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1.
Gram-negative bacteria like Rhodobacter capsulatus use intertwined pathways to carry out the posttranslational maturation of c-type cytochromes (Cyts). This periplasmic process requires at least 10 essential components for apo-Cyt c chaperoning, thio-oxidoreduction, and the delivery of heme and its covalent ligation. One of these components, CcmI (also called CycH), is thought to act as an apo-Cyt c chaperone. In R. capsulatus, CcmI-null mutants are unable to produce c-type Cyts and thus sustain photosynthetic (Ps) growth. Previously, we have shown that overproduction of the putative heme ligation components CcmF and CcmH(Rc) (also called Ccl1 and Ccl2) can partially bypass the function of CcmI on minimal, but not on enriched, media. Here, we demonstrate that either additional overproduction of CcmG (also called HelX) or hyperproduction of CcmF-CcmH(Rc) is needed to completely overcome the role of CcmI during the biogenesis of c-type Cyts on both minimal and enriched media. These findings indicate that, in the absence of CcmI, interactions between the heme ligation and thioreduction pathways become restricted for sufficient Cyt c production. We therefore suggest that CcmI, along with its apo-Cyt chaperoning function, is also critical for the efficacy of holo-Cyt c formation, possibly via its close interactions with other components performing the final heme ligation steps during Cyt c biogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
During cytochrome c maturation (Ccm), the DsbA-dependent thio-oxidative protein-folding pathway is thought to introduce a disulphide bond into the haem-binding motif of apocytochromes c. This disulphide bond is believed to be reduced through a thio-reductive pathway involving the Ccm components CcdA (DsbD), CcmG and CcmH. Here, we show in Rhodobacter capsulatus that in the absence of DsbA cytochrome c levels were decreased and CcdA or CcmG or the putative glutathione transporter CydDC was not needed for Ccm. This decrease was not due to overproduction of the periplasmic protease DegP as a secondary effect of DsbA absence. In contrast, CcmH was absolutely necessary regardless of DsbA, indicating that compensatory thio-redox interactions excluded it. Remarkably, the double (DsbA-CcmG) and triple (DsbA-CcmG-CcdA) mutants produced cytochromes c at lower levels than the DsbA-null mutants, unless they contained a CcmG derivative (CcmG*) lacking its thio-reductive activity. Purified CcmG* can bind apocytochrome c in vitro, revealing for the first time a thiol-independent, direct interaction between apocytochrome c and CcmG. Furthermore, elimination of the thio-redox components does not abolish cytochrome c production, restricting the number of Ccm components essential for haem-apocyt c ligation per se during Ccm.  相似文献   

3.
Cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) is a post-translational and post-export protein modification process that involves ten (CcmABCDEFGHI and CcdA or DsbD) components in most Gram-negative bacteria. The absence of any of these components abolishes the ability of cells to form cytochrome c, leading in the case of Rhodobacter capsulatus to the loss of photosynthetic proficiency and respiratory cytochrome oxidase activity. Based on earlier molecular genetic studies, we inferred that R. capsulatus CcmF, CcmH, and CcmI interact with each other to perform heme-apocytochrome c ligation. Here, using functional epitope-tagged derivatives of these components coproduced in appropriate mutant strains, we determined protein-protein interactions between them in detergent-dispersed membranes. Reciprocal affinity purification as well as tandem size exclusion and affinity chromatography analyses provided the first biochemical evidence that CcmF, CcmH, and CcmI associate stably with each other, indicating that these Ccm components form a membrane-integral complex. Under the conditions used, the CcmFHI complex does not contain CcmG, suggesting that the latter thio-reduction component is not always associated with the heme ligation components. The findings are discussed with respect to defining the obligatory components of a minimalistic heme-apocytochrome c ligation complex in R. capsulatus.  相似文献   

4.
Cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) is a sophisticated post-translational process. It occurs after translocation of apocytochromes c to the p side of energy transducing membranes and forms stereo-specific thioether bonds between the vinyl groups of heme b (protoporphyrin IX-Fe) and the thiol groups of cysteines at their conserved heme binding sites. In many organisms this process involves up to 10 (CcmABCDEFGHI and CcdA) membrane proteins. One of these proteins is CcmI, which has an N-terminal membrane-embedded domain with two transmembrane helices and a large C-terminal periplasmic domain with protein-protein interaction motifs. Together with CcmF and CcmH, CcmI forms a multisubunit heme ligation complex. How the CcmFHI complex recognizes its apocytochrome c substrates remained unknown. In this study, using Rhodobacter capsulatus apocytochrome c(2) as a Ccm substrate, we demonstrate for the first time that CcmI binds apocytochrome c(2) but not holocytochrome c(2). Mainly the C-terminal portions of both CcmI and apocytochrome c(2) mediate this binding. Other physical interactions via the conserved structural elements in apocytochrome c(2), like the heme ligating cysteines or heme iron axial ligands, are less crucial. Furthermore, we show that the N-terminal domain of CcmI can also weakly bind apocytochrome c(2), but this interaction requires a free thiol group at apocytochrome c(2) heme binding site. We conclude that the CcmI subunit of the CcmFHI complex functions as an apocytochrome c chaperone during the Ccm process used by proteobacteria, archaea, mitochondria of plants and red algae.  相似文献   

5.
Cytochromes c covalently bind their heme prosthetic groups through thioether bonds between the vinyl groups of the heme and the thiols of a CXXCH motif within the protein. In Gram-negative bacteria, this process is catalyzed by the Ccm (cytochrome c maturation) proteins, also called System I. The Ccm proteins are found in the bacterial inner membrane, but some (CcmE, CcmG, CcmH, and CcmI) also have soluble functional domains on the periplasmic face of the membrane. Elucidation of the mechanisms involved in the transport and relay of heme and the apocytochrome from the bacterial cytosol into the periplasm, and their subsequent reaction, has proved challenging due to the fact that most of the proteins involved are membrane-associated, but recent progress in understanding some key components has thrown up some surprises. In this Review, we discuss advances in our understanding of this process arising from a substrate’s point of view and from recent structural information about individual components.  相似文献   

6.
Ahuja U  Thöny-Meyer L 《FEBS letters》2006,580(1):216-222
The cytochrome c maturation system of Escherichia coli contains two monotopic membrane proteins with periplasmic, functional domains, the heme chaperone CcmE and the thioredoxin CcmG. We show in a domain swap experiment that the membrane anchors of these proteins can be exchanged without drastic loss of function in cytochrome c maturation. By contrast, the soluble periplasmic forms produced with a cleavable OmpA signal sequence have low biological activity. Both the chimerical CcmE (CcmG'-'E) and the soluble periplasmic CcmE produce low levels of holo-CcmE and thus are impaired in their heme receiving capacity. Also, both forms of CcmE can be co-precipitated with CcmC, thus restricting the site of interaction of CcmE with CcmC to the C-terminal periplasmic domain. However, the low level of holo-CcmE formed in the chimera is transferred efficiently to cytochrome c, indicating that heme delivery from CcmE does not involve the membrane anchor.  相似文献   

7.
Cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) is a post-translational process that occurs after translocation of apocytochromes c to the positive (p) side of energy-transducing membranes. Ccm is responsible for the formation of covalent bonds between the thiol groups of two cysteines residues at the heme-binding sites of the apocytochromes and the vinyl groups of heme b (protoporphyrin IX-Fe). Among the proteins (CcmABCDEFGHI and CcdA) required for this process, CcmABCD are involved in loading heme b to apoCcmE. The holoCcmE thus formed provides heme b to the apocytochromes. Catalysis of the thioether bonds between the apocytochromes c and heme b is mediated by the heme ligation core complex, which in Rhodobacter capsulatus contains at least the CcmF, CcmH, and CcmI components. In this work we show that the heme chaperone apoCcmE binds to the apocytochrome c and the apocytochrome c chaperone CcmI to yield stable binary and ternary complexes in the absence of heme in vitro. We found that during these protein-protein interactions, apoCcmE favors the presence of a disulfide bond at the apocytochrome c heme-binding site. We also establish using detergent-dispersed membranes that apoCcmE interacts directly with CcmI and CcmH of the heme ligation core complex CcmFHI. Implications of these findings are discussed with respect to heme transfer from CcmE to the apocytochromes c during heme ligation assisted by the core complex CcmFHI.  相似文献   

8.
Biogenesis of c-type cytochromes in Escherichia coli involves a number of membrane proteins (CcmA-H), which are required for the transfer of heme to the periplasmically located apocytochrome c. The pathway includes (i) covalent, transient binding of heme to the periplasmic domain of the heme chaperone CcmE; (ii) the subsequent release of heme; and (iii) transfer and covalent attachment of heme to apocytochrome c. Here, we report that CcmF is a key player in the late steps of cytochrome c maturation. We demonstrate that the conserved histidines His-173, His-261, His-303, and His-491 and the tryptophan-rich signature motif of the CcmF protein family are functionally required. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that CcmF interacts directly with the heme donor CcmE and with CcmH but not with apocytochrome c. We propose that CcmFH forms a bacterial heme lyase complex for the transfer of heme from CcmE to apocytochrome c.  相似文献   

9.
In the process of cytochrome c maturation, heme groups are covalently attached to reduced cysteines of specific heme-binding motifs (CXXCH) in an apocytochrome c sequence. In Escherichia coli, the CcmH protein maintains apo-protein cysteines in a reduced state prior to heme attachment. We have purified and biophysically, as well as structurally characterized the soluble, N-terminal domain of E. coli CcmH that carries the functionally relevant LRCXXC-motif. In contrast to a recently presented structure of the homologous domain from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the E. coli protein forms a tightly interlinked dimer by swapping its N-terminal helix between two monomers. We propose that an altered environment of the functional motif may help to discern between the two redox partners CcmG and apocytochrome c.  相似文献   

10.
Shewanella oneidensis is renowned for its respiratory versatility, which is largely due to abundant c‐type cytochromes. Maturation of these proteins depends on a Ccm system encoded by genes in an unusual chromosomal arrangement, but the detailed mechanism is not understood. In this study, we identify SO0265 as CcmI, an apocytochrome c chaperone that is important and essential for maturation of c‐type cytochromes with the canonical heme binding motif(s) (HBM; CX2CH) and nitrite reductase NrfA carrying a non‐canonical CX2CK motif respectively. We show that the N‐terminal transmembrane segment of CcmI, CcmI‐1, is sufficient for maturation of the former but the entire protein is required for maturation of the latter. Although S. oneidensis possesses a heme lyase, SirEFG, dedicated for non‐canonical HBMs, it is specific for SirA, a sulfite reductase with a CX15CH motif. By presenting evidence that the periplasmic portion of CcmI, CcmI‐2, interacts with NrfA, we suggest that CcmI also takes the role of Escherichia coli NrfG for chaperoning apo‐NrfA for maturation at CX2CK. Moreover, intact CcmI is required for maturation of NrfA, presumably by ensuring that heme attachment at canonical HBMs occurs before apoprotein degradation.  相似文献   

11.
The c-type cytochromes are defined by the occurrence of heme covalently linked to the polypeptide via thioether bonds between heme and the cysteine sulfhydryls in the CXXCH motif of apocytochrome. Maintenance of apocytochrome sulfhydryls in a reduced state is a prerequisite for covalent ligation of heme to the CXXCH motif. In bacteria, a thiol disulfide transporter and a thioredoxin are two components in a thio-reduction pathway involved in c-type cytochrome assembly. We have identified in photosynthetic eukaryotes nucleus-encoded homologs of a prokaryotic thiol disulfide transporter, CcdA, which all display an N-terminal extension with respect to their bacterial counterparts. The extension of Arabidopsis CCDA functions as a targeting sequence, suggesting a plastid site of action for CCDA in eukaryotes. Using PhoA and LacZ as topological reporters, we established that Arabidopsis CCDA is a polytopic protein with within-membrane strictly conserved cysteine residues. Insertional mutants in the Arabidopsis CCDA gene were identified, and loss-of-function alleles were shown to impair photosynthesis because of a defect in cytochrome b(6)f accumulation, which we attribute to a block in the maturation of holocytochrome f, whose heme binding domain resides in the thylakoid lumen. We postulate that plastid cytochrome c maturation requires CCDA, thioredoxin HCF164, and other molecules in a membrane-associated trans-thylakoid thiol-reducing pathway.  相似文献   

12.
c-Type cytochromes are located partially or completely in the periplasm of gram-negative bacteria, and the heme prosthetic group is covalently bound to the protein. The cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) multiprotein system is required for transport of heme to the periplasm and its covalent linkage to the peptide. Other cytochromes and hemoglobins contain a noncovalently bound heme and do not require accessory proteins for assembly. Here we show that Bradyrhizobium japonicum cytochrome c550 polypeptide accumulation in Escherichia coli was heme dependent, with very low levels found in heme-deficient cells. However, apoproteins of the periplasmic E. coli cytochrome b562 or the cytosolic Vitreoscilla hemoglobin (Vhb) accumulated independently of the heme status. Mutation of the heme-binding cysteines of cytochrome c550 or the absence of Ccm also resulted in a low apoprotein level. These levels were restored in a degP mutant strain, showing that apocytochrome c550 is degraded by the periplasmic protease DegP. Introduction of the cytochrome c heme-binding motif CXXCH into cytochrome b562 (c-b562) resulted in a c-type cytochrome covalently bound to heme in a Ccm-dependent manner. This variant polypeptide was stable in heme-deficient cells but was degraded by DegP in the absence of Ccm. Furthermore, a Vhb variant containing a periplasmic signal peptide and a CXXCH motif did not form a c-type cytochrome, but accumulation was Ccm dependent nonetheless. The data show that the cytochrome c heme-binding motif is an instability element and that stabilization by Ccm does not require ligation of the heme moiety to the protein.  相似文献   

13.
Unlike other cytochromes, c-type cytochromes have two covalent bonds formed between the two vinyl groups of haem and two cysteines of the protein. This haem ligation requires specific assembly proteins in prokaryotes or eukaryotic mitochondria and chloroplasts. Here, it is shown that Bordetella pertussis is an excellent bacterial model for the widespread system II cytochrome c synthesis pathway. Mutations in four different genes (ccsA, ccsB, ccsX and dipZ) result in B. pertussis strains unable to synthesize any of at least seven c-type cytochromes. Using a cytochrome c4:alkaline phosphatase fusion protein as a bifunctional reporter, it was demonstrated that the B. pertussis wild-type and mutant strains secrete an active alkaline phosphatase fusion protein. However, unlike the wild type, all four mutants are unable to attach haem covalently, resulting in a degraded N-terminal apocytochrome c4 component. Thus, apocytochrome c secretion is normal in each of the four mutants, but all are defective in a periplasmic assembly step (or export of haem). CcsX is related to thioredoxins, which possess a conserved CysXxxXxxCys motif. Using phoA gene fusions as reporters, CcsX was proven to be a periplasmic thioredoxin-like protein. Both the B. pertussis dipZ (i. e. dsbD) and ccsX mutants are corrected for their assembly defects by the thiol-reducing compounds, dithiothreitol and 2-mercaptoethanesulphonic acid. These results indicate that DipZ and CcsX are required for the periplasmic reduction of the cysteines of apocytochromes c before ligation. In contrast, the ccsA and ccsB mutants are not corrected by exogenous reducing agents, suggesting that CcsA and CcsB are required for the haem ligation step itself in the periplasm (or export of haem to the periplasm). Related to this suggestion, the topology of CcsB was determined experimentally, demonstrating that CcsB has four transmembrane domains and a large 435-amino-acid periplasmic region.  相似文献   

14.
Defects in heme biosynthesis have been associated with a large number of diseases, but mostly recognized in porphyrias, which are neurovisceral or cutaneous disorders caused by the accumulation of biosynthetic intermediates. However, defects in the maturation of heme groups that are part of the oxidative phosphorylation system are now also recognized as important causes of disease. The electron transport chain contains heme groups of the types a, b and c, all of which are directly involved in electron transfer reactions. In this article, we review the effect of mutations in enzymes involved in the maturation of heme a (the prosthetic group of cytochrome c oxidase) and heme c (the prosthetic group of cytochrome c) both in yeast and in humans. COX10 and COX15 are two genes, initially identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that have been found to cause infantile cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in humans. They participate in the farnesylation and hydroxylation of heme b, steps that are necessary for the formation of heme a, the prosthetic group required for cytochrome oxidase assembly and activity. Deletion of the cytochrome c heme lyase gene in a single allele has also been associated with a human disease, known as Microphthalmia with Linear Skin defects (MLS) syndrome. The cytochrome c heme lyase is necessary to covalently attach the heme group to the apocytochrome c polypeptide. The production of mouse models recapitulating these diseases is providing novel information on the pathogenesis of clinical syndromes.  相似文献   

15.
Mitochondrial apocytochrome c and c1 are converted to their holoforms in the intermembrane space by attachment of heme to the cysteines of the CXXCH motif through the activity of assembly factors cytochrome c heme lyase and cytochrome c1 heme lyase (CCHL and CC1HL). The maintenance of apocytochrome sulfhydryls and heme substrates in a reduced state is critical for the ligation of heme. Factors that control the redox chemistry of the heme attachment reaction to apocytochrome c are known in bacteria and plastids but not in mitochondria. We have explored the function of Cyc2p, a candidate redox cytochrome c assembly component in yeast mitochondria. We show that Cyc2p is required for the activity of CCHL toward apocytochrome c and c1 and becomes essential for the heme attachment to apocytochrome c1 carrying a CAPCH instead of CAACH heme binding site. A redox function for Cyc2p in the heme lyase reaction is suggested from 1) the presence of a noncovalently bound FAD molecule in the C-terminal domain of Cyc2p, 2) the localization of Cyc2p in the inner membrane with the FAD binding domain exposed to the intermembrane space, and 3) the ability of recombinant Cyc2p to carry the NADPH-dependent reduction of ferricyanide. We postulate that, in vivo, Cyc2p interacts with CCHL and is involved in the reduction of heme prior to its ligation to apocytochrome c by CCHL.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The c-type cytochromes are electron transfer proteins involved in energy transduction. They have heme-binding (CXXCH) sites that covalently ligate heme b via thioether bonds and are classified into different classes based on their protein folds and the locations and properties of their cofactors. Rhodobacter capsulatus produces various c-type cytochromes using the cytochrome c maturation (Ccm) System I, formed from the CcmABCDEFGHI proteins. CcmI, a component of the heme ligation complex CcmFHI, interacts with the heme-handling protein CcmE and chaperones apocytochrome c2 by binding its C-terminal helix. Whether CcmI also chaperones other c-type apocytochromes, and the effects of heme on these interactions were unknown previously. Here, we purified different classes of soluble and membrane-bound c-type apocytochromes (class I, c2 and c1, and class II c′) and investigated their interactions with CcmI and apoCcmE. We report that, in the absence of heme, CcmI and apoCcmE recognized different classes of c-type apocytochromes with different affinities (nm to μm KD values). When present, heme induced conformational changes in class I apocytochromes (e.g. c2) and decreased significantly their high affinity for CcmI. Knowing that CcmI does not interact with mature cytochrome c2 and that heme converts apocytochrome c2 into its b-type derivative, these findings indicate that CcmI holds the class I apocytochromes (e.g. c2) tightly until their noncovalent heme-containing b-type cytochrome-like intermediates are formed. We propose that these intermediates are subsequently converted into mature cytochromes following the covalent ligation of heme via the remaining components of the Ccm complex.  相似文献   

18.
Mutants of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae unable to respire via the cytochrome aa3 pathway were identified by the inability to oxidize N,N'-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine. Two mutants which were complemented by cosmid pIJ1942 from an R. leguminosarum clone bank were identified. Although pea nodules induced by these mutants contained many bacteroids, no symbiotic nitrogen fixation was detected. Heme staining of cellular proteins revealed that all cytochrome c-type heme proteins were absent. These mutants lacked spectroscopically detectable cytochrome c, but cytochromes aa3 and d were present, the latter at a higher-than-normal level. DNA sequence analysis of complementing plasmids revealed four apparently cotranscribed open reading frames (cycH, cycJ, cycK, and cycL). CycH, CycJ, CycK, and CycL are homologous to Bradyrhizobium japonicum and Rhizobium meliloti proteins thought to be involved in the attachment of heme to cytochrome c apoproteins; CycK and CycL are also homologous to the Rhodobacter capsulatus ccl1 and ccl2 gene products and the Escherichia coli nrfE and nrfF gene products involved in the assembly of c-type cytochromes. The absence of cytochrome c heme proteins in these R. leguminosarum mutants is consistent with the view that the cycHJKL operon could be involved in the attachment of heme to apocytochrome c.  相似文献   

19.
CcmE is a heme chaperone involved in the periplasmic maturation of c-type cytochromes in many bacteria and plant mitochondria. It binds heme covalently and subsequently transfers it to the apo form of cytochromes c. To examine the role of the C-terminal domain of CcmE in the binding of heme, in vitro heme binding to the apo form of a truncated (immediately before Pro-136) version of the periplasmic domain of the heme chaperone from Escherichia coli was studied. Removal of the C-terminal domain dramatically altered the ligation of non-covalently bound heme in CcmE' (the soluble form lacking the membrane anchor) but only slightly affected its affinity for protoporphyrin IX and 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate. This finding has significant mechanistic implications for in vivo holo-CcmE formation and indicates that the C-terminal region is not required for the recruitment and docking of heme into its binding site but is likely to contain amino acid(s) involved in heme iron axial coordination. Removal of the C-domain significantly impaired in vivo heme binding to CcmE and conversion of apocytochrome to holoprotein by a similar factor, suggesting that the C-terminal domain of the chaperone is primarily involved in heme binding to CcmE rather than in heme transfer to the apo cytochrome.  相似文献   

20.
In all organisms, haem is post-translationally and covalently attached to c apocytochromes to produce c holocytochromes via a process called c-type cytochromes maturation, which involves numerous components. In bacteria it was not clear which of these components catalyses the extracytoplasmic haem-apocytochrome ligation per se. In this issue of Molecular Microbiology, Feissner and colleagues report that a single polypeptide from Helicobacter pylori, corresponding to the fusion of two proteins found in other organisms, performs haem ligation to a coexpressed Bordetella pertussis apocytochrome c in an Escherichia coli mutant lacking its own cytochrome c maturation proteins. This simple experimental system pinpoints the components catalysing extracytoplasmic covalent haem ligation and raises intriguing issues about the requirements for delivery of haem and apocytochrome c substrates to produce c holocytochromes.  相似文献   

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