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1.
Clostridium pasteurianum has two distinct hydrogenases, the bidirectional hydrogenase and the H2-oxidizing (uptake) hydrogenase. The H2-oxidizing hydrogenase has been purified (up to 970-fold) to a specific activity of 17,600 μmol H2 oxidized/min·mg protein (5 mM methylene blue) or 3.5 μmol H2 produced/min·mg protein (1 mM methyl viologen). The uptake hydrogenase has a Mr of 53,000 (one polypeptide chain). Depending upon how protein was measured, the Fe and S= contents (gatom/mol) were 4.7 and 5.2 (by the dye-binding assay) or 7.2 and 8.0 (by the Lowry method). Both reduced and oxidized forms of the enzyme gave electron paramagnetic resonance signals. The activation energy for H2-production and H2-oxidation by the uptake hydrogenase was 59.1 and 31.2 kJ/mol, respectively. In the exponential phase of growth, the ratio of uptake hydrogenase/bidirectional hydrogenase in NH3-grown cells was much lower than that in N2-fixing cells.  相似文献   

2.
Membrane-associated hydrogenase was purified from the chemolithoautotrophic epsilonproteobacterium Hydrogenimonas thermophila at 152-fold purity. The hydrogenase was found to be localized in the periplasmic space, and was easily solubilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 treatment. Hydrogen oxidation activity was 1,365 μmol H2/min/mg of protein at 80 °C at pH 9.0, with phenazine methosulphate as the electron acceptor. Hydrogen production activity was 900 μmol H2/min/mg of protein at 80 °C and pH 6.0, with reduced methyl viologen as the electron donor. The hydrogenase from this organism showed higher oxygen tolerance than those from other microorganisms showing hydrogen oxidation activity. The structural genes of this hydrogenase, which contains N-terminal amino acid sequences from both small and large subunits of purified hydrogenase, were successfully elucidated. The hydrogenase from H. thermophila was found to be phylogenetically related with H2 uptake hydrogenases from pathogenic Epsilonproteobacteria.  相似文献   

3.
A hydrogenase linked to the carbon monoxide oxidation pathway in Rubrivivax gelatinosus displays tolerance to O2. When either whole-cell or membrane-free partially purified hydrogenase was stirred in full air (21% O2, 79% N2), its H2 evolution activity exhibited a half-life of 20 or 6 h, respectively, as determined by an anaerobic assay using reduced methyl viologen. When the partially purified hydrogenase was stirred in an atmosphere containing either 3.3 or 13% O2 for 15 min and evaluated by a hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange assay, nearly 80 or 60% of its isotopic exchange rate was retained, respectively. When this enzyme suspension was subsequently returned to an anaerobic atmosphere, more than 90% of the H-D exchange activity was recovered, reflecting the reversibility of this hydrogenase toward O2 inactivation. Like most hydrogenases, the CO-linked hydrogenase was extremely sensitive to CO, with 50% inhibition occurring at 3.9 μM dissolved CO. Hydrogen production from the CO-linked hydrogenase was detected when ferredoxins of a prokaryotic source were the immediate electron mediator, provided they were photoreduced by spinach thylakoid membranes containing active water-splitting activity. Based on its appreciable tolerance to O2, potential applications of this hydrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The purple sulfur phototrophic bacterium Thiocapsa roseopersicina BBS synthesizes at least three NiFe hydrogenases (Hox, Hup, Hyn). We characterized the physiological H2 consumption/evolution reactions in mutants having deletions of the structural genes of two hydrogenases in various combinations. This made possible the separation of the functionally distinct roles of the three hydrogenases. Data showed that Hox hydrogenase (unlike the Hup and Hyn hydrogenases) catalyzed the dark fermentative H2 evolution and the light-dependent H2 production in the presence of thiosulfate. Both Hox+ and Hup+ mutants demonstrated light-dependent H2 uptake stimulated by CO2 but only the Hup+ mutant was able to mediate O2-dependent H2 consumption in the dark. The ability of the Hox+ mutant to evolve or consume hydrogen was found to depend on a number of interplaying factors including both growth and reaction conditions (availability of glucose, sulfur compounds, CO2, H2, light). The study of the redox properties of Hox hydrogenase supported the reversibility of its action. Based on the results a scheme is suggested to describe the role of Hox hydrogenase in light-dependent and dark hydrogen metabolism in T. roseopersicina BBS.  相似文献   

5.
Purification of Hydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A method is described which results in a 2750-fold purification of hydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, yielding a preparation which is approximately 40% pure. With a saturating amount of ferredoxin as the electron mediator, the specific activity of pure enzyme was calculated to be 1800 micromoles H2 produced per milligram protein per minute. The molecular weight was determined to be 4.5 × 104 by gel filtration and 4.75 × 104 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme has an abundance of acidic side groups, contains iron, and has an activation energy of 55.1 kilojoules per mole for H2 production; these properties are similar to those of bacterial hydrogenases. The enzyme is less thermally stable than most bacterial hydrogenases, however, losing 50% of its activity in 1 hour at 55°C. The Km of purified hydrogenase for ferredoxin is 10 micromolar, and the binding of these proteins to each other is enhanced under slightly acidic conditions. Purified hydrogenase also accepts electrons from a variety of artificial electron mediators, including sodium metatungstate, sodium silicotungstate, and several viologen dyes. A lag period is frequently observed before maximal activity is expressed with these artificial electron mediators, although the addition of sodium thiosulfate at least partially overcomes this lag.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Steven W. Singer 《BBA》2006,1757(12):1582-1591
Upon exposure to CO during anaerobic growth, the purple phototrophic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum expresses a CO-oxidizing H2 evolving enzymatic system. The CO-oxidizing enzyme, carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), has been purified and extensively characterized. However the electron transfer pathway from CODH to the CO-induced hydrogenase that evolves H2 is not well understood. CooF is an Fe-S protein that is the proposed mediator of electron transfer between CODH and the CO-induced hydrogenase. Here we present the spectroscopic and biochemical properties of the CODH:CooF complex. The characteristic EPR signals observed for CODH are largely insensitive to CooF complexation. Metal analysis and EPR spectroscopy show that CooF contains 2 Fe4S4 clusters. The observation of 2 Fe4S4 clusters for CooF contradicts the prediction of 4 Fe4S4 clusters based on analysis of the amino acid sequence of CooF and structural studies of CooF homologs. Comparison of in vivo and in vitro CO-dependent H2 evolution indicates that ∼ 90% of the activity is lost upon cell lysis. We propose that the loss of two labile Fe-S clusters from CooF during cell lysis may be responsible for the low in vitro CO-dependent H2 evolution activity. During the course of these studies, a new assay for CODH:CooF was developed using membranes from an R. rubrum mutant that did not express CODH:CooF, but expressed high levels of the CO-induced hydrogenase. The assay revealed that the CO-induced hydrogenase requires the presence of CODH:CooF for optimal H2 evolution activity.  相似文献   

8.
F420-nonreactive and F420-reactive hydrogenases have been partially purified from Methanococcus jannaschii, an extremely thermophilic methanogen isolated from a submarine hydrothermal vent. The molecular weights of both hydrogenases were determined by native gradient electrophoresis in 5 to 27% polyacrylamide gels. The F420-nonreactive hydrogenase produced one major band (475 kilodaltons), whereas the F420-reactive hydrogenase produced two major bands (990 and 115 kilodaltons). The F420-nonreactive hydrogenase consisted of two subunits (43 and 31 kilodaltons), and the F420-reactive hydrogenase contained three subunits (48, 32, and 25 kilodaltons). Each hydrogenase was active at very high temperatures. Methyl viologen-reducing activity of the F420-nonreactive hydrogenase was maximal at 80°C but was still detectable at 103°C. The maximum activities of F420-reactive hydrogenase for F420 and methyl viologen were measured at 80 and 90°C, respectively. Low but measureable activity toward methyl viologen was repeatedly observed at 103°C. Moreover, the half-life of the F420-nonreactive hydrogenase at 70°C was over 9 h, and that of the F420-reactive enzyme was over 3 h.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Photosynthetic microorganisms that directly channel solar energy to the production of molecular hydrogen are a potential future biofuel system. Building such a system requires installation of a hydrogenase in the photosynthetic organism that is both tolerant to oxygen and capable of hydrogen production. Toward this end, we have identified the [NiFe] hydrogenase from the marine bacterium Alteromonas macleodii “Deep ecotype” that is able to be heterologously expressed in cyanobacteria and has tolerance to partial oxygen. The A. macleodii enzyme shares sequence similarity with the uptake hydrogenases that favor hydrogen uptake activity over hydrogen evolution. To improve hydrogen evolution from the A. macleodii hydrogenase, we examined the three Fe-S clusters found in the small subunit of many [NiFe] uptake hydrogenases that presumably act as a molecular wire to guide electrons to or from the active site of the enzyme. Studies by others altering the medial cluster of a Desulfovibrio fructosovorans hydrogenase from 3Fe-4S to 4Fe-4S resulted in two-fold improved hydrogen evolution activity.

Results

We adopted a strategy of screening for improved hydrogenase constructs using an Escherichia coli expression system before testing in slower growing cyanobacteria. From the A. macleodii enzyme, we created a mutation in the gene encoding the hydrogenase small subunit that in other systems is known to convert the 3Fe-4S medial cluster to 4Fe-4S. The medial cluster substitution did not improve the hydrogen evolution activity of our hydrogenase. However, modifying both the medial cluster and the ligation of the distal Fe-S cluster improved in vitro hydrogen evolution activity relative to the wild type hydrogenase by three- to four-fold. Other properties of the enzyme including thermostability and tolerance to partial oxygen did not appear to be affected by the substitutions.

Conclusions

Our results show that substitution of amino acids altering the ligation of Fe-S clusters in the A. macleodii [NiFe] uptake hydrogenase resulted in increased hydrogen evolution activity. This activity can be recapitulated in multiple host systems and with purified protein. These results validate the approach of using an E. coli-cyanobacteria shuttle system for enzyme expression and improvement.
  相似文献   

10.

Background

Surface waters of aquatic environments have been shown to both evolve and consume hydrogen and the ocean is estimated to be the principal natural source. In some marine habitats, H2 evolution and uptake are clearly due to biological activity, while contributions of abiotic sources must be considered in others. Until now the only known biological process involved in H2 metabolism in marine environments is nitrogen fixation.

Principal Findings

We analyzed marine and freshwater environments for the presence and distribution of genes of all known hydrogenases, the enzymes involved in biological hydrogen turnover. The total genomes and the available marine metagenome datasets were searched for hydrogenase sequences. Furthermore, we isolated DNA from samples from the North Atlantic, Mediterranean Sea, North Sea, Baltic Sea, and two fresh water lakes and amplified and sequenced part of the gene encoding the bidirectional NAD(P)-linked hydrogenase. In 21% of all marine heterotrophic bacterial genomes from surface waters, one or several hydrogenase genes were found, with the membrane-bound H2 uptake hydrogenase being the most widespread. A clear bias of hydrogenases to environments with terrestrial influence was found. This is exemplified by the cyanobacterial bidirectional NAD(P)-linked hydrogenase that was found in freshwater and coastal areas but not in the open ocean.

Significance

This study shows that hydrogenases are surprisingly abundant in marine environments. Due to its ecological distribution the primary function of the bidirectional NAD(P)-linked hydrogenase seems to be fermentative hydrogen evolution. Moreover, our data suggests that marine surface waters could be an interesting source of oxygen-resistant uptake hydrogenases. The respective genes occur in coastal as well as open ocean habitats and we presume that they are used as additional energy scavenging devices in otherwise nutrient limited environments. The membrane-bound H2-evolving hydrogenases might be useful as marker for bacteria living inside of marine snow particles.  相似文献   

11.
The genome of the sulfate-reducing and anaerobic bacterium Desulfovibrio fructosovorans encodes different hydrogenases. Among them is Hnd, a tetrameric cytoplasmic [FeFe] hydrogenase that has previously been described as an NADP-specific enzyme (Malki et al., 1995). In this study, we purified and characterized a recombinant Strep-tagged form of Hnd and demonstrated that it is an electron-bifurcating enzyme. Flavin-based electron-bifurcation is a mechanism that couples an exergonic redox reaction to an endergonic one allowing energy conservation in anaerobic microorganisms. One of the three ferredoxins of the bacterium, that was named FdxB, was also purified and characterized. It contains a low-potential (Em?=??450?mV) [4Fe4S] cluster. We found that Hnd was not able to reduce NADP+, and that it catalyzes the simultaneous reduction of FdxB and NAD+. Moreover, Hnd is the first electron-bifurcating hydrogenase that retains activity when purified aerobically due to formation of an inactive state of its catalytic site protecting against O2 damage (Hinact). Hnd is highly active with the artificial redox partner (methyl viologen) and can perform the electron-bifurcation reaction to oxidize H2 with a specific activity of 10?μmol of NADH/min/mg of enzyme. Surprisingly, the ratio between NADH and reduced FdxB varies over the reaction with a decreasing amount of FdxB reduced per NADH produced, indicating a more complex mechanism than previously described. We proposed a new mechanistic model in which the ferredoxin is recycled at the hydrogenase catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

12.
The hydrogen-evolving reaction of the purified soluble NAD-linked hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus was used to determine kinetic parameters of the enzyme. The H2-evolving activity with methyl viologen as electron mediator was 20-fold as compared to that with NADH. In the assay with dithionite-reduced methyl viologen (K m 0.7 mM) the hydrogenase was most active at a redox potential of –560 mV and exhibited a pH optimum of 7.0. The K m for protons, the second substrate for H2 evolution, was 6.2 nM. With electrochemically reduced methyl viologen the pH optimum was shifted to pH 6.0. Double-reciprocal plots of reaction rates versus proton concentrations intercepted at the ordinate for different methyl viologen concentrations. At different pH values such an intercept was also observed with the dye as the varied substrate. The kinetic data are diagnostic for an ordered bisubstrate mechanism where both substrates are bound before the product H2 is released. Hydrogenase coupled to thylakoid membranes resulted in a constant H2 evolution rate over 6 h. The system appeared to be limited by the capacity of the thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

13.
Recently, a novel group of [NiFe]-hydrogenases has been defined that appear to have a great impact in the global hydrogen cycle. This so-called group 5 [NiFe]-hydrogenase is widespread in soil-living actinobacteria and can oxidize molecular hydrogen at atmospheric levels, which suggests a high affinity of the enzyme toward H2. Here, we provide a biochemical characterization of a group 5 hydrogenase from the betaproteobacterium Ralstonia eutropha H16. The hydrogenase was designated an actinobacterial hydrogenase (AH) and is catalytically active, as shown by the in vivo H2 uptake and by activity staining in native gels. However, the enzyme does not sustain autotrophic growth on H2. The AH was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography and consists of two subunits with molecular masses of 65 and 37 kDa. Among the electron acceptors tested, nitroblue tetrazolium chloride was reduced by the AH at highest rates. At 30°C and pH 8, the specific activity of the enzyme was 0.3 μmol of H2 per min and mg of protein. However, an unexpectedly high Michaelis constant (Km) for H2 of 3.6 ± 0.5 μM was determined, which is in contrast to the previously proposed low Km of group 5 hydrogenases and makes atmospheric H2 uptake by R. eutropha most unlikely. Amperometric activity measurements revealed that the AH maintains full H2 oxidation activity even at atmospheric oxygen concentrations, showing that the enzyme is insensitive toward O2.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Hydrogenases are enzymes that play a key role in controlling excess reducing equivalents in both photosynthetic and anaerobic organisms. This enzyme is viewed as potentially important for the industrial generation of hydrogen gas; however, insufficient hydrogen production has impeded its use in a commercial process. Here, we explore the potential to circumvent this problem by directly evolving the Fe⿿Fe hydrogenase genes from two species of Clostridia bacteria. In addition, a computational model based on these mutant sequences was developed and used as a predictive aid for the isolation of enzymes with even greater efficiency in hydrogen production. Two of the improved mutants have a logarithmic increase in hydrogen production in our in vitro assay. Furthermore, the model predicts hydrogenase sequences with hydrogen productions as high as 540-fold over the positive control. Taken together, these results demonstrate the potential of directed evolution to improve the native bacterial hydrogenases as a first step for improvement of hydrogenase activity, further in silico prediction, and finally, construction and demonstration of an improved algal hydrogenase in an in vivo assay of C. reinhardtii hydrogen production.  相似文献   

17.
The H2 uptake activity (units/mg protein) of Clostridium pasteurianum cells with methylene blue as the electron acceptor increases with cell density independent of the growth conditions. The H2 evolution activity (units/mg protein) of the same cells with reduced methyl viologen as the electron donor remains fairly constant under all growth conditions tested. Cells grown under N2-fixing conditions have the highest H2 uptake activity and were used for the purification of hydrogenase II (uptake hydrogenase). Attempts to separate hydrogenase II from hydrogenase I (bidirectional hydrogenase) by a previously published method were unreliable. We report here a new large-scale purification procedure which employs a rapid membrane filtration system to fractionate cell-free extracts. Hydrogenases I and II were easily filtered into the low-molecular-weight fraction (Mr less than 100 000), and from this, hydrogenase II was further purified to a homogeneous state. Hydrogenase II is a monomeric iron-sulfur protein of molecular weight 53 000 containing eight iron atoms and eight acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Hydrogenase II catalyzes both H2 oxidation and H2 evolution at rates of 3000 and 5.9 μmol H2 consumed or evolved/min per mg protein, respectively. The purification procedure for hydrogenase II using the filtration system described greatly facilitates the large-scale purification of hydrogenase I and other enzymes from cell-free extracts of C. pasteurianum.  相似文献   

18.
Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 was selected for the homologous overexpression of its Fe-only hydrogenase and for the heterologous expressions of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Scenedesmus obliquus HydA1 Fe-only hydrogenases. The three Strep tag II-tagged Fe-only hydrogenases were isolated with high specific activities by two-step column chromatography. The purified algal hydrogenases evolve hydrogen with rates of around 700 μmol H2 min−1 mg−1, while HydA from C. acetobutylicum (HydACa) shows the highest activity (5,522 μmol H2 min−1 mg−1) in the direction of hydrogen uptake. Further, kinetic parameters and substrate specificity were reported. An electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analysis of the thionin-oxidized HydACa protein indicates a characteristic rhombic EPR signal that is typical for the oxidized H cluster of Fe-only hydrogenases.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Hydrogen production by cell-free extracts of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is stimulated by anions when methyl viologen, reduced by dithionite, is used as the electron donor to hydrogenase. The increasing effectiveness of various anions closely follows their position in the Hofmeister chaotropic sequence. The most stimulatory anion tested, I?, gives a six-fold increase in activity at a concentration of 0.5 n. The Km of the enzyme for methyl viologen is not affected by anions, while the V is greatly increased. H2 oxidation coupled to methyl viologen reduction is also greatly stimulated by anions. However, when reduced ferredoxin is used as the electron donor to hydrogenase, there is a very strong inhibition of H2 production by salts. In this case, the V of the enzyme is unaffected, but there is a large increase in the Km of the enzyme for ferredoxin. The most inhibitory salt tested, KI, decreases hydrogenase activity by 93% at a concentration of 0.2 n.  相似文献   

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