Abstract

The genome of the cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. PCC7120 carries three genes (all4978, all7016, and alr7522) encoding putative heme-binding GAF (cGMP-specific phosphodiesterases, adenylyl cyclases, and FhlA) proteins that were annotated as transcriptional regulators. They are composed of an N-terminal cofactor domain and a C-terminal helix-turn-helix motif. All4978 showed the highest affinity for protoheme binding. The heme binding capability of All7016 was moderate, and Alr7522 did not bind heme at all. The "as isolated" form of All4978, identified by Soret band (λmax = 427 nm), was assigned by electronic absorption, EPR, and resonance Raman spectroscopy as a hexa-coordinated low spin Fe(III) heme with a distal cysteine ligand (absorption of δ-band around 360 nm). The protoheme cofactor is noncovalently incorporated. Reduction of the heme could be accomplished by chemically using sodium dithionite and electrospectrochemically; this latter method yielded remarkably low midpoint potentials of -445 and -453 mV (following Soret and α-band absorption changes, respectively). The reduced form of the heme (Fe(II) state) binds both NO and CO. Cysteine coordination of the as isolated Fe(III) protein is unambiguous, but interestingly, the reduced heme instead displays spectral features indicative of histidine coordination. Cys-His ligand switches have been reported as putative signaling mechanisms in other heme-binding proteins; however, these novel cyanobacterial proteins are the first where such a ligand-switch mechanism has been observed in a GAF domain. DNA binding of the helix-turn-helix domain was investigated using a DNA sequence motif from its own promoter region. Formation of a protein-DNA complex preferentially formed in ferric state of the protein.

Highlights

  • Three GAF domain proteins from cyanobacteria (Nostoc PCC7120) identified with heme group binding signatures

  • For the corresponding region of GAFAll4978, sequence alignment revealed an interesting pattern of three alternate histidine residues at positions 95–99 (HDHGH), preceded by a cysteine at position 92

  • GAFAll4978 represents a new heme-binding GAF domain protein; there are only few examples reported so far [9, 11], and none have yet been identified in cyanobacteria

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Summary

Background

Three GAF domain proteins from cyanobacteria (Nostoc PCC7120) identified with heme group binding signatures. PCC7120 carries three genes (all4978, all7016, and alr7522) encoding putative heme-binding GAF (cGMP-specific phosphodiesterases, adenylyl cyclases, and FhlA) proteins that were annotated as transcriptional regulators They are composed of an N-terminal cofactor domain and a C-terminal helix-turn-helix motif. GAF domains, with tetrapyrrole ligand-binding capacity, are most prominent in canonical phytochromes, red-/far red-sensing photoreceptors present in both plants and bacteria [17], and in the related cyanobacteriochromes [16] In these chromoproteins, a cysteine residue in the GAF domain facilitates covalent binding of the chromophore, an open-chain tetrapyrrole (bilin) derivative, to the protein scaffold, which undergoes light-driven photochromic conversion between a resting and a signaling state. In contrast to the heme-binding GAF domains from M. acetivorans and M. tuberculosis described above, which carry a histidine kinase as a signaling domain, the three GAF domain proteins from Nostoc carry an HtH motif at their C-terminal end. These proteins from Nostoc represent the first examples where a heme-binding GAF domain is combined, putatively in a regulatory fashion, with an HtH structural motif

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