4.4 Article

Glutamyl-tRNA reductase of Chlorobium vibrioforme is a dissociable homodimer that contains one tightly bound heme per subunit

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 187, Issue 13, Pages 4444-4450

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.13.4444-4450.2005

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delta-Aminolevulinic acid, the biosynthetic precursor of tetrapyrroles, is synthesized from glutamate via the tRNA-dependent five-carbon pathway in the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium vibrioforme. The enzyme glutamyl-tRNA reductase (GTR), encoded by the hemA gene, catalyzes the first committed step in this pathway, which is the reduction of tRNA-bound glutamate to produce glutamate I-semialdehyde. To characterize the GTR protein, the hemA gene from C vibrioforme Was cloned into expression plasmids that added an N-terminal His, tag to the expressed protein. The His-tagged GTR protein was purified using Ni affinity column chromatography. GTR was observable as a 49-kDa band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) gels. The native molecular mass, as determined by gel filtration chromatography, appeared to be approximately 40 kDa, indicating that native GTR is a monomer. However, when the protein was mixed with 5 % (vol/vol) glycerol, the product had an apparent molecular mass of 95 kDa, indicating that the protein is a dimer under these conditions. Purified His(6)-GTR was catalytically active in vitro when it was incubated with Escherichia coli glutamyl-tRNA(Glu) and purified recombinant Chlamydomonas reinhardtii glutamate-1-semialdehyde aminotransferase. The expressed GTR contained 1 mol of tightly bound heme per mol of peptide subunit. The heme remained bound to the protein throughout purification and was not removed by anion- or cation-exchange column chromatography. However, the bound heme was released during SDS-PAGE if the protein was denatured in the presence of beta-mercaptoethanol. Added heme did not inhibit the activity of purified expressed GTR in vitro. However, when the GTR was expressed in the presence of 3-amino-2,3-dihydrobenzoic acid (gabaculine), an inhibitor of heme synthesis, the purified GTR had 60 to 70 % less bound heme than control GTR, and it was inhibited by hemin in vitro.

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