The Coordination Chemistry of Copper Uptake and Storage for Methane Oxidation

Methanotrophs are remarkable bacteria that utilise large quantities of copper (Cu) to oxidize the potent greenhouse gas methane. To assist in providing the Cu they require for this process some methanotrophs can secrete the Cu‐sequestering modified peptide methanobactin. These small molecules bind C...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemistry : a European journal 2019-01, Vol.25 (1), p.74-86
1. Verfasser: Dennison, Christopher
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Methanotrophs are remarkable bacteria that utilise large quantities of copper (Cu) to oxidize the potent greenhouse gas methane. To assist in providing the Cu they require for this process some methanotrophs can secrete the Cu‐sequestering modified peptide methanobactin. These small molecules bind CuI with very high affinity and crystal structures have given insight into why this is the case, and also how the metal ion may be released within the cell. A much greater proportion of methanotrophs, genomes of which have been sequenced, possess a member of a newly discovered bacterial family of copper storage proteins (the Csps). These are tetramers of four‐helix bundles whose cores are lined with Cys residues enabling the binding of large numbers of CuI ions. In methanotrophs, a Csp exported from the cytosol stores CuI for the active site of the ubiquitous enzyme that catalyses the oxidation of methane. The presence of cytosolic Csps, not only in methanotrophs but in a wide range of bacteria, challenges the dogma that these organisms have no requirement for Cu in this location. The properties of the Csps, with an emphasis on CuI binding and the structures of the sites formed, are the primary focus of this review. Bio‐storage: Methanotrophs utilise large quantities of copper (Cu) to oxidise the potent greenhouse gas methane. To help provide the Cu they require some methanotrophs secrete Cu‐sequestering modified peptides called methanobactins. A much greater proportion of methanotrophs possess a member of the newly discovered family of proteins that can store large quantities of Cu for methane oxidation.
ISSN:0947-6539
1521-3765
DOI:10.1002/chem.201803444