Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone

Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) can swim along Earth’s magnetic field lines, thanks to the alignment of dedicated cytoplasmic organelles. These organelles, termed magnetosomes, are proteolipidic vesicles filled by a 35-120 nm crystal of either magnetite or greigite. The formation and alignment of magne...

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Main Authors: Pascal eArnoux, Marina I Siponen, Christopher T Lefèvre, Nicolas eGinet, David ePignol
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00117/full
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spelling doaj-c173a6087d44401090e5207cbf8157ca2020-11-25T00:14:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2014-03-01510.3389/fmicb.2014.0011777564Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alonePascal eArnoux0Pascal eArnoux1Pascal eArnoux2Marina I Siponen3Marina I Siponen4Marina I Siponen5Christopher T Lefèvre6Christopher T Lefèvre7Christopher T Lefèvre8Nicolas eGinet9Nicolas eGinet10Nicolas eGinet11David ePignol12David ePignol13David ePignol14Commissariat à l'énergie AtomiqueCNRS, UMR Biol Veget & Microbiol EnvironAix-Marseille UniversitéCommissariat à l'énergie AtomiqueCNRS, UMR Biol Veget & Microbiol EnvironAix-Marseille UniversitéCommissariat à l'énergie AtomiqueCNRS, UMR Biol Veget & Microbiol EnvironAix-Marseille UniversitéCommissariat à l'énergie AtomiqueCNRS, UMR Biol Veget & Microbiol EnvironAix-Marseille UniversitéCommissariat à l'énergie AtomiqueCNRS, UMR Biol Veget & Microbiol EnvironAix-Marseille UniversitéMagnetotactic bacteria (MTB) can swim along Earth’s magnetic field lines, thanks to the alignment of dedicated cytoplasmic organelles. These organelles, termed magnetosomes, are proteolipidic vesicles filled by a 35-120 nm crystal of either magnetite or greigite. The formation and alignment of magnetosomes are mediated by a group of specific genes, the mam genes, encoding the magnetosome-associated proteins. The whole process of magnetosome biogenesis can be divided into four sequential steps; (i) cytoplasmic membrane invagination, (ii) magnetosomes alignment, (iii) iron crystal nucleation and (iv) species-dependent mineral size and shape control. Since both magnetite and greigite are a mix of iron(III) and iron(II), iron redox state management within the magnetosome vesicle is a key issue. Recently, studies have started pointing out the importance of a MTB-specific c-type cytochrome domain found in several magnetosome-associated proteins (MamE, P, T and X). This magnetochrome (MCR) domain is almost always found in tandem, and this tandem is either found alone (MamT), in combination with a PDZ domain (MamP), a domain of unknown function (MamX) or with a trypsin combined to one or two PDZ domains (MamE). By taking advantage of new genomic data available on MTB and a recent structural study of MamP, which helped define the MCR domain boundaries, we attempt to retrace the evolutionary history within and between the different MCR-containing proteins. We propose that the observed tandem repeat of MCR is the result of a convergent evolution and attempt to explain why this domain is rarely found alone.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00117/fullIronredox reactionsEvolution, Molecularmagnetotactic bacteriamagnetochrome
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
David ePignol
David ePignol
David ePignol
spellingShingle Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
David ePignol
David ePignol
David ePignol
Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
Frontiers in Microbiology
Iron
redox reactions
Evolution, Molecular
magnetotactic bacteria
magnetochrome
author_facet Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Pascal eArnoux
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Marina I Siponen
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Christopher T Lefèvre
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
Nicolas eGinet
David ePignol
David ePignol
David ePignol
author_sort Pascal eArnoux
title Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
title_short Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
title_full Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
title_fullStr Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
title_full_unstemmed Structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
title_sort structure and evolution of the magnetochrome domains: no longer alone
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) can swim along Earth’s magnetic field lines, thanks to the alignment of dedicated cytoplasmic organelles. These organelles, termed magnetosomes, are proteolipidic vesicles filled by a 35-120 nm crystal of either magnetite or greigite. The formation and alignment of magnetosomes are mediated by a group of specific genes, the mam genes, encoding the magnetosome-associated proteins. The whole process of magnetosome biogenesis can be divided into four sequential steps; (i) cytoplasmic membrane invagination, (ii) magnetosomes alignment, (iii) iron crystal nucleation and (iv) species-dependent mineral size and shape control. Since both magnetite and greigite are a mix of iron(III) and iron(II), iron redox state management within the magnetosome vesicle is a key issue. Recently, studies have started pointing out the importance of a MTB-specific c-type cytochrome domain found in several magnetosome-associated proteins (MamE, P, T and X). This magnetochrome (MCR) domain is almost always found in tandem, and this tandem is either found alone (MamT), in combination with a PDZ domain (MamP), a domain of unknown function (MamX) or with a trypsin combined to one or two PDZ domains (MamE). By taking advantage of new genomic data available on MTB and a recent structural study of MamP, which helped define the MCR domain boundaries, we attempt to retrace the evolutionary history within and between the different MCR-containing proteins. We propose that the observed tandem repeat of MCR is the result of a convergent evolution and attempt to explain why this domain is rarely found alone.
topic Iron
redox reactions
Evolution, Molecular
magnetotactic bacteria
magnetochrome
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00117/full
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