Rusticyanin, a bacterial electron transfer protein, causes G1 arrest in J774 and apoptosis in human cancer cells

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Abstract

During acid mine drainage, Acidithiobacillus firrooxidans, a nonpathogenic, acidophilic, lithotrophic bacterium, utilizes rusticyanin to transfer electrons for the oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ for deriving its energy. No other function of rusticyanin is known. We demonstrate that purified rusticyanin enters mammalian cells inducing either inhibition of cell cycle progression or caspase-8 mediated apoptosis. Treatment of human melanoma cells with rusticyanin allowed significant generation of reactive oxygen species and active caspase-8, leading to cell death. The ability of rusticyanin to modulate mammalian cell death might be relevant to a role of this cupredoxin in protecting. At. ferrooxidans from eukaryotic predators in the environment.

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Yamada, T., Hiraoka, Y., Das Gupta, T. K., & Chakrabarty, A. M. (2004). Rusticyanin, a bacterial electron transfer protein, causes G1 arrest in J774 and apoptosis in human cancer cells. Cell Cycle, 3(9), 1182–1187. https://doi.org/10.4161/cc.3.9.1125

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