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2012
Journal Article
Title
Cyanobacterial metallochaperone inhibits deleterious side reactions of copper
Abstract
Copper metallochaperones supply copper to cupro-proteins through copper-mediated protein-protein-interactions and it has been hypothesized that metallochaperones thereby inhibit copper from causing damage en route. Evidence is presented in support of this latter role for cyanobacterial metallochaperone, Atx1. In cyanobacteria Atx1 contributes towards the supply of copper to plastocyanin inside thylakoids but it is shown here that in copper-replete medium, copper can reach plastocyanin without Atx1. Unlike metallochaperone- independent copper-supply to superoxide dismutase in eukaryotes, glutathione is not essential for Atx1- independent supply to plastocyanin: Double mutants missing atx1 and gshB (encoding glutathione synthetase) accumulate the same number of atoms of copper per cell in the plastocyanin pool as wild type. Critically, atx1gshB are hypersensitive to elevated copper relative to wild type cells and also relative to gshB single mutants with evidence that hyp ersensitivity arises due to the mislocation of copper to sites for other metals including iron and zinc. The zinc site on the amino-terminal domain (ZiaA N) of the P 1-type zinctransporting ATPase is especially similar to the copper site of the Atx1 target PacS N, and ZiaA N will bind Cu(I) more tightly than zinc. An NMR model of a substituted-ZiaA N-Cu(I)-Atx1 heterodimer has been generated making it possible to visualize a juxtaposition of residues surrounding the ZiaA N zinc site, including Asp 18, which normally repulse Atx1. Equivalent repulsion between bacterial copper metallochaperones and the amino-terminal regions of P 1-type ATPases for metals other than Cu(I) is conserved, again consistent with a role for copper metallochaperones to withhold copper from binding sites for other metals.