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A look into the biochemistry of magnetosome biosynthesis in magnetotactic bacteria Shiran Barber-Zucker, and Raz Zarivach ACS Chem. Biol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.6b01000 • Publication Date (Web): 08 Dec 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 9, 2016
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ACS Chemical Biology
A look into the biochemistry of magnetosome biosynthesis in magnetotactic
1
bacteria
2 3
Authors: Shiran Barber-Zucker and Raz Zarivach*
4 5
Authors' affiliation:
6
Department of Life Sciences, the National Institute for Biotechnology in the Negev and Ilse
7
Katz Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,
8
Beer Sheva, 8410501, Israel
9 10
* Correspondence should be addressed to Raz Zarivach, Department of Life Sciences, Ben-
11
Gurion University of the Negev, P.O.B. 653, Beer Sheva 8410501, Israel. Tel: +972-8-
12
6461999, Fax: +972-8-6472970, Email:
[email protected] 13 14 15 16
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Abstract
17
Magnetosomes are protein-rich membrane organelles that encapsulate magnetite or greigite
18
and whose chain-alignment enables magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) to sense the geomagnetic
19
field. As these bacteria synthesize uniform magnetic particles, their biomineralization
20
mechanism is of great interest among researchers from different fields, from material
21
engineering to medicine. Both magnetosome formation and magnetic particle synthesis are
22
highly controlled processes that can be divided into several crucial steps: membrane
23
invagination from the inner-cell membrane, protein sorting, the magnetosomes' arrangement
24
into chains, iron transport and chemical environment regulation of the magnetosome lumen,
25
magnetic particle nucleation and finally crystal growth, size and morphology control. This
26
complex system involves an ensemble of unique proteins that participate in different stages
27
during magnetosome formation, some of which were extensively studied in recent years. Here
28
we present the current knowledge on magnetosome biosynthesis with a focus on the different
29
proteins and the main biochemical pathways along this process.
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Keywords
32
Magnetotactic bacteria: Gram negative bacteria that can align themselves according to the
33
geomagnetic field and by that reach a suitable environment for their survival.
34
Magnetosome: a subcellular organelle in magnetotactic bacteria, comprising a magnetic iron
35
mineral enclosed in a protein-rich membrane.
36
Biomineralization: the formation of minerals by living organisms.
37
Magnetosome island: a genomic region in magnetotactic bacteria that encodes for proteins
38
that participate in magnetosome formation.
39
Cation diffusion facilitator: a conserved family of divalent transition metal cation
40
transporters that usually utilize the proton motive force to excrete the metals from the
41
cytoplasm.
42
Major facilitator superfamily: a conserved family of uniporters and cotransporters that
43
facilitates the movement of small molecules through the membrane.
44
Magnetochrome: a small, c-type cytochrome domain that is found uniquely in magnetotactic
45
2+
bacteria and participates in Fe oxidation inside the magnetosome.
46
Protein raft: a defined area in the membrane that is condensed with transmembrane proteins
47
and, similarly to a lipid raft, has specific properties that allow a certain function.
48 49 50 51 52
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Introduction
53
Many organisms are thought to have the ability to sense the geomagnetic field, including 1
54
birds, fish, insects and even humans . In 1963 and 1975 Salvatore Bellini and Richard
55
Blakemore, respectively, independently discovered magnetotactic bacteria (MTB), a group of
56
Gram-negative bacteria that can be found in sediments and aquatic environments and navigate
57
2–4
passively according to the geomagnetic field lines . Since their discovery, MTB have
58
become the most characterized group of organisms that can orient according to a magnetic
59
field. MTB are highly divergent and affiliated to Alpha-, Gamma- and Deltaproteobacteria
60
classes of the Proteobacteria phylum, as well as to the Nitrospirae, Latescibacteria and
61
5–7
Omnitrophica phyla . Today, there are cultivated strains from all the Proteobacteria
62
classes8, but mostly the study of Alphaproteobacteria Magnetospirillum magneticum AMB-1
63
(AMB-1) and Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense MSR-1 (MSR-1) strains in recent years
64
9
contributed to the understanding of the molecular mechanism of MTB .
65
In all MTB strains, the ability to navigate according to the geomagnetic field lines is due to
66
the formation of a chain-like arrangement of magnetosomes, MTB-exclusive organelles in
67
which each is composed of a magnetic particle (magnetite, Fe3O4, or greigite, Fe3S4)
68
encapsulated in a protein-rich membrane10,11. The magnetic particle size and shape varies
69
between different MTB strains but are conserved within each strain, which makes their
70
biomineralization mechanism of great interest to the biotechnology community. The magnetic
71
particle size range is usually ~30–120 nm, the size of a single magnetic domain, and only the
72
alignment of several magnetosomes into a chain or chains (strain-dependent) creates a dipole
73
12
moment . The magnetosome chain's dipole enables the rotation of the bacterium to the
74
direction of the geomagnetic field and allows for its movement according to the field lines
75
using its flagella. This behavior, named magnetotaxis, enables the bacterium to reach a
76
13
suitable, usually oxic-anoxic zone in aquatic ecosystems .
77
The magnetosome membrane and lumen differ from the cytoplasm and its membrane in their
78
compositions, creating together a distinctive environment that enables the biomineralization
79
14
of the magnetic particle . The formation of the magnetosomes themselves and their
80
alignment are highly controlled processes and require a unique set of proteins, most of which
81
are encoded in a conserved genomic segment named the magnetosome island (MAI)
14–16
. The
82
MAI is found in all MTB species and contains a few operons: the most conserved and
83
essential mamAB operon is found in all characterized MTB strains, and other operons such as
84
5,17
mamCDFG, mamXY and mms6 are specific to Alphaproteobacteria
. The proteins encoded
85
by these operons are named magnetosome membrane-associated (Mam) and magnetic particle
86
membrane-specific (Mms) proteins and were widely studied in the past decade. Other sets of
87
magnetosome-related genes are the magnetosome-associated Deltaproteobacteria (mad)
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genes in Deltaproteobacteria, Nitrospirae and Omnitrophica strains and the magnetosome
89
genes in Nitrospirae (man), which started to be characterized recently and whose encoded
90
proteins are thought to have a parallel role to some of the Mam and Mms proteins, but in
91
18,19
different strains
.
92
Mam, Mms, Mad and other related proteins participate in concerted processes that result in
93
the formation of an adult, functioning magnetosome chain or chains. Magnetosome formation
94
begins with membrane invagination to create a separated environment from the cytoplasm,
95
combined with the sorting of specific proteins that are needed for the biomineralization, some
96
of which are exclusively found in the magnetosome. Next, magnetosome alignment into
97
chains and magnetic particle nucleation starts. The final step is the magnetic particle growth
98
into a specific size and morphology (Figure 1)14,20,21. Recent reviews in the field of MTB have
99
9
focused on different scientific aspects of magnetosome biogenesis, such as genetic studies , 22
20
chemical pathways that lead to magnetite formation , protein function
100
and single-protein
101
studies . A comprehensive structural study of magnetosome proteins presented structural
102
modeling with an overview of these proteins studies to gain better understanding of their
103
23
21
function . Here, we review all of the pathways in the magnetosome formation scheme with
104
an emphasis on protein structural studies and the most studied and defined biochemical
105
processes that occur during magnetite biosynthesis: the transport of iron to, into and inside the
106
2+
magnetosome, the oxidation of Fe
and pH regulation to enable magnetite nucleation, and
magnetite growth and morphology control.
107 108 109
Constructing the organic envelope: membrane invagination and protein sorting and
110
activation
111
Nucleation of magnetite or greigite particles requires a specific chemical environment, with a
112
basic pH and a local high iron concentration, for example, and can result in the formation of
113
toxic byproducts24,25. In MTB, the formation of the lipid bilayer magnetosome membrane
114
(MM) creates a distinct environment that allows magnetic particle biomineralization and
115
protects the cell from unnecessary, harmful byproducts26. The MM contains a mass of
116
proteins that facilitate the formation of the required environment and hence creates the
117
21,27,28
suitable space for the particle nucleation and growth
. Many studies have showed that the
118
MM invaginates from the inner cell membrane (CM), a process that is utilized by a few
119
11,29
magnetosome-associated proteins
. The invagination of the MM does not depend on
120
magnetic particle formation, as empty magnetosome vesicles can be found prior to the
121
26
biomineralization process and in non-magnetic MTB strains . It was recently shown that in
122
AMB-1 the membrane grows to a certain size, and only if and when biomineralization starts
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does the membrane expand to a larger size that can contain the mature magnetite30. In some
124
MTB species, at least some of the magnetosomes stay attached to the CM, which can enable
125
better orientation of the whole bacterium in response to the magnetic field
9,29
. It is also
126
speculated that the CM-attached magnetosomes often have an open channel to the periplasmic
127
space that can facilitate the exchange of compounds such as iron with the periplasmic space
128
29,31
. However, it is believed that
129
they are not fully open but at least partially closed, maybe by a plug of proteins, since in an
130
open state the magnetosome lumen is exposed to unnecessary components that can be harmful
131
and affect normal magnetite formation. Yet, the magnetosomes do not remain attached to the
132
CM in all species32, suggesting a variation in membrane biogenesis between different species.
133
A few studies have shown the relationship between MM invagination and the magnetosome-
134
and provide an advantage in nucleation and magnetite growth
associated proteins MamB, Q, L, and Y (and in AMB-1, also MamI)
33,34,28,35
. Recently it was
135
shown by Raschdorf et al. that in the absence of the mamAB operon in MSR-1, only the
136
complementation with seven mam genes – mamL, Q, B, I, E, M, O – resulted in proper
137
magnetosome vesicle synthesis, suggesting that all of these proteins have a critical role in
138
33
membrane biogenesis . This study also found that the most crucial protein for MM formation
139
is MamB, which belongs to the cation diffusion facilitator protein family and hence may also
140
33,36
have a role in ferrous transport into the magnetosome
. All of these proteins are thought to
141
be involved in the physical bending of the membrane or in protein recruitment near the MM
142
nucleation points in the CM, and by that to facilitate its invagination20,21,37.
143
Although invaginated from the CM, the MM protein composition is different from that of the
144
CM, hence protein sorting and activation are needed to enable the formation of the MM itself
145
10,27,38,39
and of the magnetic particle
. Over the years, many studies have associated protein
146
sorting with MamA and MamE, and therefore they will be discussed here in detail. Yet,
147
recently it was suggested that MamL also has a role in the recruitment of magnetite
148
33
maturation-related proteins to the magnetosome . MamA is a conserved cytoplasmic 40
149
protein whose structures from different MTB phyla were solved. All structures contain five
150
(and putatively six) tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) motifs that create three protein-protein
151
41–43
interaction sites: a concave site, a convex site and a putative TPR
(Figure 2a). Self-
152
assembly of MamA creates homo-oligomers that coat the MM from its cytoplasmic side and
153
44
enables interaction with other magnetosome-associated proteins (such as Mms6 , as will be
154
discussed later), presumably with its convex site41,45 (Figure 2a). MamE is an HtrA/DegP
155
serine protease that was shown, in a few studies, to affect magnetosome-associated proteins’
156
localizations and therefore to have a role in protein sorting28,46. MamE contains a trypsin-like
157
domain, two cytochrome domains and two PDZ domains. In the absence of MamE, no
158
magnetic particles are formed and a few magnetosome proteins changed their localization,
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and in MamE protease's catalytic domain mutated form, smaller magnetic particles were 46,47
160
. These particles are smaller than are required to form a magnetic dipole, which
161
raised the hypothesis that the cells produce small magnetic particles and only when some
162
obtained
46
signal activates MamE does the maturation of the particles to their paramagnetic form start .
163
MamE’s proteolytic activity includes a self-cleaving activity and cleavage of the
164
magnetosome-associated proteins MamO and MamP, processes that require MamO's ion-
165
47–50
transporter TauE domain
. Stimulated by substrates, MamE was shown to sequentially
166
auto-cleave small fragments from its C-terminal in vivo and in vitro. Furthermore, ligand-
167
47
binding to both PDZ domains activates its auto-processing . Although MamE contains two
168
cytochrome domains, there is no experimental evidence that these domains or their redux-
169
47
related activity impacts MamE’s proteolytic regulation . Altogether, a switch-like mode of
170
regulation was suggested for MamE, in which the protease domain requires a specific
171
environment to be activated and the balance between its active and inactive states is needed
172
for a proper biomineralization process47.
173
A recent study suggested that, firstly, a membrane of a certain size is formed with the same
174
interior conditions as the periplasm, and once proper conditions for magnetite formation are
175
achieved, magnetite nucleation starts followed by membrane and magnetite growth (Figure
176
1). The size restriction prior to nucleation allows supersaturation of iron to facilitate
177
30
nucleation . Together with the switch-like mode that was proposed for MamE, it was
178
suggested
179
that
proteolysis by MamE is
the
switch that
controls the
crystal
47
nucleation/membrane growth .
180 181
Lining up: alignment of magnetosomes into chains
182
The magnetic particles inside the magnetosomes are in the size of a single magnetic domain,
183
therefore only the establishment of a magnetosome chain or chains (strain-dependent) can
184
result in a dipole moment and the weak-geomagnetic field sensing. Although it seems logical
185
that the chains will be formed mostly due to the magnetic attraction between the
186
magnetosomes, only a few studies showed this relationship and most of the studies associated
187
29,51–53
chain formation with the protein MamK
. With the cytoplasmic, acidic and putatively
188
unstructured protein MamJ serving as an anchor, the magnetosomes are attached to a long,
189
filamentous structure made of the actin-like protein MamK that stretches from one end of the
190
cell to the other
54,55,52
. MamK contains an ATP binding site (as other actin-like proteins do)
191
and its assembly depends on the hydrolysis of ATP in all studied species, on salt
192
56–58
concentrations and on the presence of magnesium in some strains
. As MamK’s surface is 57
largely hydrophobic, the salt concentration is thought to control and limit filament assembly .
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A 6.5 Å resolution EM structure of MamK confirmed its previously suggested double56,58
195
. This was supported by a recent study
196
that achieved an EM structure of AMB-1 MamK filaments at 3.6 Å resolution combined with
197
stranded, non-staggered organization (Figure 2b)
59
a monomeric 1.8 Å resolution crystal structure . MamK monomers are made of four
198
canonical domains (two domains that are each divided into two subdomains: IA, IIA, IB and
199
56,59
. The
200
transition from monomer to filament assembly involves the binding of subdomain IIA to both
201
subdomains IB and IIB from the previous protomer, which results in them getting closer to
202
each other. The tighter cleft that is formed in the polymerization and the movement of key
203
residues are thought to facilitate the ATP hydrolysis into ADP59. The longitudinal contacts in
204
each strand are based on hydrophobic interactions, electrostatic attraction, salt bridges and
205
hydrogen bonds between the positively charged top edges and negatively charged bottom
206
edges of the monomers (Figure 2b). Big gaps separate MamK's strands and there is a small
207
number of interactions between the strands and a small interaction area compared to other
208
IIB), with an ADP molecule found in a cavity between two domains (Figure 2b)
56,59
actin-like proteins (Figure 2b)
. Overall, the most current study on AMB-1 MamK
209
suggested that after invagination, magnetosomes are aligned discontinuously to an axis in a
210
MamK-independent manner and that MamK filaments have a role in closing the gaps to
211
create a long, continuous magnetosome chain, either by recruiting misaligned magnetosomes
212
into these empty locations or by pulling the existing magnetosomes together to create a more
213
30
compact packing .
214 215
Starting to biomineralize: nucleation of magnetic particle
216
To initiate biomineralization – that is, to enable iron condensation into magnetite nuclei – a
217
high concentration of iron and a proper chemical environment are required. As one of the key
218
aspects in biomineralization, deciphering the proteins' nucleation-related mechanisms has
219
been of great interest to researchers in the MTB field. The main steps that were characterized
220
in recent years regarding magnetite nucleation and that will be discussed here are: iron
221
transport from the cytoplasm, through the MM and within the magnetosome; pH regulation in
222
the magnetosome; the oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+; and the formation of ferrihydrite as a
223
precursor and its transformation to magnetite (Figure 3a).
224
In order to form magnetite, an effective mechanism for iron transport into the magnetosomes
225
is needed. In the Deltaproteobacteria strain RS-1, which lives in anoxic environments where
226
iron is mostly in ferrous form, it was recently shown that ferrous ions accumulates in the cell
227
as FeP granules and is then converted to other forms of iron: ferritin, magnetite and mostly
228
60
ferrous FeS
(although there are multiple intramembrane organelles in RS-1, there is
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contradicting evidence as to whether the magnetite itself is enclosed in a lipid membrane61,62,
230
therefore the compartmentalization of the iron forms is not clear). In AMB-1, the model
231
bacterial strain that lives under microoxic conditions, it was shown that Fe is stored in a
232
phosphate-rich ferric hydroxide phase in the cytoplasm, which is consistent with prokaryotic
233
ferritins and the expected iron state in the microoxic environment. Then, Fe and P are
234
22,63
. The current literature regarding
235
magnetosome proteins leads to the assumption that the iron is transported into the
236
magnetosomes in the form of ferrous rather than ferric ions. In that case, the existence of a
237
phosphate-rich ferric hydroxide phase before the Fe-P separation requires redox factors in the
238
cytoplasm that should be found very close to the magnetosome membrane. These factors are
239
presently unknown but we speculate that the membrane-associated ferritins, which can store
240
ferric ions and cause the nucleation of the FeP phase, have at least a partial role in the
241
oxidation-reduction process. Nevertheless, the difference in the environment redox conditions
242
and the iron forms suggests a link between these factors in MTB60. The magnetosomal cation
243
diffusion facilitator (CDF) proteins MamB and MamM are associated with iron transport into
244
separated and the Fe is transported into the magnetosome
36
the magnetosome . CDF proteins transport divalent transition metal cations from the
245
cytoplasm to the extracellular environment or into intercellular compartments, usually by
246
exploiting the proton motive force. These proteins are conserved in all domains of life and are
247
crucial for normal function of the cell and, as such, they are of great interest and were widely
248
64
studied in the past two decades . CDF proteins’ structures consist of a six-helix
249
transmembrane domain (TMD) and typically a cytoplasmic C-terminal domain (CTD) with a
250
36,64
metallocheparone-like fold, and they usually form homodimers
. The MamM CTD
251
structure from MSR-1 was solved and well characterized (Figure 3b); it binds iron and zinc in
252
vitro, which facilitates a CTD conformational change to a tighter packing and this, in turn,
253
was suggested to promote a conformational change of the TMD to allow cation transport
254
65
through the membrane . Deletion of full mamM or only its CTD and specific point mutations
255
within its CTD result in no magnetic particle formation36,66. Furthermore, specific loss-of-
256
structure of its CTD and mutations in its TM and CTD putative metal binding sites caused
257
36,65–67
defects in magnetite formation
. MamM stabilizes MamB and both were shown to
258
interact, presumably via their CTDs, suggesting that they are forming not only homodimers
259
36
but also heterodimers . In contrast to MamM, deletion of mamB results in the lack of the MM
260
and mutations within its TMD metal binding-site abolished magnetite formation28,36. MamB
261
and MamM are mainly found in the MM rather than the CM and were shown to have a role in
262
the accumulation of iron in the magnetosome specifically, meaning that a special mechanism
263
is required for their location-related function, maybe by interaction with other magnetosome-
264
related proteins36. The difference between their phenotypes and the fact that they cannot
265
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compensate for each other suggests that MamB and MamM have distinct roles in
266
magnetosome formation in general and in magnetite nucleation in particular.
267
By exploiting the proton motive force for metal transfer, the CDF proteins are also assumed
268
36
to affect the pH in the magnetosome lumen . MamB and MamM most likely cause to the
269
increasing of the magnetosome lumen pH and by that optimize the conditions for magnetite
270
growth that requires basic pH (the formation of magnetite releases eight protons per
271
magnetite: 2Fe3+ + Fe2+ + 4H2O Fe3O4 + 8H+)31. Since the number of released protons in
272
magnetite formation is much larger than the consumed iron, the CDF proteins are not
273
sufficient and other systems are required for proton extermination. Another protein that was
274
+
+
suggested to have a role in pH regulation is MamN, a Na /H antiporter homolog in whose
275
absence no crystals (AMB-1) or smaller crystals (MSR-1) were produced21,28,35. Additionally,
276
50
another protein, MamP, also helps in exporting protons, as will be discussed below .
277
Containing the major facilitator superfamily (MFS) domain, MamH and MamZ are suspected
278
68
to take part in the regulation of the chemical environment in the magnetosome . Concerning
279
MamH, its predicted structure contains a negative cavity and its deletion results in a decrease
280
in magnetic response – both suggest a role in iron transport. Besides the MFS domain, MamZ
281
contains also a ferric reductase TM component; the combination of these domains suggests
282
that MamZ has an active part in iron transport or as a mediator
21,68
.
283
In the presence of ferric reductases and the CDF proteins, magnetosomes accumulate Fe2+
284
rather than Fe3+. Since magnetite formation requires Fe3+ as well, oxidation of the ferrous
285
form into the ferric is required. The ferric reductase domain of MamZ is not the only
286
component that is thought to take part in this process; each of MamP, MamX, MamT and
287
MamE contain CXXCH heme-binding c-type cytochrome motifs – magnetochromes – which
288
68–70
are specific to MTB and represent a new type of cytochrome 70
conserved in all MTB
. MamE and MamP are 46–48,50
and their deletion causes defects in magnetite formation
289
. The
290
crystal structure of the soluble part of MamP from MO-1 strain sheds light on the
291
magnetochrome domain and redox control in MTB50. The MamP monomers contain a flexible
292
arm, a PDZ domain and two small c-type cytochrome domains (magnetochrome domain 1 or
293
2, also known as MCR 1 or 2), and they form dimers or tetramers in a pH-dependent manner
294
(Figure 3c). The 23-residue magnetochrome domain contains a single-heme binding site and
295
is one of the smallest heme-binding domains known in nature. Two iron cations can be bound
296
50
2+
within an in-dimer cavity that is surrounded by the MCRs . MamP was shown to oxidize Fe
297
in alkaline pH in vitro, with maximum activity at a pH that fits in vitro magnetite synthesis –
298
2+
four Fe are oxidized per MamP dimer
48,50
. The reduction potential of AMB-1 MamP is in a 2+
different range than other c-type cytochromes, with lower overpotential to oxidize Fe 3+
can prevent the re-reduction of Fe
299
that
300
to Fe . This suggests a mechanism for MamP in
301
2+
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controlling the Fe2+-Fe3+ ratio within the magnetosome so that the magnetite can grow 48
302
without defects . The dimension and nature of the MamP cavity, the presence of a conserved
303
proton exit channel at its bottom and the four hemes within the dimer (Figure 3c) are well-
304
2+
2+
+ 7H2O
305
(2Fe2O3*H2O) + 12H + 4e . Overall, MamP is thought to oxidize ferrous to ferrihydrite as a
306
suited for the chemistry of ferrihydrite formation from Fe : 4Fe +
50
2+
precursor of magnetite, and once MamP is fully reduced, the addition of Fe
causes the
50
307
transformation of ferrihydrite to magnetite, similar to magnetite formation in vitro .
308
Nonetheless, although MamP and also MamT heme-binding sites were shown to be required
309
for proper magnetite crystallization in AMB-1, their deletion and mutants retain the ability to
310
form magnetite. Therefore, it is assumed that they both probably have a more important role
311
in crystal growth than in nucleation48,71.
312
As mentioned before, MamO's TauE transporter domain is required for activation of MamE
313
protease activity. As TauE proteins were suggested to act as transporters of sulfur-containing
314
47,49
organic molecules, and with the evidence regarding MamE’s ligand-dependent activity
, it
315
is possible that the activation of MamE depends on a specific chemical composition inside the
316
magnetosome that is controlled by MamO. Due to the similarity between sulfate and
317
phosphate compounds, we are tempted to suggest that MamO transports phosphate-containing
318
organic molecules that originate in the periplasmic space. As phosphate inhibits magnetite
319
formation72, it can explain why it should be excreted before the magnetite nucleates and
320
19
grows. In contrast, as MamO is also found in greigite-forming MTB it is possible that it has
321
a role in controlling the sulfur concentration for proper magnetite and greigite nucleation.
322
Since both scenarios seem sensible, further studies on MamO's TauE domain are required to
323
elucidate its role. Biochemical and structural analysis of MamO's serine-protease domain
324
indicates that MamO also has a role in iron transport for magnetite nucleation inside the
325
49
magnetosome . Although sharing high similarity to serine proteases, MamO protease activity
326
is degenerated and its crystal structure lacks features that are essential for protease activity.
327
Nonetheless, the crystal structure of this domain revealed a di-histidine transition metal
328
binding site that is required for magnetite formation in vivo (Figure 3d), which suggests that
329
the protease domain of MamO binds iron and by that leads the ions into the crystal lattice,
330
facilitating its nucleation49.
331
The protein MamI presumably contains two TM helices with an inter-magnetosome loop that
332
was thought to take part in the MM banding during invagination, but was recently shown to
333
21,73
bind magnetite in vitro
. No MM biogenesis was observed in AMB-1 cells that lack
334
mamI , while in MSR-1 not only was the MM formed but also small iron oxide particles
335
28
33,35
were observed
. Altogether, this suggests that MamI has a role in the transition from 73
unordered condensed iron oxides to magnetite .
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338 The final touchup: control of size and morphology
339
One of the main reasons that MTB interest researchers in the biotechnology field is that each
340
MTB strain biomineralizes magnetic particles in uniform size and morphology yet in a unique
341
strain-dependent form. Magnetite growth involves a set of proteins that controls the final size
342
and shape of the particles, some of which have been intensively studied during recent years
343
20,21
by the MTB research community
. There are six, small, membrane-integrated proteins in
344
the Alphaproteobacteria strains encoded by the mamCDFG and mms6 operons that were well
345
characterized and their function will be discussed here in detail: MamC (or Mms13), MamD
346
(or Mms7), MamF, MamG (or Mms5), MmsF and Mms6. As these proteins are not encoded
347
by Deltaproteobacteria, Omnitrophica and Nitrospirae stains – which form bullet-shaped
348
magnetite particles or greigite particles – it is thought that some of the mad and man genes
349
18,19
encode proteins with similar roles, but thus far there is no evidence for that
.
350
MamC, D and G and Mms6 were shown to be tightly bound to magnetite and, as their
351
encoding genes are absent from all bullet-shape synthesizing strains that were studied so far,
352
they are thought to be involved specifically in cubo-octahedral shaped magnetite particles’
353
74,75
. They all contain a conserved hydrophobic N-terminal domain (NTD)
354
with 1–2 TM helices, which in all of them but MamC contain a leucine-glycine (LG) repeat
355
morphology control
21,27,74
that is also found in other known biomineralization-related proteins
. This domain was
356
hypothesized to create a self-assembly of these proteins – together, in some combination of
357
them or separately – which forms a wide inner-lumen domain that might interact with the
358
23,75
magnetite more steadily
.
359
An early study on the deletion of AMB-1 mms6 phenotypes showed a decrease in magnetite
360
size, a different length-to-width ratio (elongated crystals) compared to WT, and a high energy
361
76
crystal face, which suggest that in its absence magnetite crystallization is not finished . A
362
later study showed similar-but-milder phenotypic effects when mms6 was deleted in the same
363
strain and suggested that the differences in the earlier study were due to lower expression
364
levels of MmsF – another important protein for magnetite size regulation77. When comparing
365
in vitro magnetite synthesis without and with Mms6, the latter showed a larger fraction of
366
magnetite rather than other iron oxides’ forms, a narrower size distribution of magnetite
367
74,78,79
particles, and particles with a similar shape to that of magnetosomes' magnetite
. Mms6
368
contains a cytoplasmic, random-coiled NTD, a TM helix and an acidic CTD that is found
369
21,23
inside the magnetosome lumen
. It has been known for years that Mms6 undergoes 27,74
proteolytic cleavage to create a functional 6 kDa C-terminal truncated protein
370
, but it was
371
recently shown that both the full and truncated versions of Mms6 are found in the MM and
372
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that the full length protein interacts with MamA44. It is not known what the function is of 23,80
373
, but we
374
speculate that Mms6 NTD, when it appears, binds to MamA in order to create a specific
375
distribution of Mms6 in the MM to enable the cubo-octahedral shape of the magnetite
376
particles. In contrast to the NTD, the Mms6 acidic CTD function was well studied: the CTD
377
Mms6 NTD, as it is cleaved in some strains and does not appear in others
74,78,81
by itself can form homogenous magnetite crystals in vitro and was shown to bind iron
. It
378
was recently shown by NMR studies that the 20 C-terminal residues of Mms6 bind Fe more
379
2+
3+
specifically than Fe , which suggests that it facilitates the formation of magnetite from the 82
380
ferrous-rich environment inside the magnetosome . It was also shown that the pH impacts the
381
function of Mms6 (both in iron binding and magnetite precipitation) and its micelle
382
23,82,83
morphology
. In vivo studies of Mms6 have just recently indicated that the LG repeat and
383
the C-terminal acidic domain are required for its localization within the MM and onto the
384
magnetic particle surface, and that three specific acidic residues within the C-terminus are
385
crucial for its function in crystal growth and morphology control84. As Mms6 was shown to
386
self-assemble in vitro, since it has a similar function in magnetite formation in vitro and in
387
vivo and based on experimental evidences, it is hypothesized that specific hydrophobic
388
interactions cause its self-assembly in the MM as well (presumably via the LG repeat and
389
maybe together with MamD and MamG, which also contain this repeat). This assembly will
390
create a protein raft in the membrane with a large acidic surface inside the presumably-basic
391
magnetosome lumen and bind both iron forms in a favorable energetic geometry that
392
promotes magnetite formation specifically and by that affects its growth23 (Figure 4a).
393
MmsF and MamF are homologous proteins whose co-deletion causes a decrease in crystal
394
35,77
. Each protein contains three TM helices, in which the loops between the
395
two N-terminal helices in both proteins and the C-terminal tail of MmsF are rich with acidic
396
size and number
residues and are found in the magnetosome lumen
21,85
. Hence, they are assumed to bind
397
magnetite and by that to impact the maturation phase of magnetite formation. MamF in MSR-
398
1 was shown to form stable oligomers in vivo whereas MmsF was shown to self-assemble in
399
vitro
27,85
. In a co-precipitation assay with iron, the latter assemblies were shown to form
400
similar magnetite particles to AMB-1's, which further signifies its contribution to proper
401
85
magnetite formation .
402
MamC is the most abundant protein in the MM whose encoding gene deletion results in
403
slightly smaller magnetite particles and was suggested to have a role in magnetite size
404
75,86,87
control
. MamC contains two integral TM helices with an acidic inter-lumen helical loop
405
whose structure was recently solved by X-ray crystallography21,88 (Figure 4b). The helical
406
loop contains two charge-separated regions and it can bind magnetite particles. As with the
407
88
full-MamC, the loop improves magnetite formation in vitro . It contains two ~8 Å distant
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acidic residues that impact the ability of the loop to bind magnetite; as the iron atoms are
409
separated by ~6 Å in the cubo-octahedral magnetite and considering the conformational
410
freedom of these residues, it was suggested that the two residues interact directly with the iron
411
88
ions in the magnetite surface and serve as a template for magnetite nucleation and growth
412
(Figure 4b). Since in in vitro precipitation of iron with MamC forms magnetite with missing
413
corners, it was suggested that MamC might also impact crystal morphology by a face-specific
414
89
interaction .
415
Deletion of the mms7 gene in AMB-1 (also known as mamD) results in a decrease in
416
magnetite particle minor axis size and a different crystal face compared to WT bacteria
75,90
.
417
Recently, it was shown that mms7 expression induction in AMB-1 changes the morphology of
418
the crystal from elongated dumbbell-shaped (no Mms7) to a spherical particle (high
419
90
expression levels of mms7) . Mms7 contains the LG repeat in its MM-integral hydrophobic
420
NTD and a hydrophilic, inter-lumen CTD that is thought to interact with the magnetic
421
21
particle . When the latter domain was introduced into an in vitro mineralization assay 2+
3+
422
together with MamP, it did not influence green rust (a mixed valence Fe -Fe form of iron
423
oxide) formation as a precursor to magnetite. However, whereas in the lack of Mms7 the
424
green rust was fully oxidized with exposure to air, the Mms7 C-terminal peptide somehow
425
48
protected the iron oxide form and maintained the green rust . Altogether, Mms7 is suggested 2+
3+
426
to have a role not only in size and morphology control but also in regulation of the Fe -Fe
427
ratio in the crystal surface and templating of the crystal lattice.
428
MamG is a MamD and Mms6 homolog and is found exclusively in the MM27,87,91. It contains
429
two TM helices and the loop that connects them is suspected to interact with magnetite,
430
21
similar to the MamC loop . When deleting each protein, similar phenotypes were observed
431
with smaller magnetite size in all dimensions, which suggests a role of MamG in size
432
75
control .
433
Together, all of these proteins constitute the vast majority of the MM proteins and some of
434
them have a similar impact on the bacterium’s function. The fact that the bacteria put so much
435
effort into producing such a complicated system shows how important the specific
436
morphology and size of the magnetic particles are in these bacteria, for a reason that is not yet
437
clear. Nonetheless, nature gave us a wonderful living model that we can utilize for the
438
synthesis of uniform magnetic particles in vitro for different bio/nanotechnology applications
439
– a field of a broad interest that is now being studied by many groups around the world.
440 441
Acknowledgments
442
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The authors are supported by the Israel Ministry of Science, Technology and Space, the Israel
443
Science Foundation (grant n° 761676), the European Molecular Biology Organization and
444
CMST COST Action CM1306. We would like to thank S. Cronin for his help with the
445
manuscript.
446 447
** The authors declare no competing financial interest.
448 449
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Page 16 of 31
Figure legends (1)–(2)
451
Magnetosome membrane invaginates from the inner cell membrane, (3) The lumen
452
composition is modified, (4) Magnetic particle nucleation, (5) Magnetosome membrane and
453
magnetic particle growth, and (6)–(8) Alignment of magnetosomes into chains.
454
Figure 2. Proteins that participate in magnetosome organization. a) MamA participates in
455
protein sorting. Up: MamA self-assembly coats the magnetosome membrane and interacts
456
with magnetosome-associated proteins. Down: AMB-1 MamA structure (PDB code: 3AS541)
457
exhibits five TPR motifs that create concave and convex protein-protein interaction sites. b)
458
MamK assembly into filaments aligns the magnetosomes into a chain or chains (PDB code:
459
Figure
1.
Magnetosome
450 formation
scheme.
Left-to-right
magnetosomes:
56
5jyg ). Up: Surface representation of MamK monomers assembled into double-stranded
460
(green and blue) non-staggered filaments. Down: Four monomers in the filaments’ assembly,
461
with AMP and residues that participate in the subunits' interactions presented as sticks.
462
Intermolecular interactions are enlarged: in the longitudinal (i-1, i) interface hydrophobic
463
interactions between domains IB (i-1) and IA (i) are presented whereas in the longitudinal (i,
464
i+1) interface the electrostatic interactions between domains IIB (i) and IIA (i+1) are
465
presented. The inter-strand assembly (top right, green and blue) relies on a small number of
466
92
interactions. All images were produced using PyMol .
467
Figure 3. Structure and function of proteins that participate in magnetosome lumen chemical
468
composition modification and magnetic particle nucleation. a) General scheme of
469
magnetosome lumen chemical environment modification: iron is stored in the cytoplasm in
470
2+
the form of FeP, which breaks down to Fe and P (Magnetospirillum); MamB (pink), MamM
471
(purple), MamH and MamZ (dark blue and green) participate in iron transport into the
472
magnetosome; MamE (yellow), MamP (light green), MamT (brown) and MamX (red) in the
473
2+
oxidation of Fe ; MamB, MamM, MamN (light blue) and MamP in the extraction of protons;
474
MamO (orange) in iron transport to the magnetic particle surface and in S/P extraction. b)
475
MamM CTD dimer structure in the apo form (PDB code: 3w5y65). Putative binding site
476
residues are presented as sticks. c) MamP dimer structure in the iron-bound state (PDB code:
477
4jj350) with the heme ligands bound in each of the four magnetochrome domains. Close-up
478
views, left-to-right: the acidic residues in the iron binding pocket and the histidine residues in
479
the proton channel are shown as sticks and magnetochrome domains 1 and 2 with their
480
CXXCH motifs presented as sticks. In all close up views, the heme ligands are presented as
481
49
yellow sticks. d) MamO protease domain structure in Ni-bound state (PDB code: 5hma ).
482
The histidine pair is presented as sticks with the bound nickel in yellow.
483
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Figure 4. Magnetite size and morphology control. a) The presumed assembly of the
484
Alphaproteobacteria proteins MamC (yellow), MamD (purple), MamF (orange), MamG
485
(red), Mms6 (blue) and MmsF (green) in the membrane forms an inter-lumen negative
486
surface that can interact with the magnetic particle’s surface and affect its size and shape. The
487
greater the abundance of the protein in the magnetosome, the more it appears in the figure
488
(ratio is not exact; MamC and MamF are the most and second-most abundant proteins in the
489
membrane, all others are highly abundant but as their ratios are unknown they appear the
490
same number of times in the figure). b) Crystal structure of MamC inter-lumen loop (PDB
491
88
code: 5e7u ) shows two acidic residues that face the same direction and are thought to
492
interact with the magnetic particle’s iron atoms, and a positively charged arginine that faces
493
the negatively charged membrane surface.
494 495
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Abstract figure 65x27mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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