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1.
Hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC No. 27774) grown in unenriched and in enriched 61Ni and 57Fe media has been purified to apparent homogeneity. Two fractions of enzymes with hydrogenase activity were separated and were termed hydrogenase I and hydrogenase II. they were shown to have similar molecular weights (77,600 for hydrogenase I and 75,500 for hydrogenase II), to be composed of two polypeptide chains, and to contain Ni and non-heme iron. Because of its higher specific activity (152 versus 97) hydrogenase II was selected for EPR and M?ssbauer studies. As isolated, hydrogenase II exhibits an "isotropic" EPR signal at g = 2.02 and a rhombic EPR signal at g = 2.3, 2.2, and 2.0. Isotopic substitution of 61Ni proves that the rhombic signal is due to Ni. Combining the M?ssbauer and EPR data, the isotropic g = 2.02 EPR signal was shown to originate from a 3Fe cluster which may have oxygenous or nitrogenous ligands. In addition, the M?ssbauer data also revealed two [4Fe-4S]2+ clusters iun each molecule of hydrogenase II. The EPR and M?ssbauer data of hydrogenase I were found to be identical to those of hydrogenase II, indicating that both enzymes have common metallic centers.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogenase I (bidirectional) and hydrogenase II (uptake) of Clostridium pasteurianum have been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, in the presence and absence of the inhibitor, CO. These hydrogenases contain both a novel type of iron-sulfur cluster (H), which is the proposed site of H2 catalysis, and ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] clusters (F). The results show that the H clusters of these two hydrogenases have very different properties. The H cluster of oxidized hydrogenase II (Hox-II) exhibits three distinct EPR signals, two of which are pH-dependent. Hox-II binds CO reversibly to give a single, pH-independent species with a novel, rhombic EPR spectrum. The H cluster of reduced hydrogenase II (Hred-II) does not react with CO. In contrast, the EPR spectrum of Hox-I appears homogeneous and independent of pH. Hox-I has a much lower affinity for CO than Hox-II, and binds CO irreversibly to give an axial EPR signal. Hred-I also binds CO irreversibly. The EPR spectra of Fred-I and Fred-II show little or no change after CO treatment. Prior exposure to CO does not affect the catalytic activity of the reduced or oxidized hydrogenases when assayed in the absence of CO, but both enzymes are irreversibly inactivated if CO is present during catalysis. Mechanisms for H2 activation by hydrogenase I and hydrogenase II are proposed from the determined midpoint potentials (Em, pH 8.0) of H-I and H-II (Em approximately -400 mV, -CO; approximately -360 mV, +CO), F-I (Em = -420 mV, +/- CO), and F-II (Em = -180 mV, +/- CO). These allow one to rationalize the different modes of CO binding to the two hydrogenases and suggest why hydrogenase II preferentially catalyzes H2 oxidation. The results are discussed in light of recent spectroscopic data on the structures of the two H clusters.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of acetylene on the activity of the three types of hydrogenase from the anaerobic sulfate reducing bacteria has been investigated. The (Fe) hydrogenase is resistant to inhibition by acetylene while the nickel-containing hydrogenases are inhibited by acetylene with the (NiFe) hydrogenase being 10-50 fold more sensitive than the (NiFeSe) hydrogenase. In addition the Ni(III) EPR signal (g approximately 2.3) of the "as isolated" (NiFe) hydrogenase was significantly decreased in intensity upon exposure to acetylene.  相似文献   

4.
On the novel H2-activating iron-sulfur center of the "Fe-only" hydrogenases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The two hydrogenases (I and II) of the anaerobic N2-fixing bacterium Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) and the hydrogenases of the anaerobes Megasphaera elsdenii (Me) and Desulfovibrio vulgaris (strain Hildenborough, Dv), contain iron-sulfur clusters but not nickel. They are the most active hydrogenases known. All four enzymes in their reduced states give rise to EPR signals typical of [4Fe-4S]1+ clusters but exhibit novel EPR signals in their oxidized states. For example, Cp hydrogenase I exhibits a sharp rhombic EPR signal when oxidized under mild conditions but the enzyme is inactivated by over-oxidation and then exhibits an axial EPR signal. A similar axial signal is observed from mildly oxidized hydrogenase I after treatment with CO. EPR, M?ssbauer and ENDOR spectroscopy indicate that the EPR signals from the oxidized enzyme and its CO derivative arise from a novel spin-coupled Fe center. Low temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) studies reveal that an EPR-silent Fe-S cluster with S greater than 1/2 is also present in oxidized hydrogenase I. From a study of all spectroscopic properties of Cp, Dv, and Me hydrogenases, it is concluded that the H2-activating site of all four is a novel Fe-S cluster with S greater than 0 and integer, which in the oxidized state is exchange-coupled to a S = 1/2 species. The data are most consistent with the S = 1/2 species being a low spin Fe(III) center. The H2-activating site is susceptible to oxidative rearrangements to yield both active and inactive states of the enzyme. We discuss the possible implications of these finding to methods of enzyme oxidation and purification procedures currently used for hydrogenases.  相似文献   

5.
The periplasmic hydrogenase of Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenbourough NCIB 8303) belongs to the category of [Fe] hydrogenase which contains only iron-sulfur clusters as its prosthetic groups. Amino acid analyses were performed on the purified D. vulgaris hydrogenase. The amino acid composition obtained compared very well with the result derived from the nucleotide sequence of the structural gene (Voordouw, G., Brenner, S. (1985) Eur. J. Biochem. 148, 515-520). Detailed EPR reductive titration studies on the D. vulgaris hydrogenase were performed to characterize the metal centers in this hydrogenase. In addition to the three previously observed EPR signals (namely, the "isotropic" 2.02 signal, the rhombic 2.10 signal, and the complex signal of the reduced enzyme), a rhombic signal with resonances at the g-values of 2.06, 1.96, and 1.89 (the rhombic 2.06 signal) was detected when the samples were poised at potentials between 0 and -250 mV (with respect to normal hydrogen electrode). The midpoint redox potentials for each of the four EPR-active species were determined, and the characteristics of each EPR signal are described. Both the rhombic 2.10 and 2.06 signals exhibit spectral properties that are distinct from a ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S] cluster and are proposed to originate from the same H2-binding center but in two different conformations. The complex signal of the reduced hydrogenase has been shown to represent two spin-spin interacting ferredoxin-type [4Fe-4S]1+ clusters (Grande, H. J., Dunham, W. R., Averill, B., Van Dijk, C., and Sands, R. H. (1983) Eur. J. Biochem. 136, 201-207). The titration data indicated a strong cooperative effect between these two clusters during their reduction. In an effort to accurately estimate the number of iron atoms/molecule of hydrogenase, plasma emission and chemical methods were used to determine the iron contents in the samples; and four different methods, including amino acid analysis, were used for protein determination. The resulting iron stoichiometries were found to be method-dependent and vary over a wide range (+/- 20%). The uncertainties involved in the determination of iron stoichiometry are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The effects of CO and O2 on the EPR spectrum of oxidized Clostridium pasteurianum hydrogenase I have been investigated both before and after prolonged exposure to white light at 8 K and 30 K. Low concentrations of O2 were found to induce analogous changes in the EPR spectrum as CO, i.e. conversion of the rhombic signal with g approximately 2.10, 2.04, 2.00, a characteristic of the novel H2-activating center in oxidized Fe-hydrogenases, to an axial signal with g approximately 2.07, 2.01, 2.01. The results suggest a common binding site and mode of coordination for CO and O2 and permit rationalization of conflicting reports from different laboratories concerning the EPR properties of oxidized Fe-hydrogenases. The CO- and O2-induced axial EPR signals were found to be light-sensitive at low temperatures. Moreover, they exhibited indistinguishable and unusual photolysis behavior with the dominant photo-product being dependent on the temperature at which illumination was performed. At 8 K, photodissociation of CO or O2 occurs, resulting in an EPR signal identical with that of the oxidized enzyme in the absence of CO or O2. However, at 30 K, the dominant photoproduct is a rhombic EPR signal with g approximately 2.26, 2.12, 1.89. While the origin of this new EPR signal is uncertain, the g-value anisotropy and relaxation characteristics resemble those of a low spin Fe(III) center. These two photoproducts cannot be thermally or photolytically interconverted, but both are quantitatively reconverted to the original axial EPR signal on warming in the dark to 200 K. A tentative working hypothesis for the nature of the H2-activating center of Fe-hydrogenases is presented that is consistent with the available physiochemical data and permits rationalization of the novel photolysis behavior.  相似文献   

8.
A soluble hydrogenase from the halophilic sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio salexigens, strain British Guiana (NCIB 8403) has been purified to apparent homogeneity with a final specific activity of 760 mumoles H2 evolved/min/mg (an overall 180-fold purification with 20% recovery yield). The enzyme is composed of two non-identical subunits of molecular masses 62 and 36 kDa, respectively, and contains approximately 1 Ni, 12-15 Fe and 1 Se atoms/mole. The hydrogenase shows a visible absorption spectrum typical of an iron-sulfur containing protein (A400/A280 = 0.275) and a molar absorbance of 54 mM-1cm-1 at 400 nm. In the native state (as isolated, under aerobic conditions), the enzyme is almost EPR silent at 100 K and below. However, upon reduction under H2 atmosphere a rhombic EPR signal develops at g-values 2.22, 2.16 and around 2.0, which is optimally detected at 40 K. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the nickel signal C (g-values 2.19, 2.16 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized D. gigas nickel containing hydrogenase and assigned to nickel by 61 Ni isotopic substitution (J.J.G. Moura, M. Teixeira, I. Moura, A.V. Xavier and J. Le Gall (1984), J. Mol. Cat., 23, 305-314). Upon longer incubation with H2 the "2.22" EPR signal decreases. During the course of a redox titration under H2, this EPR signal attains a maximal intensity around--380 mV. At redox states where this "2.22" signal develops (or at lower redox potentials), low temperature studies (below 10 K) reveals the presence of other EPR species with g-values at 2.23, 2.21, 2.14 with broad components at higher fields. This new signal (fast relaxing) exhibits a different microwave power dependence from that of the "2.22" signal, which readily saturates with microwave power (slow relaxing). Also at low temperature (8 K) typical reduced iron-sulfur EPR signals are concomitantly observed with gmed approximately 1.94. The catalytic properties of the enzyme were also followed by substrate isotopic exchange D2/H+ and H2 production measurements.  相似文献   

9.
Previous M?ssbauer and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) studies of oxidized hydrogenase I (bidirectional) from Clostridium pasteurianum W5 demonstrated that this enzyme contains two diamagnetic [4Fe-4S]2+ clusters and an iron-sulfur center of unknown structure and composition that is characterized by its novel M?ssbauer and ENDOR properties. In the present study we combine ENDOR and EPR measurements to show that the novel cluster contains 3-4 iron atoms. In addition, we have used EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies to investigate the effect of binding the competitive inhibitor carbon monoxide to oxidized hydrogenase I, using 13C-labeled CO and enzyme isotopically enriched in 57Fe. Treatment of oxidized enzyme with CO causes the g-tensor of the paramagnetic center to change from rhombic to axial symmetry. The observation of a 13C signal by ENDOR spectroscopy and analysis of the EPR broadening show that a single CO covalently binds to the paramagnetic center. The 13C hyperfine coupling constant (Ac approximately equal to 21 MHz) is within the range observed for inorganic iron-carbonyl clusters. The observation of 57Fe ENDOR signals from two types of iron site ([A1c] approximately 30-34 MHz; [A2c] approximately 6 MHz) and resolved 57Fe hyperfine interactions in the EPR spectrum from two nuclei characterized by [A1c] confirm that the iron-sulfur cluster remains intact upon CO coordination, but show that CO binding greatly changes the 57Fe hyperfine coupling constants.  相似文献   

10.
Two different hydrogenases have been isolated from Clostridium pasteurianum W5. Hydrogenase II (uptake) is active in H2 oxidation while hydrogenase I (bidirectional) is active both in H2 oxidation and evolution. Previous EPR and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) studies of oxidized hydrogenase I have now been complemented by analogous studies on oxidized 57Fe-enriched hydrogenase II and its CO derivative (using 12CO and 13CO). Binding of CO greatly changes the EPR spectrum of oxidized hydrogenase II, and use of 13CO leads to resolved hyperfine splitting from interaction with a single 13CO molecule (AC approximately 34 MHz). This coupling is over 50% larger than that seen for hydrogenase I. 57Fe ENDOR disclosed two types of iron site in both oxidized hydrogenase II and its CO derivative. Combination of EPR, ENDOR, and M?ssbauer results shows that site 1 has AFe1 = 18 MHz shifting to approximately 30 MHz upon CO binding and consisting of two Fe atoms and site 2 has A2 approximately 7 MHz shifting to approximately 10 MHz and containing a single Fe. These results are very similar to those seen for hydrogenase I, which indicates that a structurally similar 3Fe cluster, believed to be the catalytically active site, is present in both. Proton ENDOR shows a solvent exchangeable resonance only in the CO derivative of hydrogenase II. This indicates a structural difference between hydrogenases I and II that is brought out by CO binding. No evidence of 14N coordination to the cluster is seen for either enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Bennett B  Lemon BJ  Peters JW 《Biochemistry》2000,39(25):7455-7460
Carbon monoxide binding and inhibition have been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy in solution and in crystals of structurally described states of the Fe-only hydrogenase (CpI) from Clostridium pasteurianum. Simulation of the EPR spectrum of the as-isolated state indicates that the main component of the EPR spectrum consists of the oxidized state of the "H cluster" and components due to reduced accessory FeS clusters. Addition of carbon monoxide to CpI in the presence of dithionite results in the inhibition of hydrogen evolution activity, and a characteristic axial EPR signal [g(eff(1)), g(eff(2)), and g(eff(3)) = 2.0725, 2.0061, and 2.0061, respectively] was observed. Hydrogen evolution activity was restored by successive sparging with hydrogen and argon and resulted in samples that exhibited the native oxidized EPR signature that could be converted to the reduced form upon addition of sodium dithionite and hydrogen. To examine the relationship between the spectroscopically defined states of CpI and those observed structurally by X-ray crystallography, we have examined the CpI crystals using EPR spectroscopy. EPR spectra of the crystals in the CO-bound state exhibit the previously described axial signal associated with CO binding. The results indicate that the addition of carbon monoxide to CpI results in a single reversible carbon monoxide-bound species characterized by loss of enzyme activity and the distinctive axial EPR signal.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of exposure to carbon monoxide on the activity of the (Fe) hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris has been determined. Concentrations of carbon monoxide which completely inhibit hydrogenase activity and induce formation of the axial g = 2.06 EPR signal up to 0.8 spin/molecule do not cause irreversible inhibition of the (Fe) hydrogenase.  相似文献   

13.
Hydrogenase [hydrogen: ferricytochrome c3 oxidoreductase, EC 1.12.2.1] solubilized and purified from the particulate fraction of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Miyazaki F (IAM 12604) contains 8 iron and 8 labile sulfide ions in one molecule which is composed of two unequal subunits (Mr: 60,000 + 29,000). It does not contain nickel atoms. The EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) spectrum has an isotropic signal at g = 2.017 which is independent of the temperature. The peak-to-peak width of the signal is about 20 G. The signal intensity is nearly equivalent to 1 unpaired electron per molecule. No other signals can be detected in the field range between 2,240 and 4,240 G (which corresponds to g-values between 2.91 and 1.54). Ferricyanide has only a little effect on the shape and intensity of the EPR signal. The hydrogenase reduced under H2 is EPR silent. The M?ssbauer spectrum has no hyperfine splitting at 4K. The isomer shift and quadrupole splitting at 77K are 0.38 and 0.87 mm/s, respectively. Based on these magnetic measurements, the structure of the active center of hydrogenase was suggested to be [4Fe-4S]3+ + [4Fe-4S]2+.  相似文献   

14.
The soluble hydrogenase (hydrogen:NAD+ oxidoreductase (EC 1.12.1.2) from Alcaligenes eutrophus has been purified to homogeneity by an improved procedure, which includes preparative electrophoresis as final step. The specific activity of 57 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein was achieved and the yield of pure enzyme from 200 g cells (wet weight) was about 16 mg/purification. After removal of non-functional iron, analysis of iron and acid-labile sulphur yielded average values of 11.5 and 12.9 atoms/molecule of enzyme, respectively. p-Chloromercuribenzoate was a strong inhibitor of hydrogenase and apparently competed with NAD not with H2. Chelating agents, CO and O2 failed to inhibit enzyme activity. The oxidized hydrogenase showed an EPR spectrum with a small signal at g = 2.02. On reduction the appearance of a high temperature (50--77 K) signal at g = 2.04, 1.95 and a more complex low temperature (less than 30 K) spectrum at g = 2.04, 2.0, 1.95, 1.93, 1.86 was observed. The pronounced temperature dependence and characteristic lineshape of the signals obtained with hydrogenase in 80--85% dimethylsulphoxide demonstrated that iron-sulphur centres of both the [2Fe-2S] and [4Fe-4S] types are present in the enzyme. Quantitation of the EPR signals indicated the existence of two identical centres each of the [4Fe-4S] and of the [2Fe-2S] type. The midpoint redox potentials of the [4Fe-4S] and the [2Fe-2S] centres were determined to be -445 mV and -325 mV, respectively. Spin coupling between two centres, indicated by the split feature of the low temperature spectrum of the native hydrogenase around g = 1.95, 1.93, has been established by power saturation studies. On reduction of the [Fe-4S] centres, the electron spin relaxation rate of the [2Fe-2S] centres was considerably increased. Treatment of hydrogenase with CO caused no change in EPR spectra.  相似文献   

15.
The hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743) was purified from each of three different fractions: soluble periplasmic (wash), soluble cytoplasmic (cell disruption) and membrane-bound (detergent solubilization). Plasma-emission metal analysis detected in all three fractions the presence of iron plus nickel and selenium in equimolecular amounts. These hydrogenases were shown to be composed of two non-identical subunits and were distinct with respect to their spectroscopic properties. The EPR spectra of the native (as isolated) enzymes showed very weak isotropic signals centered around g approximately 2.0 when observed at low temperature (below 20 K). The periplasmic and membrane-bound enzymes also presented additional EPR signals, observable up to 77 K, with g greater than 2.0 and assigned to nickel(III). The periplasmic hydrogenase exhibited EPR features at 2.20, 2.06 and 2.0. The signals observed in the membrane-bound preparations could be decomposed into two sets with g at 2.34, 2.16 and approximately 2.0 (component I) and at 2.33, 2.24, and approximately 2.0 (component II). In the reduced state, after exposure to an H2 atmosphere, all the hydrogenase fractions gave identical EPR spectra. EPR studies, performed at different temperatures and microwave powers, and in samples partially and fully reduced (under hydrogen or dithionite), allowed the identification of two different iron-sulfur centers: center I (2.03, 1.89 and 1.86) detectable below 10 K, and center II (2.06, 1.95 and 1.88) which was easily saturated at low temperatures. Additional EPR signals due to transient nickel species were detected with g greater than 2.0, and a rhombic EPR signal at 77 K developed at g 2.20, 2.16 and 2.0. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the Ni-signal C (g at 2.19, 2.14 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized Desulfovibrio gigas hydrogenase (Teixeira et al. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 8942]. During the course of a redox titration at pH 7.6 using H2 gas as reductant, this signal attained a maximal intensity around -320 mV. Low-temperature studies of samples at redox states where this rhombic signal develops (10 K or lower) revealed the presence of a fast-relaxing complex EPR signal with g at 2.25, 2.22, 2.15, 2.12, 2.10 and broad components at higher field. The soluble hydrogenase fractions did not show a time-dependent activation but the membrane-bound form required such a step in order to express full activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Methanosarcina barkeri has recently been shown to produce a multisubunit membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenase designated Ech (Escherichia coli hydrogenase 3) hydrogenase. In the present study Ech hydrogenase was purified to apparent homogeneity in a high yield. The enzyme preparation obtained only contained the six polypeptides which had previously been shown to be encoded by the ech operon. The purified enzyme was found to contain 0.9 mol of Ni, 11.3 mol of nonheme-iron and 10.8 mol of acid-labile sulfur per mol of enzyme. Using the purified enzyme the kinetic parameters were determined. The enzyme catalyzed the H2 dependent reduction of a M. barkeri 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxin with a specific activity of 50 U x mg protein-1 at pH 7.0 and exhibited an apparent Km for the ferredoxin of 1 microM. The enzyme also catalyzed hydrogen formation with the reduced ferredoxin as electron donor at a rate of 90 U x mg protein-1 at pH 7.0. The apparent Km for the reduced ferredoxin was 7.5 microM. Reduction or oxidation of the ferredoxin proceeded at similar rates as the reduction or oxidation of oxidized or reduced methylviologen, respectively. The apparent Km for H2 was 5 microM. The kinetic data strongly indicate that the ferredoxin is the physiological electron donor or acceptor of Ech hydrogenase. Ech hydrogenase amounts to about 3% of the total cell protein in acetate-grown, methanol-grown or H2/CO2-grown cells of M. barkeri, as calculated from quantitative Western blot experiments. The function of Ech hydrogenase is ascribed to ferredoxin-linked H2 production coupled to the oxidation of the carbonyl-group of acetyl-CoA to CO2 during growth on acetate, and to ferredoxin-linked H2 uptake coupled to the reduction of CO2 to the redox state of CO during growth on H2/CO2 or methanol.  相似文献   

17.
A new and improved method for the purification of the periplasmic hydrogenase from Desulfovibriogigasis described. This preparation of hydrogenase was found to contain 0.64 g atom of nickel per mole of protein. In the oxidized state, the hydrogenase exhibited an isotropic signal at g = 2.02 and a characteristic Ni(III) signal with g-values at 2.31, 2.20 and ~2.0. The EPR spectrum of the reduced enzyme consisted of multiple species. One set of g-values are determined as 2.17, 2.08 and 2.04. The other minor species exhibited a resonance at g = 2.28. On partial reoxidation of the hydrogenase, the initial Ni(III) signals reappeared along with additional signals attributed to multiple Ni(III) species. It is proposed that Ni is an important functional unit in this hydrogenase.  相似文献   

18.
19.
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   

20.
The dependence on temperature in the range between 4.2 K and 20 K was measured for the EPR signal of monovalent nickel in H2-reduced hydrogenase from Chromatium vinosum and from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. In accordance with measurements on the hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas [Teixeira, M., Moura, I., Xavier, A. V., Huynh, B. H., DerVartanian, D. V., Peck, H. D., Jr, LeGall, J. and Moura, J. J. G. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 8942-8950; and Cammack, R., Patil, D. S. and Fernandez, V. M. (1985) Biochem. Soc. Trans. 13, 572-578], the enzyme from C. vinosum showed a distinct transformation of the EPR signal of nickel in this temperature region. The light sensitivity did not change. EPR spectra recorded at 9 GHz and at 35 GHz showed that the transformation of the spectrum at 4.2 K is caused by spin coupling to an unknown paramagnet. No coupling was apparent at temperatures above 20 K. At 4.2 K, additional, very broad signals in the region g= 1.2-3, as well as a signal around g = 5, were detected In the enzyme from C. Vinosum, both in the H2-reduced state and in the Ar-reoxidised state. The possible origin of the paramagnetic species responsible for these signals is discussed. The EPR signal of monovalent nickel in the enzyme from M. thermoautotrophicum showed no significant changes in line shape between 4.2 K and 70 K, nor were any additional signals detected. This suggests that in the reduced form of this enzyme similar paramagnetic species might be absent or not reduced.  相似文献   

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