Covalent attachment of heme to apocytochromes c in bacteria occurs on the outside of the cytoplasmic membrane and requires two reduced cysteinyls at the heme binding site. A constructed ResA-deficient Bacillus subtilis strain was found to lack c-type cytochromes. Cytochrome c synthesis was restored in the mutant by: (i) in trans expression of resA; (ii) deficiency in BdbD, a thioldisulfide oxidoreductase that catalyzes formation of an intramolecular disulfide bond in apocytochrome c after transfer of the polypeptide across the cytoplasmic membrane; or (iii) by addition of the reductant dithiothreitol to the growth medium. In vivo studies of ResA showed that it is membrane-associated with its thioredoxin-like domain on the outside of the cytoplasmic membrane. Analysis of a soluble form of the protein revealed two redox reactive cysteine residues with a midpoint potential of about ؊340 mV at pH 7. We conclude that ResA, probably together with another thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase, CcdA, is required for the reduction of the cysteinyls in the heme binding site of apocytochrome c.
Post-translational maturation of cytochromes c involves the covalent attachment of heme to the Cys-XxxXxx-Cys-His motif of the apo-cytochrome. For this process, the two cysteines of the motif must be in the reduced state. In bacteria, this is achieved by dedicated, membrane-bound thiol-disulfide oxidoreductases with a high reducing power, which are essential components of cytochrome c maturation systems and are also linked to cellular disulfide-bond formation machineries. Here we report high-resolution structures of oxidized and reduced states of a soluble, functional domain of one such oxidoreductase, ResA, from Bacillus subtilis. The structures elucidate the structural basis of the protein's high reducing power and reveal the largest redox-coupled conformational changes observed to date in any thioredoxin-like protein. These redox-coupled changes alter the protein surface and illustrate how the redox state of ResA predetermines to which substrate it binds. Furthermore, a polar cavity, present only in the reduced state, may confer specificity to recognize apo-cytochrome c. The described features of ResA are likely to be general for bacterial cytochrome c maturation systems.
Some of the recent findings which revise our view of the role and regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) in C4 plants are discussed. Evidence is presented that PEPCK is present at appreciable activities in the bundle-sheath of some NADP-malic enzyme-type C4 plants, such as maize, but it was not detectable in NAD-malic enzyme-type C4 plants. PEPCK is rapidly inactivated in crude extracts of leaves of the C4 plant, Panicum maximum. This inactivation could be prevented by high concentrations of dithiothreitol or by the inclusion of ADP or ATP, suggesting the involvement of thiols at the active site. PEPCK is also subject to rapid proteolysis in crude extracts of a range of C4 plants, resulting in cleavage to a smaller (62 kDa) form. This can be reduced by extraction at high pH and by the inclusion of SDS, but it means that intact PEPCK has never been purified from a C4 plant. The molecular mass of PEPCK varies considerably in C4 plants, unlike C3 and CAM plants in which it is usually 74 kDa. PEPCK is phosphorylated during darkness (and reversed by light) in some C4 plants with PEPCK of a larger molecular mass, such as Panicum maximum (71 kDa), but it was not phosphorylated in the PEPCK-type C4 plant, Sporobolus pyramidalis (69 kDa). The known regulatory properties of PEPCK are discussed in relation to its role in C4 photosynthesis, in particular its sensitivity to regulation by adenylates and by Mn2+.
In the C 4 plant Guinea grass (Panicum maximum), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) is phosphorylated in darkened leaves and dephosphorylated in illuminated leaves. To determine whether the properties of phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated PEPCK were different, PEPCK was purified to homogeneity from both illuminated and darkened leaves. The final step of the purification procedure, gel filtration chromatography, further separated phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated forms. In the presence of a high ratio of ATP to ADP, the non-phosphorylated enzyme had a higher affinity for its substrates, oxaloacetate and phosphoenolpyruvate. The activity of the non-phosphorylated form was up to 6-fold higher when measured at low substrate concentrations. Comparison of proteoloytically cleaved PEPCK from Guinea grass, which lacked its N-terminal extension, from yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), which does not possess an N-terminal extension, and from the C 4 plant Urochloa panicoides, which possesses an N-terminal extension but is not subject to phosphorylation, revealed similar properties to the non-phosphorylated full-length form from Guinea grass. Assay of PEPCK activity in crude extracts of Guinea grass leaves, showed a large difference between illuminated and darkened leaves when measured in a selective assay (a low concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate and a high ratio of ATP to ADP), but there was no difference under assay conditions used to estimate maximum activity. Immunoblots of sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gels showed no difference in the abundance of PEPCK protein in illuminated and darkened leaves. There were no light/dark differences in activity detected in maize (Zea mays) leaves, in which PEPCK is not subject to phosphorylation.The aim of this study was to investigate whether phosphorylation of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase (PEPCK) from plants alters its properties or its activity. In plants, PEPCK is a cytosolic enzyme that catalyzes the reversible reaction:OAA ϩ ATP 7 PEP ϩ ADP ϩ CO 2 PEPCK occurs in a diverse range of plant tissues, including both developing and germinating seeds, flowers, fruits, trichomes, the vasculature, and leaves of some Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) and C 4 plants ( Leegood and Walker, 1999; Walker et al., 2001). In leaves of CAM plants and C 4 plants and in some algae, PEPCK functions as a decarboxylase in their photosynthetic CO 2 -concentrating mechanisms (Reiskind and Bowes, 1991; Leegood et al., 1996). C 4 plants are divided into different subtypes on the basis of the enzyme decarboxylating C 4 acids in the bundle sheath. The original classification into three subtypes (PEPCK, NAD-malic enzyme, and NADPmalic enzyme; Hatch et al., 1975) is now known to be an over-simplification, since the PEPCK subtypes, such as Guinea grass (Panicum maximum), also utilize NAD-malic enzyme as a decarboxylase (Burnell and Hatch, 1988) and some monocot members of the NADP-malic enzyme subtype, such as maize (Zea mays), also utilize PEPCK to deca...
The aim of this study was to investigate whether gluconeogenesis catalysed by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) occurs during leaf senescence. This was addressed by determining changes in the abundance and intercellular location of enzymes necessary for gluconeogenesis during the senescence of barley leaves and cucumber cotyledons. PEPCK was never present in barley leaves, despite the presence of large amounts of isocitrate lyase (ICL), a key enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle, and of its product, glyoxylate. Although PEPCK was present in non-senescent cucumber cotyledons, its abundance declined during senescence. Throughout senescence, PEPCK was only present in the trichomes and vasculature, whereas ICL was located in mesophyll cells. Pyruvate,Pi dikinase (PPDK) which, in concert with NAD(P)-malic enzyme, is also capable of catalysing gluconeogenesis, was present in non-senescent barley leaves and cucumber cotyledons, but in both plants its abundance decreased greatly during senescence. The abundance of ICL was greatly reduced in senescing detached barley leaves by either illumination or by co-incubation with sucrose, and greatly increased in darkened attached barley leaves. These results argue against the large-scale occurrence of gluconeogenesis during senescence catalysed either by PEPCK or PPDK. In cucumber cotyledons, PEPCK may play a role in metabolic processes linked to the export of amino acids, a role in which phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase may also be involved. The amount of ICL was increased by starvation and during senescence may function in the conversion of lipids to organic acids, which are then utilised in the mobilisation of amino acids from leaf protein.
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