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Dissecting the Functional Role of Key Residues in Triheme Cytochrome PpcA: A Path to Rational Design of G. sulfurreducens Strains with Enhanced Electron Transfer Capabilities
Author(s) -
Leonor Morgado,
Sílvia Pires Lourenço,
Yuri Y. Londer,
M. Schiffer,
P. Raj Pokkuluri,
Carlos A. Salgueiro
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0105566
Subject(s) - electron transfer , geobacter sulfurreducens , key (lock) , rational design , chemistry , computational biology , electron transport chain , cytochrome c , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , biology , mitochondrion , biochemistry , genetics , biofilm , photochemistry , bacteria , ecology
PpcA is the most abundant member of a family of five triheme cytochromes c 7 in the bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens ( Gs ) and is the most likely carrier of electrons destined for outer surface during respiration on solid metal oxides, a process that requires extracellular electron transfer. This cytochrome has the highest content of lysine residues (24%) among the family, and it was suggested to be involved in e − /H + energy transduction processes. In the present work, we investigated the functional role of lysine residues strategically located in the vicinity of each heme group. Each lysine was replaced by glutamine or glutamic acid to evaluate the effects of a neutral or negatively charged residue in each position. The results showed that replacing Lys 9 (located near heme IV), Lys 18 (near heme I) or Lys 22 (between hemes I and III) has essentially no effect on the redox properties of the heme groups and are probably involved in redox partner recognition. On the other hand, Lys 43 (near heme IV), Lys 52 (between hemes III and IV) and Lys 60 (near heme III) are crucial in the regulation of the functional mechanism of PpcA, namely in the selection of microstates that allow the protein to establish preferential e − /H + transfer pathways. The results showed that the preferred e − /H + transfer pathways are only established when heme III is the last heme to oxidize, a feature reinforced by a higher difference between its reduction potential and that of its predecessor in the order of oxidation. We also showed that K43 and K52 mutants keep the mechanistic features of PpcA by establishing preferential e − /H + transfer pathways at lower reduction potential values than the wild-type protein, a property that can enable rational design of Gs strains with optimized extracellular electron transfer capabilities.

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