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1.
Mechanical disruption of cells of Methanobacterium strain G2R resulted in a 78-fold increase in the specific activity of the hydrogenase as measured by the benzyl viologen reduction assay. Approximately 50% of the activity in disrupted cells was associated with the particulate fraction. Between 69 and 85% of the particulate hydrogenase was released by treatment with the detergents Triton X-100, deoxycholate, and octyl-beta-d-glucopyranoside. The relative electrophoretic mobilities of the soluble hydrogenases were identical, indicating that G2R possessed a single electrophoretically distinct hydrogenase. The particulate enzyme was inactivated by oxygen and could be reactivated with dithionite or glucose plus glucose oxidase. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 8.5 and resisted heating at 52 but not 77 degrees C. A number of nonspecific dyes, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and riboflavin 5'-phosphate were effective electron acceptors; oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, and factor 420 were apparently not reduced. Hydrogenase activity was inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, cyanide, chloroform, and chloramphenicol. The molecular weight of the solubilized enzyme was 900,000, with subunits of molecular weights 38,500, 50,700, and approximately 80,000. It is suggested that, in intact cells of G2R, the large hydrogenase complex is loosely bound to the cell wall or membrane.  相似文献   

2.
The photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus synthesises a membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenase encoded by the H2 uptake hydrogenase (hup)SLC structural operon. The hupS and hupL genes encode the small and large subunits of hydrogenase, respectively; hupC encodes a membrane electron carrier protein which may be considered as the third subunit of the uptake hydrogenase. In Wolinella succinogenes, the hydC gene, homologous to hupC, has been shown to encode a low potential cytochrome b which mediates electron transfer from H2 to the quinone pool of the bacterial membrane. In whole cells of R. capsulatus or intact membrane preparation of the wild type strain B10, methylene blue but not benzyl viologen can be used as acceptor of the electrons donated by H2 to hydrogenase; on the other hand, membranes of B10 treated with Triton X-100 or whole cells of a HupC- mutant exhibit both benzyl viologen and methylene blue reductase activities. We report the effect of diphenylene iodonium (Ph2I), a known inhibitor of mitochondrial complex I and of various monooxygenases on R. capsulatus hydrogenase activity. With H2 as electron donor, Ph2I inhibited partially the methylene blue reductase activity in an uncompetitive manner, and totally benzyl viologen reductase activity in a competitive manner. Furthermore, with benzyl viologen as electron acceptor, Ph2I increased dramatically the observed lagtime for dye reduction. These results suggest that two different sites exist on the electron donor side of the membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenase of R. capsulatus, both located on the small subunit. A low redox potential site which reduces benzyl viologen, binds Ph2I and could be located on the distal [Fe4S4] cluster. A higher redox potential site which can reduce methylene blue in vitro could be connected to the high potential [Fe3S4] cluster and freely accessible from the periplasm.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane-bound hydrogenase from Paracoccus denitrificans was purified 68-fold with a yield of 14.6%. The final preparation had a specific activity of 161.9 mumol H2 min-1 (mg protein)-1 (methylene blue reduction). Purification involved solubilization by Triton X-114, phase separation, chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, ammonium-sulfate precipitation and chromatography on Procion-red HE-3B-Sepharose. Gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions revealed two non-identical subunits with molecular masses of 64 kDa and 34 kDa. The molecular mass of the native enzyme was 100 kDa, as estimated by FPLC gel filtration in the presence of Chaps, a zwitterionic detergent. The isoelectric point of the Paracoccus hydrogenase was 4.3. Metal analysis of the purified enzyme indicated a content of 0.6 nickel and 7.3 iron atoms/molecule. ESR spectra of the reduced enzyme exhibited a close similarity to the membrane-bound hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 with g values of 1.86, 1.92 and 1.98. The half-life for inactivation under air at 20 degrees C was 8 h. The Paracoccus hydrogenase reduced several electron acceptors, namely methylene blue, benzyl viologen, methyl viologen, menadione, cytochrome c, FMN, 2,6-dichloroindophenol, ferricyanide and phenazine methosulfate. The highest activity was measured with methylene blue (V = 161.9 U/mg; Km = 0.04 mM), whereas benzyl and methyl viologen were reduced at distinctly lower rates (16.5 U/mg and 12.1 U/mg, respectively). The native hydrogenase from P. denitrificans cross-reacted with purified antibodies raised against the membrane-bound hydrogenase from A. eutrophus H16. The corresponding subunits from both enzymes also showed immunological relationship. All reactions were of partial identity.  相似文献   

4.
Two membrane-bound hydrogenase isoenzymes present in Escherichia coli during anaerobic growth have been resolved. The isoenzymes are immunologically and electrophoretically distinct. The physically more abundant isoenzyme (hydrogenase 1) contains a subunit of Mr 64,000 and is not released from the membrane by exposure to either trypsin or pancreatin. The second isoenzyme (hydrogenase 2) apparently contributes the greater part of the membrane-bound hydrogen:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase activity and exists in two electrophoretic forms revealed by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel analysis. This isoenzyme is irreversibly inactivated at alkaline pH and gives rise to an active, soluble derivative when the membrane-bound enzyme is exposed to either trypsin or pancreatin. Both hydrogenase isoenzymes contain nickel.  相似文献   

5.
The uptake hydrogenase (hydrogen:ferricytochrome c3 oxidoreductase, EC 1.12.2.1) from the bacteroids of soybean root nodules infected with Rhizobium japonicum 110 has been purified and characterized. Bacteroids were prepared, then broken by sonication. The particulate enzyme was solubilized by treatment with Triton X-100 and further purified by polyethylene glycol fractionation, DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-100 chromatography. The specific activity has been increased 196-fold to 19.6 units/mg protein. The molecular weight is 63 300 as determined by gel filtration and 65 300 as determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that the enzyme is a monomer. The enzyme is O2 sensitive, with a half-life of 70 min when exposed to air. The pH optimum of the solubilized enzyme is near 5.5; the Km for H2 is 1.4 microM. Suitable electron acceptors are methylene blue, ferricyanide, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, and cytochrome c. Benzyl viologen is reduced slowly; methyl viologen, NAD(P)+, FAD, FMN, and O2 are not reduced. The optimum temperature for activity is 65-70 degrees C with an activation energy of 9.2 kcal. H2 evolution by the enzyme has been demonstrated. The hydrogenase is well-suited to function in an environment where all the available H2 is generated in situ.  相似文献   

6.
All of the tested photosynthetic bacteria possessed hydrogenase activity. Cell membranes of representatives of the Chromatiaceae, Rhodospirillaceae, and Chlorobiaceae families were found to be impermeable to the oxidized redox dyes methyl viologen and benzyl viologen, whereas the reduced forms could easily penetrate the membranes. This permeability difference made possible the localization of the hydrogenase enzyme. Members of the Chromatiaceae and the Rhodospirillaceae contained a predominantly or exclusively membranebound enzyme. In contrast, the majority of hydrogenase activity was in the cytoplasm ofChlorobium limicola f. thiosulfatophilum. Hydrogenase, or at least its active center, was oriented toward the outer surface of the cell membrane in purple bacteria.  相似文献   

7.
Uptake hydrogenase (EC 1.12) from Azotobacter vinelandii has been purified 250-fold from membrane preparations. Purification involved selective solubilization of the enzyme from the membranes, followed by successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-100, and hydroxylapatite. Freshly isolated hydrogenase showed a specific activity of 110 mumol of H2 uptake (min X mg of protein)-1. The purified hydrogenase still contained two minor contaminants that ran near the front on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The enzyme appears to be a monomer of molecular weight near 60,000 +/- 3,000. The pI of the protein is 5.8 +/- 0.2. With methylene blue or ferricyanide as the electron acceptor (dyes such as methyl or benzyl viologen with negative midpoint potentials did not function), the enzyme had pH optima at pH 9.0 or 6.0, respectively, It has a temperature optimum at 65 to 70 degrees C, and the measured half-life for irreversible inactivation at 22 degrees C by 20% O2 was 20 min. The enzyme oxidizes H2 in the presence of an electron acceptor and also catalyzes the evolution of H2 from reduced methyl viologen; at the optimal pH of 3.5, 3.4 mumol of H2 was evolved (min X mg of protein)-1. The uptake hydrogenase catalyzes a slow deuterium-water exchange in the absence of an electron acceptor, and the highest rate was observed at pH 6.0. The Km values varied widely for different electron acceptors, whereas the Km for H2 remained virtually constant near 1 to 2 microM, independent of the electron acceptors.  相似文献   

8.
The protons produced by the catalytic activity of hydrogenase in H2 evolution from dithionite-reduced methyl viologen or through benzyl viologen reduction by H2 gas are automatically titrated by a pH-stat device. This approach allows the measurement of hydrogenase activity and ensures the constancy of pH during the reaction in absence of buffers. Kinetic assays and pH and temperature-dependence experiments with Desulfovibrio gigas hydrogenase performed by this method basically confirm the results obtained with customary manometric assay.  相似文献   

9.
The hydrogenase from Paracoccus denitrificans, which is an intrinsic membrane protein, has been solubilised from membranes by Triton X-100. The partial specific volume of the solubilised protein has been determined using sucrose density gradient centrifugation in H2O and 2H2O. The values of the specific volumes of hydrogenase, measured in the presence or absence of Triton X-100, are 0.73 and 0.74 ml . g-1, respectively, indicating that hydrogenase binds much less than one micelle of Triton X-100. The sedimentation coefficient of hydrogenase is increased from 10.4 S to 15.9 S on removal of detergent. The Stokes' radius of hydrogenase, determined by gel filtration on Sepharose 6B, is 5.5 nm in the presence of Triton X-100 compared to 6.7 nm in the absence of detergent. The apparent molecular weight therefore increases from 242,500 to 466,000 on removal of detergent. In the presence of urea and sodium dodecylsulphate, the hydrogenase has an apparent molecular weight of 63,000. The enzyme therefore behaves as a non-covalently linked tetramer in the presence of Triton X-100. Removal of Triton X-100 results in association of tetramers to form octamers.  相似文献   

10.
The nitrogen-fixing, aerobic hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium Alcaligenes latus forms hydrogenase when growing lithoautotrophically with hydrogen as electron donor and carbon dioxide as sole carbon source or when growing heterotrophically with N2 as sole nitrogen source. The hydrogenase is membrane-bound and relatively oxygen-sensitive. The enzymes formed under both conditions are identical on the basis of the following criteria: molecular mass, mobility in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Km value for hydrogen (methylene blue reduction), stability properties, localization, and cross-reactivity to antibodies raised against the 'autotrophic' hydrogenase. The hydrogenase was solubilized by Triton X-100 and deoxycholate treatment and purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose C1-4B, DEAE-Sephacel and Matrix Gel Red A under hydrogen to homogeneity to a specific activity of 113 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein (methylene blue reduction). SDS gel electrophoresis revealed two nonidentical subunits of molecular weights of 67 000 and 34 000, corresponding to a total molecular weight of 101 000. The pure enzyme was able to reduce FAD, FMN, riboflavin, flavodoxin isolated from Megasphaera elsdenii, menadione and horse heart cytochrome c as well as various artificial electron acceptors. The reversibility of the hydrogenase function was demonstrated by H2 evolution from reduced methyl viologen.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract The thermophilic facultatively phototrophic green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus strain Ok-70-fl was shown to possess sulfide-repressed hydrogenase activity. Biosynthesis of the enzyme was severely repressed by S2− (5.7 mM) and stimulated specifically by Ni2+ and by molecular hydrogen. The hydrogenase was shown to be localized in the cytoplasmic membrane and could be solubilized from the latter by the detergent Triton X-100 in a state forming one enzymatically active band ( M r 170 × 103) in polyacrylamide gels. In the membraneous state, the hydrogenase had its maximal activity at 73°C and was active with methyl viologen, methylene blue, menadione and flavins, but not with NAD or NADP as electron acceptors. Solubilization of the enzyme with Triton X-100 resulted in a drastic increase in the FAD/FMN-linked activity.  相似文献   

12.
Hydrogenase isoenzyme 1 from the membrane fraction of anaerobically grown Escherichia coli has been purified to near homogeneity. The preparation involved dispersion of the membrane fraction with deoxycholate followed by ammonium sulphate precipitation, ion-exchange, hydroxyapatite and gel filtration chromatography steps. The enzyme was assayed by quantification of the H2:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase activity immunoprecipitated by a non-inhibitory antiserum specific for the enzyme. The enzyme constituted about 8% of the hydrogenase activity found in the detergent-dispersed membranes, the remainder being attributable to hydrogenase isoenzyme 2. Isoenzyme 1 was purified 130-fold and the specific activity of the final preparation was 10.6 mumol benzyl viologen reduced min-1 (mg protein)-1 (H2:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase). The final preparation contained polypeptides of apparent Mr 64,000, 31,000 and 29,000. Antibodies were raised both to the final preparation and to immunoprecipitation arcs containing hydrogenase isoenzyme 1, excised from crossed immunoelectrophoresis plates. The former cross-reacted with all three polypeptides in the enzyme preparation but the latter recognised only the Mr-64,000 polypeptide. Immunological analysis revealed that the polypeptides of apparent Mr 31,000 and 29,000 are fragments of a single polypeptide of Mr 35,000 which is present in the detergent-dispersed membranes. The fragmentation of the Mr-35,000 polypeptide during the preparation correlates with a change in the electrophoretic mobility of the enzyme. A similar electrophoretic mobility change was observed, accompanied by cleavage of the Mr-35,000 polypeptide to one of 32,000 when the enzyme was analysed after exposure of detergent-dispersed membranes to trypsin. The enzyme in the detergent-dispersed membranes consists minimally of two subunits of Mr 64,000 and two subunits of Mr 35,000. It contained 12.2 mol Fe and 9.1 mol acid-labile S2-/200,000 g enzyme. The enzyme, purified from bacteria grown in the presence of 63Ni, was found to contain 0.64 (+/- 0.20) mol Ni/200,000 g enzyme. A constant ratio of 63Ni immunoprecipitated to hydrogenase isoenzyme 1 activity immunoprecipitated by antiserum specific for the enzyme was observed during the preparation, consistent with Ni being part of the enzyme. The enzyme has a low Km for H2 (2.0 microM) in the H2:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase assay. It catalyses H2 evolution employing reduced methyl viologen as electron donor. It is inhibited reversibly by CO and irreversibly by N-bromosuccinimide.  相似文献   

13.
The soluble hydrogenase (hydrogen: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.12.1.2) from Alcaligenes eutrophus H 16 was purified 68-fold with a yield of 20% and a final specific activity (NAD reduction) of about 54 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein. The enzyme was shown to be homogenous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its molecular weight and isoelectric point were determined to be 205 000 and 4.85 respectively. The oxidized hydrogenase, as purified under aerobic conditions, was of high stability but not reactive. Reductive activation of the enzyme by H2, in the presence of catalytic amounts of NADH, or by reducing agents caused the hydrogenase to become unstable. The purified enzyme, in its active state, was able to reduce NAD, FMN, FAD, menaquinone, ubiquinone, cytochrome c, methylene blue, methyl viologen, benzyl viologen, phenazine methosulfate, janus green, 2,6-dichlorophenoloindophenol, ferricyanide and even oxygen. In addition to hydrogenase activitiy, the enzyme exhibited also diaphorase and NAD(P)H oxidase activity. The reversibility of hydrogenase function (i.e. H2 evolution from NADH, methyl viologen and benzyl viologen) was demonstrated. With respect to H2 as substrate, hydrogenase showed negative cooperativity; the Hill coefficient was n = 0.4. The apparent Km value for H2 was found to be 0.037 mM. The absorption spectrum of hydrogenase was typical for non-heme iron proteins, showing maxima (shoulders) at 380 and 420 nm. A flavin component could be extracted from native hydrogenase characterized by its absorption bands at 375 and 447 nm and a strong fluorescense at 526 nm.  相似文献   

14.
L C Seefeldt  D J Arp 《Biochimie》1986,68(1):25-34
Azotobacter vinelandii hydrogenase has been purified to homogeneity from membranes. The enzyme was solubilized with Triton X-100 followed by ammonium sulfate-hexane extractions to remove lipids and detergent. The enzyme was then purified by carboxymethyl-Sepharose and octyl-Sepharose column chromatography. All purification steps were performed under anaerobic conditions in the presence of dithionite and dithiothreitol. The enzyme was purified 143-fold from membranes to a specific activity of 124 mumol of H2 uptake . min-1 . mg protein-1. Nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the hydrogenase revealed a single band which stained for both activity and protein. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed two bands corresponding to peptides of 67,000 and 31,000 daltons. Densitometric scans of the SDS-gel indicated a molar ratio of the two bands of 1.07 +/- 0.05. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was determined by three different methods. While gel permeation gave a molecular weight of 53,000, sucrose density gradient centrifugation and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gave molecular weights of 98,600 +/- 10,000 and 98,600 +/- 2,000, respectively. We conclude that the A. vinelandii hydrogenase is an alpha beta dimer (98,000 daltons) with subunits of 67,000 and 31,000 daltons. Analyses for nickel and iron indicated 0.68 +/- 0.01 mol Ni/mol hydrogenase and 6.6 +/- 0.5 mol Fe/mol hydrogenase. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was 6.1 +/- 0.01. In addition, several catalytic properties of the enzyme have been examined. The Km for H2 was 0.86 microM, and H2 evolution was observed in the presence of reduced methyl viologen. The pH profile of enzyme activity with methylene blue as the electron acceptor has been determined, along with the Km and Vmax for various electron acceptors.  相似文献   

15.
An active tryptic fragment of membrane-bound hydrogenase isoenzyme 2 from anaerobically grown Escherichia coli has been purified. The soluble enzyme derivative was released from the membrane fraction by trypsin cleavage. The purification procedure involved ion-exchange, hydroxyapatite and gel permeation chromatography. The enzyme derivative was purified 100-fold from the membrane fraction and the specific activity of the final preparation was 320 mumol benzyl viologen reduced min-1 mg protein-1 (H2:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase). The native enzyme derivative had an Mr of 180,000 and was composed of equimolar amounts of polypeptides of Mr 61,000 and 30,000. It possessed 12.5 mol Fe, 12.8 mol acid-labile S2- and 3.1 mol Ni/180,000 g enzyme. Antibodies were raised to the purified preparation which cross-reacted with hydrogenase isoenzyme 2 but not with isoenzyme 1 in detergent-dispersed preparations. Western immunoblot analysis revealed that isoenzyme 2 which had not been exposed to trypsin contained cross-reacting polypeptides of Mr 61,000 and 35,000. Trypsin treatment of the membrane-bound enzyme to form the soluble derivative of isoenzyme 2, therefore, cleaves a polypeptide of Mr 35,000 to produce the 30,000-Mr fragment. Trypsin treatment of the detergent-dispersed isoenzyme 2 produces the same fragmentation of the enzyme. Neither of the subunits of the enzyme revealed any immunological identity with those of hydrogenase isoenzyme 1.  相似文献   

16.
Osz J  Bagyinka C 《Biophysical journal》2005,89(3):1984-1989
A moving front has been observed as a special pattern during the hydrogenase-catalyzed reaction of hydrogen uptake with benzyl viologen as electron acceptor in a thin-layer reaction chamber. Such fronts start spontaneously and at random times at different points of the reaction chamber; blue spheres are seen expanding at constant speed and amplitude. The number of observable starting points depends on the hydrogenase concentration. Fronts can be initiated by injecting either a small amount of completed reaction mixture or activated hydrogenase, but not by injecting a low concentration of reduced benzyl viologen. These characteristics are consistent with an autocatalytic reaction step in the enzyme reaction. The special characteristics of the hydrogen-uptake reaction in the bulk reaction (a long lag phase, and the enzyme concentration dependence of the lag phase) support the autocatalytic nature. We conclude that there is at least one autocatalytic reaction step in the hydrogenase-catalyzed reaction. The two possible autocatalytic schemes for hydrogenase are prion-type autocatalysis, in which two enzyme forms interact, and product-activation autocatalysis, where a reduced electron acceptor and an inactive enzyme form interact. The experimental results strongly support the occurrence of prion-type autocatalysis.  相似文献   

17.
The main catalytic properties of the Hox type hydrogenase isolated from the Gloeocapsa alpicola cells have been studied. The enzyme effectively catalyzes reactions of oxidation and evolution of H2 in the presence of methyl viologen (MV) and benzyl viologen (BV). The rates of these reactions in the interaction with the physiological electron donor/acceptor NADH/NAD+ are only 3-8% of the MV(BV)-dependent values. The enzyme interacts with NADP+ and NADPH, but is more specific to NAD+ and NADH. Purification of the hydrogenase was accompanied by destruction of its multimeric structure and the loss of ability to interact with pyridine nucleotides with retained activity of the hydrogenase component (HoxYH). To show the catalytic activity, the enzyme requires reductive activation, which occurs in the presence of H2, and NADH accelerates this process. The final hydrogenase activity depends on the redox potential of the activation medium (E(h)). At pH 7.0, the enzyme activity in the MV-dependent oxidation of H2 increased with a decrease in E(h) from -350 mV and reached the maximum at E(h) of about -390 mV. However, the rate of H2 oxidation in the presence of NAD+ in the E(h) range under study was virtually constant and equal to 7-8% of the maximal rate of H2 oxidation in the presence of MV.  相似文献   

18.
Cell-free extracts of the homoacetate-fermenting bacterium Clostridium thermoaceticum were shown to catalyze the hydrogen-dependent reduction of various artificial electron acceptors. The activity of the hydrogenase was optimal at pH 8.5 to 9 and was extremely sensitive to aeration. EDTA did not significantly reduce the liability of the enzymic activity to oxidation (aeration). At 50 degrees C, when both methyl viologen and hydrogen were at saturating concentrations with respect to hydrogenase, the specific activity of cell-free extracts approximated 4 mumol of H2 oxidized per min per mg of protein; fourfold higher specific activities were obtained when benzyl viologen was utilized as an electron acceptor. Activity stains of polyacrylamide gels demonstrated the presence of a single hydrogenase band, suggesting that the catalytic activity in cell extracts was due to a single enzyme. The activity was stable for at least 32 min at 55 degrees C but was slowly inactivated at 70 degrees C. NAD, NADP, flavin adenine dinucleotide, flavin mononucleotide, and ferredoxin were not significantly reduced, but possible reduction of the particulate b-type cytochrome of C. thermoaceticum was observed. NaCl, sodium dodecyl sulfate, iodoacetamide, and CO were shown to inhibit catalysis. A kinetic study is presented, and the possible physiologic roles for hydrogenase in C. thermoaceticum ar discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The cytoplasmic membrane-bound hydrogenase of the facultative anaerobe, Proteus mirabilis, has been solubilized and purified to homogeneity. The purified enzyme exhibited a maximal specific activity of about 780 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein (benzyl viologen reduction). The hydrogenase has a molecular weight of 205 000 and is composed of two subunits with a molecular weight of 63 000 and two of 33 000. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme was characteristic of non-heme iron proteins. The millimolar extinction coefficients at 400 and 280 nm are 106 and 390, respectively. The hydrogenase has about 24 iron atoms and 24 acid-labile sulfide atoms/molecule. Amino acid analyses revealed the presence of 39 half-cystine residues/molecule and a preponderance of acidic amino acids. The hydrogenase in its oxidized form exhibits an EPR signal of the HiPIP-type with g values at 2.025 and 2.018. Upon reduction with either dithionite or H2 the signal disappears; no other signals were detectable.  相似文献   

20.
The archaebacterium, Pyrococcus furiosus, grows optimally at 100 degrees C by a fermentative type metabolism in which H2 and CO2 are the only detectable products. The organism also reduces elemental sulfur (S0) to H2S. Cells grown in the absence of S0 contain a single hydrogenase, located in the cytoplasm, which has been purified 350-fold to apparent homogeneity. The yield of H2 evolution activity from reduced methyl viologen at 80 degrees C was 40%. The hydrogenase has a Mr value of 185,000 +/- 15,000 and is composed of three subunits of Mr 46,000 (alpha), 27,000 (beta), and 24,000 (gamma). The enzyme contains 31 +/- 3 g atoms of iron, 24 +/- 4 g atoms of acid-labile sulfide, and 0.98 +/- 0.05 g atoms of nickel/185,000 g of protein. The H2-reduced hydrogenase exhibits an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal at 70 K typical of a single [2Fe-2S] cluster, while below 15 K, EPR absorption is observed from extremely fast relaxing iron-sulfur clusters. The oxidized enzyme is EPR silent. The hydrogenase is reversibly inhibited by O2 and is remarkably thermostable. Most of its H2 evolution activity is retained after a 1-h incubation at 100 degrees C. Reduced ferredoxin from P. furiosus also acts as an electron donor to the enzyme, and a 350-fold increase in the rate of H2 evolution is observed between 45 and 90 degrees C. The hydrogenase also catalyzes H2 oxidation with methyl viologen or methylene blue as the electron acceptor. The temperature optimum for both H2 oxidation and H2 evolution is greater than 95 degrees C. Arrhenius plots show two transition points at approximately 60 and approximately 80 degrees C independent of the mode of assay. That occurring at 80 degrees C is associated with a dramatic increase in H2 production activity. The enzyme preferentially catalyzes H2 production at all temperatures examined and appears to represent a new type of "evolution" hydrogenase.  相似文献   

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