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The role of blood platelets in tumor angiogenesis
Authors:Sabrkhany Siamack  Griffioen Arjan W  Oude Egbrink Mirjam G A
Institution:Department of Biological Science, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan.
Abstract:The purple photosynthetic bacterium Rubrivivax gelatinosus has, at least, four periplasmic electron carriers, i.e., HiPIP, two cytochromes c?with low- and high-midpoint potentials, and cytochrome c? as electron donors to the photochemical reaction center. The quadruple mutant lacking all four electron carrier proteins showed extremely slow photosynthetic growth. During the long-term cultivation of this mutant under photosynthetic conditions, a suppressor strain recovering the wild-type growth level appeared. In the cells of the suppressor strain, we found significant accumulation of a soluble c-type cytochrome that has not been detected in wild-type cells. This cytochrome c has a redox midpoint potential of about +280 mV and could function as an electron donor to the photochemical reaction center in vitro. The amino acid sequence of this cytochrome c was 65% identical to that of the high-potential cytochrome c?of this bacterium. The gene for this cytochrome c was identified as nirM on the basis of its location in the newly identified nir operon, which includes a gene coding cytochrome cd?-type nitrite reductase. Phylogenetic analysis and the well-conserved nir operon gene arrangement suggest that the origin of the three cytochromes c? in this bacterium is NirM. The two other cytochromes c?, of high and low potentials, proposed to be generated by gene duplication from NirM, have evolved to function in distinct pathways.
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