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Characterization of Axial and Proximal Histidine Mutations of the Decaheme Cytochrome MtrA from Shewanella sp. Strain ANA-3 and Implications for the Electron Transport System
Author(s) -
Carolina Reyes,
Fang Qian,
Alissa Zhang,
Sergey Bondarev,
A N Welch,
Michael P. Thelen,
Chad W. Saltikov
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of bacteriology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.652
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1067-8832
pISSN - 0021-9193
DOI - 10.1128/jb.00890-12
Subject(s) - histidine , shewanella , extracellular , biology , biochemistry , cytochrome , shewanella oneidensis , electron transport chain , periplasmic space , mutant , amino acid , enzyme , bacteria , genetics , escherichia coli , gene
Extracellular respiration of solid-phase electron acceptors in some microorganisms requires a complex chain of multihemec -type cytochromes that span the inner and outer membranes. InShewanella species, MtrA, an ∼35-kDa periplasmic decahemec -type cytochrome, is an essential component for extracellular respiration of iron(III). The exact mechanism of electron transport has not yet been resolved, but the arrangement of the polypeptide chain may have a strong influence on the capability of the MtrA cytochrome to transport electrons. The iron hemes of MtrA are bound to its polypeptide chain via proximal (CXXCH) and distal histidine residues. In this study, we show the effects of mutating histidine residues of MtrA to arginine on protein expression and extracellular respiration usingShewanella sp. strain ANA-3 as a model organism. Individual mutations to six out of nine proximal histidines in CXXCH of MtrA led to decreased protein expression. However, distal histidine mutations resulted in various degrees of protein expression. In addition, the effects of histidine mutations on extracellular respiration were tested using ferrihydrite and current production in microbial fuel cells. These results show that proximal histidine mutants were unable to reduce ferrihydrite. Mutations to the distal histidine residues resulted in various degrees of ferrihydrite reduction. These findings indicate that mutations to the proximal histidine residues affect MtrA expression, leading to loss of extracellular respiration ability. In contrast, mutations to the distal histidine residues are less detrimental to protein expression, and extracellular respiration can proceed.

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