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Springer, JBIC Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry, 3(14), p. 329-345, 2009

DOI: 10.1007/s00775-009-0473-0

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The crystal structure of auracyanin A at 1.85 Å resolution: the structures and functions of auracyanins A and B, two almost identical “blue” copper proteins, in the photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Auracyanins A and B are two closely similar "blue" copper proteins produced by the filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus. Both proteins have a water-soluble 140-residue globular domain, which is preceded in the sequence by an N-terminal tail. The globular domains of auracyanins A and B have sequences that are 38% identical. The sequences of the N-terminal tails, on the other hand, are distinctly different, suggesting that auracyanins A and B occupy different membrane sites and have different functions. The crystal structure of auracyanin A has been solved and refined at 1.85 A resolution. The polypeptide fold is similar to that of auracyanin B (Bond et al. in J Mol Biol 306:47-67, 2001), but the distribution of charged and polar residues on the molecular surface is different. The Cu-site dimensions of the two auracyanins are identical. This is unexpected, since auracyanin A has a shorter polypeptide loop between two of the Cu-binding residues, and the two proteins have significantly different EPR, UV-visible and resonance Raman spectra. The genes for the globular domains of auracyanins A and B have been cloned in a bacterial expression system, enabling purification of large quantities of protein. It is shown that auracyanin A is expressed only when C. aurantiacus cells are grown in light, whereas auracyanin B is expressed under dark as well as light conditions. The inference is that auracyanin A has a function in photosynthesis, and that auracyanin B has a function in aerobic respiration.