Abstract
In the chloroplast, Calvin–Benson–Bassham enzymes are active in the reducing environment created in the light by electrons from the photosystems. In the dark, these enzymes are inhib-ited, mainly caused by oxidation of key regulatory cysteine residues. CP12 is a small protein that plays a role in this regulation with four cysteine residues that undergo a redox transition. Using amide-proton exchange with solvent, measured by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and mass-spectrometry, we confirmed that reduced CP12 is intrinsically disordered. Using real-time NMR, we showed that the oxidation of the two disulfide bridges is simultaneous. In oxidized CP12, the C23–C31 pair is in a region that undergoes a conformational exchange in the NMR-intermediate time-scale. The C66–C75 pair is in the C-terminus that folds into a stable helical turn. We confirmed that these structural states exist in a physiologically relevant environment: a cell extract from Chlamydo-monas reinhardtii. Consistent with these structural equilibria, the reduction is slower for the C66-C75 pair than for the C23–C31 pair. The redox mid-potentials for the two cysteine pairs differ and are similar to those found for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase and phosphoribulokinase, consistent with the regulatory role of CP12.
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Launay, H., Shao, H., Bornet, O., Cantrelle, F. X., Lebrun, R., Receveur-Brechot, V., & Gontero, B. (2021). Flexibility of oxidized and reduced states of the chloroplast regulatory protein cp12 in isolation and in cell extracts. Biomolecules, 11(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/biom11050701
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