Abstract

The genes coding for the photosynthetic reaction center cytochrome c subunit ( pufC) and the soluble cytochrome c 2 ( cycA) from the purple non-sulfur bacterium Rhodopseudomonas viridis were expressed in Escherichia coli. Biosynthesis of the reaction center cytochrome without a signal peptide resulted in the formation of inclusion bodies in the cytoplasm amounting to 14% of the total cellular protein. A series of plasmids coding for the cytochrome subunit with varying N-terminal signal peptides was constructed in attempts to achieve translocation across the E. coli cytoplasmic membrane and heme attachment. However, the two major recombinant proteins with N-termini corresponding to the signal peptide and the cytochrome were synthesized in E. coli as non-specific aggregates without heme incorporation. An increased ratio of precursor as compared to ‘processed’ apo-cytochrome was obtained when expression was carried out in a proteinase-deficient strain. Cytochrome c 2 from R. viridis was synthesized in E. coli as a precursor associated with the cytoplasmic membrane. An expression plasmid was designed encoding the N-terminal part of the 33 kDa precursor protein of the oxygen-evolving complex of Photosystem II from spinach followed by cytochrome c 2. Two recombinant proteins without heme were found to aggregate as inclusion bodies with N-termini corresponding to the signal peptide and the mature 33 kDa protein.

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