Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1282890 International Journal of Hydrogen Energy 2010 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The purple photosynthetic bacterium, Thiocapsa roseopersicina harbours at least three functional [NiFe] hydrogenases. Two of them are attached to the periplasmic membrane (HynSL, HupSL), while the third one is apparently localized in the cytoplasm (HoxEFUYH). Two hypC-type genes, coding for putative small maturation proteins, were found and their roles were studied by activity measurements performed with hypC mutants. Protein–protein interaction experiments confirmed that each HypC-type protein participates in the maturation of at least two [NiFe] hydrogenase large subunits via direct interaction. Endopeptidases perform the last step of the complex [NiFe] hydrogenase maturation process. A separate endopeptidase (HynD, HupD, HoxW) cleaves off the C-terminus of each large subunit and they are strictly specific for their corresponding hydrogenases. The results demonstrate a sophisticated assembly of these functionally active redox metalloenzymes through specific and selective protein–protein interactions and imply some diversity in the hydrogenase assembly machinery among the various microbes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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