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<i>Arabidopsis</i>FNRL protein is an NADPH‐dependent chloroplast oxidoreductase resembling bacterial ferredoxin‐NADP<sup>+</sup>reductases

14

Citations

51

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Plastidic ferredoxin-NADP<sup>+</sup> oxidoreductases (FNRs; EC:1.18.1.2) together with bacterial type FNRs (FPRs) form the plant-type FNR family. Members of this group contain a two-domain scaffold that forms the basis of an extended superfamily of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) dependent oxidoreductases. In this study, we show that the Arabidopsis thaliana At1g15140 [Ferredoxin-NADP<sup>+</sup> oxidoreductase-like (FNRL)] is an FAD-containing NADPH dependent oxidoreductase present in the chloroplast stroma. Determination of the kinetic parameters using the DCPIP NADPH-dependent diaphorase assay revealed that the reaction catalysed by a recombinant FNRL protein followed a saturation Michaelis-Menten profile on the NADPH concentration with k<sub>cat</sub> = 3.2 ± 0.2 s<sup>-1</sup> , K<sub>m</sub><sup>NADPH</sup> = 1.6 ± 0.3 μM and k<sub>cat</sub> /K<sub>m</sub><sup>NADPH</sup> = 2.0 ± 0.4 μM<sup>-1</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> . Biochemical assays suggested that FNRL is not likely to interact with Arabidopsis ferredoxin 1, which is supported by the sequence analysis implying that the known Fd-binding residues in plastidic FNRs differ from those of FNRL. In addition, based on structural modelling FNRL has an FAD-binding N-terminal domain built from a six-stranded β-sheet and one α-helix, and a C-terminal NADP<sup>+</sup> -binding α/β domain with a five-stranded β-sheet with a pair of α-helices on each side. The FAD-binding site is highly hydrophobic and predicted to bind FAD in a bent conformation typically seen in bacterial FPRs.

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