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Abstract

Hydrogenobacter thermophilus cytochrome c552 (Ht cyt c552) is a small monoheme protein in the cytochrome c551 family. Ht cyt c552 is unique because it is hypothesized to undergo spontaneous cytoplasmic maturation (covalent heme attachment) when expressed in Escherichia coli. This is in contrast to the usual maturation route for bacterial cytochromes c that occurs in the cellular periplasm, where maturation factors direct heme attachment. Here, the expression of Ht cyts c552 in the periplasm as well as the cytoplasm of E. coli is reported. The products are characterized by absorption, circular dichroism, and NMR spectroscopy as well as mass spectrometry, proteolysis, and denaturation studies. The periplasmic product's properties are found to be indistinguishable from those reported for protein isolated from Ht cells, while the major cytoplasmic product exhibits structural anomalies in the region of the N-terminal helix. These anomalies are shown to result from the retention of the N-terminal methionine in the cytoplasmic product, and not from heme attachment errors. The 1H NMR chemical shifts of the heme methyls of the oxidized (S=1/2) expression products display a unique pattern not previously reported for a cytochrome c with histidine-methionine axial ligation, although they are consistent with native-like heme ligation. These results support the hypothesis that proper heme attachment can occur spontaneously in the E. coli cytoplasm for Ht cyt c552.

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Supplemental Material
Table S1Table S1 (18.8 KB)
Chemical shifts for proton NMR resonances for reduced Ht p-cyt c552 at 25 °C, pH 5.0


Table S2Table S2 (18.1 KB)
Chemical shifts of assigned proton NMR resonances in reduced Ht c-cyt c552 at 25 °C, pH 5.0




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Referenced by
4 newer articles

  1. Zoppellaro, Giorgio (2009) Review: Studies of ferric heme proteins with highly anisotropic/highly axial low spin (S = 1/2) electron paramagnetic resonance signals with bis-Histidine and histidine-methionine axial iron coordination. Biopolymers 91(12)
    [CrossRef]
  2. Smith, Lorna J. (2006) Molecular dynamics simulations of Hydrogenobacter thermophilus cytochrome c552: Comparisons of the wild-type protein, a b-type variant, and the apo state. Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics 65(3)
    [CrossRef]
  3. Bowman, Sarah E. J. (2008) The chemistry and biochemistry of heme c: functional bases for covalent attachment. Natural Product Reports 25(6)
    [CrossRef]
  4. Walker, F. Ann (2006) The heme environment of mouse neuroglobin: histidine imidazole plane orientations obtained from solution NMR and EPR spectroscopy as compared with X-ray crystallography. JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry 11(4)
    [CrossRef]
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