Applied Sciences (Oct 2021)

Cytochrome <i>c</i><sub>M</sub> Is Probably a Membrane Protein Similar to the C Subunit of the Bacterial Nitric Oxide Reductase

  • Tomás Rodríguez-Gil,
  • Alejandro Torrado,
  • Macarena Iniesta-Pallarés,
  • Consolación Álvarez,
  • Vicente Mariscal,
  • Fernando P. Molina-Heredia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11209396
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 20
p. 9396

Abstract

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Cytochrome cM was first described in 1994 and its sequence has been found in the genome of manifold cyanobacterial species ever since. Numerous studies have been carried out with the purpose of determining its function, but none of them has given place to conclusive results so far. Many of these studies are based on the assumption that cytochrome cM is a soluble protein located in the thylakoid lumen of cyanobacteria. In this work, we have reevaluated the sequence of cytochrome cM, with our results showing that its most probable 3D structure is strongly similar to that of the C subunit of the bacterial nitric oxide reductase. The potential presence of an α-helix tail, which could locate this protein in the thylakoid membrane, further supports this hypothesis, thus providing a new, unexpected role for this redox protein.

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