01, by t test). Discussion MamX is involved in magnetite crystal maturation in MSR-1 cells To elucidate the function of the highly conserved MamX protein in MTB, we constructed mamX deletion mutant (∆mamX) and complemented (CmamX) strains of M. gryphiswaldense MSR-1. Selleck AZD2014 For ∆mamX, the Cmag value was zero and intracellular iron content was significantly reduced, although cell growth was similar to that of WT (Figure 1). HR-TEM observations revealed that the magnetite particles in ∆mamX were irregularly shaped, small (26.11±9.92 nm), and predominantly superparamagnetic, whereas those in WT were symmetrically
cuboid, large (41.25±10.46 nm), and predominantly single-domain. These findings indicate that MamX plays an essential role in the control of magnetosome morphology and that mamX is involved in magnetite crystal maturation in MSR-1. There was a notable reduction of intracellular iron content in ∆mamX, corresponding to a crystal diameter much smaller than that in WT. The observed alteration of the crystal lattice may account for the reduction of Cmag in ∆mamX and result in a phenotype similar to that of a LY2835219 molecular weight mamXY operon knock-out in MSR-1 [16]. Surprisingly, the
mean crystal number per cell for ∆mamX (20.85±3.91) was 36% higher than that for WT (15.35±3.06). This finding may be due to the fact that crystals in the mutant strain were smaller; i.e., equivalent amounts of materials (iron, MMP, electrons, ATP, etc.) in the cells may have been capable of producing more crystals, as supported by HR-TEM observations (Figure 3E). MamX has conserved double heme-binding motifs MamX is conserved very in not only spirillum strains such as M. gryphiswaldense MSR-1 (MGR_4149), M. magneticum AMB-1 (amb1017), and M. magnetotacticum MS-1 (MMMS1v1_36310026) but also in vibrio and cocci strains such as Magnetovibrio MV-1 (mv1g00028) and Magnetococcus sp. MC-1 (Mmc1_2238). A comparative genomic analysis showed that mamX is one of a set of 28 genes that are specifically associated with the magnetotactic phenotype [7]. The
ubiquity and specific presence of MamX within MTB suggest that this protein plays a role in magnetotaxis. The results of the present study indicate that MamX is involved in magnetite crystal maturation but do not clarify its exact function. A protein sequence blast search using PROSITE (http://prosite.expasy.org/) showed that MamX contains two CXXCH heme-binding motifs that are typical of c-type cytochromes (Additional file 1: Figure S1). Similar double heme-binding motifs were found recently in the magnetosome proteins MamE, MamP, and MamT [27, 28]. Site-directed mutagenesis of the two motifs in MamE resulted in the production of smaller magnetite crystals [27]. These motifs were suggested to be involved in electron transport or as a redox buffer during magnetite formation [28].