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Control of Metabolite Flux during the Final Steps of Heme b Biosynthesis in Gram-Positive Bacteria.


ABSTRACT: The pathway for assembling heme ends with a unique set of enzymes in Gram-positive bacteria. Substrates for these reactions include coproporphyrin III, Fe(II), and H2O2, which are highly reactive and toxic. Because these bacteria lack membranous compartments, we hypothesized that metabolite flux may occur via a transient protein-protein interaction between the final two pathway enzymes, coproporphyrin ferrochelatase (CpfC) and coproheme decarboxylase (ChdC). This hypothesis was tested using enzymes from the pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and a corresponding ?chdC knockout strain. The ultraviolet-visible spectral features of coproporphyrin III served as an in vitro indicator of a protein-protein interaction. A CpfC-ChdC KD of 17 ± 7 ?M was determined, consistent with transient complexation and supported by the observation that the catalytic competence of both enzymes was moderately suppressed in the stable complex. The ?chdC S. aureus was transformed with plasmids containing single-amino acid mutants in the active site gate of ChdC. The porphyrin content and growth phenotypes of these mutants showed that K129 and Y133 promote the ChdC-CpfC interaction and revealed the importance of E120. Understanding the nature of interactions between these enzymes and those further upstream in the heme biosynthesis pathway could provide new means of specifically targeting pathogenic Gram-positive bacteria such as S. aureus.

SUBMITTER: Celis AI 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7160669 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Control of Metabolite Flux during the Final Steps of Heme <i>b</i> Biosynthesis in Gram-Positive Bacteria.

Celis Arianna I AI   Choby Jacob E JE   Kentro James J   Skaar Eric P EP   DuBois Jennifer L JL  

Biochemistry 20190626 52


The pathway for assembling heme ends with a unique set of enzymes in Gram-positive bacteria. Substrates for these reactions include coproporphyrin III, Fe(II), and H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, which are highly reactive and toxic. Because these bacteria lack membranous compartments, we hypothesized that metabolite flux may occur via a transient protein-protein interaction between the final two pathway enzymes, coproporphyrin ferrochelatase (CpfC) and coproheme decarboxylase (ChdC). This hypothesis  ...[more]

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