The proteins CcmA and CcmB have long been known to be essential for cytochrome c maturation in Escherichia coli. We have purified a complex of these proteins, and found it to have ATP hydrolysis activity. CcmA, which has the features of a soluble ATP hydrolysis subunit, is found in a membrane-bound complex only when CcmB is present in the membrane. Mutation of the Walker A motif in CcmA(K40D) results in loss of the in vitro ATPase activity and in loss of cytochrome c biogenesis in vivo. The same mutation does not prevent covalent attachment of heme to the heme chaperone CcmE, but holo-CcmE is, for some unidentified reason, incompetent for heme transfer to an apocytochrome c or for release into the periplasm as a soluble variant. Addition of exogenous heme to heme-permeable E. coli with a ccmA deletion did not restore cytochrome c production. Our results suggest a role for CcmAB in the handling of heme by CcmE, which is chemically complex and involves an unusual histidine-heme covalent bond. © 2007 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Christensen, O., Harvat, E. M., Thöny-Meyer, L., Ferguson, S. J., & Stevens, J. M. (2007). Loss of ATP hydrolysis activity by CcmAB results in loss of c-type cytochrome synthesis and incomplete processing of CcmE. FEBS Journal, 274(9), 2322–2332. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2007.05769.x
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