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1.
Coenzyme F430 is a nickel porphinoid found in all methanogenic bacteria. Extended-X-ray-absorption-fine-structure (e.x.a.f.s.) spectra have been recorded above the nickel K-edge of coenzyme F430 and two model compounds, (5,10,15,20-tetramethylporphinato) nickel(II) and (5,10,15,20-tetramethylchlorinato)-nickel(II). The results show that the four nickel-nitrogen distances in F430 are split, with two nitrogen atoms at 0.192 nm and two at 0.210 nm.  相似文献   

2.
Factor F430 is a nickel porphinoid present in all methanogenic bacteria. It is a component of methyl-CoM reductase to which it is tightly but not covalently bound. Evidence is presented that in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum grown on nickel sufficient medium only approximately 30% of total F430 is associated with methyl-CoM reductase and that 70% is present in a non-bound, free form. When such cells were transferred to a nickel deficient medium the bacteria continued to grow although synthesis of total F430 stopped. During growth in the absence of nickel the amount of total F430 per 1 culture remained constant and that per g cells decreased. The ratio of free F430 to bound F430, however, changed. Free F430 was converted into the protein-bound form until almost all of the free F430 had disappeared. The kinetics of labelling with 63Ni of free and bound F430 agreed rather well with that calculated for a precursor-product relationship between free and bound F430.Dedicated to Professor H. G. Schlegel on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

3.
Nickel requirement and factor F430 content of methanogenic bacteria.   总被引:16,自引:5,他引:16       下载免费PDF全文
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum has been reported to require nickel for growth and to contain high concentrations of a nickel tetrapyrrole designated factor F430. In this communication it is shown that all methanogenic bacteria investigated incorporated nickel during growth and also synthesized factor F430. This was also true for Methanobrevibacter smithii, which is dependent on acetate as a carbon source, and for Methanosarcina barkeri growing on acetate or methanol as energy sources. Other bacteria, including Acetobacterium woodii and Clostridium thermoaceticum, contained no factor F430. It is further shown that two yellow nickel-containing degradation products were formed from factor F430 when heated at pH 7. This finding explains why several forms of factor F430 were found in methanogenic bacteria when a heat step was employed in the purification procedure.  相似文献   

4.
Coenzyme M (2-mercaptoethane sulfonic acid) and factor F430 (a nickel porphinoid) are coenzymes found in methanogenic bacteria. Recently it has been proposed that in these bacteria a coenzyme MF430 also exists which plays a key role in methane formation and in which coenzyme M and F430 are bound to each other. To test this hypothesis Methanobrevibacter ruminantium, which requires coenzyme M as a vitamin, was grown in the presence of [2-14C]CoMSH. F430 and 'CoM' (mixture of CoMSH and its disulfides) were quantitatively extracted from these cells and from partially purified methyl-CoM reductase using various methods. The extracts were chromatographed on cellulose or Sephadex G-10. Under all conditions factor F430 and 'CoM' were completely (greater than 99%) separated. There was no indication for the existence of a protein-free F430 species containing covalently bound coenzyme M in Mb. ruminantium. The results support the structure previously assigned to coenzyme F430.  相似文献   

5.
X-ray absorption spectroscopic characterization of axial ligand coordination to factor F430, the nickel-tetrapyrrole cofactor of the S-methyl-coenzyme M (CH3SCoM) methyl reductase enzyme from methanogenic bacteria, is presented. The nickel of isolated F430 is hexacoordinate at 10 K in aqueous solution (as is the enzyme-bound cofactor), whereas the epimerized and ring-oxidized derivatives of F430 have four-coordinate nickel. Reduction of the ring-oxidized derivative, F560, with dithionite yields F430 in its native configuration, with axial ligands indistinguishable from those present when the cofactor is obtained directly from the holoenzyme. Thus, we conclude that the axial ligands to F430 in aqueous solution are water molecules. Analysis of the nickel extended x-ray absorption fine structure is consistent with this conclusion. Resonance Raman spectra obtained at room temperature contain features characteristic of both 4- and 6-coordinate forms of the cofactor. We have found that the resonance Raman, optical, and x-ray absorption spectra of aqueous solutions of F430 are temperature-dependent due to a ligand-binding equilibrium involving the square-planar and 6-coordinate bis-aquo forms of the cofactor. At low temperatures (less than 250 K) the 6-coordinate form predominates, whereas higher temperature solutions contain both 4- and 6-coordinate species in a dynamic equilibrium. Similar behavior is observed in other weakly coordinating solvents such as methanol and ethanol. The 4-coordinate form is predominant in solvents with strong electron-withdrawing substituents such as 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol and 2-mercaptoethanol. The relevance of this facile ligand exchange to the active site structure and enzymatic mechanism of the parent enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Corrinoids, such as aquocobalamin, methylcobalamin, and (cyanoaquo)cobinamide, catalyze the reductive dehalogenation of CCl4 with titanium(III) citrate as the electron donor [Krone et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4908-4914]. We report here that this reaction is also effectively mediated by the nickel-containing porphinoid, coenzyme F430, found in methanogenic bacteria. Chloroform, methylene chloride, methyl chloride, and methane were detected as intermediates and products. Ethane was formed in trace amounts, and several as yet unidentified nonvolatile compounds were also generated. The rate of dehalogenation decreased in the series of CCl4, CHCl3, and CH2Cl2. With coenzyme F430 as the catalyst, the reduction of CH3Cl to CH4 proceeded more than 50 times faster than with aquocobalamin. Cell suspensions of Methanosarcina barkeri were found to catalyze the reductive dehalogenation of CCl4 with CO as the electron donor (E'0 = -0.524 V). Methylene chloride was the main end product. The kinetics of CHCl3 and CH2Cl2 formation from CCl4 were similar to those with coenzyme F430 or aquocobalamin as catalysts and titanium(III) citrate as the reductant.  相似文献   

7.
F430 is the nickel containing tetrapyrrole cofactor of S-methyl coenzyme M methylreductase, the enzyme that catalyzes the final step of methane production by methanogenic bacteria: the reduction of S-methyl coenzyme M (H3CSCH2CH2SO3-) to methane and coenzyme M (HSCH2CH2SO3-). The protein-free F430 obtained from the cytosol of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, strain delta H, exists predominantly in two isomeric forms that differ in relative stereochemical disposition of acid side chains at the 12 and 13 positions of the macrocycle periphery (Pfaltz, A., Livingston, D. A., Jaun, B., Diekert, G., Thauer, R. K., and Eschenmoser, A. (1985) Helv. Chim. Acta 68, 1338-1358). A simple one-step chromatographic procedure for the large-scale separation of these isomers is described. X-ray absorption spectroscopic studies show that F430 (i.e. the native isomer) is 6-coordinate with long nickel-ligand bonds (approximately 2.1 A), suggesting an approximately planar macrocycle. In contrast, the 12,13-diepimer exhibits a 4-coordinate, square-planar structure with short nickel-nitrogen bonds (approximately 1.9 A), suggesting a ruffled macrocycle. Previous reports, based on other x-ray absorption spectroscopic data, of static disorder in F430 Ni-N distances are shown to be incorrect due to sample heterogeneity. The optical spectrum of F430 (whether purified from the protein-free cytosol or extracted at high ionic strength from the holoenzyme) differs significantly from that of the 12,13-diepimer. The optical spectral differences are correlated with the alterations in coordination number and geometry of the central nickel ion in the two F430 isomers.  相似文献   

8.
《FEBS letters》1985,190(1):169-171
Factor F430 is a nickel-containing coenzyme of methanogenic bacteria with porphinoid structure which is derived from uroporphyrinogen III. It is shown that sirohydrochlorin is metabolized by cell free extracts of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum to factor F430 demonstrating that this compound, or a reduced form of it, is an intermediate in the biosynthesis of F430, and not only of vitamin B12 and siroheme.  相似文献   

9.
Factor F430 is a yellow compound of unknown structure present in methanogenic bacteria. It has recently been shown to contain nickel. In this communication the influence of the nickel concentration in the growth medium on the factor F430 content of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and on the nickel content of factor F430 was studied. It was found: (1) The content of factor F430 in the cells was strongly dependent on the nickel concentration of the growth medium. Cells grown on media with 2.5 M NiCl2 contained 28 times as much factor F430 per g as those grown on media with 0.075 M NiCl2; (2) factor F430 was synthesized in nickel deprived cells only upon the addition of nickel Nickel uptake paralleled factor F430 synthesis; (3) independent of the nickel concentration in the growth medium, the extinction coefficient at 430 nm of factor F430 per mol nickel was always near 22,500 cm-1 (mol Ni)-1. These findings indicate that nickel is an essential component of factor F430.Dedicated to Professor Otto Kandler on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

10.
A series of pentaalkylamide forms of F430 and of its 12,13-diepimer have been generated and characterized. Carbodiimide-assisted N-hydroxysulfosuccinimide activation of all five peripheral carboxylates of the F430 macrocycle allows nucleophilic attack by a number of primary amines (RNH2, R- = CH3-, CH3CH2-, CF3CH2-, CH3(CH2)3-) generating the pentaalkylamide derivatives. The identity of each derivative has been verified by fast-atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FAB-MS). The solubility of these derivatives in aprotic organic solvents varies as the amine alkyl substituent (R-) is changed. Electrochemical measurements have shown that the Ni(II/I) reduction potentials in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) are approximately -1 V (Ag/AgCl). Reduction by sodium amalgam in THF generates the Ni(I) form of the F430 diepimer pentabutylamide. The visible and EPR spectra of this Ni(I) species are very similar to the corresponding spectra of Ni(I) F430M (Jaun, B. and Pfaltz, A. (1986) J. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun. 1327-1329.).  相似文献   

11.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH(3)-S-CoM) to methane. The enzyme contains as a prosthetic group the nickel porphinoid F(430) which in the active enzyme is in the EPR-detectable Ni(I) oxidation state. Crystal structures of several inactive Ni(II) forms of the enzyme but not of the active Ni(I) form have been reported. To obtain structural information on the active enzyme-substrate complex we have now acquired X-ray absorption spectra of active MCR in the presence of either CH(3)-S-CoM or the substrate analog coenzyme M (HS-CoM). For both MCR complexes the results are indicative of the presence of a five-coordinate Ni(I), the five ligands assigned as four nitrogen ligands from F(430) and one oxygen ligand. Analysis of the spectra did not require the presence of a sulfur ligand indicating that CH(3)-S-CoM and HS-CoM were not coordinated via their sulfur atom to nickel in detectable amounts. As a control, X-ray absorption spectra were evaluated of three enzymatically inactive MCR forms, MCR-silent, MCR-ox1-silent and MCR-ox1, in which the nickel is known to be six-coordinate. Comparison of the edge position of the X-ray absorption spectra revealed that the Ni(I) in the active enzyme is more reduced than the Ni in the two EPR-silent Ni(II) states. Surprisingly, the edge position of the EPR-active MCR-ox1 state was found to be the same as that of the two silent states indicating similar electron density on the nickel.  相似文献   

12.
Factors F430 from methanogenic bacteria have recently been shown to contain nickel and it has been speculated that they may have a nickel tetrapyrrole structure. This assumption was tested by determining whether succinate is incorporated by growing Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum into three factors F430. Succinate is assimilated by Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum into the amino acids glutamate, arginine and proline and into tetrapyrroles rather than other cell components. It was found that per mol nickel 8–9 mol of succinate were incorporated into the three factors F430 which is the amount predicted for a tetrapyrrole structure. Since the three factors F430 only contained significant amounts of glutamate rather than arginine or proline, the incorporation data suggest that factors F430 are nickel tetrapyrrole compounds. Spectral properties of the three factors F430, apparent molecular weights, and the absence of phosphor in these compounds are also described.  相似文献   

13.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the methane-forming step in methanogenic archaea. It contains the nickel porphinoid F430, a prosthetic group that has been proposed to be directly involved in the catalytic cycle by the direct binding and subsequent reduction of the substrate methyl-coenzyme M. The active enzyme (MCRred1) can be generated in vivo and in vitro by reduction from MCRox1, which is an inactive form of the enzyme. Both the MCRred1 and MCRox1 forms have been proposed to contain F430 in the Ni(I) oxidation state on the basis of EPR and ENDOR data. In order to further address the oxidation state of the Ni center in F430, variable-temperature, variable-field magnetic circular dichroism (VTVH MCD), coupled with parallel absorption and EPR studies, have been used to compare the electronic and magnetic properties of MCRred1, MCRox1, and various EPR silent forms of MCR, with those of the isolated penta-methylated cofactor (F430M) in the +1, +2 and +3 oxidation states. The results confirm Ni(I) assignments for MCRred1 and MCRred2 forms of MCR and reveal charge transfer transitions involving the Ni d orbitals and the macrocycle orbitals that are unique to Ni(I) forms of F430. Ligand field transitions associated with S=1 Ni(II) centers are assigned in the near-IR MCD spectra of MCRox1-silent and MCR-silent, and the splitting in the lowest energy d–d transition is shown to correlate qualitatively with assessments of the zero-field splitting parameters determined by analysis of VTVH MCD saturation magnetization data. The MCD studies also support rationalization of MCRox1 as a tetragonally compressed Ni(III) center with an axial thiolate ligand or a coupled Ni(II)-thiyl radical species, with the reality probably lying between these two extremes. The reinterpretation of MCRox1 as a formal Ni(III) species rather than an Ni(I) species obviates the need to invoke a two-electron reduction of the F430 macrocyclic ligand on reductive activation of MCRox1 to yield MCRred1.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00775-004-0549-9Abbreviations F430 cofactor 430 - F430M penta-methylated form of cofactor 430 - Ni(I)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +1 oxidation state - Ni(II)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +2 oxidation state - Ni(III)F430M F430M with the nickel atom in the +3 oxidation state - MCR methyl-coenzyme M reductase - MCRox1 MCR exhibiting the MCR-ox1 EPR signal - MCRox1-silent EPR silent form of MCR obtained from the MCRox1 form - MCRred1 MCR exhibiting the EPR signals red1c and/or red1m - MCRred1c MCRred1 in the presence of coenzyme M - MCRred1m MCRred1 in the presence of methyl-coenzyme M - MCRred2 MCR exhibiting both the red1 and red2 EPR signals - MCRred1-silent EPR silent form of MCR obtained from the MCRred1 form - MCRsilent EPR silent form of MCR  相似文献   

14.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final step in methane biosynthesis by methanogenic archaea and contains a redox-active nickel tetrahydrocorphin, coenzyme F430, at its active site. Spectroscopic and computational methods have been used to study a novel form of the coenzyme, called F330, which is obtained by reducing F430 with sodium borohydride (NaBH4). F330 exhibits a prominent absorption peak at 330 nm, which is blue shifted by 100 nm relative to F430. Mass spectrometric studies demonstrate that the tetrapyrrole ring in F330 has undergone reduction, on the basis of the incorporation of protium (or deuterium), upon treatment of F430 with NaBH4 (or NaBD4). One- and two-dimensional NMR studies show that the site of reduction is the exocyclic ketone group of the tetrahydrocorphin. Resonance Raman studies indicate that elimination of this pi-bond increases the overall pi-bond order in the conjugative framework. X-ray absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, and computational results show that F330 contains low-spin Ni(II). Thus, conversion of F430 to F330 reduces the hydrocorphin ring but not the metal. Conversely, reduction of F430 with Ti(III) citrate to generate F380 (corresponding to the active MCR(red1) state) reduces the Ni(II) to Ni(I) but does not reduce the tetrapyrrole ring system, which is consistent with other studies [Piskorski, R., and Jaun, B. (2003) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125, 13120-13125; Craft, J. L., et al. (2004) J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 9, 77-89]. The distinct origins of the absorption band shifts associated with the formation of F330 and F380 are discussed within the framework of our computational results. These studies on the nature of the product(s) of reduction of F430 are of interest in the context of the mechanism of methane formation by MCR and in relation to the chemistry of hydroporphinoid systems in general. The spectroscopic and time-dependent DFT calculations add important insight into the electronic structure of the nickel hydrocorphinate in its Ni(II) and Ni(I) valence states.  相似文献   

15.
Binding of axial ligands to the nickel(II) of isolated factor F430 from the methyl reductase enzyme of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum is demonstrated. Evidence of bis-ligand coordination is obtained from the x-ray absorption, optical, and resonance Raman spectral characterization of F430 and its 12,13-diepimeric isomer in the presence of a large excess of cyanide, pyridine, or 1-methylimidazole. Significant broadening and 5-10-nm red shifts of the main 430-nm optical absorption band and shifts of up to 30 cm-1 for the high-frequency Raman lines are observed upon coordination of these axial ligands. The Raman spectra of native F430 and the diepimer with a particular axial ligand are nearly identical. Nickel x-ray absorption edge spectra of the diepimer in the absence and presence of these exogenous ligands are indicative of conversion from a square-planar to a tetragonally distorted octahedral geometry. Analyses of the nickel extended x-ray absorption fine structure data for the ligated diepimer complexes yield detailed structural information for these complexes. Implications of these data with respect to the enzymatic mechanism and the structure of the enzyme-bound factor are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme contains tightly bound the nickel porphinoid F430. The nickel enzyme has been shown to be active only when its prosthetic group is in the Ni(I) reduced state. In this state MCR exhibits the nickel-based EPR signal red1. We report here for the MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis that the EPR spectrum of the active enzyme changed upon addition or removal of coenzyme M, methyl coenzyme M and/or coenzyme B. In the presence of methyl-coenzyme M the red1 signal showed a more resolved 14N-superhyperfine splitting than in the presence of coenzyme M indicating a possible axial ligation of the substrate to the Ni(I). In the presence of methyl-coenzyme M and coenzyme B the red1 signal was the same as in the presence of methyl-coenzyme M alone. However, in the presence of coenzyme M and coenzyme B a highly rhombic EPR signal, MCR-red2, was induced, which was found to be light sensitive and appeared to be formed at the expense of the MCR-red1 signal. Upon addition of methyl-coenzyme M, the red2 signal disappeared and the red1 signal increased again. The red2 signal of MCR with 61Ni-labeled cofactor was significantly broadened indicating that the signal is nickel or nickel-ligand based.  相似文献   

17.
Methyl-coenzyme-M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M [2-(methylthio)ethanesulfonate] and 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme contains the nickel porphinoid coenzyme F430 as a prosthetic group. In the active, reduced (red) state, the enzyme displays two characteristic EPR signals, MCR-red1 and MCR-red2, probably derived from Ni(I). In the presence of the substrate methyl-coenzyme M, the rhombic MCR-red2 signal is quantitatively converted to the axial MCR-red1 signal. We report here on the effects of inhibitory substrate analogues on the EPR spectrum of the enzyme. 3-Bromopropanesulfonate (BrPrSO3), which is the most potent inhibitor of MCR known to date (apparent Ki = 0.05 microM), converted the EPR signals MCR-red1 and MCR-red2 to a novel axial Ni(I) signal designated MCR-BrPrSO3. 3-Fluoropropanesulfonate (apparent Ki < 50 microM) and 3-iodopropanesulfonate (apparent Ki < 1 microM) induced a signal identical to that induced by BrPrSO3 without affecting the line shape, despite the fact that the fluorine, bromine and iodine isotopes employed have nuclear spins of I = 1/2, I = 3/2 and I = 5/2, respectively. This finding suggests that MCR-BrPrSO3 is not the result of a close halogen-Ni(I) interaction. 7-Bromoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (BrHpoThrP) (apparent Ki = 5 microM), which is an inhibitory substrate analogue of 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate, converted the signals MCR-red1 and MCR-red2 to a novel axial Ni(I) signal, MCR-BrHpoThrP, similar but not identical to MCR-BrPrSO3. The results indicate that inhibition of MCR by the halogenated substrate analogues investigated above is not via oxidation of Ni(I)F430. The different MCR EPR signals are assigned to different enzyme/substrate and enzyme/inhibitor complexes.  相似文献   

18.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final reaction of the energy conserving pathway of methanogenic archaea in which methylcoenzyme M and coenzyme B are converted to methane and the heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB. It operates under strictly anaerobic conditions and contains the nickel porphinoid F430 which is present in the nickel (I) oxidation state in the active enzyme. The known crystal structures of the inactive nickel (II) enzyme in complex with coenzyme M and coenzyme B (MCR-ox1-silent) and in complex with the heterodisulfide CoM-S-S-CoB (MCR-silent) were now refined at 1.16 A and 1.8 A resolution, respectively. The atomic resolution structure of MCR-ox1-silent describes the exact geometry of the cofactor F430, of the active site residues and of the modified amino acid residues. Moreover, the observation of 18 Mg2+ and 9 Na+ ions at the protein surface of the 300 kDa enzyme specifies typical constituents of binding sites for either ion. The MCR-silent and MCR-ox1-silent structures differed in the occupancy of bound water molecules near the active site indicating that a water chain is involved in the replenishment of the active site with water molecules. The structure of the novel enzyme state MCR-red1-silent at 1.8 A resolution revealed an active site only partially occupied by coenzyme M and coenzyme B. Increased flexibility and distinct alternate conformations were observed near the active site and the substrate channel. The electron density of the MCR-red1-silent state aerobically co-crystallized with coenzyme M displayed a fully occupied coenzyme M-binding site with no alternate conformations. Therefore, the structure was very similar to the MCR-ox1-silent state. As a consequence, the binding of coenzyme M induced specific conformational changes that postulate a molecular mechanism by which the enzyme ensures that methylcoenzyme M enters the substrate channel prior to coenzyme B as required by the active-site geometry. The three different enzymatically inactive enzyme states are discussed with respect to their enzymatically active precursors and with respect to the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

We undertook an empirical force field analysis of the conformational changes that accompany the diepimeriztion of coenzyme F430. The crystal structure of 12,13-diepi F430M was used as a test of the parameter set and as the basis for the calculations. The individual pyrrole rings in 13-epi and 12,13-diepi F430 adopt alternating half chair conformations leading to a ruffled macrocycle, native F430 is also ruffled but the individual pyrroles are planar. The 12,13 di-dehydro F430 and native F430 conformations are extremely similar, this accounts for the experimental observation that reduction of 12,13 di-dehydro-F430 forms native F430 and not 12,13-diepi F430. Native F430 can easily accommodate both square planar and, by bending, trigonal bipyramidal coordination geometries about nickel. We suggest the bent trigonal bipyramidal form is the conformer bound to the protein and that direct binding of the amino acid side chains to nickel is probably not important.  相似文献   

20.
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