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1.
Comparison of the inferred amino acid sequence of orf AF1736 of Archaeoglobus fulgidus to that of Pseudomonas mevalonii HMG-CoA reductase suggested that AF1736 might encode a Class II HMG-CoA reductase. Following polymerase chain reaction-based cloning of AF1736 from A. fulgidus genomic DNA and expression in Escherichia coli, the encoded enzyme was purified to apparent homogeneity and its enzymic properties were determined. Activity was optimal at 85 degrees C, deltaHa was 54 kJ/mol, and the statin drug mevinolin inhibited competitively with HMG-CoA (Ki 180 microM). Protonated forms of His390 and Lys277, the apparent cognates of the active site histidine and lysine of the P. mevalonii enzyme, appear essential for activity. The mechanism proposed for catalysis of P. mevalonii HMG-CoA reductase thus appears valid for A. fulgidus HMG-CoA reductase. Unlike any other HMG-CoA reductase, the A. fulgidus enzyme exhibits dual coenzyme specificity. pH-activity profiles for all four reactions revealed that optimal activity using NADP(H) occurred at a pH from 1 to 3 units more acidic than that observed using NAD(H). Kinetic parameters were therefore determined for all substrates for all four catalyzed reactions using either NAD(H) or NADP(H). NADPH and NADH compete for occupancy of a common site. k(cat)[NAD(H)]/k(cat)[NADP(H)] varied from unity to under 70 for the four reactions, indicative of slight preference for NAD(H). The results indicate the importance of the protonated status of active site residues His390 and Lys277, shown by altered K(M) and k(cat) values, and indicate that NAD(H) and NADP(H) have comparable affinity for the same site.  相似文献   

2.
Evidence is presented for a pathway of phenylalanine catabolism in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus involving the following enzymes—phenylalanine:2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase, phenyllactate dehydrogenase, radical iron–sulphur 3-phenyllactyl-CoA dehydratase, phenylpropionyl-CoA dehydrogenase, aryl pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductase, ADP-forming acetyl-CoA synthetase and family III CoA-transferase. Hitherto amino acid degradation pathways involving radical iron–sulphur dehydratases have been characterised only in mesophilic clostridia and related bacteria. The difference here is that the pathway is not fermentative but coupled to sulphate reduction. Initial experiments also show the utilisation of tryptophan as a growth substrate and the decarboxylation of caffeate by cell extracts, suggesting the potential to catabolise different classes of aromatic compounds.  相似文献   

3.
The acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase (ACDS) multienzyme complex catalyzes the reversible cleavage and synthesis of acetyl-CoA in methanogens. This report of the enzyme complex in Archaeoglobus fulgidus demonstrates the existence of a functional ACDS complex in an organism that is not a methanogen. The A. fulgidus enzyme complex contained five subunits of 89, 72, 50, 49.5, and 18.5 kDa, and it catalyzed the overall synthesis of acetyl-CoA according to the following reaction: w CO2 + 2 Fdred(Fe2+) + 2 H+ + CH3– H4SPt + CoA ⇌ acetyl-CoA + H4SPt + 2 Fdox(Fe3+) + H2O where Fd is ferredoxin, and CH3–H4SPt and H4SPt denote N 5-methyl-tetrahydrosarcinapterin and tetrahydrosarcinapterin, respectively. Received: 27 October 1997 / Accepted: 29 January 1998  相似文献   

4.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase in the extreme thermophile Archaeoglobus fulgidus   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) is an essential enzyme for maintaining genomic integrity. Here we describe a UDG from the extreme thermophile Archaeoglobus fulgidus. The enzyme is a member of a new class of enzymes found in prokaryotes that is distinct from the UDG enzyme found in Escherichia coli, eukaryotes, and DNA-containing viruses. The A. fulgidus UDG is extremely thermostable, maintaining full activity after heating for 1.5 h at 95 degrees C. The protein is capable of removing uracil from double-stranded DNA containing either a U/A or U/G base pair as well as from single-stranded DNA. This enzyme is product-inhibited by both uracil and apurinic/apyrimidinic sites. The A. fulgidus UDG has a high degree of similarity at the primary amino acid sequence level to the enzyme found in Thermotoga maritima, a thermophilic eubacteria, and suggests a conserved mechanism of UDG-initiated base excision repair in archaea and thermophilic eubacteria.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Superoxide reductases (SORs), iron-centered enzymes responsible for reducing superoxide (O2(-)) to hydrogen peroxide, are found in many anaerobic and microaerophilic prokaryotes. The rapid reaction with an exogenous electron donor renders the reductase activity catalytic. Here, we demonstrate using pulse radiolysis that the initial reaction between O2(-) and Archaeoglobus fulgidus neelaredoxin, a one-iron SOR, leads to a short-lived transient that immediately disappears to yield a solvent-bound ferric species in acid-base equilibrium. Through comparison of wild-type neelaredoxin with mutants lacking the ferric ion coordinating glutamate, we demonstrate that the remaining step is related to the final coordination of this ligand to the oxidized metal center and kinetically characterize it for the first time, by pulse radiolysis and stopped-flow kinetics. The way exogenous phosphate perturbs the kinetics of superoxide reduction by neelaredoxin and mutant proteins was also investigated.  相似文献   

7.
Archaeoglobus fulgidus, an anaerobic marine hyperthermophile, forms a biofilm in response to environmental stresses. The biofilm is a heterogeneous, morphologically variable structure containing protein, polysaccharide, and metals. Production of the biofilm can be induced by nonphysiological extremes of pH and temperature, by high concentrations of metals, and by addition of antibiotics, xenobiotics, or oxygen. Cells within the biofilm show an increased tolerance to otherwise toxic environmental conditions. Metals sequestered within the biofilm stimulate growth of A. fulgidus cells in metal-depleted medium. These data suggest that cells may produce biofilm as a mechanism for concentrating cells and attaching to surfaces, as a protective barrier, and as a reserve nutrient. Because similar biofilms are formed by Archaeoglobus profundus, Methanococcus jannaschii, and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, biofilm formation might be a common stress response mechanism among the archaea.  相似文献   

8.
Base excision repair of DNA alkylation damage is initiated by a methylpurine DNA glycosylase (MPG) function. Such enzymes have previously been characterized from bacteria and eukarya, but not from archaea. We identified activity for the release of methylated bases from DNA in cell-free extracts of Archaeoglobus fulgidus, an archaeon growing optimally at 83 degrees C. An open reading frame homologous to the alkA gene of Escherichia coli was overexpressed and identified as a gene encoding an MPG enzyme (M(r) = 34 251), hereafter designated afalkA. The purified AfalkA protein differs from E. coli AlkA by excising alkylated bases only, from DNA, in the following order of efficiency: 3-methyladenine (m(3)A) > 3-methylguanine approximately 7-methyladenine > 7-methylguanine. Although the rate of enzymatic release of m(3)A is highest in the temperature range of 65-75 degrees C, it is only reduced by 50% at 45 degrees C, a temperature that does not support growth of A. fulgidus. At temperatures above 75 degrees C, nonenzymatic release of methylpurines predominates. The results suggest that the biological function of AfalkA is to excise m(3)A from DNA at suboptimal and maybe even mesophilic temperatures. This hypothesis is further supported by the observation that the afalkA gene function suppresses the alkylation sensitivity of the E. coli tag alkA double mutant. The amino acid sequence similarity and evolutionary relationship of AfalkA with other MPG enzymes from the three domains of life are described and discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Neelaredoxin is a mononuclear iron protein widespread among prokaryotic anaerobes and facultative aerobes, including human pathogens. It has superoxide scavenging activity, but the exact mechanism by which this process occurs has been controversial. In this report, we present the study of the reaction of superoxide with the reduced form of neelaredoxin from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus by pulse radiolysis. This protein reduces superoxide very efficiently (k = 1.5 x 10(9) m(-1)s(-1)), and the dismutation activity is rate-limited, in steady-state conditions, by the much slower superoxide oxidation step. These data show unambiguously that the superfamily of neelaredoxin-like proteins (including desulfoferrodoxin) presents a novel type of reactivity toward superoxide, a result of particular relevance for the understanding of both oxygen stress response mechanisms and, in particular, how pathogens may respond to the oxidative burst produced by the defense cells in eukaryotes. The actual in vivo functioning of these enzymes will depend strongly on the cell redox status. Further insight on the catalytic mechanism was obtained by the detection of a transient intermediate ferric species upon oxidation of neelaredoxin by superoxide, detectable by visible spectroscopy with an absorption maximum at 610 nm, blue-shifted approximately 50 nm from the absorption of the resting ferric state. The role of the iron sixth ligand, glutamate-12, in the reactivity of neelaredoxin toward superoxide was assessed by studying two site-directed mutants: E12Q and E12V.  相似文献   

10.
Four genes that encode the homologues of plant geranylgeranyl reductase were isolated from a hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus, which produces menaquinone with a fully saturated heptaprenyl side chain, menaquinone-7(14H). The recombinant expression of one of the homologues in Escherichia coli led to a distinct change in the quinone profile of the host cells, although the homologue is the most distantly related to the geranylgeranyl reductase. The new compounds found in the profile had successively longer elution times than those of ordinary quinones from E. coli, i.e., menaquinone-8 and ubiquinone-8, in high-performance liquid chromatography on a reversed-phase column. Structural analyses of the new compounds by electron impact-mass spectrometry indicated that their molecular masses progressively increase relative to the ordinary quinones at a rate of 2 U but that they still contain quinone head structures, strongly suggesting that the compounds are quinones with partially saturated prenyl side chains. In vitro assays with dithionite as the reducing agent showed that the prenyl reductase is highly specific for menaquinone-7, rather than ubiquinone-8 and prenyl diphosphates. This novel enzyme noncovalently binds flavin adenine dinucleotide, similar to geranylgeranyl reductase, but was not able to utilize NAD(P)H as the electron donor, unlike the plant homologue.  相似文献   

11.
12.
CopA, a thermophilic ATPase from Archaeoglobus fulgidus, drives the outward movement of Cu(+) across the cell membrane. Millimolar concentration of Cys dramatically increases ( congruent with 800%) the activity of CopA and other P(IB)-type ATPases (Escherichia coli ZntA and Arabidopsis thaliana HMA2). The high affinity of CopA for metal ( congruent with 1 microM) together with the low Cu(+)-Cys K(D) (<10(-10)M) suggested a multifaceted interaction of Cys with CopA, perhaps acting as a substitute for the Cu(+) chaperone protein present in vivo. To explain the activation by the amino acid and further understand the mechanism of metal delivery to transport ATPases, Cys effects on the turnover and partial reactions of CopA were studied. 2-20 mM Cys accelerates enzyme turnover with little effect on CopA affinity for Cu(+), suggesting a metal independent activation. Furthermore, Cys activates the p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of CopA, even though this activity is metal independent. Cys accelerates enzyme phosphorylation and the forward dephosphorylation rates yielding higher steady state phosphoenzyme levels. The faster dephosphorylation would explain the higher enzyme turnover in the presence of Cys. The amino acid has no significant effect on low affinity ATP K(m) suggesting no changes in the E(1)<-->E(2) equilibrium. Characterization of Cu(+) transport into sealed vesicles indicates that Cys acts on the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme. However, the Cys activation of truncated CopA lacking the N-terminal metal binding domain (N-MBD) indicates that activation by Cys is independent of the regulatory N-MBD. These results suggest that Cys is a non-essential activator of CopA, interacting with the cytoplasmic side of the enzyme while this is in an E1 form. Interestingly, these effects also point out that Cu(+) can reach the cytoplasmic opening of the access path into the transmembrane transport sites either as a free metal or a Cu(+)-Cys complex.  相似文献   

13.
We have solved the crystal structure of a PFL2 from Archaeglobus fulgidus at 2.9 A resolution. Of the three previously solved enzyme structures of glycyl radical enzymes, pyruvate formate lyase (PFL), anaerobic ribonucleotide reductase and glycerol dehydratase (GD), the last one is clearly most similar to PFL2. We observed electron density in the active site of PFL2, which we modelled as glycerol. The orientation of the glycerol is different from that in GD, and changes in the active site indicate that the actual substrate of PFL2 is bigger than a glycerol molecule, but sequence and structural homology suggest that PFL2 may be a dehydratase. Crystal packing, solution X-ray scattering and ultracentrifugation experiments show that PFL2 is tetrameric, unlike other glycyl radical enzymes. A.fulgidus is a hyperthermophile and PFL2 appears to be stabilized by several factors including an increased number of ion pairs, differences in buried charges, a truncated N terminus, anchoring of loops and N terminus via salt-bridges, changes in the oligomeric interface and perhaps also the higher oligomerization state of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
A putative perA gene from Archaeoglobus fulgidus was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3), and the recombinant catalase-peroxidase was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme is a homodimer with a subunit molecular mass of 85 kDa. UV-visible spectroscopic analysis indicated the presence of protoheme IX as a prosthetic group (ferric heme), in a stoichiometry of 0.25 heme per subunit. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis confirmed the presence of ferric heme and identified the proximal axial ligand as a histidine. The enzyme showed both catalase and peroxidase activity with pH optima of 6.0 and 4.5, respectively. Optimal temperatures of 70 degrees C and 80 degrees C were found for the catalase and peroxidase activity, respectively. The catalase activity strongly exceeded the peroxidase activity, with Vmax values of 9600 and 36 U mg(-1), respectively. Km values for H2O2 of 8.6 and 0.85 mM were found for catalase and peroxidase, respectively. Common heme inhibitors such as cyanide, azide, and hydroxylamine inhibited peroxidase activity. However, unlike all other catalase-peroxidases, the enzyme was also inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Although the enzyme exhibited a high thermostability, rapid inactivation occurred in the presence of H2O2, with half-life values of less than 1 min. This is the first catalase-peroxidase characterized from a hyperthermophilic microorganism.  相似文献   

15.
Hydrolytic deamination of cytosine to uracil in cellular DNA is a major source of C-to-T transition mutations if uracil is not repaired by the DNA base excision repair (BER) pathway. Since deamination increases rapidly with temperature, hyperthermophiles, in particular, are expected to succumb to such damage. There has been only one report of crenarchaeotic BER showing strong similarities to that in most eukaryotes and bacteria for hyperthermophilic Archaea. Here we report a different type of BER performed by extract prepared from cells of the euryarchaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus. Although immunodepletion showed that the monofunctional family 4 type of uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) is the principal and probably only UDG in this organism, a β-elimination mechanism rather than a hydrolytic mechanism is employed for incision of the abasic site following uracil removal. The resulting 3′ remnant is removed by efficient 3′-phosphodiesterase activity followed by single-nucleotide insertion and ligation. The finding that repair product formation is stimulated similarly by ATP and ADP in vitro raises the question of whether ADP is more important in vivo because of its higher heat stability.After depurination, hydrolytic deamination of cytosine to uracil is the most frequent event that damages DNA (36), and it results in G·C-to-A·T transition mutations if the damage is not repaired. In addition, some dUTP molecules escape hydrolysis by dUTPase, which results in a certain amount of dUMP introduced into DNA opposite adenine during replication (32). Irrespective of the mode of appearance, all cells contain uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) (EC 3.2.2.3) enzymes to remove uracil from DNA (17). The resulting abasic or apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site can subsequently be removed, and the integrity of the DNA can be restored by the so-called base excision repair (BER) pathway, which consists in its simplest form of the sequential actions of 5′-acting AP endonuclease, 5′-deoxyribose phosphate (dRP) lyase, DNA polymerase, and DNA ligase. The BER pathway can be initiated by one of several DNA glycosylases with different substrate specificities (17, 36, 57), and quantitatively it is the most important repair mechanism for the removal of spontaneously generated base modifications. Genes encoding bacterial and eukaryotic UDGs exhibiting significant selectivity for uracil have been cloned and sequenced in the last 2 decades, and the results have demonstrated that there is a high degree of conservation between distantly related species. Family 1 UDGs (for a review of UDG families 1 to 3, see reference 44), typified by the Escherichia coli Ung enzyme (37), recognize uracil in an extrahelical or flipped-out conformation in double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) and single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). Several family 1 enzymes have been extensively characterized, both structurally and at the cell and organism levels. Family 2 UDGs, which includes E. coli Mug and mammalian thymine-DNA glycosylase, are mismatch specific and recognize guanine on the complementary strand rather than the lesion itself and thus are inactive with ssDNA. Family 3 UDGs, typified by the SMUG1 enzyme of human cells, have similar substrate requirements but exhibit a stronger preference for uracil in ssDNA than family 1 enzymes (17, 27, 57, 67).UDG activity in hyperthermophilic microorganisms was first reported in 1996 (33). Three years later, Sandigursky and Franklin (47) cloned and overexpressed an open reading frame (ORF) of the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima that typifies the family 4 UDGs that are able to remove uracil from U·G and U·A base pairs, as well as from ssDNA. By means of homology searches, these workers found ORFs homologous to the T. maritima UDG gene in several prokaryotic genomes, including that of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus, a strict anaerobe that grows optimally at 83°C (60; for a review of DNA repair in hyperthermophilic archaea, see reference 20). Subsequently, they cloned and overexpressed the A. fulgidus ORF in E. coli by producing a His-tagged fusion protein. As expected, the purified A. fulgidus recombinant Afung (rAfung) protein exhibited UDG activity (48). However, whether Afung is the major UDG of A. fulgidus or is just a minor glycosylase with uracil-releasing ability remained to be determined.As a continuation of previous biochemical and physicochemical studies (31) of non-His-tagged rAfung protein, here we characterized a family 4 UDG in archaeon cell extract. The abundance of Afung in vivo was determined, and evidence indicates that this enzyme is the principal UDG of A. fulgidus. Here we also describe the mechanism of dUMP repair employed by this euryarchaeon, which differs in important ways from the mechanism reported for the crenarchaeon Pyrobaculum aerophilum (50).  相似文献   

16.
A hyperthermophilic sulfate reducer, strain 7324, was isolated from hot (75 degrees C) oil field waters from an oil production platform in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea. It was enriched on a complex medium and isolated on lactate with sulfate. The cells were nonmotile, irregular coccoid to disc shaped, and 0.3 to 1.0 mum wide. The temperature for growth was between 60 and 85 degrees C with an optimum of 76 degrees C. Lactate, pyruvate, and valerate plus H(2) were utilized as carbon and energy sources with sulfate as electron acceptor. Lactate was completely oxidized to CO(2). The cells contained an active carbon monoxide dehydrogenase but no 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase activity, indicating that lactate was oxidized to CO(2) via the acetyl coenzyme A/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway. The cells produced small amounts of methane simultaneously with sulfate reduction. F(420) was detected in the cells which showed a blue-green fluorescence at 420 nm. On the basis of morphological, physiological, and serological features, the isolate was classified as an Archaeoglobus sp. Strain 7324 showed 100% DNA-DNA homology with A. fulgidus Z, indicating that it belongs to the species A. fulgidus. Archaeoglobus sp. has been selectively enriched and immunomagnetically captured from oil field waters from three different platforms in the North Sea. Our results show that strain 7324 may grow in oil reservoirs at 70 to 85 degrees C and contribute to hydrogen sulfide formation in this environment.  相似文献   

17.
Archaeoglobus fulgidus neelaredoxin (Nlr) is an electron donor:superoxide oxidoreductase. The reaction of superoxide with reduced Nlr is almost diffusion-limited, but the overall efficiency for detoxifying superoxide in vivo depends on the rate of reduction of Nlr by electron donors. Here, we report the purification and characterization of the two type I rubredoxins from A. fulgidus (AF0880 and AF1349) and show that they act as efficient electron donors for neelaredoxin, in vitro, with a second-order rate constant of 10(7)M(-1)s(-1) at 10 degrees C and pH 7.2.  相似文献   

18.
Shikimate 5-dehydrogenase (SKDH; EC 1.1.1.25) catalyzes the reversible reduction of 3-dehydroshikimate to shikimate and is a key enzyme in the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis pathway. The shikimate 5-dehydrogenase gene, aroE, from Archaeoglobus fulgidus was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant enzyme purified as a homodimer and yielded a maximum specific activity of 732 U/mg at 87 degrees C (with NADP+ as coenzyme). Apparent Km values for shikimate, NADP+, and NAD+ were estimated at 0.17+/-0.03 mM, 0.19+/-0.01 mM, and 11.4+/-0.4 mM, respectively. The half-life of the A. fulgidus SKDH is 2 h at the assay temperature (87 degrees C) and 17 days at 60 degrees C. Addition of 1 M NaCl or KCl stabilized the enzyme's half-life to approximately 70 h at 87 degrees C and approximately 50 days at 60 degrees C. This work presents the first kinetic analysis of an archaeal SKDH.  相似文献   

19.
The eukaryotic pre-replication complex is assembled at replication origins in a reaction called licensing. Licensing involves the interactions of a variety of proteins including the origin recognition complex (ORC), Cdc6 and the Mcm2-7 helicase, homologues of which are also found in archaea. The euryarchaeote Archaeoglobus fulgidus encodes two genes with homology to Orc/Cdc6 and a single Mcm homologue. The A.fulgidus Mcm protein and one Orc/Cdc6 homologue have been purified and investigated in vitro. The Mcm protein is an ATP-dependent, hexameric helicase that can unwind between 200 and 400 bp of duplex DNA. Deletion of 112 amino acids from the N-terminus of A.f Mcm produced a protein, which was still capable of forming a hexamer, was competent in DNA binding and was able to unwind at least 1 kb of duplex DNA. The purified Orc/Cdc6 homologue was also able to bind DNA. Both Mcm and Orc/Cdc6 show a preference for specific DNA structures, namely molecules containing a single stranded bubble that mimics early replication intermediates. Nuclease protection showed that the binding sites for Mcm and Orc/Cdc6 overlap. The Orc/Cdc6 protein bound more tightly to these substrates and was able to displace pre-bound Mcm hexamer.  相似文献   

20.
CopA from the extreme thermophile Archaeoglobus fulgidus is a P-type ATPase that transports Cu(+) and Ag(+) and has individual metal-binding domains (MBDs) at both N- and C-termini. We expressed and purified full-length CopA as well as constructs with MBDs deleted either individually or collectively. Cu(+) and Ag(+)-dependent ATPase assays showed that full-length CopA had submicromolar affinity for both ions, but was inhibited by concentrations above 1muM. Deletion of both MBDs had no effect on affinity but resulted in loss of this inhibition. Individual deletions implicated the N-terminal MBD in causing the inhibition at concentrations >1muM. Rates of phosphoenzyme decay indicated that neither the dephosphorylation step, nor the E1P-E2P equilibrium accounted for this inhibition, suggesting the involvement of a different catalytic step. Alternative hypotheses are discussed by which the N-terminal MBD could influence the catalytic activity of CopA.  相似文献   

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