A full-length heme oxygenase gene from the patho-genic bacterium Corynebacterium diphtheriae has been subcloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The enzyme is expressed at high levels as a soluble catalytically active protein that results in the accumulation of biliverdin within the E. coli cells. The purified heme oxygenase forms a 1:1 complex with heme (K d 2.5 1 M) and has hemeprotein spectra similar to those previously reported for the purified eukaryotic heme oxyge-nases. In the presence of an E. coli NADPH-dependent reductase isolated during the purification of Hmu O, the heme-Hmu O complex is catalytically turned over to yield biliverdin IX and carbon monoxide. A number of redox partners were investigated for their ability to reconstitute Hmu O activity in vitro. Of these the most efficient appeared to be the recombinant NADH-dependent putidaredoxin/putidaredoxin reduc-tase from Pseudomonas putida. As with the E. coli NADPH-dependent reductase the final products of the reaction were biliverdin IX and carbon monoxide. This is the first bacterial heme oxygenase to be described to date. The close relationship between iron acquisition and pathogenesis suggests that the release of iron from heme by heme oxygenase may play a crucial role in the pathogenicity of C. diphtheriae.
CITATION STYLE
Wilks, A., & Schmitt, M. P. (1998). Expression and Characterization of a Heme Oxygenase (Hmu O) fromCorynebacterium diphtheriae. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(2), 837–841. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.2.837
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