4.4 Article

Characterization of the binding of deuteroporphyrin IX to the magnesium chelatase H subunit and spectroscopic properties of the complex

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 40, Issue 31, Pages 9291-9299

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi010562a

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Magnesium protoporphyrin chelatase catalyzes the insertion of a Mg2+ ion into protoporphyrin IX, which can be considered as the first committed step of (bacterio)chlorophyll synthesis. In the present work, the Mg chelatase H subunits from both Synechocystis and Rhodobacter sphaeroides were studied because of the differing requirements of these organisms for modified cyclic tetrapyrroles. Deuteroporphyrin was shown to be a substrate for Mg chelatase. Analytical HPLC gel filtration was used to show that an H-deuteroporphyrin complex can be reconstituted by incubating the magnesium chelatase H subunit with a molar excess of deuteroporphyrin and that these complexes are monomers. The binding process occurs in the absence of Mg2+ or ATP or the I or D subunits of Mg chelatase. The emission from Trp residues in the H subunit is partly quenched when deuteroporphyrin is bound. Quantitative analysis of Trp fluorescence quenching led to determination of the K-d values for deuteroporphyrin binding to BchH from Rb. sphaeroides and Ch1H from Synechocystis, which are 1.22 +/- 0.42 muM and 0.53 +/- 0.12 muM for Ch1H and BchH, respectively. In the case of Ch1H, but not BchH, the K-d increased 4-fold in the presence of MgATP(2-). Red shifts in absorbance and excitation peaks were observed in the B band of the bound porphyrin in comparison with deuteroporphyrin in solution, as well as reduced yield and red shifts of up to 8 nm in fluorescence emission. These alterations are consistent with a slightly deformed nonplanar conformation of the bound porphyrin. Mg deuteroporphyrin, the product of the Mg chelation reaction, was shown to form a complex with either Ch1H or BchH; in each case the K-d for Mg deuteroporphyrin is similar to that for deuteroporphyrin. The implications of the H-Mg protoporphyrin interaction for the next enzyme in the chlorophyll biosynthetic pathway, Mg protoporphyrin methyltransferase, are discussed.

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