4.7 Article

A Biochemical Deconstruction-Based Strategy to Assist the Characterization of Bacterial Electric Conductive Filaments

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24087032

Keywords

Geobacter; nanowires; multiheme cytochromes; electron transfer; NMR

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Periplasmic nanowires and electric conductive filaments made of c-type cytochromes from Geobacter sulfurreducens bacterium are crucial for electron storage and/or extracellular electron transfer. The assignment of the heme proton NMR signals for domains C and D in the nanowire cytochrome GSU1996 was obtained and used to guide the assignment of the corresponding signals in the hexaheme bi-domain CD. This new strategy provides a way to functionally characterize large multiheme cytochromes.
Periplasmic nanowires and electric conductive filaments made of the polymeric assembly of c-type cytochromes from Geobacter sulfurreducens bacterium are crucial for electron storage and/or extracellular electron transfer. The elucidation of the redox properties of each heme is fundamental to the understanding of the electron transfer mechanisms in these systems, which first requires the specific assignment of the heme NMR signals. The high number of hemes and the molecular weight of the nanowires dramatically decrease the spectral resolution and make this assignment extremely complex or unattainable. The nanowire cytochrome GSU1996 (similar to 42 kDa) is composed of four domains (A to D) each containing three c-type heme groups. In this work, the individual domains (A to D), bi-domains (AB, CD) and full-length nanowire were separately produced at natural abundance. Sufficient protein expression was obtained for domains C (similar to 11 kDa/three hemes) and D (similar to 10 kDa/three hemes), as well as for bi-domain CD (similar to 21 kDa/six hemes). Using 2D-NMR experiments, the assignment of the heme proton NMR signals for domains C and D was obtained and then used to guide the assignment of the corresponding signals in the hexaheme bi-domain CD. This new biochemical deconstruction-based procedure, using nanowire GSU1996 as a model, establishes a new strategy to functionally characterize large multiheme cytochromes.

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