid. These compounds were further tested in vitro for inhibition of the purified enzymes GluTR and glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase as confirmation of the specificity and site of action. Several promising compounds were identified from the high-throughput screen that inhibit GluTR with an I(0.5) of less than 10 microM. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of cell-based high-throughput screening for identifying inhibitors of 5-aminolevulinic acid biosynthesis, thus representing the first report of exogenous inhibitors of this enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The newly emerging Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) encodes the conserved macro domain within non-structural protein 3. However, the precise biochemical function and structure of the macro domain is unclear. Using differential scanning fluorimetry and isothermal titration calorimetry, we characterized the MERS-CoV macro domain as a more efficient adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-ribose binding module than macro domains from other CoVs. Furthermore, the crystal structure of the MERS-CoV macro domain was determined at 1.43-Å resolution in complex with ADP-ribose. Comparison of macro domains from MERS-CoV and other human CoVs revealed structural differences in the α1 helix alters how the conserved Asp-20 interacts with ADP-ribose and may explain the efficient binding of the MERS-CoV macro domain to ADP-ribose. This study provides structural and biophysical bases to further evaluate the role of the MERS-CoV macro domain in the host response via ADP-ribose binding but also as a potential target for drug design.  相似文献   

13.
TolR is a 15-kDa inner membrane protein subunit of the Tol-Pal complex in Gram-negative bacteria, and its function is poorly understood. Tol-Pal is recruited to cell division sites where it is involved in maintaining the integrity of the outer membrane. TolR is related to MotB, the peptidoglycan (PG)-binding stator protein from the flagellum, suggesting it might serve a similar role in Tol-Pal. The only structure thus far reported for TolR is of the periplasmic domain from Haemophilus influenzae in which N- and C-terminal residues had been deleted (TolR(62–133), Escherichia coli numbering). H. influenzae TolR(62–133) is a symmetrical dimer with a large deep cleft at the dimer interface. Here, we present the 1.7-Å crystal structure of the intact periplasmic domain of E. coli TolR (TolR(36–142)). E. coli TolR(36–142) is also dimeric, but the architecture of the dimer is radically different from that of TolR(62–133) due to the intertwining of its N and C termini. TolR monomers are rotated ∼180° relative to each other as a result of this strand swapping, obliterating the putative PG-binding groove seen in TolR(62–133). We found that removal of the strand-swapped regions (TolR(60–133)) exposes cryptic PG binding activity that is absent in the full-length domain. We conclude that to function as a stator in the Tol-Pal complex dimeric TolR must undergo large scale structural remodeling reminiscent of that proposed for MotB, where the N- and C-terminal sequences unfold in order for the protein to both reach and bind the PG layer ∼90 Å away from the inner membrane.  相似文献   

14.
Members of the DEAD-box family of RNA helicases contribute to virtually every aspect of RNA metabolism, in organisms from all domains of life. Many of these helicases are constituents of multicomponent assemblies, and their interactions with partner proteins within the complexes underpin their activities and biological function. In Escherichia coli the DEAD-box helicase RhlB is a component of the multienzyme RNA degradosome assembly, and its interaction with the core ribonuclease RNase E boosts the ATP-dependent activity of the helicase. Earlier studies have identified the regulator of ribonuclease activity A (RraA) as a potential interaction partner of both RNase E and RhlB. We present structural and biochemical evidence showing how RraA can bind to, and modulate the activity of RhlB and another E. coli DEAD-box enzyme, SrmB. Crystallographic structures are presented of RraA in complex with a portion of the natively unstructured C-terminal tail of RhlB at 2.8-Å resolution, and in complex with the C-terminal RecA-like domain of SrmB at 2.9 Å. The models suggest two distinct mechanisms by which RraA might modulate the activity of these and potentially other helicases.  相似文献   

15.
Glutamate-1-semialdehyde 2,1-aminomutase (GSAM) is the second enzyme in the C(5) pathway of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis found in most bacteria, in archaea and in plants. It catalyzes the transamination of glutamate-1-semialdehyde to 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) in a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent manner. We present the crystal structure of GSAM from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus (GSAM(Tel)) in its PLP-bound form at 2.85A resolution. GSAM(Tel) is a symmetric homodimer, whereas GSAM from Synechococcus (GSAM(Syn)) has been described as asymmetric. The symmetry of GSAM(Tel) thus challenges the previously proposed negative cooperativity between monomers of this enzyme. Furthermore, GSAM(Tel) reveals an extensive flexible region at the interface of the proposed complex of GSAM with glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GluTR), the preceding enzyme in tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. Compared to GSAM(Syn), the monomers of GSAM(Tel) are rotated away from each other along the dimerization interface by 10 degrees . The associated flexibility of GSAM may be essential for complex formation with GluTR to occur. Unexpectedly, we find that GSAM is structurally related to 5-aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS), the ALA-producing enzyme in the Shemin pathway of alpha-proteobacteria and non-plant eukaryotes. This structural relationship applies also to the corresponding subfamilies of PLP-dependent enzymes. We thus propose that the CoA-subfamily (including ALAS) and the aminotransferase subfamily II (including GSAM) are evolutionarily closely related and that ALAS may thus have evolved from GSAM.  相似文献   

16.
Mayer SM  Beale SI 《Plant physiology》1991,97(3):1094-1102
Wild-type Euglena gracillis cells synthesize the key chlorophyll precursor, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), from glutamate in their plastids. The synthesis requires transfer RNAGlu (tRNAGlu) and the three enzymes, glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, glutamyl-tRNA reductase, and glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase. Non-greening mutant Euglena strain W14ZNaIL does not synthesize ALA from glutamate and is devoid of the required tRNAGlu. Other cellular tRNAGlus present in the mutant cells were capable of being charged with glutamate, but the resulting glutamyl-tRNAs did not support ALA synthesis. Surprisingly, the mutant cells contain all three of the enzymes, and their cell extracts can convert glutamate to ALA when supplemented with tRNAGlu obtained from wild-type cells. Activity levels of the three enzymes were measured in extracts of cells grown under a number of light conditions. All three activities were diminished in extracts of cells grown in complete darkness, and full induction of activity required 72 hours of growth in the light. A light intensity of 4 microeinsteins per square meter per second was sufficient for full induction. Blue light was as effective as white light, but red light was ineffective, in inducing extractable enzyme activity above that of cells grown in complete darkness, indicating that the light control operates via the nonchloroplast blue light receptor in the mutant cells. Of the three enzyme activities, the one that is most acutely affected by light is glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase, as has been previously shown for wild-type Euglena cells. These results indicate that the enzymes required for ALA synthesis from glutamate are present in an active form in the nongreening mutant cells, even though they cannot participate in ALA formation in these cells because of the absence of the required tRNAGlu, and that the activity of all three enzymes is regulated by light. Because the absence of plastid tRNAGlu precludes the synthesis of proteins within the plastids, the three enzymes must be synthesized in the cytoplasm and their genes encoded in the nucleus in Euglena.  相似文献   

17.
Beale SI 《Plant physiology》1990,93(4):1273-1279
δ-Aminolevulinic acid (ALA), the common biosynthetic precursor of hemes, chlorophylls, and bilins, is synthesized by two distinct routes. Among phototrophic species, purple nonsulfur bacteria form ALA by condensation of glycine with succinyl-CoA, catalyzed by ALA synthase, in a reaction identical to that occurring in the mitochondria of animals, yeast, and fungi. Most or all other phototrophic species form ALA exclusively from the intact carbon skeleton of glutamic acid in a reaction sequence that begins with activation of the α-carboxyl group of glutamate by an ATP-dependent ligation to tRNAGlu, catalyzed by glutamyl-tRNA synthetase. Glutamyl-tRNA is the substrate for a pyridine nucleotide-dependent dehydrogenase reaction whose product is glutamate-1-semialdehyde or a similar reduced compound. Glutamate-1-semialdehyde is then transaminated to form ALA. Regulation of ALA formation from glutamate is exerted at the dehydrogenase step through end product feedback inhibition and induction/repression. In some species, end product inhibition of the glutamyl-tRNA synthetase step and developmental regulation of tRNAGlu level may also occur.  相似文献   

18.
Clan CD cysteine peptidases, a structurally related group of peptidases that include mammalian caspases, exhibit a wide range of important functions, along with a variety of specificities and activation mechanisms. However, for the clostripain family (denoted C11), little is currently known. Here, we describe the first crystal structure of a C11 protein from the human gut bacterium, Parabacteroides merdae (PmC11), determined to 1.7-Å resolution. PmC11 is a monomeric cysteine peptidase that comprises an extended caspase-like α/β/α sandwich and an unusual C-terminal domain. It shares core structural elements with clan CD cysteine peptidases but otherwise structurally differs from the other families in the clan. These studies also revealed a well ordered break in the polypeptide chain at Lys147, resulting in a large conformational rearrangement close to the active site. Biochemical and kinetic analysis revealed Lys147 to be an intramolecular processing site at which cleavage is required for full activation of the enzyme, suggesting an autoinhibitory mechanism for self-preservation. PmC11 has an acidic binding pocket and a preference for basic substrates, and accepts substrates with Arg and Lys in P1 and does not require Ca2+ for activity. Collectively, these data provide insights into the mechanism and activity of PmC11 and a detailed framework for studies on C11 peptidases from other phylogenetic kingdoms.  相似文献   

19.
Plants, algae, cyanobacteria and many other bacteria synthesize the tetrapyrrole precursor, δ-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), from glutamate by means of a tRNAGlu-mediated pathway. The enzyme glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GTR) catalyzes the first committed step in this pathway, which is the reduction of tRNA-bound glutamate to produce glutamate 1-semialdehyde. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mRNA encoding gtr was sequenced from a cDNA and genomic libraries. The 3179-bp gtr cDNA contains a 1566-bp open reading frame that encodes a 522-amino acid polypeptide. After removal of the predicted transit peptide, the mature 480-residue GTR has a calculated molecular weight of 52,502. The deduced C. reinhardtii mature GTR amino acid sequence has more than 55% identity to a GTR sequence of Arabidopsis thaliana, and significant similarity to GTR proteins of other plants and prokaryotes. Southern blot analysis of C. reinhardtii genomic DNA indicates that C. reinhardtii has only one gtr gene. Genomic DNA sequencing revealed the presence of a small intron near the putative transit peptide cleavage site. Expression constructs for the full-length initial gtr translation product, the mature protein after transit peptide removal, and the coding sequence of the second exon were cloned into expression vector that also introduced a C-terminal His6 tag. All of these constructs were expressed in E. coli, and both the mature protein and the exon 2 translation product complemented a hemA mutation. The expressed proteins were purified by Ni-affinity column chromatography to yield active GTR. Purified mature GTR was not inhibited by heme, but heme inhibition was restored upon addition of C. reinhardtii soluble proteins.  相似文献   

20.
SGT1 is an evolutionarily conserved eukaryotic protein involved in many important cellular processes. In plants, SGT1 is involved in resistance to disease. In a low ionic strength environment, the SGT1 protein tends to form dimers. The protein consists of three structurally independent domains (the tetratricopeptide repeats domain (TPR), the CHORD- and SGT1-containing domain (CS), and the SGT1-specific domain (SGS)), and two less conserved variable regions (VR1 and VR2). In the present study, we provide the low-resolution structure of the barley (Hordeum vulgare) SGT1 protein in solution and its dimer/monomer equilibrium using small-angle scattering of synchrotron radiation, ab-initio modeling and circular dichroism spectroscopy. The multivariate curve resolution least-square method (MCR-ALS) was applied to separate the scattering data of the monomeric and dimeric species from a complex mixture. The models of the barley SGT1 dimer and monomer were formulated using rigid body modeling with ab-initio structure prediction. Both oligomeric forms of barley SGT1 have elongated shapes with unfolded inter-domain regions. Circular dichroism spectroscopy confirmed that the barley SGT1 protein had a modular architecture, with an α-helical TPR domain, a β-sheet sandwich CS domain, and a disordered SGS domain separated by VR1 and VR2 regions. Using molecular docking and ab-initio protein structure prediction, a model of dimerization of the TPR domains was proposed.  相似文献   

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