4.6 Article

Thioredoxin- dependent Redox Regulation of Chloroplastic Phosphoglycerate Kinase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 43, Pages 30012-30024

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.597997

Keywords

Chlamydomonas; Chloroplast; Disulfide; Photosynthesis; Redox Signaling; Thiol; Thioredoxin; Calvin-Benson Cycle; Phosphoglycerate Kinase

Funding

  1. PRIN
  2. ANR [12-BSV5-0019 REDPRO2]
  3. LABEX DYNAMO [ANR-LABX11-0011]
  4. FARB2012 University of Bologna

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Background: Chloroplastic PGK is a putative target of thioredoxin identified by redox proteomics. Results:Chlamydomonas PGK1 is regulated by TRX-f via oxidoreduction of the Cys(227)-Cys(361) disulfide bond. Conclusion:Chlamydomonas PGK1 is a potentially new light-modulated Calvin-Benson cycle enzyme. Significance: The complex redox regulation of the Calvin-Benson cycle and its evolution are further expanded. In photosynthetic organisms, thioredoxin-dependent redox regulation is a well established mechanism involved in the control of a large number of cellular processes, including the Calvin-Benson cycle. Indeed, 4 of 11 enzymes of this cycle are activated in the light through dithiol/disulfide interchanges controlled by chloroplastic thioredoxin. Recently, several proteomics-based approaches suggested that not only four but all enzymes of the Calvin-Benson cycle may withstand redox regulation. Here, we characterized the redox features of the Calvin-Benson enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK1) from the eukaryotic green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and we show that C. reinhardtii PGK1 (CrPGK1) activity is inhibited by the formation of a single regulatory disulfide bond with a low midpoint redox potential (-335 mV at pH 7.9). CrPGK1 oxidation was found to affect the turnover number without altering the affinity for substrates, whereas the enzyme activation appeared to be specifically controlled by f-type thioredoxin. Using a combination of site-directed mutagenesis, thiol titration, mass spectrometry analyses, and three-dimensional modeling, the regulatory disulfide bond was shown to involve the not strictly conserved Cys(227) and Cys(361). Based on molecular mechanics calculation, the formation of the disulfide is proposed to impose structural constraints in the C-terminal domain of the enzyme that may lower its catalytic efficiency. It is therefore concluded that CrPGK1 might constitute an additional light-modulated Calvin-Benson cycle enzyme with a low activity in the dark and a TRX-dependent activation in the light. These results are also discussed from an evolutionary point of view.

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