Published May 25, 2021
| Version v1
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Post-translational flavinylation is associated with diverse extracytosolic redox functionalities throughout bacterial life
Creators
- 1. University of California, Berkeley
- 2. University of Chicago
Description
Disparate redox activities that take place beyond the bounds of the prokaryotic cell cytosol must connect to membrane or cytosolic electron pools. Proteins post-translationally flavinylated by the enzyme ApbE mediate electron transfer in several characterized extracytosolic redox systems but the breadth of functions of this modification remains unknown. Here we present a comprehensive bioinformatic analysis of 31,910 prokaryotic genomes that provides evidence of extracytosolic ApbEs within ~50% of bacteria and the involvement of flavinylation in numerous uncharacterized biochemical processes. By mining flavinylation-associated gene clusters, we identify five protein classes responsible for transmembrane electron transfer and two domains of unknown function (DUF2271 and DUF3570) that are flavinylated by ApbE. We observe flavinylation/iron transporter gene colocalization patterns that implicate functions in iron reduction and assimilation. We find associations with characterized and uncharacterized respiratory oxidoreductases that highlight roles of flavinylation in respiratory electron transport chains. Finally, we identify interspecies gene cluster variability consistent with flavinylation/cytochrome functional redundancies and discover a class of "multi-flavinylated proteins'' that may resemble multiheme cytochromes in facilitating longer distance electron transfer. These findings provide key mechanistic insight into an important facet of bacterial physiology and establish flavinylation as a functionally diverse mediator of extracytosolic electron transfer.
Data availability
All data generated or analysed during this study are included in the manuscript and supporting files.
The following previously published data sets were used:
Parks D Chuvochina Waite Rinke Skarshewski Chaumeil Hugenholtz (2019) NCBI/GTDB ID 30148503. A standardized bacterial taxonomy based on genome phylogeny substantially revises the tree of life (release R04-RS89). https://data.gtdb.ecogenomic.org/releases/release89/
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.7554/eLife.66878
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:9892
Funding
- National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- K22 AI144031
- Ford Foundation
- Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
- Innovative Genomics Institute