Almeida, A, Turner DL, Silva MA, Salgueiro CA.
2025.
New insights in uranium bioremediation by cytochromes of the bacterium G. uraniireducens. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 301(2):108090.
AbstractThe bacterium Geotalea uraniireducens, commonly found in uranium-contaminated environments, plays a key role in bioremediation strategies by converting the soluble hexavalent form of uranium (UVI) into less soluble forms (e.g. UIV.). While most of the reduction and concomitant precipitation of uranium occur outside the cells, there have been reports of important reduction processes taking place in the periplasm. In any case, the triheme periplasmic cytochromes are crucial players, either by ensuring an effective interface between the cell´s interior and exterior or by directly participating in the reduction of the metal. Therefore, understanding the functional mechanism of the highly abundant G. uraniireducens’ triheme cytochromes is crucial to assist the elucidation on the respiratory pathways in this bacterium. In this work, a detailed functional characterization of the triheme cytochromes PpcA and PpcB from G. uraniireducens was conducted using NMR and visible spectroscopy techniques. Despite sharing high amino acid sequence and structural homology with their counterparts from G. sulfurreducens, the results obtained showed that the heme reduction potential values are less negative, the order of oxidation of the hemes is distinct, and the redox and redox-Bohr network of interactions revealed unprecedented functional mechanisms of the G. uraniireducens cytochromes. In these cytochromes, the reduction potential values of the three heme groups are much more similar, hence covering a narrow range of values, features that facilitate the directional electron flow from the inner membrane, thereby favouring the optimal reduction of uranium.
Fernandes, MV, Antunes JMA, Salgueiro CA, Morgado L.
2025.
Characterization of CbcS from Geobacter sulfurreducens' Cbc4 complex: a putative novel respiratory pathway. Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. :113097.
AbstractElectroactive bacteria mediate electron exchange with external compounds through a process known as extracellular electron transfer (EET). A key step in EET is the transfer of electrons from the menaquinone pool to inner membrane-associated quinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase complexes, which subsequently relay electrons to periplasmic redox partners. Gene-knockout and proteomic analyses have identified several critical components involved in EET in Geobacter sulfurreducens, including six inner membrane oxidoreductase gene clusters. Of these, three – CbcL, ImcH, and CbcBA - have been linked to specific respiratory pathways depending on the redox potential of the terminal electron acceptor. Cbc4 is one of the other inner membrane oxidoreductase complexes and is composed by three domains: a membrane-anchored tetraheme c-type cytochrome (CbcS), an iron–sulfur protein containing four [4Fe4S] clusters (CbcT), and an integral membrane subunit (CbcU). In this study, the sequence and AlphaFold model of CbcS were analyzed and its cytochrome domain was produced, and structurally and functionally characterized using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy. CbcS has four bis-histidine low-spin hemes and the structure of its hemecore is homologous to CymA and NrfH from Shewanella and Desulfovibrio species, respectively, despite differences on its axial ligands. Potentiometric titrations showed that the redox active window of CbcS overlaps with those of its putative redox partners of the triheme periplasmic cytochrome family (PpcA-E). However, NMR-monitored electron transfer experiments revealed that CbcS can transfer electrons to PpcA through the heme group closer to the C-terminal (heme IV). Together, these findings provide insights on a putative new respiratory pathway in G. sulfurreducens.