Oxidation of the cysteines from ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) leads to inactivation and promotes structural changes that increase the proteolytic sensitivity and membrane association propensity related to its catabolism. To uncover the individual role of the different cysteines, the sequential order of modification under increasing oxidative conditions was determined using chemical labeling and mass spectrometry. Besides, site-directed RubisCO mutants were obtained in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii replacing single conserved cysteines (Cys84, Cys172, Cys192, Cys247, Cys284, Cys427, Cys459 from the large and sCys41, sCys83 from the small subunit) and the redox properties of the mutant enzymes were determined. All mutants retained significant carboxylase activity and grew photoautotrophically, indicating that these conserved cysteines are not essential for catalysis. Cys84 played a noticeable structural role, its replacement producing a structurally altered enzyme. While Cys247, Cys284, and sCys83 were not affected by the redox environment, all other residues were oxidized using a disulfide/thiol ratio of around two, except for Cys172 whose oxidation was distinctly delayed. Remarkably, Cys192 and Cys427 were apparently protective, their absence leading to a premature oxidation of critical residues (Cys172 and Cys459). These cysteines integrate a regulatory network that modulates RubisCO activity and conformation in response to oxidative conditions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11120-018-0497-9DOI Listing

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