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1.
Fisher K  Dilworth MJ  Newton WE 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15570-15577
In contrast to the wild-type MoFe protein, neither the alpha-195(Asn) nor the alpha-191(Lys) MoFe protein catalyzed N(2) reduction to NH(3), when complemented with wild-type Fe protein. However, N(2) was bound by the alpha-195(Asn) MoFe protein and inhibited the reduction of both protons and C(2)H(2). The alpha-191(Lys) MoFe protein did not interact with N(2). With the alpha-195(Asn) MoFe protein, the N(2)-induced inhibition of substrate reduction was reversed by removing the N(2). Surprisingly, even though added H(2) also relieved N(2) inhibition of substrate reduction, the alpha-195(Asn) MoFe protein did not catalyze HD formation under a N(2)/D(2) atmosphere. This observation is the first indication that these two reactions have different chemical origins, prompting a revision of the current hypothesis that these two reactions are consequences of the same nitrogenase chemistry. A rationale that accounts for the dichotomy of the two reactions is presented. The two altered MoFe proteins also responded quite differently to azide. It was a poor substrate for both but, in addition, azide was an electron-flux inhibitor with the 195(Asn) MoFe protein. The observed reactivity changes are correlated with likely structural changes caused by the amino acid substitutions and provide important details about the interaction(s) of N(2,) H(2), D(2), and azide with Mo-nitrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
Fisher K  Dilworth MJ  Kim CH  Newton WE 《Biochemistry》2000,39(35):10855-10865
Wild-type and three altered Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase MoFe proteins, with substitutions either at alpha-195(His) (replaced by alpha-195(Asn) or alpha-195(Gln)) or at alpha-191(Gln) (replaced by alpha-191(Lys)), were used to probe the interactions of HCN and CN(-), both of which are present in NaCN solutions at pH 7.4, with nitrogenase. The first goal was to determine how added C(2)H(2) enhances the rate of CH(4) production from HCN reduction by wild-type nitrogenase. In the absence of C(2)H(2), wild-type Mo-nitrogenase showed a declining total electron flux, which is an overall measure of all products formed, as the NaCN concentration was increased from 1 to 5 mM, whereas the rates of both CH(4) and NH(3) production increased with increasing NaCN concentration. The NH(3) production rate exceeded the CH(4) production rate up to 5 mM NaCN, at which point they became equal. The "excess NH(3)" likely arises from the two-electron reduction of HCN to CH(2)=NH, some of which is released and hydrolyzed to HCHO plus NH(3). With added C(2)H(2), the rate of CH(4) production increased but only until it equaled that of NH(3) production, which remained unchanged. In addition, total electron flux was decreased even more at each NaCN concentration by C(2)H(2). The increased CH(4) production did not arise from the added C(2)H(2). The lowered total electron flux with C(2)H(2) present would decrease the affinity of the enzyme for HCN, making it a poorer competitor for the binding site. Thus, less CH(2)=NH would be displaced, more CH(2)=NH would undergo the full six-electron reduction, and the rate of CH(4) production would be enhanced. A second goal was to gain mechanistic insight into the roles of the amino acid residues in the alpha-subunit of the MoFe protein at positions alpha-191 and alpha-195 in substrate reduction. At 5 mM NaCN and in the presence of excess wild-type Fe protein, the specific activity for CH(4) production by the alpha-195(Asn), alpha-195(Gln), and alpha-191(Lys) MoFe proteins was 59%, 159%, and 6%, respectively, of that of wild type. For the alpha-195(Asn) MoFe protein, total electron flux decreased with increasing NaCN concentration like wild type. However, the rates of both CH(4) and NH(3) production were maximal at 1 mM NaCN, and they remained unequal even at 5 mM NaCN. With the alpha-195(Gln) MoFe protein, the rates of production of both CH(4) and NH(3) were equal at all NaCN concentrations, and total electron flux was hardly affected by changing the NaCN concentration. With the alpha-191(Lys) MoFe protein, the rates of both CH(4) and NH(3) production were very low, but the rate of NH(3) production was higher, and both rates slowly increased with increasing NaCN concentration. A hypothesis, which is based on the varying apparent affinities of the altered MoFe proteins for HCN and CN(-), is advanced to explain the higher rate of NH(3) production versus the rate of CH(4) production and the effect of increasing NaCN concentration on electron flux to products. A new method for CH(3)NH(2) quantification showed that all four MoFe proteins produced CH(3)NH(2). Added CO significantly inhibited both CH(4) and NH(3) production from HCN with all MoFe proteins except for the alpha-191(Lys) MoFe protein, which still manifested its very low rate of NH(3) production but without CH(4) production. All of the MoFe proteins responded differently to the addition of C(2)H(2) to reactions containing NaCN. With the alpha-195(Asn) MoFe protein, added C(2)H(2) decreased the rates of both CH(4) and NH(3) production, but the rate of NH(3) production decreased much less. C(2)H(2) also exacerbated the inhibition of electron flux. With the alpha-195(Gln) MoFe protein, added C(2)H(2) decreased the rates of both CH(4) and NH(3) production substantially and about equally. C(2)H(2) also eliminated the slight decrease in total electron flux that was caused by NaCN. Added C(2)H(2) hardly affected the alpha-191(Lys) MoFe protein. (ABSTRACT TRUNCA  相似文献   

3.
Various S=3/2 EPR signals elicited from wild-type and variant Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase MoFe proteins appear to reflect different conformations assumed by the FeMo-cofactor with different protonation states. To determine whether these presumed changes in protonation and conformation reflect catalytic capacity, the responses (particularly to changes in electron flux) of the alphaH195Q, alphaH195N, and alphaQ191K variant MoFe proteins (where His at position 195 in the alpha subunit is replaced by Gln/Asn or Gln at position alpha-191 by Lys), which have strikingly different substrate-reduction properties, were studied by stopped-flow or rapid-freeze techniques. Rapid-freeze EPR at low electron flux (at 3-fold molar excess of wild-type Fe protein) elicited two transient FeMo-cofactor-based EPR signals within 1 s of initiating turnover under N(2) with the alphaH195Q and alphaH195N variants, but not with the alphaQ191K variant. No EPR signals attributable to P cluster oxidation were observed for any of the variants under these conditions. Furthermore, during turnover at low electron flux with the wild-type, alphaH195Q or alphaH195N MoFe protein, the longer-time 430-nm absorbance increase, which likely reflects P cluster oxidation, was also not observed (by stopped-flow spectrophotometry); it did, however, occur for all three MoFe proteins under higher electron flux. No 430-nm absorbance increase occurred with the alphaQ191K variant, not even at higher electron flux. This putative lack of involvement of the P cluster in electron transfer at low electron flux was confirmed by rapid-freeze (57)Fe M?ssbauer spectroscopy, which clearly showed FeMo-factor reduction without P cluster oxidation. Because the wild-type, alphaH195Q and alphaH195N MoFe proteins can bind N(2), but alphaQ195K cannot, these results suggest that P cluster oxidation occurs only under high electron flux as required for N(2) reduction.  相似文献   

4.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the biological reduction of N(2) to ammonia (nitrogen fixation), as well as the two-electron reduction of the non-physiological alkyne substrate acetylene (HC triple bond CH). A complex metallo-organic species called FeMo-cofactor provides the site of substrate reduction within the MoFe protein, but exactly where and how substrates interact with FeMo-cofactor remains unknown. Recent results have shown that the MoFe protein alpha-70(Val) residue, whose side chain approaches one Fe-S face of FeMo-cofactor, plays a significant role in defining substrate access to the active site. For example, substitution of alpha-70(Val) by alanine results in an increased capacity for the reduction of the larger alkyne propyne (HC triple bond C-CH(3)), whereas, substitution by isoleucine at this position nearly eliminates the capacity for the reduction of acetylene. These and complementary spectroscopic studies led us to propose that binding of short chain alkynes occurs with side-on binding to Fe atom 6 within FeMo-cofactor. In the present work, the alpha-70(Val) residue was substituted by glycine and this MoFe protein variant shows an increased capacity for reduction of the terminal alkyne, 1-butyne (HC triple bond C-CH(2)-CH(3)). This protein shows no detectable reduction of the internal alkyne 2-butyne (H(3)C-C triple bond C-CH(3)). In contrast, substitution of the nearby alpha-191(Gln) residue by alanine, in combination with the alpha-70(Ala) substitution, does result in significant reduction of 2-butyne, with the exclusive product being 2-cis-butene. These results indicate that the reduction of alkynes by nitrogenases involves side-on binding of the alkyne to Fe6 within FeMo-cofactor, and that a terminal acidic proton is not required for reduction. The successful design of amino acid substitutions that permit the targeted accommodation of an alkyne that otherwise is not a nitrogenase substrate provides evidence to support the current model for alkyne interaction within the nitrogenase MoFe protein.  相似文献   

5.
Unlike wild type, certain Mo-dependent nitrogenases, which are expressed in non-N2-fixing mutant strains of Azotobacter vinelandii and have single amino acid substitutions within a region of the MoFe protein alpha-subunit proposed to encompass an FeMo cofactor-binding domain, are able to catalyze the reduction of acetylene by both two and four electrons to yield ethylene and ethane, respectively (Scott, D. J., May, H. D., Newton, W. E., Brigle, K. E., and Dean, D. R. (1990) Nature 343, 188-190). Although the V-dependent nitrogenase is also able to catalyze the reduction of acetylene to the same two- and four-electron products (Dilworth, M. J., Eady, R. R., Robson, R. L., and Miller, R. W. (1987) Nature 327, 167-168), we find that ethane formation from acetylene catalyzed by the altered Mo-dependent nitrogenases occurs by a different mechanism, which is distinguished by: (i) an increased sensitivity to CO; (ii) the absence of a lag; and (iii) no temperature dependence of product distribution among ethylene and ethane during acetylene reduction. An altered MoFe protein, which was purified from one such mutant strain having the alpha-subunit glutaminyl 191 residue substituted by lysyl, exhibited both a changed S = 3/2 EPR spectrum and changes in the distribution of electrons to various products when compared to wild type. Also, unlike wild type, this altered MoFe protein catalyzed proton reduction that is inhibited by carbon monoxide (CO). Because proton reduction catalyzed by a nitrogenase that has a FeMo cofactor with citrate rather than homocitrate as its organic constituent (Liang, J., Madden, M., Shah, V. K., and Burris, R. H. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 8577-8581) is also inhibited by CO, the possibility arose that changes in the polypeptide environment of FeMo cofactor might have caused a rearrangement in its molecular structure or composition. However, this possibility was ruled out by biochemical reconstitution studies (using FeMo cofactor isolated from both the wild-type and altered MoFe proteins), which were monitored by EPR spectroscopy and resulting catalytic activity.  相似文献   

6.
Fifty years after a role of vanadium in biological fixation was proposed, it was shown that in addition to their well-characterized molybdendum nitrogenases, Azotobacter chroococcum and Azotobacter vinelandii both have a genetically distinct nitrogenase system in which the conventional molybdoprotein is replaced by a vanadoprotein. Both Mo-nitrogenases and V-nitrogenases have similar requirements for activity: MgATP, a low potential reductant and the absence of oxygen. The genes encoding the V-nitrogenase are expressed only under conditions of Mo-deficiency. V-Nitrogenase of A.chroococcum is made up of a tetrameric VFe protein (Mr 210,000) with an alpha 2 beta 2 structure containing two V atoms, 23 Fe atoms and 20 acid-labile sulphide atoms per tetramer, and a dimeric Fe protein (Mr 64,000) with a gamma 2 structure containing four Fe atoms and four acid-labile sulphide atoms per dimer. Vanadium K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicates that V in the VFe protein, like Mo in MoFe protein, has S, Fe and possibly O as nearest neighbours. A vanadium- and iron-containing cofactor (FeVaco) can be extracted from the VFe protein and will restore C2H2 reductase, but no nitrogenase activity, to the inactive MoFe protein accumulated by mutants unable to synthesize the molybdenum- and iron-containing co-factor of Mo-nitrogenase. The products of C2H2 reduction by the hybrid protein (C2H6 as well as C2H4) are a characteristic of the VFe protein and provide evidence that FeVaco is, or forms part of the active site of V-nitrogenase.  相似文献   

7.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the biological reduction of N(2) to ammonia (nitrogen fixation) as well as the reduction of a number of alternative substrates, including acetylene (HC identical with CH) to ethylene (H2C=CH2). It is known that the metallocluster FeMo-cofactor located within the nitrogenase MoFe protein component provides the site of substrate reduction, but the exact site where substrates bind and are reduced on the FeMo-cofactor remains unknown. We have recently shown that the alpha-70 residue of the MoFe protein plays a significant role in defining substrate access to the active site; alpha-70 approaches one face of the FeMo-cofactor, and when valine is substituted by alanine at this position, the substituted nitrogenase is able to accommodate a reduction of the larger alkyne propargyl alcohol (HC identical with CCH(2)OH, propargyl-OH). During this reduction, a substrate-derived intermediate can be trapped on the FeMo-cofactor resulting in an S = 1/2 spin system with a novel electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum. In the present work, trapping of the propargyl-OH-derived or propargyl amine (HC identical with CCH(2)NH(2), propargyl-NH(2))-derived intermediates is shown to be dependent on pH and the presence of histidine at position alpha-195. It is concluded that these catalytic intermediates are stabilized and thereby trapped by H-bonding interactions between either the-OH group or the-NH(3)(+)group and the imidazole epsilon-NH of alpha-195(His). Thus, for the first time it is possible to establish the location of a bound substrate-derived intermediate on the FeMo-cofactor. Refinement of the binding mode and site was accomplished by the use of density functional and force field calculations pointing to an eta(2) coordination at Fe-6 of the FeMo-cofactor.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrogenase in the archaebacterium Methanosarcina barkeri 227.   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The discovery of nitrogen fixation in the archaebacterium Methanosarcina barkeri 227 raises questions concerning the similarity of archaebacterial nitrogenases to Mo and alternative nitrogenases in eubacteria. A scheme for achieving a 20- to 40-fold partial purification of nitrogenase components from strain 227 was developed by using protamine sulfate precipitation, followed by using a fast protein liquid chromatography apparatus operated inside an anaerobic glove box. As in eubacteria, the nitrogenase activity was resolved into two components. The component 1 analog had a molecular size of approximately 250 kDa, as estimated by gel filtration, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels revealed two predominant bands with molecular sizes near 57 and 62 kDa, consistent with an alpha 2 beta 2 tetramer as in eubacterial component 1 proteins. For the component 2 analog, a molecular size of approximately 120 kDa was estimated by gel filtration, with a subunit molecular size near 31 kDa, indicating that the component 2 protein is a tetramer, in contrast to eubacterial component 2 proteins, which are dimers. Rates of C2H2 reduction by the nearly pure subunits were 1,000 nmol h-1 mg of protein-1, considerably lower than those for conventional Mo nitrogenases but similar to that of the non-Mo non-V nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. Strain 227 nitrogenase reduced N2 at a higher rate per electron than it reduced C2H2, also resembling the non-Mo non-V nitrogenase of A. vinelandii. Ethane was not produced from C2H2. NH4+ concentrations as low as 10 microM caused a transient inhibition of C2H2 reduction by strain 227 cells. Antiserum against component 2 Rhodospirillum rubrum nitrogenase was found to cross-react with component 2 from strain 227, and Western immunoblots using this antiserum showed no evidence for covalent modification of component 2. Also, extracts of strain 227 cells prepared before and after switch-off had virtually the same level of nitrogenase activity. In conclusion, the nitrogenase from strain 227 is similar in overall structure to the eubacterial nitrogenases and shows greatest similarity to alternative nitrogenases.  相似文献   

9.
Substitution of the MoFe protein alpha-70(Val) residue with Ala or Gly expands the substrate range of nitrogenase, allowing the reduction of larger alkynes, including propargyl alcohol (HC[triple bond]CCH(2)OH). Herein, we report characterization of the alpha-70(Val)(-->)(Ala) MoFe protein with propargyl alcohol trapped at the active site. The alpha-70(Ala) variant MoFe protein was rapidly frozen during reduction of propargyl alcohol, resulting in the conversion of the resting-state FeMo-cofactor EPR signal (S = 3/2 and g = [4.41, 3.60, 2.00]) to a new state (S = 1/2 and g = [2.123, 1.998, 1.986]). This EPR signal of the new state increased in intensity with increasing propargyl alcohol concentration, consistent with the binding of a single substrate. The EPR signal of the propargyl alcohol state showed temperature and microwave power dependencies markedly different from those of the classic FeMo-cofactor EPR signal, consistent with the difference in spin. The new state is analogous to that induced by the binding of the inhibitor CO ("lo CO" state) to FeMo-cofactor in the wild-type MoFe protein. The (13)C ENDOR spectrum of the alpha-70(Ala) MoFe protein with trapped (13)C-labeled propargyl alcohol exhibited three well-resolved (13)C doublets centered at the (13)C Larmor frequency with isotropic hyperfine couplings of approximately 3.2, approximately 1.4, and approximately 0.7 MHz, indicating that the alcohol (or a fragment) is coordinated to the cofactor. The results presented here localize the binding site of propargyl alcohol to one [4Fe-4S] face of FeMo-cofactor and indicate roles for the alpha-70(Val) residue in controlling FeMo-cofactor reactivity.  相似文献   

10.
We have constructed a strain of Azotobacter vinelandii which has deletions in the genes for both the molybdenum (Mo) and vanadium (V) nitrogenases. This strain fixed nitrogen in medium that did not contain Mo or V. Growth and nitrogenase activity were inhibited by Mo and V. In highly purified medium, growth was limited by iron. Addition of other metals (Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Re, Ti, W, and Zn) did not stimulate growth. Like the V-nitrogenase, the nitrogenase synthesized by the double deletion strain reduced acetylene to both ethylene and ethane (C2H6/C2H4 ratio, 0.046). There was an approximately 10-fold increase in ethane production when Mo was added to the deletion strain grown in medium lacking Mo and V. This change in reactivity may be due to the incorporation of an Mo-containing cofactor into the nitrogenase synthesized by the double-deletion strain. A strain synthesizing the V-nitrogenase did not show a similar increase in ethane production. The growth characteristics of the double-deletion strain, together with the metal composition reported for a nitrogenase isolated from a tungstate-tolerant strain lacking genes for the molydenum enzyme grown in the absence of Mo and V (J. R. Chisnell, R. Premakumar, and P. E. Bishop, J. Bacteriol. 170:27-33, 1988) show that A. vinelandii can synthesize a nitrogenase which lacks both Mo and V. Reduction of dinitrogen by nitrogenase can therefore occur at a center lacking both these metals.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the sequential addition of six electrons and six protons to a N2 that is bound to the active site metal cluster FeMo-cofactor, yielding two ammonia molecules. The nature of the intermediates bound to FeMo-cofactor along this reduction pathway remains unknown, although it has been suggested that there are intermediates at the level of reduction of diazene (HN=NH, also called diimide) and hydrazine (H2N-NH2). Through in situ generation of diazene during nitrogenase turnover, we show that diazene is a substrate for the wild-type nitrogenase and is reduced to NH3. Diazene reduction, like N2 reduction, is inhibited by H2. This contrasts with the absence of H2 inhibition when nitrogenase reduces hydrazine. These results support the existence of an intermediate early in the N2 reduction pathway at the level of reduction of diazene. Freeze-quenching a MoFe protein variant with alpha-195His substituted by Gln and alpha-70Val substituted by Ala during steady-state turnover with diazene resulted in conversion of the S = 3/2 resting state FeMo-cofactor to a novel S = 1/2 state with g1 = 2.09, g2 = 2.01, and g3 approximately 1.98. 15N- and 1H-ENDOR establish that this state consists of a diazene-derived [-NHx] moiety bound to FeMo-cofactor. This moiety is indistinguishable from the hydrazine-derived [-NHx] moiety bound to FeMo-cofactor when the same MoFe protein is trapped during turnover with hydrazine. These observations suggest that diazene joins the normal N2-reduction pathway, and that the diazene- and hydrazine-trapped turnover states represent the same intermediate in the normal reduction of N2 by nitrogenase. Implications of these findings for the mechanism of N2 reduction by nitrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The hydrolysis of ATP to ADP and P(i) is an integral part of all substrate reduction reactions catalyzed by nitrogenase. In this work, evidence is presented that nitrogenases isolated from Azotobacter vinelandii and Clostridium pasteurianum can hydrolyze MgGTP, MgITP, and MgUTP to their respective nucleoside diphosphates at rates comparable to those measured for MgATP hydrolysis. The reactions were dependent on the presence of both the iron (Fe) protein and the molybdenum-iron (MoFe) protein. The oxidation state of nitrogenase was found to greatly influence the nucleotide hydrolysis rates. MgATP hydrolysis rates were 20 times higher under dithionite reducing conditions (approximately 4,000 nmol of MgADP formed per min/mg of Fe protein) as compared with indigo disulfonate oxidizing conditions (200 nmol of MgADP formed per min/mg of Fe protein). In contrast, MgGTP, MgITP, and MgUTP hydrolysis rates were significantly higher under oxidizing conditions (1,400-2,000 nmol of MgNDP formed per min/mg of Fe protein) as compared with reducing conditions (80-230 nmol of MgNDP formed per min/mg of Fe protein). The K(m) values for MgATP, MgGTP, MgUTP, and MgITP hydrolysis were found to be similar (330-540 microM) for both the reduced and oxidized states of nitrogenase. Incubation of Fe and MoFe proteins with each of the MgNTP molecules and AlF(4)(-) resulted in the formation of non-dissociating protein-protein complexes, presumably with trapped AlF(4)(-) x MgNDP. The implications of these results in understanding how nucleotide hydrolysis is coupled to substrate reduction in nitrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The Azotobacter vinelandii genes encoding the nitrogenase structural components are clustered and ordered: nifH (Fe protein)-nifD (MoFe protein alpha subunit)-nifK (MoFe protein beta subunit). In this study various A. vinelandii mutant strains which contain defined deletions within the nitrogenase structural genes were isolated and studied. Mutants deleted for the nifD or nifK genes were still able to accumulate significant amounts of the unaltered MoFe protein subunit as well as active Fe protein. Extracts of such nifD or nifK deletion strains had no MoFe protein activity. However, active MoFe protein could be reconstituted by mixing extracts of the mutant strains. These results establish an approach for the purification of the individual MoFe protein subunits. Mutants lacking either or both of the MoFe protein subunits were still able to synthesize the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-cofactor), indicating that in A. vinelandii the FeMo-cofactor is preassembled and inserted into the MoFe protein. In contrast, a mutant strain lacking both the Fe protein and the MoFe protein failed to accumulate any detectable FeMo-cofactor. The further utility of specifically altered A. vinelandii strains for the study of the assembly, structure, and reactivity of nitrogenase is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogenase activity for Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) at a Cp2:Cp1 ratio of 1.0 and Azotobacter vinelandii (Av) at Av2:Av1 protein ratios (R) of 1, 4 and 10 is determined as a function of increasing MoFe protein concentration from 0.01 to 5 microM. The rates of ethylene and hydrogen evolution for these ratios and concentrations were measured to determine the effect of extreme dilution on nitrogenase activity. The experimental results show three distinct types of kinetic behavior: (1) a finite intercept along the concentration axis (approximately 0.05 microM MoFe); (2) a non-linear increase in the rate of product formation with increasing protein concentration (approximately 0.2 microM MoFe) and (3) a limiting linear rate of product formation at high protein concentrations (>0.4 microM MoFe). The data are fitted using the following rate equation derived from a mechanism for which two Fe proteins interact cooperatively with a single half of the MoFe protein. (see equation) The equation predicts that the cubic dependence in MoFe protein gives rise to the non-linear rate of product formation (the dilution effect) at very low MoFe protein concentrations. The equation also predicts that the rate will vary linearly at high MoFe protein concentrations with increasing MoFe protein concentration. That these limiting predictions are in accord with the experimental results suggests that either two Fe proteins interact cooperatively with a single half of the MoFe protein, or that the rate constants in the Thorneley and Lowe model are more dependent upon the redox state of MoFe protein than previously suspected [R.N. Thornley and D. J. Lowe, Biochem. J. 224 (1984) 887-894]. Previous Klebsiella pneumoniae and Azotobacter chroococcum dilution results were reanalyzed using the above equation. Results from all of these nitrogenases are consistent and suggest that cooperativity is a fundamental kinetic aspect of nitrogenase catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
By treating the reduced MoFe protein of nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii with O-phenanthroline (O-phen) and O2, inactive MoFe protein which was partialy deficient in both P-cluster and FeMoco could be obtained. After incubating the inactive protein with a reconstituent solution containing KMnO4, ferric homocitrate, Na2S and dithiothreitol, a reconstituted protein could be obtained. The absorption spectrum and C2H2, H+ and N2 reduction activity of the reconstituted protein could be well restored to the state of the reduced MoFe protein. However, the α-helix and CD spectrum at 380—550 nm and at 620—670 nm of the reconstituted protein were somewhat different from those of the reduced MoFe protein. The results showed that: (1) the reconstituted protein was composed of the assembled protein which might be a MnFe protein due to the reconstitution of the metalloclusterdeficient MoFe protein with Mn-containing solution and MoFe protein in which metalloclusters were still intact after the treatment with O-phen and O2; (2) It might be possible that the MnFe protein and MoFe protein were similar in the ability of nitrogen fixation, but were somewhat different in the structure from each other.  相似文献   

16.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the MgATP-dependent reduction of dinitrogen gas to ammonia. In addition to the physiological substrate, nitrogenase catalyzes reduction of a variety of other multiply bonded substrates, such as acetylene, nitrous oxide, and azide. Although carbon monoxide (CO) is not reduced by nitrogenase, it is a potent inhibitor of all nitrogenase catalyzed substrate reductions except proton reduction. Here, we present kinetic parameters for an altered Azotobacter vinelandii MoFe protein for which the alphaGly(69) residue was substituted by serine (Christiansen, J., Cash, V. L., Seefeldt, L. C., and Dean, D. R. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 11459-11464). For the wild type enzyme, CO and acetylene are both noncompetitive inhibitors of dinitrogen reduction. However, for the alphaSer(69) MoFe protein both CO and acetylene have become competitive inhibitors of dinitrogen reduction. CO is also converted from a noncompetitive inhibitor to a competitive inhibitor of acetylene, nitrous oxide, and azide reduction. These results are interpreted in terms of a two-site model. Site 1 is a high affinity acetylene-binding site to which CO also binds, but dinitrogen, azide, and nitrous oxide do not bind. This site is the one primarily accessed during typical acetylene reduction assays. Site 2 is a low affinity acetylene-binding site to which CO, dinitrogen, azide, and nitrous oxide also bind. Site 1 and site 2 are proposed to be located in close proximity within a specific 4Fe-4S face of FeMo cofactor.  相似文献   

17.
The nitrogenase of the free-living, microaerobic, N2-fixing bacterium Azospirillum amazonense (strain Y1) was purified by chromatography on DEAE-52 cellulose, by heat treatment, and by preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific nitrogenase activities were 2,400 nmol of C2H4 formed per min per mg of protein for dinitrogenase (MoFe protein) and 1,800 nmol of C2H4 formed per min per mg of protein for dinitrogenase reductase (Fe protein). The MoFe protein was composed of a minimum of 1,852 amino acid residues, had an isoelectric point of 5.2, and contained 2 atoms of Mo, 24 atoms of Fe, and 28 atoms of acid-labile sulfide per molecule. The Fe protein had 624 amino acid residues and an isoelectric point of 4.6 and contained four atoms of Fe and six atoms of acid-labile sulfide per molecule. The purified MoFe protein showed two subunits with molecular weights of 55,000 and 50,000. The purified Fe protein revealed two polypeptides on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with apparent molecular weights of 35,000 and 31,000. The two Fe protein polypeptides were demonstrated with immunological techniques in the purified, highly active enzyme as well as in extracts. Also, Azotobacter vinelandii Fe protein showed two closely migrating polypeptides that migrated differently from the Fe protein polypeptides of Azospirillum brasilense or Rhodospirillum rubrum. The nitrogenase activity of Azospirillum amazonense Y1 was independent of Mn2+, and the addition of activating enzyme had no effect. No activating enzyme could be found in Azospirillum amazonense. Obviously, the nitrogenase system of Azospirillum amazonense Y1 is different from that of Azospirillum brasilense Sp7 and resembles the Azotobacter system.  相似文献   

18.
A mutant UW3, which is unable to fix N2 in the presence of Mo (Nif-) but undergo phenotypic reversal to Nif+ under Mo deficiency, was able to grow in Mo- and NH3-deficient medium containing Mn, and the growth was accelerated by Mn at low concentration. A partly purified nitrogenase component Ⅰ protein separated from UW3 grown in the Mn-containing medium was shown to contain Fe and Mn atoms (ratio of Fe/Mo/Mn: 10.41/0.19/1.00) with C2H2- and H+-reducing activity which almost equal to half of that of MoFe protein purified from wild-type mutant of Azotobacter vinelandii Lipmann. This protein was obviously different from MoFe protein in both absorption spectrum and circular dichroism, and the molecular weight of subunits in Mn-containing protein was close to that of α subunit in MoFe protein. The preliminary results indicated that the protein containing Mn might be a nitrogenase component Ⅰprotein.  相似文献   

19.
The pre-steady-state ATPase activity of nitrogenase has been reinvestigated. The exceptionally high burst in the hydrolysis of MgATP by the nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii communicated by Cordewener et al. (1987) [Cordewener J., ten Asbroek A., Wassink H., Eady R. R., Haaker H. & Veeger C. (1987) Eur. J. Biochem. 162, 265-270] was found to be caused by an apparatus artefact. A second possible artefact in the determination of the stoichiometry of the pre-steady-state ATPase activity of nitrogenase was observed. Acid-quenched mixtures of dithionite-reduced MoFe or Fe protein of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase and MgATP contained phosphate above the background level. It is proposed that due to this reaction, quenched reaction mixtures of nitrogenase and MgATP may contain phosphate in addition to the phosphate released by the ATPase activity of the nitrogenase complex. It was feasible to monitor MgATP-dependent pre-steady-state proton production by the absorbance change at 572 nm of the pH indicator o-cresolsulfonaphthalein in a weakly buffered solution. At 5.6 degrees C, a pre-steady-state phase of H+ production was observed, with a first-order rate constant of 2.2 s-1, whereas electron transfer occurred with a first-order rate constant of 4.9 s-1. At 20.0 degrees C, MgATP-dependent H+ production and electron transfer in the pre-steady-state phase were characterized by observed rate constants of 9.4 s-1 and 104 s-1, respectively. The stopped-flow technique failed to detect a burst in the release of protons by the dye-oxidized nitrogenase complex. It is concluded that the hydrolysis rate of MgATP, as judged by proton release, is lower than the rate of electron transfer from the Fe protein to the MoFe protein.  相似文献   

20.
Carbon monoxide inhibits reduction of dinitrogen (N2) by purified nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii and Clostridium pasteurianum in a noncompetitive manner (Kii and Kis = 1.4 X 10(-4) and 4.5 X 10(-4) and 7 X 10(-4) atm and 14 X 10(-4) atm for the two enzymes, respectively). The onset of inhibition is within the turnover time of the enzyme, and CO does not affect the electron flux to the H2-evolving site. The kinetics of CO inhibition of N2 reduction are simple, but CO inhibition of acetylene reduction is complicated by substrate inhibition effects. When low-temperature (approximately 13 K) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of CO-inhibited nitrogenase are examined, it is found that low concentrations of CO ([CO] = [enzyme]) induce the appearance of a signal with g values near 2.1, 1.98, and 1.92 with t1/2 approximately 4 s, while higher concentrations of CO lead to the appearance of a signal with g values near 2.17, 2.1, and 2.05 with a similar time course. The MoFe proteins from Rhizobium japonicum and Rhodospirillum rubrum, reduced with Azotobacter Fe protein in the presence of CO, give similar results. Under conditions which promote the accumulation of H2 in the absence of CO, an additional EPR signal with g values near 2.1, 2.0, and 1.98 is observed. The use of Azotobacter nitogenase components enriched selectively with 57Fe or 95Mo, as well as the use of 13CO, permitted the assignment of the center(s) responsible for the induced signals. Only 57Fe, when present in the MoFe protein, yielded broadened EPR signals. It is suggested that the MoFe protein of nitrogenase contains one or more iron-sulfur clusters of the type found in the simple ferrodoxins. It is further proposed that the CO-induced signals arise from states of the MoFe protein in which CO inhibits electron flow to the N2-reducing site so that the iron-sulfur cluster achieves steady-state net charges of -1 (high CO complex) and -3 (low CO complex) in analogy to the normal paramagnetic states of high-potential iron-sulfur proteins and ferredoxins, respectively. The "no-CO" signal may be either an additional center or the N2-reducing site with H2 bound competitively.  相似文献   

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