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Characterization of the magnesium chelatase from Thermosynechococcus elongatus

Authors :
James D. Reid
Nathan B. P. Adams
Christopher J. Marklew
Amanda A. Brindley
C. Neil Hunter
Source :
The Biochemical journal. 457(1)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The first committed step in chlorophyll biosynthesis is catalysed by magnesium chelatase (E.C. 6.6.1.1), which uses the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to insert an Mg2+ ion into the ring of protoporphyrin IX. We have characterized magnesium chelatase from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus. This chelatase is thermostable, with subunit melting temperatures between 55 and 63°C and optimal activity at 50°C. The T. elongatus chelatase (kcat of 0.16 μM/min) shows a Michaelis–Menten-type response to both Mg2+ (Km of 2.3 mM) and MgATP2− (Km of 0.8 mM). The response to porphyrin is more complex; porphyrin inhibits at high concentrations of ChlH, but when the concentration of ChlH is comparable with the other two subunits the response is of a Michaelis–Menten type (at 0.4 μM ChlH, Km is 0.2 μM). Hybrid magnesium chelatases containing a mixture of subunits from the mesophilic Synechocystis and Thermosynechococcus enzymes are active. We generated all six possible hybrid magnesium chelatases; the hybrid chelatase containing Thermosynechococcus ChlD and Synechocystis ChlI and ChlH is not co-operative towards Mg2+, in contrast with the Synechocystis magnesium chelatase. This loss of co-operativity reveals the significant regulatory role of Synechocystis ChlD.

Details

ISSN :
14708728
Volume :
457
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Biochemical journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ce21ec1ddb9d9a2f70281acc6fb815f