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Título
Unexpected diversity of ferredoxin-dependent thioredoxin reductases in cyanobacteria
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
ferredoxin-dependent thioredoxin reductases
Cyanobacteria
Redox metabolism
Flavoenzymes
Enzyme evolution
Fecha de publicación
2021-02-18
Citación
Buey, R. M., Fernández-Justel, D., González-Holgado, G., Martínez-Júlvez, M., González-López, A., Velázquez-Campoy, A., ... & Balsera, M. (2021). Unexpected diversity of ferredoxin-dependent thioredoxin reductases in cyanobacteria. Plant Physiology, 186(1), 285-296.
Resumen
[EN]Thioredoxin reductases control the redox state of thioredoxins (Trxs)—ubiquitous proteins that regulate a spectrum of
enzymes by dithiol–disulfide exchange reactions. In most organisms, Trx is reduced by NADPH via a thioredoxin reductase
flavoenzyme (NTR), but in oxygenic photosynthetic organisms, this function can also be performed by an iron-sulfur ferre-
doxin (Fdx)-dependent thioredoxin reductase (FTR) that links light to metabolic regulation. We have recently found that
some cyanobacteria, such as the thylakoid-less Gloeobacter and the ocean-dwelling green oxyphotobacterium
Prochlorococcus, lack NTR and FTR but contain a thioredoxin reductase flavoenzyme (formerly tentatively called deeply-
rooted thioredoxin reductase or DTR), whose electron donor remained undefined. Here, we demonstrate that Fdx func-
tions in this capacity and report the crystallographic structure of the transient complex between the plant-type Fdx1 and
the thioredoxin reductase flavoenzyme from Gloeobacter violaceus. Thereby, our data demonstrate that this cyanobacterial
enzyme belongs to the Fdx flavin-thioredoxin reductase (FFTR) family, originally described in the anaerobic bacterium
Clostridium pasteurianum. Accordingly, the enzyme hitherto termed DTR is renamed FFTR. Our experiments further show
that the redox-sensitive peptide CP12 is modulated in vitro by the FFTR/Trx system, demonstrating that FFTR functionally
substitutes for FTR in light-linked enzyme regulation in Gloeobacter. Altogether, we demonstrate the FFTR is spread within
the cyanobacteria phylum and propose that, by substituting for FTR, it connects the reduction of target proteins to photo-
synthesis. Besides, the results indicate that FFTR acquisition constitutes a mechanism of evolutionary adaptation in marine
phytoplankton such as Prochlorococcus that live in low-iron environments.
URI
ISSN
1532-2548
DOI
10.1093/plphys/kiab072
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