Papers In Press, published online ahead of print August 20, 2003
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M212685200
Submitted on December 12, 2002
Revised on August 15, 2003
Accepted on August 20, 2003
Export of a heterologous cytochrome P450 (CYP105D1) in Escherichia coli is associated with periplasmic accumulation of uroporphyrin
Kalim M. Akhtar, Naheed N. Kaderbhai, David J. Hopper, Steven L. Kelly, and Mustak A. Kaderbhai
Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, Abersystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 3DD
Corresponding Author: mak{at}aber.ac.uk
This report suggests an important physiological role of a CYP in the accumulation of uroporphyrin I arising from catalytic oxidative conversion of uroporphyrinogen I to uroporphyrin I in the periplasm of Escherichia coli cultured in the presence of 5-aminolevulinic acid. A structurally competent Streptomyces griseus CYP105D1 was expressed as an engineered, exportable form in aerobically-grown Escherichia coli. Its progressive induction in the presence of 5-aminolevulinic acid-supplemented medium was accompanied by an accumulation of over a hundred-fold higher amount of uroporphyrin I in the periplasm relative to cells lacking CYP105D1. Expression of a cytoplasmic-resident engineered CYP105D1 at a comparative level to the secreted form was far less effective in promoting porphyrin accumulation in the periplasm. Expression at ten-fold molar excess over the exported CYP105D1 of another periplasmicallyexported hemoprotein, the globular core of cytochrome b5, did not substitute the role of the periplasmically-localised CYP105D1 in promoting porphyrin production. This, therefore, eliminated the possibility that uroporphyrin accumulation is merely a result of increased hemoprotein synthesis. Moreover, in the strain that secreted CYP105D1, uroporphyrin production was considerably reduced by azole-based P450 inhibitors. Production of both holo CYP105D1 and uroporphyrin was dependent upon 5-aminolevulinic acid, except that at higher concentrations this resulted in a decrease in uroporphyrin. This study suggests that the exported CYP105D1 oxidatively catalyses periplasmic conversion of uroporphyrinogen I to uroporphyrin I in Escherichia coli. The findings have significant implications in the ontogenesis of human uroporphyria-related diseases.