生化图谱揭示了系统 I 细菌细胞色素 c 生物发生过程中通过 CcmCD 转运血红素的保守机制。

IF 5.1 1区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mBio Pub Date : 2025-05-14 Epub Date: 2025-04-01 DOI:10.1128/mbio.03515-24
Alicia N Kreiman, Sarah E Garner, Susan C Carroll, Molly C Sutherland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

血红素是一种氧化还原活性辅助因子,在生命的所有领域中都是必不可少的。血红素的氧化还原能力是其生物学意义的原因,但也使其具有高度细胞毒性,需要严格的细胞内调节。因此,血红素贩运的机制仍然没有得到很好的了解。为了解决这个问题,细菌细胞色素c的生物发生途径正在被开发成模型系统,以阐明血红素运输的机制。这些途径的功能是将血红素附着到细胞色素c上,这需要将血红素从细胞内运输到细胞外。在这里,我们重点关注系统I途径(CcmABCDEFGH),该途径被提出通过两个步骤发挥作用:CcmABCD转运血红素穿过膜并将其附着在CcmE上。然后,全息cme将血红素运送到全息细胞色素c合成酶(CcmFH)上,并附着在细胞色素c上。为了研究血红素跨膜运输,我们重点研究了CcmCD,它可以独立于CcmAB形成全息cme,从而得出CcmCD是血红素转运体的假设。通过半胱氨酸/血红素交联的结构功能分析,确定了CcmCD中的血红素接受域和血红素运输通道。原核生物的生物信息学分析和结构预测表明,血红素接受域在结构上是可变的,可能与不同的血红素传递蛋白相互作用。相比之下,CcmC跨膜血红素通道在结构上是保守的,这表明了跨膜血红素运输的共同机制。我们提供了绘制CcmCD血红素通道的直接生化证据,并提供了其他血红素转运体运输血红素的一般机制的见解。重要性:血红素是一种生物学上重要的辅助因子,参与基本细胞功能,如氧气运输和能量生产。血红素也可能对细胞有毒,因此需要严格的监管和特定的运输途径。因此,人们投入了大量的精力来了解这种重要但具有细胞毒性的分子是如何运输的。虽然已经确定了几个血红素转运者/进口商/出口商,但运输的生化机制尚未得到很好的了解,这是一个重大的知识差距。在这里,细菌细胞色素c生物生成途径系统I (CcmABCDEFGH)被用来阐明血红素通过CcmCD的跨膜运输。我们利用半胱氨酸/血红素交联方法,可以在特定区域捕获内源性血红素,来绘制CcmCD中血红素运输通道的生化图,证明CcmCD是一种血红素转运体。这些结果提示了原核生物和真核生物中其他血红素转运体运输血红素的模型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Biochemical mapping reveals a conserved heme transport mechanism via CcmCD in System I bacterial cytochrome c biogenesis.

Heme is a redox-active cofactor for essential processes across all domains of life. Heme's redox capabilities are responsible for its biological significance but also make it highly cytotoxic, requiring tight intracellular regulation. Thus, the mechanisms of heme trafficking are still not well understood. To address this, the bacterial cytochrome c biogenesis pathways are being developed into model systems to elucidate mechanisms of heme trafficking. These pathways function to attach heme to apocytochrome c, which requires the transport of heme from inside to outside of the cell. Here, we focus on the System I pathway (CcmABCDEFGH) which is proposed to function in two steps: CcmABCD transports heme across the membrane and attaches it to CcmE. HoloCcmE then transports heme to the holocytochrome c synthase, CcmFH, for attachment to apocytochrome c. To interrogate heme transport across the membrane, we focus on CcmCD, which can form holoCcmE independent of CcmAB, leading to the hypothesis that CcmCD is a heme transporter. A structure-function analysis via cysteine/heme crosslinking identified a heme acceptance domain and heme transport channel in CcmCD. Bioinformatic analysis and structural predictions across prokaryotic organisms determined that the heme acceptance domains are structurally variable, potentially to interact with diverse heme delivery proteins. In contrast, the CcmC transmembrane heme channel is structurally conserved, indicating a common mechanism for transmembrane heme transport. We provide direct biochemical evidence mapping the CcmCD heme channel and providing insights into general mechanisms of heme trafficking by other putative heme transporters.

Importance: Heme is a biologically important cofactor for proteins involved with essential cellular functions, such as oxygen transport and energy production. Heme can also be toxic to cells and thus requires tight regulation and specific trafficking pathways. As a result, much effort has been devoted to understanding how this important, yet cytotoxic, molecule is transported. While several heme transporters/importers/exporters have been identified, the biochemical mechanisms of transport are not well understood, representing a major knowledge gap. Here, the bacterial cytochrome c biogenesis pathway, System I (CcmABCDEFGH), is used to elucidate the transmembrane transport of heme via CcmCD. We utilize a cysteine/heme crosslinking approach, which can trap endogenous heme in specific domains, to biochemically map the heme transport channel in CcmCD, demonstrating that CcmCD is a heme transporter. These results suggest a model for heme trafficking by other heme transporters in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.

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来源期刊
mBio
mBio MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
762
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: mBio® is ASM''s first broad-scope, online-only, open access journal. mBio offers streamlined review and publication of the best research in microbiology and allied fields.
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