Nature Communications (Aug 2023)

Architecture of the Heme-translocating CcmABCD/E complex required for Cytochrome c maturation

  • Lorena Ilcu,
  • Lukas Denkhaus,
  • Anton Brausemann,
  • Lin Zhang,
  • Oliver Einsle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40881-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Mono- and multiheme cytochromes c are post-translationally matured by the covalent attachment of heme. For this, Escherichia coli employs the most complex type of maturation machineries, the Ccm-system (for cytochrome c maturation). It consists of two membrane protein complexes, one of which shuttles heme across the membrane to a mobile chaperone that then delivers the cofactor to the second complex, an apoprotein:heme lyase, for covalent attachment. Here we report cryo-electron microscopic structures of the heme translocation complex CcmABCD from E. coli, alone and bound to the heme chaperone CcmE. CcmABCD forms a heterooctameric complex centered around the ABC transporter CcmAB that does not by itself transport heme. Our data suggest that the complex flops a heme group from the inner to the outer leaflet at its CcmBC interfaces, driven by ATP hydrolysis at CcmA. A conserved heme-handling motif (WxWD) at the periplasmic side of CcmC rotates the heme by 90° for covalent attachment to the heme chaperone CcmE that we find interacting exclusively with the CcmB subunit.