January 26, 2007
Journal Article

The Structure of a Cyanobacterial Bicarbonate Transport Protein, CmpA

Abstract

Cyanobacteria, blue-green algae, are the most abundant autotrophs in aquatic environments and form the base of the food chain by fixing carbon and nitrogen into cellular biomass. To compensate for the low selectivity of Rubisco for CO2 over O2, Cyanobacteria have developed highly efficient CO2concentrating machinery of which the ABC transport system CmpABCD from Synechocystis PCC 6803 is one component. Here we describe the structure of the bicarbonate binding protein, CmpA, in the absence and presence of bicarbonate and carbonic acid. CmpA is highly homologous to the nitrate transport protein, NrtA. CmpA binds carbonic acid at the entrance to the ligand-binding pocket whereas bicarbonate binds in nearly an identical location compared to nitrate binding to NrtA. Unexpectedly, bicarbonate binding is accompanied by a metal ion, identified as Ca²? via inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry. The binding of bicarbonate and metal is highly cooperative and suggests that CmpA co-transports bicarbonate and calcium.

Revised: April 7, 2011 | Published: January 26, 2007

Citation

Koropatkin N.M., D.W. Koppenaal, H.B. Pakrasi, and T.J. Smith. 2007. The Structure of a Cyanobacterial Bicarbonate Transport Protein, CmpA. Journal of Biological Chemistry 282, no. 4:2606-2614. PNNL-SA-52280. doi:10.1074/jbc.M610222200