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1.
The nap operon of Escherichia coli K-12, encoding a periplasmic nitrate reductase (Nap), encodes seven proteins. The catalytic complex in the periplasm, NapA-NapB, is assumed to receive electrons from the quinol pool via the membrane-bound cytochrome NapC. Like NapA, B and C, a fourth polypeptide, NapD, is also essential for Nap activity. However, none of the remaining three polypeptides, NapF, G and H, which are predicted to encode non-haem, iron-sulphur proteins, are essential for Nap activity, and their function is currently unknown. The relative rates of growth and electron transfer from physiological substrates to Nap have been investigated using strains defective in the two membrane-bound nitrate reductases, and also defective in either ubiquinone or menaquinone biosynthesis. The data reveal that Nap is coupled more effectively to menaquinol oxidation than to ubiquinol oxidation. Conversely, parallel experiments with a second set of mutants revealed that nitrate reductase A couples more effectively with ubiquinol than with menaquinol. Three further sets of strains were constructed with combinations of in frame deletions of ubiCA, menBC, napC, napF and napGH genes. NapF, NapG and NapH were shown to play no role in electron transfer from menaquinol to the NapAB complex but, in the Ubi+Men- background, deletion of napF, napGH or napFGH all resulted in total loss of nitrate-dependent growth. Electron transfer from ubiquinol to NapAB was totally dependent upon NapGH, but not on NapF. NapC was essential for electron transfer from both ubiquinol and menaquinol to NapAB. The results clearly established that NapG and H, but not NapF, are essential for electron transfer from ubiquinol to NapAB. The decreased yield of biomass resulting from loss of NapF in a Ubi+Men+ strain implicates NapF in an energy- conserving role coupled to the oxidation of ubiquinol. We propose that NapG and H form an energy- conserving quinol dehydrogenase functioning as either components of a proton pump or in a Q cycle, as electrons are transferred from ubiquinol to NapC.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial cellular metabolism is renowned for its metabolic diversity and adaptability. However, certain environments present particular challenges. Aerobic metabolism of highly reduced carbon substrates by soil bacteria such as Paracoccus pantotrophus presents one such challenge since it may result in excessive electron delivery to the respiratory redox chain when compared with the availability of terminal oxidant, O2. The level of a periplasmic ubiquinol-dependent nitrate reductase, NAP, is up-regulated in the presence of highly reduced carbon substrates. NAP oxidizes ubiquinol at the periplasmic face of the cytoplasmic membrane and reduces nitrate in the periplasm. Thus its activity counteracts the accumulation of excess reducing equivalents in ubiquinol, thereby maintaining the redox poise of the ubiquinone/ubiquinol pool without contributing to the protonmotive force across the cytoplasmic membrane. Although P. pantotrophus NapAB shows a high level of substrate specificity towards nitrate, the enzyme has also been reported to reduce selenate in spectrophotometric solution assays. This transaction draws on our current knowledge concerning the bacterial respiratory nitrate reductases and extends the application of PFE (protein film electrochemistry) to resolve and quantify the selenate reductase activity of NapAB.  相似文献   

3.
Periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapABC enzyme) has been characterized from a variety of proteobacteria, especially Paracoccus pantotrophus. Whole-genome sequencing of Escherichia coli revealed the structural genes napFDAGHBC, which encode NapABC enzyme and associated electron transfer components. E. coli also expresses two membrane-bound proton-translocating nitrate reductases, encoded by the narGHJI and narZYWV operons. We measured reduced viologen-dependent nitrate reductase activity in a series of strains with combinations of nar and nap null alleles. The napF operon-encoded nitrate reductase activity was not sensitive to azide, as shown previously for the P. pantotrophus NapA enzyme. A strain carrying null alleles of narG and narZ grew exponentially on glycerol with nitrate as the respiratory oxidant (anaerobic respiration), whereas a strain also carrying a null allele of napA did not. By contrast, the presence of napA+ had no influence on the more rapid growth of narG+ strains. These results indicate that periplasmic nitrate reductase, like fumarate reductase, can function in anaerobic respiration but does not constitute a site for generating proton motive force. The time course of phi(napF-lacZ) expression during growth in batch culture displayed a complex pattern in response to the dynamic nitrate/nitrite ratio. Our results are consistent with the observation that phi(napF-lacZ) is expressed preferentially at relatively low nitrate concentrations in continuous cultures (H. Wang, C.-P. Tseng, and R. P. Gunsalus, J. Bacteriol. 181:5303-5308, 1999). This finding and other considerations support the hypothesis that NapABC enzyme may function in E. coli when low nitrate concentrations limit the bioenergetic efficiency of nitrate respiration via NarGHI enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Anderson LJ  Richardson DJ  Butt JN 《Biochemistry》2001,40(38):11294-11307
The first step in the respiratory reduction of nitrate to dinitrogen in Paracoccus pantotrophus is catalyzed by the quinol-nitrate oxidoreductase NarGHI. This membrane-anchored protein directs electrons from quinol oxidation at the membrane anchor, NarI, to the site of nitrate reduction in the membrane extrinsic [Fe-S] cluster and Mo-bis-MGD containing dimer, NarGH. Liberated from the membrane, NarGH retains its nitrate reductase activity and forms films on graphite and gold electrodes within which direct and facile exchange of electrons between the electrode and the enzyme occurs. Protein film voltammetry has been used to define the catalytic behavior of NarGH in the potential domain and a complex pattern of reversible, nitrate concentration dependent modulation of activity has been resolved. At low nitrate concentrations the local maximum observed in the catalytic current-potential profile reveals how NarGH can catalyze nitrate reduction via two pathways having distinct specificity constants, k(obs)(cat)/K(obs)(M). Catalysis is directed to occur via one of the pathways by an electrochemical event within NarGH. On increasing the nitrate concentration, the local maximum in the catalytic current becomes less distinct, and the catalytic waveform adopts an increasingly sigmoidal form. A pattern of voltammetry similar to that observed during nitrate reduction is observed during reduction of the stereochemically distinct substrate chlorate. Centers whose change of oxidation state may define the novel catalytic voltammetry of NarGH have been identified by EPR-monitored potentiometric titrations and mechanisms by which the electrochemistry of Mo-bis-MGD or [Fe-S] clusters can account for the observed behavior are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The periplasmic nitrate reductase (NAP) from Paracoccus pantotrophus is a soluble two-subunit enzyme (NapAB) that binds two c-type haems, a [4Fe-4S] cluster and a bis-molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide cofactor that catalyses the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. In the present work the NapAB complex has been studied by magneto-optical spectroscopy to probe co-ordination of both the NapB haems and the NapA active site Mo. The absorption spectrum of the NapAB complex is dominated by features from the NapB c-type cytochromes. Using a combination of electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and magnetic circular dichroism it was demonstrated that both haems are low-spin with bis-histidine axial ligation. In addition, a window between 600 and 800 nm was identified in which weak absorption features that may arise from Mo could be detected. The low-temperature MCD spectrum shows oppositely signed bands in this region (peak 648 nm, trough 714 nm) which have been assigned to S-to-Mo(V) charge transfer transitions.  相似文献   

6.
(1) The role of the ubiquinone pool in the reactions of the cyclic electron-transfer chain has been investigated by observing the effects of reduction of the ubiquinone pool on the kinetics and extent of the cytochrome and electrochromic carotenoid absorbance changes following flash illumination. (2) In the presence of antimycin, flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b-561 is dependent on a coupled oxidation of ubiquinol. The ubiquinol oxidase site of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase catalyses a concerted reaction in which one electron is transferred to a high-potential chain containing cytochromes c1 and c2, the Rieske-type iron-sulfur center, and the reaction center primary donor, and a second electron is transferred to a low-potential chain containing cytochromes b-566 and b-561. (3) The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 in the presence of antimycin has been shown to reflect the rate of turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. This diagnostic feature has been used to measure the dependence of the kinetics of the site on the ubiquinol concentration. Over a limited range of concentration (0–3 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561), the kinetics showed a second-order process, first order with respect to ubiquinol from the pool. At higher ubiquinol concentrations, other processes became rate determining, so that above approx. 25 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561, no further increase in rate was seen. (4) The kinetics and extents of cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash in the presence of antimycin, and of the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2, and the slow phase of the carotenoid change, have been measured as a function of redox potential over a wide range. The initial rate for all these processes increased on reduction of the suspension over the range between 180 and 100 mV (pH 7). The increase in rate occurred as the concentration of ubiquinol in the pool increased on reduction, and could be accounted for in terms of the increased rate of ubiquinol oxidation. It is not necessary to postulate the presence of a tightly bound quinone at this site with altered redox properties, as has been previously assumed. (5) The antimycin-sensitive reactions reflect the turnover of a second catalytic site of the complex, at which cytochrome b-561 ix oxidized in an electrogenic reaction. We propose that ubiquinone is reduced at this site with a mechanism similar to that of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. We suggest that antimycin binds at this site, and displaces the quinone species so that all reactions at the site are inhibited. (6) In coupled chromatophores, the turnover of the ubiquinone reductase site can be measured by the antimycin-sensitive slow phase of the electrochromic carotenoid change. At redox potentials higher than 180 mV, where the pool is completely oxidized, the maximal extent of the slow phase is half that at 140 mV, where the pool contains approx. 1 mol ubiquinone/mol cytochrome b-561 before the flash. At both potentials, cytochrome b-561 became completely reduced following one flash in the presence of antimycin. The results are interpreted as showing that at potentials higher than 180 mV, ubiquinol stoichiometric with cytochrome b-561 reaches the complex from the reaction center. The increased extent of the carotenoid change, when one extra ubiquinol is available in the pool, is interpreted as showing that the ubiquinol oxidase site turns over twice, and the ubiquinone reductase sites turns over once, for a complete turnover of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c2 oxidoreductase complex, and the net oxidation of one ubiquinol/complex. (7) The antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c1 and c2 is shown to reflect the second turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. (8) We suggest that, in the presence of antimycin, the ubiquinol oxidase site reaches a quasi equilibrium with ubiquinol from the pool and the high- and low-potential chains, and that the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalysed constrains the site to the single turnover under most conditions. (9) The results are discussed in the context of a detailed mechanism. The modified Q-cycle proposed is described by physicochemical parameters which account well for the results reported.  相似文献   

7.
(1) The role of the ubiquinone pool in the reactions of the cyclic electron-transfer chain has been investigated by observing the effects of reduction of the ubiquinone pool on the kinetics and extent of the cytochrome and electrochromic carotenoid absorbance changes following flash illumination. (2) In the presence of antimycin, flash-induced reduction of cytochrome b-561 is dependent on a coupled oxidation of ubiquinol. The ubiquinol oxidase site of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c(2) oxidoreductase catalyses a concerted reaction in which one electron is transferred to a high-potential chain containing cytochromes c(1) and c(2), the Rieske-type iron-sulfur center, and the reaction center primary donor, and a second electron is transferred to a low-potential chain containing cytochromes b-566 and b-561. (3) The rate of reduction of cytochrome b-561 in the presence of antimycin has been shown to reflect the rate of turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. This diagnostic feature has been used to measure the dependence of the kinetics of the site on the ubiquinol concentration. Over a limited range of concentration (0-3 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561), the kinetics showed a second-order process, first order with respect to ubiquinol from the pool. At higher ubiquinol concentrations, other processes became rate determining, so that above approx. 25 mol ubiquinol/mol cytochrome b-561, no further increase in rate was seen. (4) The kinetics and extents of cytochrome b-561 reduction following a flash in the presence of antimycin, and of the antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c(1) and c(2), and the slow phase of the carotenoid change, have been measured as a function of redox potential over a wide range. The initial rate for all these processes increased on reduction of the suspension over the range between 180 and 100 mV (pH 7). The increase in rate occurred as the concentration of ubiquinol in the pool increased on reduction, and could be accounted for in terms of the increased rate of ubiquinol oxidation. It is not necessary to postulate the presence of a tightly bound quinone at this site with altered redox properties, as has been previously assumed. (5) The antimycin-sensitive reactions reflect the turnover of a second catalytic site of the complex, at which cytochrome b-561 is oxidized in an electrogenic reaction. We propose that ubiquinone is reduced at this site with a mechanism similar to that of the two-electron gate of the reaction center. We suggest that antimycin binds at this site, and displaces the quinone species so that all reactions at the site are inhibited. (6) In coupled chromatophores, the turnover of the ubiquinone reductase site can be measured by the antimycin-sensitive slow phase of the electrochromic carotenoid change. At redox potentials higher than 180 mV, where the pool is completely oxidized, the maximal extent of the slow phase is half that at 140 mV, where the pool contains approx. 1 mol ubiquinone/mol cytochrome b-561 before the flash. At both potentials, cytochrome b-561 became completely reduced following one flash in the presence of antimycin. The results are interpreted as showing that at potentials higher than 180 mV, ubiquinol stoichiometric with cytochrome b-561 reaches the complex from the reaction center. The increased extent of the carotenoid change, when one extra ubiquinol is available in the pool, is interpreted as showing that the ubiquinol oxidase site turns over twice, and the ubiquinone reductase sites turns over once, for a complete turnover of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c(2) oxidoreductase complex, and the net oxidation of one ubiquinol/complex. (7) The antimycin-sensitive reduction of cytochrome c(1) and c(2) is shown to reflect the second turnover of the ubiquinol oxidase site. (8) We suggest that, in the presence of antimycin, the ubiquinol oxidase site reaches a quasi equilibrium with ubiquinol from the pool and the high- and low-potential chains, and that the equilibrium constant of the reaction catalysed constrains the site to the single turnover under most conditions. (9) The results are discussed in the context of a detailed mechanism. The modified Q-cycle proposed is described by physicochemical parameters which account well for the results reported.  相似文献   

8.
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli nitrate reductase A (NarGHI) in complex with pentachlorophenol has been determined to 2.0 A of resolution. We have shown that pentachlorophenol is a potent inhibitor of quinol:nitrate oxidoreductase activity and that it also perturbs the EPR spectrum of one of the hemes located in the membrane anchoring subunit (NarI). This new structural information together with site-directed mutagenesis data, biochemical analyses, and molecular modeling provide the first molecular characterization of a quinol binding and oxidation site (Q-site) in NarGHI. A possible proton conduction pathway linked to electron transfer reactions has also been defined, providing fundamental atomic details of ubiquinol oxidation by NarGHI at the bacterial membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Paracoccus pantotrophus expresses two nitrate reductases—membrane bound nitrate reductase (Nar) and periplasmic nitrate reductase (Nap). In growth experiments with two denitrifying species (Paracoccus pantotrophus and Alcaligenes eutrophus) that have both Nap and Nar and two species (Pseudomonas denitrificans and Pseudomonas fluorescens) with Nar only, it was found that diauxic lag is shorter for bacteria that express Nap. In P. pantotrophus, napEDABC encodes the periplasmic nitrate reductase. To analyze the effect of Nap on diauxic lag, the nap operon was deleted from P. pantotrophus. The growth experiments with nap? mutant resulted in increased diauxic lag when switched from aerobic to anoxic respiration, suggesting Nap is responsible for shorter lags and helps in adaptation to anoxic metabolism after transition from aerobic conditions. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

10.
The Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 napABC genes, encoding nitrate reductase activity, were isolated and sequenced. The derived protein sequences are very similar throughout the whole Nap segment to the NapABC protein sequences of Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas sp. G-179, Ralstonia eutropha, Rhodobacter sphaeroides, and Paracoccus denitrificans. Based on whole-cell nitrate reductase assays with the artificial electron donors benzyl viologen and methyl viologen, and assays with periplasmic cell-free extracts, it was concluded that the napABC-encoded enzyme activity in Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 corresponds to a periplasmic dissimilatory nitrate reductase, which was expressed under anoxic conditions and oxic conditions. A kanamycin-resistant Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 napA insertion mutant was constructed. The mutant still expressed assimilatory nitrate reductase activity, but was devoid of its periplasmic dissimilatory nitrate reductase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrate reductase A (NRA, NarGHI) is expressed in Escherichia coli by growing the bacterium in anaerobic conditions in the presence of nitrate. This enzyme reduces nitrate to nitrite and uses menaquinol (or ubiquinol) as the electron donor. The location of quinones in the enzyme, their number, and their role in the electron transfer mechanism are still controversial. In this work, we have investigated the spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties of a semiquinone (SQ) in membrane samples of overexpressed E. coli nitrate reductase poised in appropriate redox conditions. This semiquinone is highly stabilized with respect to free semiquinone. The g-values determined from the numerical simulation of its Q-band (35 GHz) EPR spectrum are equal to 2.0061, 2.0051, 2.0023. The midpoint potential of the Q/QH(2) couple is about -100 mV, and the SQ stability constant is about 100 at pH 7.5. The semiquinone EPR signal disappears completely upon addition of the quinol binding site inhibitor 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide (NQNO). A semiquinone radical could also be stabilized in preparations where only the NarI membrane subunit is overexpressed in the absence of the NarGH catalytic dimer. Its thermodynamic and spectroscopic properties show only slight variations with those of the wild-type enzyme. The X-band continuous wave (cw) electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectra of the radicals display similar proton hyperfine coupling patterns in NarGHI and in NarI, showing that they arise from the same semiquinone species bound to a single site located in the NarI membrane subunit. These results are discussed with regard to the location and the potential function of quinones in the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
We have used EPR spectroscopy, redox potentiometry, and protein crystallography to characterize the [4Fe-4S] cluster (FS0) of the Escherichia coli nitrate reductase A (NarGHI) catalytic subunit (NarG). FS0 is clearly visible in the crystal structure of NarGHI [Bertero, M. G., et al. (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 681-687] but has novel coordination comprising one His residue and three Cys residues. At low temperatures (<15 K), reduced NarGHI exhibits a previously unobserved EPR signal comprising peaks at g = 5.023 and g = 5.556. We have assigned these features to a [4Fe-4S](+) cluster with an S = (3)/(2) ground state, with the g = 5.023 and g = 5.556 peaks corresponding to subpopulations exhibiting DeltaS = (1)/(2) and DeltaS = (3)/(2) transitions, respectively. Both peaks exhibit midpoint potentials of approximately -55 mV at pH 8.0 and are eliminated in the EPR spectrum of apomolybdo-NarGHI. The structure of apomolybdo-NarGHI reveals that FS0 is still present but that there is significant conformational disorder in a segment of residues that includes one of the Cys ligands. On the basis of these observations, we have assigned the high-spin EPR features of reduced NarGHI to FS0.  相似文献   

13.
Zhao Z  Rothery RA  Weiner JH 《Biochemistry》2003,42(48):14225-14233
We have studied the effects of site-directed mutations in Escherichia coli nitrate reductase A (NarGHI) on heme reduction by a menaquinol analogue (menadiol) using the stopped-flow method. For NarGHI(H66Y) and NarGHI(H187Y), both lacking heme b(L) but having heme b(H), the heme reduction by menadiol is abolished. For NarGHI(H56R) and NarGHI(H205Y), both without heme b(H) but with heme b(L), a smaller and slower heme reduction compared to that of the wild-type enzyme is observed. These results indicate that electrons from menadiol oxidation are transferred initially to heme b(L). A transient species, likely to be associated with a semiquinone radical anion, was generated not only on reduction of the wild-type enzyme as observed previously (1) but also on reduction of NarGHI(H56R) and NarGHI(H205Y). The inhibitors 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide and stigmatellin both have significant effects on the reduction kinetics of NarGHI(H56R) and NarGHI(H205Y). We have also investigated the reoxidation of menadiol-reduced heme by nitrate in the mutants. Compared to the wild type, no significant heme reoxidation is observed for NarGHI(H56R) and NarGHI(H205Y). This result indicates that a single mutation removing heme b(H) blocks the electron-transfer pathway from the subunit NarI to the catalytic dimer NarGH.  相似文献   

14.
The respiratory molybdoenzyme nitrate reductase (NarGHI) from Escherichia coli has been studied by protein film voltammetry, with the enzyme adsorbed on a rotating disk pyrolytic graphite edge (PGE) electrode. Catalytic voltammograms for nitrate reduction show a complex wave consisting of two components that vary with pH, nitrate concentration, and the presence of inhibitors. At micromolar levels of nitrate, the activity reaches a maximum value at approximately -25 mV and then decreases as the potential becomes more negative. As the nitrate concentration is raised, the activity at more negative potentials increases and eventually becomes the dominant feature at millimolar concentrations. This leads to the hypothesis that nitrate binds more tightly to Mo(V) than Mo(IV), so that low levels of nitrate are more effectively reduced at a higher potential despite the lower driving force. However, an alternative interpretation, that nitrate binding is affected by a change in the redox state of the pterin, cannot be ruled out. This proposal, implicating a specific redox transition at the active site, is supported by experiments carried out using the inhibitors azide and thiocyanate. Azide is the stronger inhibitor of the two, and each inhibitor shows two inhibition constants, one at high potential and one at low potential, both of which are fully competitive with nitrate; closer analysis reveals that the inhibitors act preferentially upon the catalytic activity at high potential. The unusual potential dependence therefore derives from the weaker binding of nitrate or the inhibitors to a more reduced state of the active site. The possible manifestation of these characteristics in vivo has interesting implications for the bioenergetics of E. coli.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Molybdoenzymes are ubiquitous in living organisms and catalyze, for most of them, oxidation-reduction reactions using a large range of substrates. Periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapAB) from Rhodobacter sphaeroides catalyzes the 2-electron reduction of nitrate into nitrite. Its active site is a Mo bis-(pyranopterin guanine dinucleotide), or Mo-bisPGD, found in most prokaryotic molybdoenzymes. A [4Fe-4S] cluster and two c-type hemes form an intramolecular electron transfer chain that deliver electrons to the active site. Lysine 56 is a highly conserved amino acid which connects, through hydrogen-bonds, the [4Fe-4S] center to one of the pyranopterin ligands of the Mo-cofactor. This residue was proposed to be involved in the intramolecular electron transfer, either defining an electron transfer pathway between the two redox cofactors, and/or modulating their redox properties.In this work, we investigated the role of this lysine by combining site-directed mutagenesis, activity assays, redox titrations, EPR and HYSCORE spectroscopies. Removal of a positively-charged residue at position 56 strongly decreased the redox potential of the [4Fe-4S] cluster at pH?8 by 230?mV to 400?mV in the K56H and K56M mutants, respectively, thus affecting the kinetics of electron transfer from the hemes to the [4Fe-4S] center up to 5 orders of magnitude. This effect was partly reversed at acidic pH in the K56H mutant likely due to protonation of the imidazole ring of the histidine. Overall, our study demonstrates the critical role of a charged residue from the second coordination sphere in tuning the reduction potential of the [4Fe-4S] cluster in RsNapAB and related molybdoenzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The rumen bacterium Wolinella succinogenes grows by respiratory nitrate ammonification with formate as electron donor. Whereas the enzymology and coupling mechanism of nitrite respiration is well known, nitrate reduction to nitrite has not yet been examined. We report here that intact cells and cell fractions catalyse nitrate and chlorate reduction by reduced viologen dyes with high specific activities. A gene cluster encoding components of a putative periplasmic nitrate reductase system (napA, G, H, B, F, L, D) was sequenced. The napA gene was inactivated by inserting a kanamycin resistance gene cassette. The resulting mutant did not grow by nitrate respiration and did not reduce nitrate during growth by fumarate respiration, in contrast to the wild type. An antigen was detected in wild-type cells using an antiserum raised against the periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapA) from Paracoccus pantotrophus. This antigen was absent in the W. succinogenes napA mutant. It is concluded that the periplasmic nitrate reductase NapA is the only respiratory nitrate reductase in W. succinogenes, although a second nitrate-reducing enzyme is apparently induced in the napA mutant. The nap cluster of W. succinogenes lacks a napC gene whose product is thought to function in quinol oxidation and electron transfer to NapA in other bacteria. The W. succinogenes genome encodes two members of the NapC/NirT family, NrfH and FccC. Characterization of corresponding deletion mutants indicates that neither of these two proteins is required for nitrate respiration. A mutant lacking the genes encoding respiratory nitrite reductase (nrfHA) had wild-type properties with respect to nitrate respiration. A model of the electron transport chain of nitrate respiration is proposed in which one or more of the napF, G, H and L gene products mediate electron transport from menaquinol to the periplasmic NapAB complex. Inspection of the W. succinogenes genome sequence suggests that ammonia formation from nitrate is catalysed exclusively by periplasmic respiratory enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Continous culture experiments with the obligatory methanotroph, Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, were conducted to study the whole-cell methane monooxygenase (MMO) and nitrogenase activities in a nitrate minimal salts medium under oxygen-limited conditions with methane as the carbone source. The important variables investigated were the feed medium concentrations of copper and nitrate, CO(2) addition, the agitation speed, and the dilution rate. M. trichosporium OB3b required quantitative amounts of copper (2.6 x 10(-4) g Cu/g dry cell Wt) for the exclusive production of particulate MMo during continous culture growth. When the feed medium nitrate concentration was varied in the range of 5-50 mM, the whole-cell specific pMMO activity exhibited a maximum at 40 mM. The elimination of external CO(2) gassing decreased pMMO activity by more than 30%. The steady-state cell density increased continuously over a 300-700 rpm range of agitation speed, whereas, the pMMO activity became maximal at 400 rpm. Also, the pMMO activity increased with the dilution rate up to 0.06 h(-1) and remained constant thereafter. Maximal continuous pMMO productivity was, thus, achieved in Higgin's medium containing 10 muM Cu, 80 muM Fe, and 40 mM nitrate with an agitation speed of 500 rpm and a dilution rate of 0.06 h(-1). Nitrogenase activity, on the other hand, increased over a feed medium copper concentration of 2-15 muM, falling sharply at 20 muM, and it exhibited a minimum at 20 mM when the feed medium nitrate concentration was varied. (c) 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Preliminary studies showed that the periplasmic nitrate reductase (Nap) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and the membrane-bound nitrate reductases of Escherichia coli are able to reduce selenate and tellurite in vitro with benzyl viologen as an electron donor. In the present study, we found that this is a general feature of denitrifiers. Both the periplasmic and membrane-bound nitrate reductases of Ralstonia eutropha, Paracoccus denitrificans, and Paracoccus pantotrophus can utilize potassium selenate and potassium tellurite as electron acceptors. In order to characterize these reactions, the periplasmic nitrate reductase of R. sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans IL106 was histidine tagged and purified. The V(max) and K(m) were determined for nitrate, tellurite, and selenate. For nitrate, values of 39 micromol x min(-1) x mg(-1) and 0.12 mM were obtained for V(max) and K(m), respectively, whereas the V(max) values for tellurite and selenate were 40- and 140-fold lower, respectively. These low activities can explain the observation that depletion of the nitrate reductase in R. sphaeroides does not modify the MIC of tellurite for this organism.  相似文献   

20.
Quinol/nitrate oxidoreductase (NarGHI) is the first enzyme involved in respiratory denitrification in prokaryotes. Although this complex in E. coli is known to operate with both ubi and menaquinones, the location and the number of quinol binding sites remain elusive. NarGHI strongly stabilizes a semiquinone radical located within the dihemic anchor subunit NarI. To identify its location and function, we used a combination of mutagenesis, kinetics, EPR, and ENDOR spectroscopies. For the NarGHIH66Y and NarGHIH187Y mutants lacking the distal heme bD, no EPR signal of the semiquinone was observed. In contrast, a semiquinone was detected in the NarGHIH56Y mutant lacking the proximal heme bP. Its thermodynamic properties and spectroscopic characteristics, as revealed by Q-band EPR and ENDOR spectroscopies, are identical to those observed in the native enzyme. The substitution by Ala of the Lys86 residue close to heme bD, which was previously proposed to be in a quinol oxidation site of NarGHI (QD), also leads to the loss of the EPR signal of the semiquinone, although both hemes are present. Enzymatic assays carried out on the NarGHIK86A mutant reveal that the substitution dramatically reduces the rate of oxidation of both mena and ubiquinol analogues. These observations demonstrate that the semiquinone observed in NarI is strongly associated with heme bD and that Lys86 is required for its stabilization. Overall, our results indicate that the semiquinone is located within the quinol oxidation site QD. Details of the possible binding motif of the semiquinone and mechanistic implications are discussed.  相似文献   

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