Two proteins with similarity to IscA are encoded in the genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. One of them, the product of slr1417 which accounts for 0.025% of the total soluble protein of Synechocystis was over-expressed in E. coli and purified. The purified protein was found to be mainly dimeric and did not contain any cofactor. Incubation with iron ions, cysteine and Synechocystis IscS led to the formation of one [2Fe2S] cluster at an IscA dimer as demonstrated (by the binding of about one iron and one sulfide ion per IscA monomer) by UV/Vis, EPR and Mo¨ssbauer spectroscopy. Mo¨ssbauer spectroscopy furtherindicatedthat the FeSclusterwas bound byfour cysteine residues. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that of the five cysteine residues only C110 and C112 were involved in cluster binding. It was therefore concluded that the [2Fe2S] cluster is located between the two protomers of the IscA dimer and ligated by C110 and C112 of both protomers. The cluster could be transferred to apo ferredoxin, a [2Fe2S] protein, with a half-time of 10 min. Surprisingly, incubation of cluster-containing IscA with apo adenosine 5¢-phosphosulfate reductase led to a reactivation of the enzyme which requires the presence of a [4Fe4S] cluster. This demonstrates that it is possible to build [4Fe4S] clusters from [2Fe2S] units.
The deduced polypeptide sequence of open reading frame slr1736 reveals homology to chlorophyll synthase and 1,4-dihydroxy-2-naphthoic acid phytyltransferase in Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. In tocopherol and plastoquinone biosynthesis, a condensation reaction mechanistically similar to that of these two enzymes is performed. To analyze the function of this novel prenyltransferase, a deletion mutant of slr1736 was generated by homologous recombination. The mutant showed a markedly decreased tocopherol content, while plastoquinone levels remained unchanged. Since the aromatic precursor homogentisic acid accumulated in the mutant, the function of the enzyme was proven to be a novel tocopherol phytyltransferase. ß
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