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Prochlorococcus phage ferredoxin: structural characterization and electron transfer to cyanobacterial sulfite reductases

Authors :
Weijun Xu
Othneil N. Sparks
Jonathan J. Silberg
George N. Bennett
Mitchell D. Miller
Ian J. Campbell
Dimithree Kahanda
Joshua T. Atkinson
Jose L. Olmos
George N. Phillips
Source :
J Biol Chem
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2020.

Abstract

Marine cyanobacteria are infected by phages whose genomes encode ferredoxin (Fd) electron carriers. These Fds are thought to redirect the energy harvested from light to phage-encoded oxidoreductases that enhance viral fitness, but it is unclear how the biophysical properties and partner specificities of phage Fds relate to those of photosynthetic organisms. Here, results of a bioinformatics analysis using a sequence similarity network revealed that phage Fds are most closely related to cyanobacterial Fds that transfer electrons from photosystems to oxidoreductases involved in nutrient assimilation. Structural analysis of myovirus P-SSM2 Fd (pssm2-Fd), which infects the cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus, revealed high levels of similarity to cyanobacterial Fds (root mean square deviations of ≤0.5 Å). Additionally, pssm2-Fd exhibited a low midpoint reduction potential (–336 mV versus a standard hydrogen electrode), similar to other photosynthetic Fds, although it had lower thermostability (T(m) = 28 °C) than did many other Fds. When expressed in an Escherichia coli strain deficient in sulfite assimilation, pssm2-Fd complemented bacterial growth when coexpressed with a P. marinus sulfite reductase, revealing that pssm2-Fd can transfer electrons to a host protein involved in nutrient assimilation. The high levels of structural similarity with cyanobacterial Fds and reactivity with a host sulfite reductase suggest that phage Fds evolved to transfer electrons to cyanobacterially encoded oxidoreductases.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Biol Chem
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6d0afb37d4349ccbb4096c9be1bf330