Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of Toronto, Mississauga, Mississauga, Ontario L5L 1C6, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Carboxysomes are proteinaceous biochemical compartments that constitute the enzymatic “back end” of the cyanobacterial CO
2
-concentrating mechanism. These protein-bound organelles catalyze HCO
3
−
dehydration and photosynthetic CO
2
fixation. In
Synechocystis
sp. strain PCC6803 these reactions involve the β-class carbonic anhydrase (CA), CcaA, and Form 1B ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). The surrounding shell is thought to be composed of proteins encoded by the
ccmKLMN
operon, although little is known about how structural and catalytic proteins integrate to form a functional carboxysome. Using biochemical activity assays and molecular approaches we have identified a catalytic, multiprotein HCO
3
−
dehydration complex (BDC) associated with the protein shell of
Synechocystis
carboxysomes. The complex was minimally composed of a CcmM73 trimer, CcaA dimer, and CcmN. Larger native complexes also contained RbcL, RbcS, and two or three immunologically identified smaller forms of CcmM (62, 52, and 36 kDa). Yeast two-hybrid analyses indicated that the BDC was associated with the carboxysome shell through CcmM73-specific protein interactions with CcmK and CcmL. Protein interactions between CcmM73 and CcaA, CcmM73 and CcmN, or CcmM73 and itself required the N-terminal γ-CA-like domain of CcmM73. The specificity of the CcmM73-CcaA interaction provided both a mechanism to integrate CcaA into the fabric of the carboxysome shell and a means to recruit this enzyme to the BDC during carboxysome biogenesis. Functionally, CcaA was the catalytic core of the BDC. CcmM73 bound H
14
CO
3
−
but was unable to catalyze HCO
3
−
dehydration, suggesting that it may potentially regulate BDC activity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
107 articles.
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