4.6 Article

PvdM of fluorescent pseudomonads is required for the oxidation of ferribactin by PvdP in periplasmic pyoverdine maturation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 298, Issue 8, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102201

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [BR 2285/7-1]

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This study reveals the subcellular localization and functional role of PvdM. Using the model organism P. fluorescens, it is shown that PvdM is anchored to the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane, where it is essential for the activity of the tyrosinase PvdP. The results also suggest that PvdM prevents loss of the biosynthesis intermediate of pyoverdine into the medium by ensuring the efficient transfer of ferribactin to PvdP.
Fluorescent pseudomonads such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa or Pseudomonas fluorescens produce pyoverdine siderophores that ensure iron-supply in iron-limited environments. After its synthesis in the cytoplasm, the nonfluorescent pyoverdine precursor ferribactin is exported into the periplasm, where the enzymes PvdQ, PvdP, PvdO, PvdN, and PtaA are responsible for fluorophore maturation and tailoring steps. While the roles of all these enzymes are clear, little is known about the role of PvdM, a human renal dipeptidase-related protein that is predicted to be periplasmic and that is essential for pyoverdine biogenesis. Here, we reveal the subcellular localization and functional role of PvdM. Using the model organism P. fluorescens, we show that PvdM is anchored to the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane, where it is indispensable for the activity of the tyrosinase PvdP. While PvdM does not share the metallopeptidase function of renal dipeptidase, it still has the corresponding peptide-binding site. The substrate of PvdP, deacylated ferribactin, is secreted by a Delta pvdM mutant strain, indicating that PvdM prevents loss of this periplasmic biosynthesis intermediate into the medium by ensuring the efficient transfer of ferribactin to PvdP in vivo. We propose that PvdM belongs to a new dipeptidase-related protein subfamily with inactivated Zn(2+ )coordination sites, members of which are usually genetically linked to TonB-dependent uptake systems and often associated with periplasmic FAD-dependent oxidoreductases related to D-amino acid oxidases. We suggest that these proteins are necessary for selective binding, exposure, or transfer of specific D- and L-amino acid-containing peptides and other periplasmic biomolecules in manifold pathways.

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