Maturation of Rhizobium leguminosarum Hydrogenase in the Presence of Oxygen Requires the Interaction of the Chaperone HypC and the Scaffolding Protein HupK

[NiFe] hydrogenases are key enzymes for the energy and redox metabolisms of different microorganisms. Synthesis of these metalloenzymes involves a complex series of biochemical reactions catalyzed by a plethora of accessory proteins, many of them required to synthesize and insert the unique NiFe(CN)...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2014-08, Vol.289 (31), p.21217-21229
Hauptverfasser: Albareda, Marta, Pacios, Luis F., Manyani, Hamid, Rey, Luis, Brito, Belén, Imperial, Juan, Ruiz-Argüeso, Tomás, Palacios, Jose M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[NiFe] hydrogenases are key enzymes for the energy and redox metabolisms of different microorganisms. Synthesis of these metalloenzymes involves a complex series of biochemical reactions catalyzed by a plethora of accessory proteins, many of them required to synthesize and insert the unique NiFe(CN)2CO cofactor. HypC is an accessory protein conserved in all [NiFe] hydrogenase systems and involved in the synthesis and transfer of the Fe(CN)2CO cofactor precursor. Hydrogenase accessory proteins from bacteria-synthesizing hydrogenase in the presence of oxygen include HupK, a scaffolding protein with a moderate sequence similarity to the hydrogenase large subunit and proposed to participate as an intermediate chaperone in the synthesis of the NiFe cofactor. The endosymbiotic bacterium Rhizobium leguminosarum contains a single hydrogenase system that can be expressed under two different physiological conditions: free-living microaerobic cells (∼12 μm O2) and bacteroids from legume nodules (∼10–100 nm O2). We have used bioinformatic tools to model HupK structure and interaction of this protein with HypC. Site-directed mutagenesis at positions predicted as critical by the structural analysis have allowed the identification of HupK and HypC residues relevant for the maturation of hydrogenase. Mutant proteins altered in some of these residues show a different phenotype depending on the physiological condition tested. Modeling of HypC also predicts the existence of a stable HypC dimer whose presence was also demonstrated by immunoblot analysis. This study widens our understanding on the mechanisms for metalloenzyme biosynthesis in the presence of oxygen. Background: [NiFe] hydrogenase biosynthesis requires the interaction among multiple accessory proteins for metal cofactor assembly. Results: Combined bioinformatic protein modeling and mutant analysis on HupK and HypC proteins identify key residues required for hydrogenase maturation. Conclusion: HypC-HupK interaction is a relevant step for hydrogenase biosynthesis in the presence of oxygen. Significance: The results expand our knowledge on the mechanism of hydrogenase biosynthesis in aerobic bacteria.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M114.577403