首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
In Methanothrix soehngenii, acetate is activated to acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) by an acetyl-CoA synthetase. Cell extracts contained high activities of adenylate kinase and pyrophosphatase, but no activities of a pyrophosphate:AMP and pyrophosphate:ADP phosphotransferase, indicating that the activation of 1 acetate in Methanothrix requires 2 ATP. Acetyl-CoA synthetase was purified 22-fold in four steps to apparent homogeneity. The native molecular mass of the enzyme from M. soehngenii estimated by gel filtration was 148 kilodaltons (kDa). The enzyme was composed of two subunits with a molecular mass of 73 kDa in an alpha 2 oligomeric structure. The acetyl-CoA synthetase constituted up to 4% of the soluble cell protein. At the optimum pH of 8.5, the Vmax was 55 mumol of acetyl-CoA formed per min per mg of protein. Analysis of enzyme kinetic properties revealed a Km of 0.86 mM for acetate and 48 microM for coenzyme A. With varying amounts of ATP, weak sigmoidal kinetic was observed. The Hill plot gave a slope of 1.58 +/- 0.12, suggesting two interacting substrate sites for the ATP. The kinetic properties of the acetyl-CoA synthetase can explain the high affinity for acetate of Methanothrix soehngenii.  相似文献   

2.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase and methyl-coenzyme M reductase were purified from 61Ni-enriched and natural-abundance nickel-grown cells of the methanogenic archae Methanothrix soehngenii. The nickel-EPR signal from cofactor F-430 in methyl-CoM reductase was of substoichiometric intensity and exhibited near-axial symmetry with g = 2.153, 2.221 and resolved porphinoid nitrogen superhyperfine splittings of approximately 1 mT. In the spectrum from 61Ni-enriched enzyme a well-resolved parallel I = 3/2 nickel hyperfine splitting was observed, A parallel = 4.4 mT. From a computer simulation of this spectrum the final enrichment in 61Ni was estimated to be 69%, while the original enrichment of the nickel metal was 87%. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase isolated from the same batch exhibited four different EPR spectra. However, in none of these signals could any splitting or broadening from 61Ni be detected. Also, the characteristic g = 2.08 EPR signal found in some other carbon monoxide dehydrogenases and ascribed to a Ni-Fe-C complex, was never observed by us under any conditions of detection (4 to 100 K) and incubation in the presence of ferricyanide, dithionite, CO, coenzyme A, or acetyl-coenzyme A. Novel, high-spin EPR was found in the oxidized enzyme with effective g-values at g = 14.5, 9.6, 5.5, 4.6, 4.2, 3.8. The lines at g = 14.5 and 5.5 were tentatively ascribed to an S = 9/2 system (approximately 0.3 spins/alpha beta) with rhombicity E/D = 0.047 and D less than 0. The other signals were assigned to an S = 5/2 system (0.1 spins/alpha beta) with E/D = 0.27. Both sets of signals disappear upon reduction with Em,7.5 = - 280 mV. With a very similar reduction potential, Em,7.5 = - 261 mV, an S = 1/2 signal (0.1 spins/alpha beta) appears with the unusual g-tensor 2.005, 1.894, 1.733. Upon further lowering of the potential the putative double cubane signal also appears. At a potential E approximately - 320 mV the double cubane is only reduced by a few percent and this allows the detection of individual cubane EPR not subjected to dipolar interaction; a single spectral component is observed with g-tensor 2.048, 1.943, 1.894.  相似文献   

3.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase was purified to apparent homogeneity from Methanothrix soehngenii. In contrast with the carbon monoxide dehydrogenases from most other anaerobic bacteria, the purified enzyme of Methanothrix soehngenii was remarkably stable towards oxygen and it was only slightly inhibited by cyanide. The native molecular mass of the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase of Methanothrix soehngenii determined by gel filtration was 190 kDa. The enzyme is composed of subunits with molecular mass of 79.4 kDa and 19.4 kDa in an alpha 2 beta 2 oligomeric structure. The enzyme contains 1.9 +/- 0.2 (n = 3) mol Ni/mol and 19 +/- 3 (n = 3) mol Fe/mol and it constitutes 4% of the soluble cell protein. Analysis of enzyme kinetic properties revealed a Km of 0.7 mM for CO and of 65 microM for methyl viologen. At the optimum pH of 9.0 the Vmax was 140 mumol of CO oxidized min-1 mg protein-1. The enzyme showed a high degree of thermostability.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract In Methanothrix soehngenii acetate is first activated by an acetate thiokinase rather than a phosphotransacetylase. The specific activity of the acetate thiokinase was 5.29 μmol acetate activated min−1 mg−1 protein with a half maximum rate at 0.74 mM acetate and at 0.047 mM CoA. In cell-free extracts a CO-dehydrogenase activity was measured of 3.02 μmol min−1 mg−1 protein with a half maximum rate at 0.44 mM CO and at 0.18 mM methylviologen. NADP and NAD could not replace methylviologen. F420 showed only low activity as electron acceptor.  相似文献   

5.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Methanosarcina barkeri, purified to 95% homogeneity, contains 30 Fe, 2 Ni, 1 Zn, and 1 Cu (per alpha 2 beta 2 enzyme). Core extrusion experiments indicate 6 [4Fe-4S] clusters/tetramer, and electron paramagnetic resonance (epr) spectroscopy detects at least one of these clusters, in the reduced form, with apparent g values of 2.05, 1.94, and 1.90, and Em9.2-390 mV. A second epr signal, also seen in the reduced enzyme, has apparent g values of 2.005, 1.91, and 1.76, and Em9.2-35 mV. Two signals were seen in thionin-oxidized enzyme, one with a line shape suggestive of Cu(II), and the other resembling that of a [3Fe-4S] cluster. The enzymes nonphysiological substrate, CO, caused several spectral changes to the reduced enzyme, most notably a shift of the g = 1.76 feature to g = 1.73.  相似文献   

6.
The cdhA and cdhB genes that code for the large and the small subunits of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CDH), respectively, were isolated from a genomic library of Methanothrix soehngenii DNA in Escherichia coli, using polyclonal antibodies raised against purified CDH. After introduction in E. coli or Desulfovibrio vulgaris, the cdh genes appeared to be expressed irrespective of their orientation, yielding immunoreactive proteins of 79 and 19 kDa, corresponding in size to the known subunits of purified CDH. However, no CDH activity could be detected in these heterologous hosts. The cdh genes are preceded by consensus ribosome-binding sites and are arranged in an operon-like structure, with cdhA preceding cdhB. Upstream from this operon, sequences similar to archaeal promoters were identified. The amino acid sequence, deduced from the primary sequence of cdhA, showed homology with ferredoxins and with acyl-CoA oxidase. This is compatible with the proposed functions of CDH.  相似文献   

7.
After activation with NiCl2, the recombinant alpha subunit of the Ni-containing alpha2beta2 acetyl-CoA synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (ACS/CODH) catalyzes the synthesis of acetyl-CoA from CO, CoA, and a methyl group donated from the corrinoid-iron-sulfur protein (CoFeSP). The alpha subunit has two conformations (open and closed), and contains a novel [Fe4S4]-[Nip Nid] active site in which the proximal Nip ion is labile. Prior to Ni activation, recombinant apo-alpha contain only an Fe4S4 cluster. Ni-activated alpha subunits exhibit catalytic, spectroscopic and heterogeneity properties typical of alpha subunits contained in ACS/CODH. Evidence presented here indicates that apo-alpha is a monomer whereas Ni-treated alpha oligomerizes, forming dimers and higher molecular weight species including tetramers. No oligomerization occurred when apo-alpha was treated with Cu(II), Zn(II), or Co(II) ions, but oligomerization occurred when apo-alpha was treated with Pt(II) and Pd(II) ions. The dimer accepted only 0.5 methyl group/alpha and exhibited, upon treatment with CO and under reducing conditions, the NiFeC EPR signal quantifying to 0.4 spin/alpha. Dimers appear to consist of two types of alpha subunits, including one responsible for catalytic activity and one that provides a structural scaffold. Higher molecular weight species may be similarly constituted. It is concluded that Ni binding to the A-cluster induces a conformational change in the alpha subunit, possibly to the open conformation, that promotes oligomerization. These interrelated events demonstrate previously unrealized connections between (a) the conformation of the alpha subunit; (b) the metal which occupies the proximal/distal sites of the A-cluster; and (c) catalytic activity.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
Seravalli J  Ragsdale SW 《Biochemistry》2008,47(26):6770-6781
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation of CO to CO2 at a nickel-iron-sulfur cluster (the C-cluster). CO oxidation follows a ping-pong mechanism involving two-electron reduction of the C-cluster followed by electron transfer through an internal electron transfer chain to external electron acceptors. We describe 13C NMR studies demonstrating a CODH-catalyzed steady-state exchange reaction between CO and CO2 in the absence of external electron acceptors. This reaction is characterized by a CODH-dependent broadening of the 13CO NMR resonance; however, the chemical shift of the 13CO resonance is unchanged, indicating that the broadening is in the slow exchange limit of the NMR experiment. The 13CO line broadening occurs with a rate constant (1080 s-1 at 20 degrees C) that is approximately equal to that of CO oxidation. It is concluded that the observed exchange reaction is between 13CO and CODH-bound 13CO2 because 13CO line broadening is pH-independent (unlike steady-state CO oxidation), because it requires a functional C-cluster (but not a functional B-cluster) and because the 13CO2 line width does not broaden. Furthermore, a steady-state isotopic exchange reaction between 12CO and 13CO2 in solution was shown to occur at the same rate as that of CO2 reduction, which is approximately 750-fold slower than the rate of 13CO exchange broadening. The interaction between CODH and the inhibitor cyanide (CN-) was also probed by 13C NMR. A functional C-cluster is not required for 13CN- broadening (unlike for 13CO), and its exchange rate constant is 30-fold faster than that for 13CO. The combined results indicate that the 13CO exchange includes migration of CO to the C-cluster, and CO oxidation to CO2, but not release of CO2 or protons into the solvent. They also provide strong evidence of a CO2 binding site and of an internal proton transfer network in CODH. 13CN- exchange appears to monitor only movement of CN- between solution and its binding to and release from CODH.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
The final steps in the synthesis of acetyl-CoA by CO dehydrogenase (CODH) have been studied by following the exchange reaction between CoA and the CoA moiety of acetyl-CoA. This reaction had been studied earlier (Pezacka, E., and Wood, H. G. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1609-1615 and Ramer, W. E., Raybuck, S. A., Orme-Johnson, W. H., and Walsh, C. T. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4675-4680). The CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange activity was determined at various controlled redox potentials and was found to be activated by a one-electron reduction with half-maximum activity occurring at -486 mV. There is approximately 2000-fold stimulation of the exchange by performing the reaction at -575 mV relative to the rate at -80 mV. Binding of CoA to CODH is not sensitive to the redox potential; therefore, the reductive activation affects some step other than association/dissociation of CoA. We propose that a metal center on CODH with a midpoint reduction potential of less than or equal to -486 mV is activated by a one-electron reduction to cleave the carbonyl-sulfur bond and/or bind the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA. Based on a comparison of the redox dependence of this reaction with that for methylation of CODH (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) and CO2 reduction and formation of the Ni-Fe-C EPR signal (Lindahl, P. A., Münck, E., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3873-3879), we propose that the assembly of the acetyl group of acetyl-CoA, i.e. binding the methyl group of the methylated corrinoid/iron-sulfur protein, binding CO, and methyl migration to form the acetyl-CODH intermediate, occur at the novel Ni-Fe3-4-containing site in CODH. CO has two effects on the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange: it activates the reaction due to its reductive capacity and its acts as a noncompetitive inhibitor. We also discovered that the CoA/acetyl-CoA exchange was inhibited by nitrous oxide via an oxidative mechanism. In the presence of a low-potential electron donor, CODH becomes a nitrous oxide reductase which catalytically converts N2O to N2. This study combined with earlier results (Lu, W-P., Harder, S. R., and Ragsdale, S. W. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3124-3133) establishes that the two-subunit form of CODH is completely active in all reactions known to be catalyzed by CODH.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/ACS) is a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes the reversible reduction of carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide and the coupled synthesis of acetyl-CoA from the carbon monoxide produced. Exposure of CODH/ACS from Moorella thermoacetica to carbon monoxide gives rise to several infrared bands in the 2100-1900 cm(-1) spectral region that are attributed to the formation of metal-coordinated carbon monoxide species. Infrared bands attributable to M-CO are not detected in the as-isolated enzyme, suggesting that the enzyme does not contain intrinsic metal-coordinated CO ligands. A band detected at 1996 cm(-1) in the CO-flushed enzyme is assigned as arising from CO binding to a metal center in cluster A of the ACS subunit. The frequency of this band is most consistent with it arising from a terminally coordinated Ni(I) carbonyl. Multiple infrared bands at 2078, 2044, 1970, 1959, and 1901 cm(-1) are attributed to CO binding at cluster C of the CODH subunit. All infrared bands attributed to metal carbonyls decay in a time-dependent fashion as CO(2) appears in the solution. These observations are consistent with the enzyme-catalyzed oxidation of carbon monoxide until it is completely depleted from solution during the course of the experiments.  相似文献   

16.
W Shin  P A Lindahl 《Biochemistry》1992,31(51):12870-12875
Adding 1,10-phenanthroline to carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Clostridium thermoaceticum results in the complete loss of the NiFeC EPR signal and the CO/acetyl-CoA exchange activity. Other EPR signals characteristic of the enzyme (the gav = 1.94 and gav = 1.86 signals) and the CO oxidation activity are completely unaffected by the 1,10-phenanthroline treatment. This indicates that there are two catalytic sites on the enzyme; the NiFe complex is required for catalyzing the exchange and acetyl-CoA synthase reactions, while some other site is responsible for CO oxidation. The strength of CO binding to the NiFe complex was examined by titrating dithionite-reduced enzyme with CO. During the titration, the NiFeC EPR signal developed to a final spin intensity of 0.23 spin/alpha beta. The resulting CO titration curve (NiFeC spins/alpha beta vs CO pha beta) was fitted using two reactions: binding of CO to the oxidized NiFe complex, and reduction of the CO-bound species to a form that exhibits the NiFeC signal. Best fits yielded apparent binding constants between 6000 and 14,000 M-1 (Kd = 70-165 microM). This sizable range is due to uncertainty whether CO binds to all or only a small fraction (approximately 23%) of the NiFe complexes. Reduction of the CO-bound NiFe complex is apparently required to activate it for catalysis. The electron used for this reduction originates from the CO oxidation site, suggesting that delivery of a low-potential electron to the CO-bound NiFe complex is the physiological function of the CO oxidation reaction catalyzed by this enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from Methanococcus vannielii grown with formate as the sole carbon source. The enzyme is composed of subunits with molecular weights of 89,000 and 21,000 in an alpha 2 beta 2 oligomeric structure. The native molecular weight of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, determined by gel electrophoresis, is 220,000. The enzyme from M. vannielii contains 2 g-atoms of nickel per mol of enzyme. Except for its relatively high pH optimum of 10.5 and its slightly greater net positive charge, the enzyme from M. vannielii closely resembles carbon monoxide dehydrogenase isolated previously from acetate-grown Methanosarcina barkeri. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from M. vannielii constitutes 0.2% of the soluble protein of the cell. By comparison the enzyme comprises 5% of the soluble protein in acetate-grown cells of M. barkeri and approximately 1% in methanol-grown cells.  相似文献   

18.
Carbon monoxide-dependent production of H2, CO2, and CH4 was detected in crude cell extracts of acetate-grown Methanosarcina barkeri. This metabolic transformation was associated with an active methyl viologen-linked CO dehydrogenase activity (5 to 10 U/mg of protein). Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activity was inhibited 85% by 10 microM KCN and was rapidly inactivated by O2. The enzyme was nearly homogeneous after 20-fold purification, indicating that a significant proportion of soluble cell protein was CO dehydrogenase (ca. 5%). The native purified enzyme displayed a molecular weight of 232,000 and a two-subunit composition of 92,000 and 18,000 daltons. The enzyme was shown to contain nickel by isolation of radioactive CO dehydrogenase from cells grown in 63Ni. Analysis of enzyme kinetic properties revealed an apparent Km of 5 mM for CO and a Vmax of 1,300 U/mg of protein. The spectral properties of the enzyme were similar to those published for CO dehydrogenase from acetogenic anaerobes. The physiological functions of the enzyme are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Many anaerobic bacteria fix CO2 via the acetyl-CoA pathway. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), a key enzyme in the pathway, condenses a methyl group, a carbonyl group from CO, CO2, or the carboxyl group of pyruvate, and CoA to form acetyl-CoA. When treated with CO, CODH exhibits an EPR signal which results from an organometallic complex containing nickel, at least 3 iron, and CO and has been referred to as the NiFeC signal. Although this EPR signal has been presumed to be the spectroscopic signature of the enzyme-bound C-1 precursor of the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA, its catalytic relevance had not been rigorously studied. We have demonstrated the catalytic competence of this NiFeC species by showing that the rate of formation of the NiFeC EPR signal is faster than the rate of an isotope exchange reaction between CO and acetyl-CoA, a partial reaction in the overall synthesis. Generation of the NiFeC signal in the absence of CO by acetyl-CoA has been demonstrated and requires a one-electron reduction at a midpoint potential of -541 mV versus the standard hydrogen electrode. In addition, we have observed and characterized an isotope exchange reaction between the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA and the carbonyl group of the NiFeC complex, indicating that the C in the NiFeC complex is in the form of CO. These combined results demonstrate that the NiFeCO complex exhibits the characteristics expected of the precursor of the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA.  相似文献   

20.
W Shin  P R Stafford  P A Lindahl 《Biochemistry》1992,31(26):6003-6011
Redox titrations of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) from Clostridium thermoaceticum were performed using the reductant CO and the oxidant thionin. Titrations were followed at 420 nm, a wavelength sensitive to redox changes of the iron-sulfur clusters in the enzyme. When CODH was oxidized by just enough thionin to maximize A420, two molecules of CO per mole of CODH dimer (4 equiv/mol) reduced the enzyme fully. Likewise, 4 equiv/mol of thionin oxidized the fully-reduced enzyme to the point where A420 maximized. The four n = 1 redox sites which titrated in this region were designated group I sites. They include at least two iron-sulfur clusters, [Fe/S]A and [Fe/S]B, and two other sites, A' and B'. The [Fe4S4]2+/1+ cluster in CODH is included in this group. [Fe/S]B and B' have reduction potentials (at pH 8) below -480 mV vs NHE; [Fe/S]A and A' have reduction potentials above that value. The reduction potential of either [Fe/S]B or B' is near to the CO/CO2 couple at pH 8 (-622 mV). When CODH was oxidized by more than enough thionin to maximize A420, some of the excess thionin oxidized the so-called group II redox sites. These sites have reduction potentials more positive than group I and do not exhibit changes at 420 nm when titrated. Titration of group II sites required 1-2 equiv/mol. EPR of reduced group II sites exhibited the gav = 1.82 signal. When these sites were oxidized, the only signal present had g values at 2.075, 2.036, and 1.983.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号