4.8 Article

X-ray crystal structure of the light-independent protochlorophyllide reductase

Journal

NATURE
Volume 465, Issue 7294, Pages 110-U124

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/nature08950

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [17687008, 18054308, 19570036, 20200063, 19750148, 19350088, 19010733, 2110614]
  2. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)
  3. Kato Memorial Science Foundation
  4. Toyoaki Scholarship Foundation
  5. Japan Securities Scholarship Foundation
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17687008, 19750148] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Photosynthetic organisms adopt two different strategies for the reduction of the C17=C18 double bond of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to form chlorophyllide a, the direct precursor of chlorophyll a (refs 1-4). The first involves the activity of the light-dependent Pchlide oxidoreductase(5-9), and the second involves the light-independent (dark-operative) Pchlide oxidoreductase(10) (DPOR). DPOR is a nitrogenase-like enzyme consisting of two components, L-protein (a BchL dimer) and NB-protein (a BchN-BchB heterotetramer), which are structurally related to nitrogenase Fe protein and MoFe protein, respectively(10,11). Here we report the crystal structure of the NB-protein of DPOR from Rhodobacter capsulatus at a resolution of 2.3 angstrom. As expected, the overall structure is similar to that of nitrogenase MoFe protein: each catalytic BchN-BchB unit contains one Pchlide and one iron-sulphur cluster (NB-cluster) coordinated uniquely by one aspartate and three cysteines. Unique aspartate ligation is not necessarily needed for the cluster assembly but is essential for the catalytic activity. Specific Pchlide-binding accompanies the partial unwinding of an a-helix that belongs to the next catalytic BchN-BchB unit. We propose a unique trans-specific reduction mechanism in which the distorted C17-propionate of Pchlide and an aspartate from BchB serve as proton donors for C18 and C17 of Pchlide, respectively. Intriguingly, the spatial arrangement of the NB-cluster and Pchlide is almost identical to that of the P-cluster and FeMo-cofactor in nitrogenase MoFe-protein, illustrating that a common architecture exists to reduce chemically stable multibonds of porphyrin and dinitrogen.

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