Login / Signup

NapB Restores cytochrome c biosynthesis in bacterial dsbD-deficient mutants.

Kailun GuoXue FengWeining SunSirui HanShihua WuHaichun Gao
Published in: Communications biology (2022)
Cytochromes c (cyts c), essential for respiration and photosynthesis in eukaryotes, confer bacteria respiratory versatility for survival and growth in natural environments. In bacteria having a cyt c maturation (CCM) system, DsbD is required to mediate electron transport from the cytoplasm to CcmG of the Ccm apparatus. Here with cyt c-rich Shewanella oneidensis as the research model, we identify NapB, a cyt c per se, that suppresses the CCM defect of a dsbD mutant during anaerobiosis, when NapB is produced at elevated levels, a result of activation by cAMP-Crp. Data are then presented to suggest that NapB reduces CcmG, leading to the suppression. We further show that NapB proteins capable of rescuing CCM in the dsbD mutant form a small distinct clade. The study sheds light on multifunctionality of cyts c, and more importantly, unravels a self-salvation strategy through which bacteria have evolved to better adjust to the natural world.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • signaling pathway
  • big data
  • machine learning
  • binding protein
  • artificial intelligence
  • cell wall