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Journal of Virology, August 2009, p. 8266-8269, Vol. 83, No. 16
0022-538X/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00289-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Institute of Life Science and School of Medicine, Swansea University, Swansea SA2 8PP, United Kingdom,1 Department of Biochemistry,2 Center for Molecular Toxicology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 372323
Received 10 February 2009/ Accepted 2 June 2009
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Acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus is the largest known virus, which grows in amoeba (5). In 2004, the 1.2-Mbp genome of mimivirus (GenBank accession no. AY653733) was sequenced (9). Its genome is larger than that of several bacteria and archaea and is predicted to encode 911 proteins, among which only 298 have predicted functions. Many atypical proteins are predicted to be encoded by the mimivirus genome, including key protein translation enzymes, a full complement of DNA repair pathway components, and the unique presence of three different topoisomerases (9). Interestingly, among genes never yet reported to occur in a virus, mimivirus contained two putative gene sequences predicted to encode cytochrome P450 enzymes (GenBank accession no. YP_142886 and YP_143162, also known as MIMI_L532 and MIMI_L808, respectively). First, YP_142886 is a putative protein of 468 amino acids in length. In a BLASTP search, this putative CYP protein showed homology to a range of bacterial P450 proteins, including a P450 protein from Chloroflexus aurantiacus (23% identity) and CYP171 from Streptomyces peucetius (23% identity). Additionally, YP_142886 also showed homology at the same level to nematode P450 proteins, including Caenorhabditis briggsae CYP37B1 (25% identity) and a P450 protein from the sea squirt Ciona intestinalis similar to the CYP4 family (24% identity). Efforts in our laboratory to express the YP_142886 gene and verify that it indeed encodes a cytochrome P450 have been unsuccessful, but additional attempts are in progress. The mimivirus protein YP_143886 was designated CYP5254A1 by David Nelson (http://drnelson.utmem.edu/CytochromeP450.html).
The second putative mimivirus CYP protein (YP_143162) showed in a BLASTP search the strongest homology to CYP51 proteins (7) from a variety of organisms, including protozoal CYP51 proteins from, e.g., Leishmania major (23% identity); plant CYP51 proteins from, e.g., Arabidopsis thaliana (22% identity); and fungal CYP51 proteins from, e.g., Aspergillus fumigatus (21% identity). This homology is low, strongly suggesting the absence of a functional link. Further analysis of the YP_143162 709-amino-acid sequence revealed this putative CYP protein to be approximately 200 residues longer than its closest CYP homologues, and this protein was proposed to comprise a fused protein domain of unknown function, with the best homologies to lipopolysaccharide core biosynthesis glycosyl transferase from Proteus mirabilis HI4320 (26% identity), integral membrane sensor signal transduction histidine kinase from Dinoroseobacter shibae DFL 12 (24% identity), a short region of dysferlin from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (35% identity), and pierisin-1 (NAD-DNA ADP-ribosyltransferase) from Pieris rapae (24% identity). Interestingly, several putative posttranslational modifications, including one N glycosylation site, a protein kinase C phosphorylation site, four casein kinase II phosphorylation sites, and three myristoylation sites, were predicted to exist in this C-terminal extension peptide, representing the first time these specific modifications were present in a P450 molecule.
Historically, a protein can be identified as a cytochrome P450 through the production of the carbon monoxide (CO)-bound form of the reduced (sodium dithionite-treated) pigment, which has an intense absorption band at 450 nm (8). Following isopropyl β-D-thiogalactopyranoside-induced expression of the full-length YP_143162 gene, utilizing the T7 promoter of the Escherichia coli expression vector pET17b (Novagen), only a protein producing a Soret maximum at 420 nm, recognized as the misfolded, incorrect form of CYP, was detected in reduced-difference CO spectrophotometry. Alterations in temperature, coexpression with molecular chaperones GroES and GroEL of E. coli (which allow production of active and correctly folded human P450s [4]), and the use of different E. coli strains for recombinant protein expression did not produce correctly folded YP_143162 (data not shown). Analysis of the primary sequence revealed the presence of a putative membrane-spanning segment located from residue 2 to 19 which may interfere with the expression of correctly folded P450 (1). A modified YP_143162 gene sequence encoding an insertion of alanine at amino acid position 2 was generated by PCR. This N-terminally truncated enzyme (Fig. 1A), expressed as a correctly folded CYP protein, generated a characteristic reduced-CO-difference spectrum with a maximum at 448 nm (Fig. 1B). Cell fractionation revealed the truncated protein to be associated with the membrane fraction following ultracentrifugation at 100,000 x g, and no CYP protein was detected in the E. coli cytoplasm, thus necessitating the use of detergents to purify the enzyme. The truncated but membrane-bound enzyme was expressed at CYP levels of >1,000 nmol P450/liter of culture, with supplementation of the growth medium with the heme precursor
-aminolevulinic acid increasing heme-incorporated CYP expression levels approximately twofold, to 2,000 to 3,000 nmol P450/liter of culture. Truncated YP_143162 was the major band observed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel (Fig. 1C), with the molecular mass estimated to be 78 kDa, in agreement with the predicted molecular mass of the truncated protein. The absolute absorbance spectrum of the purified (oxidized, Fe3+) YP_143162 protein showed a Soret band at 419 nm and
and β bands at 572 and 536 nm, while reduction with sodium dithionite (Fe2+) resulted in a typical Soret peak shift to 417 nm. Most CYP enzymes are purified in a low-spin state with a water molecule hexacoordinated to the CYP heme iron, as indicated by a peak at 390 nm in the absolute spectrum. Substrate or inhibitor addition shifts the heme to the high-spin state, as indicated by a peak at 419 nm in the absolute spectrum, which can be the case when imidazole, used to purify the protein, binds to the heme iron. Continued dialysis for removal of the imidazole from the protein resulted in a shift from a high- to a low-spin state. Furthermore, quantification of the iron content (2) of YP_143162 (0.97 ± 0.06 atoms of iron per heme-containing molecule of YP_143162) indicated that there is one atom of iron per heme-containing molecule of YP_143162, confirming one atom of iron associated with the heme of this P450 protein. Given the weak homology of YP_143162 to sterol-metabolizing CYP proteins, the binding of the sterols lanosterol and obtusifoliol as well as the final A. polyphaga sterol end product ergosterol to purified enzyme was investigated as previously described (3). No evidence of sterol binding or metabolism was obtained (data not shown). Such data can be confirmed by the fact that the key motif aGQHTSs (which is involved in catalysis, includes an invariant H in all CYP51 proteins to date [6], and corresponds to a negatively charged residue [D/E] in other P450 families) is missing in YP_143162 (Fig. 2A). Additionally, YP_143162 did not cluster with any CYP51 proteins but mapped to a distinct and separate branch on the tree (Fig. 2B). A homology model was generated for mimivirus YP_143162 protein on the basis of the resolved P450 crystal structures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CYP51 (Protein Data Bank accession no. 1E9X) and flavocytochrome CYP102A1 from Bacillus megaterium (Protein Data Bank accession no. 1JPZ). YP_143162 is predicted to adopt a typical P450 fold reflecting the similarity in helix assignment. It was possible to confirm the likely heme-coordinating residue (C425), and the EXXR motif, present in nearly all P450 proteins and involved in heme binding and P450 architecture, is also conserved in YP_143162 (Fig. 3). Consequently, the mimivirus protein YP_143162 was designated CYP5253A1 (http://drnelson.utmem.edu/CytochromeP450.html).
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FIG. 1. Purification and spectral characterization of mimivirus YP_143162. (A) N-terminal sequence of the full-length native enzyme, with the hydrophobic stretch that most likely forms a transmembrane helix underlined. Below is shown the N-terminal sequence of the truncated CYP protein used to obtain the correctly folded P450 protein. (B) Absolute oxidized and reduced CO difference (inset) spectra at 1 µM P450 concentration. (C) Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel (10%). Lane 1, rainbow marker; lane 2, purified mimivirus CYP51-like protein.
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FIG. 2. Alignment of mimivirus YP_143162 with 143 CYP51 family members (only two representatives of each biological kingdom are shown). (A) The fragments shown are the BC loop (SRS1 region, helices F and G [SRS2 and SRS3] and helix I [SRS4]). (B) Representative phylogenetic tree of CYP51 sequences showing the position of YP_143162.
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FIG. 3. Mimivirus P450 model with marked secondary structural elements. The resultant homology models were validated by cross-reference to the secondary structure predictions. Homology models were generated with 10 iterations of the MODELLER program, and the model structure was clipped to the first 480 amino acids, for which the sequence identity with the resolved crystal structures of MTCYP51 and flavocytochrome P450-2 of Bacillus megaterium for the CYP domain was 16%. The energy-minimized model has very good ProsaII and Profiles 3D scores.
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Published ahead of print on 10 June 2009. ![]()
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