Abstract

Some methane-oxidizing bacteria use the ribosomally synthesized, posttranslationally modified natural product methanobactin (Mbn) to acquire copper for their primary metabolic enzyme, particulate methane monooxygenase. The operons encoding the machinery to biosynthesize and transport Mbns typically include genes for two proteins, MbnH and MbnP, which are also found as a pair in other genomic contexts related to copper homeostasis. While the MbnH protein, a member of the bacterial diheme cytochrome c peroxidase (bCcP)/MauG superfamily, has been characterized, the structure and function of MbnP, the relationship between the two proteins, and their role in copper homeostasis remain unclear. Biochemical characterization of MbnP from the methanotroph Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b now reveals that MbnP binds a single copper ion, present in the +1 oxidation state, with high affinity. Copper binding to MbnP in vivo is dependent on oxidation of the first tryptophan in a conserved WxW motif to a kynurenine, a transformation that occurs through an interaction of MbnH with MbnP. The 2.04-Å-resolution crystal structure of MbnP reveals a unique fold and an unusual copper-binding site involving a histidine, a methionine, a solvent ligand, and the kynurenine. Although the kynurenine residue may not serve as a CuI primary-sphere ligand, being positioned ∼2.9 Å away from the CuI ion, its presence is required for copper binding. Genomic neighborhood analysis indicates that MbnP proteins, and by extension kynurenine-containing copper sites, are widespread and may play diverse roles in microbial copper homeostasis.

Highlights

  • Copper is vital to the physiology of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria, organisms that utilize methane gas as their sole carbon source [1]

  • By analogy to MauG and the MopE*/CorA/CorB proteins, we previously suggested that MbnH might oxidize a tryptophan residue in MbnP, perhaps facilitating a copper-handling function related to Mbn [12, 16]

  • These results suggest that MbnPH represents a new class of copper-binding proteins with potentially broad roles in microbial copper homeostasis

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Summary

Introduction

Copper is vital to the physiology of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria, organisms that utilize methane gas as their sole carbon source [1]. This protein, MbnP, binds copper with an unusual coordination sphere that includes kynurenine, a tryptophan oxidation product that is produced in vivo by a partner protein, MbnH. These mbnPH pairs are present in Mbn operons and found in proximity to genes that encode a range of copper-binding proteins and membrane transporters, including CopC, CopD, and PCuAC.

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