Flavodoxin with an air-stable flavin semiquinone in a green sulfur bacterium.
Yulia V BertsovaLeonid V KulikMahir D MamedovAlexander A BaykovAlexander V BogachevPublished in: Photosynthesis research (2019)
Flavodoxins are small proteins with a non-covalently bound FMN that can accept two electrons and accordingly adopt three redox states: oxidized (quinone), one-electron reduced (semiquinone), and two-electron reduced (quinol). In iron-deficient cyanobacteria and algae, flavodoxin can substitute for ferredoxin as the electron carrier in the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Here, we demonstrate a similar function for flavodoxin from the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium phaeovibrioides (cp-Fld). The expression of the cp-Fld gene, found in a close proximity with the genes for other proteins associated with iron transport and storage, increased in a low-iron medium. cp-Fld produced in Escherichia coli exhibited the optical, ERP, and electron-nuclear double resonance spectra that were similar to those of known flavodoxins. However, unlike all other flavodoxins, cp-Fld exhibited unprecedented stability of FMN semiquinone to oxidation by air and difference in midpoint redox potentials for the quinone-semiquinone and semiquinone-quinol couples (- 110 and - 530 mV, respectively). cp-Fld could be reduced by pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase found in the membrane-free extract of Chl. phaeovibrioides cells and photo-reduced by the photosynthetic reaction center found in membrane vesicles from these cells. The green sulfur bacterium Chl. phaeovibrioides appears thus to be a new type of the photosynthetic organisms that can use flavodoxin as an alternative electron carrier to cope with iron deficiency.
Keyphrases
- electron transfer
- iron deficiency
- induced apoptosis
- escherichia coli
- solar cells
- cell cycle arrest
- electron microscopy
- poor prognosis
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- staphylococcus aureus
- dna methylation
- long non coding rna
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- cystic fibrosis
- high speed
- genome wide analysis
- biofilm formation
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- visible light