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Marine Genomics Dec 2017Marine bacterium Oleiphilus messinensis ME102 (DSM 13489) isolated from the sediments of the harbor of Messina (Italy) is a member of the order Oceanospirillales, class...
Marine bacterium Oleiphilus messinensis ME102 (DSM 13489) isolated from the sediments of the harbor of Messina (Italy) is a member of the order Oceanospirillales, class Gammaproteobacteria, representing the physiological group of marine obligate hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria (OHCB) alongside the members of the genera Alcanivorax, Oleispira, Thalassolituus, Cycloclasticus and Neptunomonas. These organisms play a crucial role in the natural environmental cleanup in marine systems. Despite having the largest genome (6.379.281bp) among OHCB, O. messinensis exhibits a very narrow substrate profile. The alkane metabolism is pre-determined by three loci encoding for two P450 family monooxygenases, one of which formed a cassette with ferredoxin and alcohol dehydrogenase encoding genes and alkane monoxygenase (AlkB) gene clustered with two genes for rubredoxins and NAD-dependent rubredoxin reductase. Its genome contains the largest numbers of genomic islands (15) and mobile genetic elements (140), as compared with more streamlined genomes of its OHCB counterparts. Among hydrocarbon-degrading Oceanospirillales, O. messinensis encodes the largest array of proteins involved in the signal transduction for sensing and responding to the environmental stimuli (345 vs 170 in Oleispira antarctica, the bacterium with the second highest number). This must be an important trait to adapt to the conditions in marine sediments with a high physico-chemical patchiness and heterogeneity as compared to those in the water column.
Topics: Alkanes; Biodegradation, Environmental; Gammaproteobacteria; Genome, Bacterial; Geologic Sediments; Italy; Phylogeny
PubMed: 28802691
DOI: 10.1016/j.margen.2017.07.005 -
BMC Microbiology May 2011Superoxide reductases (SOR) catalyse the reduction of superoxide anions to hydrogen peroxide and are involved in the oxidative stress defences of anaerobic and...
BACKGROUND
Superoxide reductases (SOR) catalyse the reduction of superoxide anions to hydrogen peroxide and are involved in the oxidative stress defences of anaerobic and facultative anaerobic organisms. Genes encoding SOR were discovered recently and suffer from annotation problems. These genes, named sor, are short and the transfer of annotations from previously characterized neelaredoxin, desulfoferrodoxin, superoxide reductase and rubredoxin oxidase has been heterogeneous. Consequently, many sor remain anonymous or mis-annotated.
DESCRIPTION
SORGOdb is an exhaustive database of SOR that proposes a new classification based on domain architecture. SORGOdb supplies a simple user-friendly web-based database for retrieving and exploring relevant information about the proposed SOR families. The database can be queried using an organism name, a locus tag or phylogenetic criteria, and also offers sequence similarity searches using BlastP. Genes encoding SOR have been re-annotated in all available genome sequences (prokaryotic and eukaryotic (complete and in draft) genomes, updated in May 2010).
CONCLUSIONS
SORGOdb contains 325 non-redundant and curated SOR, from 274 organisms. It proposes a new classification of SOR into seven different classes and allows biologists to explore and analyze sor in order to establish correlations between the class of SOR and organism phenotypes. SORGOdb is freely available at http://sorgo.genouest.org/index.php.
Topics: Databases, Genetic; Oxidoreductases; Protein Structure, Tertiary
PubMed: 21575179
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-11-105 -
Nature Communications Apr 2023Designing metal sites into de novo proteins has significantly improved, recently. However, identifying the minimal coordination spheres, able to encompass the necessary...
Designing metal sites into de novo proteins has significantly improved, recently. However, identifying the minimal coordination spheres, able to encompass the necessary information for metal binding and activity, still represents a great challenge, today. Here, we test our understanding with a benchmark, nevertheless difficult, case. We assemble into a miniature 28-residue protein, the quintessential elements required to fold properly around a FeCys redox center, and to function efficiently in electron-transfer. This study addresses a challenge in de novo protein design, as it reports the crystal structure of a designed tetra-thiolate metal-binding protein in sub-Å agreement with the intended design. This allows us to well correlate structure to spectroscopic and electrochemical properties. Given its high reduction potential compared to natural and designed FeCys-containing proteins, we exploit it as terminal electron acceptor of a fully artificial chain triggered by visible light.
PubMed: 37185349
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-37941-8 -
Environmental Microbiology Reports Dec 2022The extensive use of petrochemicals has produced serious environmental pollution problems; fortunately, bioremediation is considered an efficient way to fight against...
The extensive use of petrochemicals has produced serious environmental pollution problems; fortunately, bioremediation is considered an efficient way to fight against pollution. In line with Synthetic Biology is that robust microbial chassis with an expanded ability to remove environmental pollutants are desirable. Pseudomonas putida KT2440 is a robust lab microbe that has preserved the ability to survive in the environment and is the natural host for the self-transmissible TOL plasmid, which allows metabolism of toluene and xylenes to central metabolism. We show that the P. putida KT2440 (pWW0) acquired the ability to use octane as the sole C-source after acquisition of an almost 62-kb ICE from a microbial community that harbours an incomplete set of octane metabolism genes. The ICE bears genes for an alkane monooxygenase, a PQQ-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase but lacks the electron donor enzymes required for the monooxygenase to operate. Host rubredoxin and rubredoxin reductase allow metabolism of octane to octanol. Proteomic assays and mutants unable to grow on octane or octanoic acid revealed that metabolism of octane is mediated by redundant host and ICE enzymes. Octane is oxidized to octanol, octanal and octanoic acid, the latter is subsequently acylated and oxidized to yield acetyl-CoA that is assimilated via the glyoxylate shunt; in fact, a knockout mutant in the aceA gene, encoding isocitrate lyase was unable to grow on octane or octanoic acid.
Topics: Pseudomonas putida; Proteomics; Octanes; Mixed Function Oxygenases; Octanols
PubMed: 35651318
DOI: 10.1111/1758-2229.13097 -
FEBS Open Bio Feb 2020During translation initiation, the heterotrimeric archaeal translation initiation factor 2 (aIF2) recruits the initiator tRNA to the small ribosomal subunit. In the...
During translation initiation, the heterotrimeric archaeal translation initiation factor 2 (aIF2) recruits the initiator tRNA to the small ribosomal subunit. In the stationary growth phase and/or during nutrient stress, Sulfolobus solfataricus aIF2 has a second function: It protects leaderless mRNAs against degradation by binding to their 5'-ends. The S. solfataricus protein Sso2509 is a translation recovery factor (Trf) that interacts with aIF2 and is responsible for the release of aIF2 from bound mRNAs, thereby enabling translation re-initiation. It is a member of the domain of unknown function 35 (DUF35) protein family and is conserved in Sulfolobales as well as in other archaea. Here, we present the X-ray structure of S. solfataricus Trf solved to a resolution of 1.65 Å. Trf is composed of an N-terminal rubredoxin-like domain containing a bound zinc ion and a C-terminal oligosaccharide/oligonucleotide binding fold domain. The Trf structure reveals putative mRNA binding sites in both domains. Surprisingly, the Trf protein is structurally but not sequentially very similar to proteins linked to acyl-CoA utilization-for example, the Sso2064 protein from S. solfataricus-as well as to scaffold proteins found in the acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase/high-mobility group-CoA synthase complex of the archaeon Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus and in a steroid side-chain-cleaving aldolase complex from the bacterium Thermomonospora curvata. This suggests that members of the DUF35 protein family are able to act as scaffolding and binding proteins in a wide variety of biological processes.
Topics: Archaeal Proteins; Binding Sites; Carrier Proteins; Crystallography, X-Ray; Peptide Initiation Factors; Prokaryotic Initiation Factors; Protein Binding; Sulfolobus solfataricus
PubMed: 31804766
DOI: 10.1002/2211-5463.12772 -
Biophysical Journal Nov 1997The energetic contributions of the protein to the redox potential in an iron-sulfur protein are studied via energy minimization, comparing homologous rubredoxins from...
The energetic contributions of the protein to the redox potential in an iron-sulfur protein are studied via energy minimization, comparing homologous rubredoxins from Clostridium pasteurianum, Desulfovibrio gigas, Desulfovibrio vulgaris, and Pyrococcus furiosus. The reduction reaction was divided into 1) the change in the redox site charge without allowing the protein to respond and 2) the relaxation of the protein in response to the new charge state, focusing on the latter. The energy minimizations predict structural relaxation near the redox site that agrees well with that in crystal structures of oxidized and reduced P. furiosus rubredoxin, but underpredicts it far from the redox site. However, the relaxation energies from the energy-minimized structures agree well with those from the crystal structures, because the polar groups near the redox site are the main determinants and the charged groups are all located at the surface and thus are screened dielectrically. Relaxation energies are necessary for good agreement with experimentally observed differences in reduction energies between C. pasteurianum and the other three rubredoxins. Overall, the relaxation energy is large (over 500 mV) from both the energy-minimized and the crystal structures. In addition, the range in the relaxation energy for the different rubredoxins is large (300 mV), because even though the structural perturbations of the polar groups are small, they are very near the redox site. Thus the relaxation energy is an important factor to consider in reduction energetics.
Topics: Amino Acid Sequence; Bacterial Proteins; Biophysical Phenomena; Biophysics; Molecular Sequence Data; Oxidation-Reduction; Rubredoxins; Sequence Alignment; Thermodynamics
PubMed: 9370467
DOI: 10.1016/S0006-3495(97)78302-4 -
Proceedings of the National Academy of... Aug 2019Photosystem II (PSII) undergoes frequent photooxidative damage that, if not repaired, impairs photosynthetic activity and growth. How photosynthetic organisms protect...
Photosystem II (PSII) undergoes frequent photooxidative damage that, if not repaired, impairs photosynthetic activity and growth. How photosynthetic organisms protect vulnerable PSII intermediate complexes during de novo assembly and repair remains poorly understood. Here, we report the genetic and biochemical characterization of chloroplast-located rubredoxin 1 (RBD1), a PSII assembly factor containing a redox-active rubredoxin domain and a single C-terminal transmembrane α-helix (TMH) domain. RBD1 is an integral thylakoid membrane protein that is enriched in stroma lamellae fractions with the rubredoxin domain exposed on the stromal side. RBD1 also interacts with PSII intermediate complexes containing cytochrome Complementation of the (hereafter ) RBD1-deficient mutant with constructs encoding RBD1 protein truncations and site-directed mutations demonstrated that the TMH domain is essential for de novo PSII assembly, whereas the rubredoxin domain is involved in PSII repair. The rubredoxin domain exhibits a redox midpoint potential of +114 mV and is proficient in 1-electron transfers to a surrogate cytochrome in vitro. Reduction of oxidized RBD1 is NADPH dependent and can be mediated by ferredoxin-NADP reductase (FNR) in vitro. We propose that RBD1 participates, together with the cytochrome , in the protection of PSII intermediate complexes from photooxidative damage during de novo assembly and repair. This role of RBD1 is consistent with its evolutionary conservation among photosynthetic organisms and the fact that it is essential in photosynthetic eukaryotes.
Topics: Arabidopsis; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii; Electron Transport; Intracellular Membranes; Iron; Models, Biological; Oxidation-Reduction; Photosystem II Protein Complex; Protein Domains; Rubredoxins; Thylakoids
PubMed: 31358635
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1903314116 -
The Journal of Biological Chemistry Feb 1985The kinetics of reduction of oxidized Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin (Rdox) by free flavin semiquinones generated by the laser flash photolysis technique and by...
Kinetics of reduction of Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin by laser photoreduced spinach ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase and free flavins. Electron transfer within a protein-protein complex.
The kinetics of reduction of oxidized Clostridium pasteurianum rubredoxin (Rdox) by free flavin semiquinones generated by the laser flash photolysis technique and by spinach ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (FNR) semiquinone (also produced by flavin semiquinone reduction) have been investigated under anaerobic conditions. 5-Deazariboflavin semiquinone (5-dRf) rapidly reduces oxidized rubredoxin (Rdox) (k = 3.0 X 10(8) M-1 S-1) and oxidized ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (FNRox) to the semiquinone level (k = 5.5 X 10(8) M-1 S-1). Lumiflavin semiquinone reduces Rdox more slowly (k = 1.3 X 10(7) M-1 S-1) and is not measurably reactive with FNRox. Absorption difference spectroscopy and difference CD indicate that Rdox and FNRox form a 1:1 complex at low ionic strength (10 mM), which is completely dissociated at higher ionic strength (310 mM). Apparent second order rate constants for reduction of Rdox in its free and complexed state by lumiflavin semiquinone are the same. Reduction of Rdox (both free and complexed) by free FNR semiquinone and intracomplex electron transfer were investigated using 5-dRf as the reductant. At I = 10 mM, a first order rate constant of 2.0 X 10(3) S-1 was obtained, which corresponds to the processes involved in intracomplex electron transfer from FNR semiquinone to Rdox. A second order reaction between free FNR semiquinone and complexed Rdox was also observed to occur (k = 5 X 10(7) M-1 S-1). At I = 310 mM, these reactions are not observed and the reaction of FNR semiquinone with free Rdox is second order (k = 4 X 10(6) M-1 S-1).
Topics: Circular Dichroism; Clostridium; Electron Transport; Ferredoxin-NADP Reductase; Ferredoxins; Flavins; Kinetics; Lasers; NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases; Oxidation-Reduction; Photolysis; Plants; Quinones; Riboflavin; Rubredoxins; Spectrophotometry
PubMed: 3968079
DOI: No ID Found -
Scientific Reports May 2024Extremophile organisms are known that can metabolize at temperatures down to - 25 °C (psychrophiles) and up to 122 °C (hyperthermophiles). Understanding...
Extremophile organisms are known that can metabolize at temperatures down to - 25 °C (psychrophiles) and up to 122 °C (hyperthermophiles). Understanding viability under extreme conditions is relevant for human health, biotechnological applications, and our search for life elsewhere in the universe. Information about the stability and dynamics of proteins under environmental extremes is an important factor in this regard. Here we compare the dynamics of small Fe-S proteins - rubredoxins - from psychrophilic and hyperthermophilic microorganisms, using three different nuclear techniques as well as molecular dynamics calculations to quantify motion at the Fe site. The theory of 'corresponding states' posits that homologous proteins from different extremophiles have comparable flexibilities at the optimum growth temperatures of their respective organisms. Although 'corresponding states' would predict greater flexibility for rubredoxins that operate at low temperatures, we find that from 4 to 300 K, the dynamics of the Fe sites in these homologous proteins are essentially equivalent.
Topics: Iron; Extremophiles; Rubredoxins; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Temperature
PubMed: 38806591
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-62261-2 -
The FEBS Journal Feb 2005Despite their high sequence homology, rubredoxins from Desulfovibrio gigas and D. desulfuricans are stabilized to very different extents by compatible solutes such as...
Despite their high sequence homology, rubredoxins from Desulfovibrio gigas and D. desulfuricans are stabilized to very different extents by compatible solutes such as diglycerol phosphate, the major osmolyte in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus[Lamosa P, Burke A, Peist R, Huber R, Liu M Y, Silva G, Rodrigues-Pousada C, LeGall J, Maycock C and Santos H (2000) Appl Environ Microbiol66, 1974-1979]. The principal structural difference between these two proteins is the absence of the hairpin loop in the rubredoxin from D. desulfuricans. Therefore, mutants of D. gigas rubredoxin bearing deletions in the loop region were constructed to investigate the importance of this structural feature on protein intrinsic stability, as well as on its capacity to undergo stabilization by compatible solutes. The three-dimensional structure of the mutant bearing the largest deletion, Delta17/29, was determined by 1H-NMR, demonstrating that, despite the drastic deletion, the main structural features were preserved. The dependence of the NH chemical shifts on temperature and solute concentration (diglycerol phosphate or mannosylglycerate) provide evidence of subtle conformational changes induced by the solute. The kinetic stability (as assessed from the absorption decay at 494 nm) of six mutant rubredoxins was determined at 90 degrees C and the stabilizing effect exerted by both solutes was assessed. The extent of protection conferred by each solute was highly dependent on the specific mutant examined: while the half-life for iron release in the wild-type D. gigas rubredoxin increased threefold in the presence of 0.1 M diglycerol phosphate, mutant Delta23/29 was destabilized. This study provides evidence for solute-induced compaction of the protein structure and occurrence of weak, specific interactions with the protein surface. The relevance of these findings to our understanding of the molecular basis for protein stabilization is discussed.
Topics: Desulfovibrio gigas; Hot Temperature; Kinetics; Mutation; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Rubredoxins
PubMed: 15691333
DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2004.04534.x