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1.
Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase reduced azide, at 30 degrees C and pH 6.8-8.2, to yield ammonia (NH3), dinitrogen (N2) and hydrazine (N2H4). Reduction of (15N = 14N = 14N)-followed by mass-spectrometric analysis showed that no new nitrogen-nitrogen bonds were formed. During azide reduction, added 15N2H4 did not contribute 15N to NH3, indicating lack of equilibration between enzyme-bound intermediates giving rise to N2H4 and N2H4 in solution. When azide reduction to N2H4 was partially inhibited by 15N2, label appeared in NH3 but not in N2H4. Product balances combined with the labelling data indicate that azide is reduced according to the following equations: (formula: see text); N2 was a competitive inhibitor and CO a non-competitive inhibitor of azide reduction to N2H4. The percentage of total electron flux used for H2 evolution concomitant with azide reduction fell from 26% at pH 6.8 to 0% at pH 8.2. Pre-steady-state kinetic data suggest that N2H4 is formed by the cleavage of the alpha-beta nitrogen-nitrogen bond to bound azide to leave a nitride (= N) intermediate that subsequently yields NH3.  相似文献   

2.
The steady-state kinetic behavior of the six-electron reduction of N2 by nitrogenase is known to differ markedly from the six-electron reduction of cyanide in two ways. First, on extrapolation to infinite concentration of cyanide, the H2 evolution reaction is almost completely suppressed whereas at extrapolated infinite concentration of N2, H2 evolution continues. Second, as the ratio of the Fe protein to the MoFe protein increases, the reduction of N2 is favored over H2 evolution, whereas the reduction of cyanide becomes less favored relative to H2 evolution. We have extended these steady-state experiments with Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase to include a third observation, that the six-electron reduction of N2 is favored over H2 evolution at high total protein concentrations whereas cyanide reduction is less favored over H2 evolution at high total protein concentrations. All three steady-state observations can be explained by a model whereby cyanide is proposed to bind to a redox state of the MoFe protein more oxidized than that reactive toward H2 evolution and N2 reduction. To test this model, we have examined the pre-steady-state kinetic behavior of both cyanide reduction by A. vinelandii nitrogenase and cyanide inhibition of total electron flow through nitrogenase. The data show that in the presence or absence of cyanide there is a short lag of 100 ms before H2 is detected, followed by a linear phase of H2 evolution lasting for about 3 s, during which time no effects of cyanide are observable. After 3 s electron flow is finally inhibited by cyanide, and the cyanide reduction product CH4 is finally formed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
A comprehensive model for the mechanism of nitrogenase action is used to simulate pre-steady-state kinetic data for H2 evolution in the presence and in the absence of N2, obtained by using a rapid-quench technique with nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae. These simulations use independently determined rate constants that define the model in terms of the following partial reactions: component protein association and dissociation, electron transfer from Fe protein to MoFe protein coupled to the hydrolysis of MgATP, reduction of oxidized Fe protein by Na2S2O4, reversible N2 binding by H2 displacement and H2 evolution. Two rate-limiting dissociations of oxidized Fe protein from reduced MoFe protein precede H2 evolution, which occurs from the free MoFe protein. Thus Fe protein suppresses H2 evolution by binding to the MoFe protein. This is a necessary condition for efficient N2 binding to reduced MoFe protein.  相似文献   

4.
Tolland JD  Thorneley RN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(27):9520-9527
Stopped-flow FTIR spectroscopy was used to monitor continuously the pre-steady- and steady-state phases of azide reduction by nitrogenase and the accompanying hydrolysis of ATP. This was characterized by a ca. 1.3 s lag phase that is explained by the number of Fe protein cycles required to effect the reductions of azide to N(2) + NH(3), N(2)H(4) + NH(3), or 3NH(3). Extrapolation of the steady-state time course for azide reduction to zero time showed that one azide binds within 200 ms to each FeMo cofactor. Inhibition of azide reduction by CO was established at times <400 ms, which was faster than the appearance of the first observable IR band assigned to CO (1904 cm(-)(1) detectable at ca. 1 s with maximum amplitude at ca. 7 s). IR bands associated with the rapidly formed (<400 ms) CO species that inhibits azide reduction were not observed over the range 1700-2100 cm(-)(1). This suggests either that the CO is initially bridging two or more Fe atoms or that a rapid reduction of CO to a formyl state occurs by insertion into a metal-hydride bond. The frequencies and time courses for the appearance and loss of the CO bands under hi- and lo-CO conditions were essentially unaffected by the presence of 20 mM azide, consistent with CO being a noncompetitive inhibitor of azide reduction and with azide and CO binding to different sites on the FeMo cofactor.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
The kinetic mechanism of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase was investigated by stopped-flow spectrofluorometry at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. Pre-steady-state kinetic steps were identified with chemical steps proposed for the mechanism of this enzyme (Palmer, J.L., and Abeles, R.H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 1217-1226). The steady-state kinetic constants for the hydrolysis or synthesis of S-adenosylhomocysteine were in good agreement with those values calculated from the pre-steady-state rate constants. The equilibrium constant for dehydration of 3'-ketoadenosine to 3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosine on the enzyme was 3. The analogous equilibrium constant for addition of L-homocysteine to S-3'-keto-4',5'-dehydroadenosylhomocysteine on the enzyme was 0.3. The elimination of H2O from adenosine in solution had an equilibrium constant of 1.4 (aH2O = 1). Thus, the equilibrium constants for these elimination reactions on the enzyme were probably not perturbed significantly from those in solution. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 8, and the analogous constant for the reduction of the enzyme by S-adenosylhomocysteine was 4. The equilibrium constant for the reduction of NAD+ by a secondary alcohol in solution was 5 x 10(-5) at pH 7.0. Consequently, the reduction of enzyme-bound NAD+ by adenosine was 10(5)-fold more favorable than the reduction of free NAD+. The magnitude of the first-order rate constants for the interconversion of enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a relatively small range (3-80 s-1). Similarly, the magnitude of the equilibrium constants among enzyme-bound intermediates varied over a narrow range (0.3-10). These results were consistent with the overall reversibility of the reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Carbamyl phosphate caused a maximal inhibition of 50% of the in vitro nitrogenase activity measured by acetylene reduction and dinitrogen reduction. The addition of 1 mM carbamyl phosphate to a N(2)-fixing culture caused a rapid decrease of 30% of the acetylene reduction activity and also repression of nitrogenase biosynthesis. However, carbamyl phosphate had no effect on the reductant-dependent adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis and H(2) evolution reactions catalyzed by nitrogenase. Studies on the binding of carbamyl phosphate to nitrogenase and each of its two components (azoferredoxin and molybdoferredoxin) indicated that optimal binding was obtained only in the presence of an operating nitrogenase system. Moreover, the binding seemed to be on the molybdoferredoxin component rather than azoferredoxin. From a Scatchard plot and a reciprocal plot of the data, the values of n = 2 and dissociation constant (K) of approximately 5 x 10(-5) M were obtained. The value for the dissociation constant was of the same order of magnitude as the endogenous level of carbamyl phosphate in a N(2)-fixing cell. The carbamyl phosphate pool in NH(3)-grown cells was twice that of N(2)-fixing cells.  相似文献   

9.
Photoproduction of H2 and activation of H2 for CO2 reduction (photoreduction) by Rhodopseudomonas capsulata are catalyzed by different enzyme systems. Formation of H2 from organic compounds is mediated by nitrogenase and is nto inhibited by an atmosphere of 99% H2. Cells grown photoheterotrophically on C4 dicarboxylic acids (with glutamate as N source) evolve H2 from the C4 acids and also from lactate and pyruvate; cells grown on C3 carbon sources, however, are inactive with the C4 acids, presumably because they lack inducible transport systems. Ammonia is known to inhibit N2 fixation by photosynthetic bacteria, and it also effectively prevents photoproduction of H2; these effects are due to inhibition and, in part, inactivation of nitrogenase. Biosynthesis of the latter, as measured by both H2 production and acetylene reduction assays, is markedly increased when cells are grown at high light intensity; synthesis of the photoreduction system, on the other hand, is not appreciably influenced by light intensity during photoheterotrophic growth. The photoreduction activity of cells grown on lactate + glutamate (which contain active nitrogenase) is greatly activated by NH4+, but this effect is not observed in cells grown with NH4+ as N source (nitrogenase repressed) or in a Nif- mutant that is unable to produce H2. Lactate, malate, and succinate, which are readily used as growth substrates by R. capsulata and are excellent H donors for photoproduction of H2, abolish photoreduction activity. The physiological significances of this phenomenon and of the reciprocal regulatory effects of NH4+ on H2 production and photoreduction are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
In combination with the Mo-Fe protein of nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae, the Fe protein of nitrogenase from Clostridium pasteurianum forms an active enzyme with novel properties different from those of either of the homologous nitrogenases. The steady-state rates of reduction of acetylene and H+ are 12% of those of the homologous system from C.pasteurianim. Acetylene reductase activity exhibited an approx. 10min lag at 30 degrees C before the rate of reduction became linear, consistent with a once-only activation step being necessary for acetylene reduction to occur. No such lag was observed for H2 evolution. The activity with N2 as a reducible substrate was very low, implying that acetylene reductase activity is not necessarily an accurate indication of nitrogen-fixing ability. This is of particular relevance to studies on mutant and agronomically important organisms. Stopped-flow spectrophotometric studies showed unimolecular electron transfer from the Fe protein to the Mo-Fe protein to occur at the same rate (k2 = 2.5 X 10(2)s-1) and with the same dependence on ATP concentration (apparent KD = 400 muM) as with the homologous Klebsiella nitrogenase. However, an ATP/2e ratio of 50 was obtained for H2 evolution, indicating that ATP hydrolysis had been uncoupled from electron transfer to substrate. These data indicate that ATP has at least two roles in the mechanism of nitrogenase action. The combination of the Mo-Fe protein of nitrogenase of C.pasteurianim and the Fe protein of K.pneumoniae were inactive in all the above reactions, except for a weak adenosine triphosphatase activity, 0.5% of that of the homologous K.pneumoniae system.  相似文献   

11.
Fisher K  Dilworth MJ  Newton WE 《Biochemistry》2006,45(13):4190-4198
The Mo-nitrogenase-catalyzed reduction of both cyanide and azide results in the production of excess NH3, which is an amount of NH3 over and above that expected to be formed from the well-recognized reactions. Several suggestions about the possible sources of excess NH3 have been made, but previous attempts to characterize these reactions have met with either limited (or no) success or controversy. Because V-nitrogenase has a propensity to release partially reduced intermediates, e.g., N2H4 during N2 reduction, it was selected to probe the reduction of cyanide and azide. Sensitive assay procedures were developed and employed to monitor the production of either HCHO or CH3OH (its further two-electron-reduced product) from HCN. Like Mo-nitrogenase, V-nitrogenase suffered electron-flux inhibition by CN- (but was much less sensitive than Mo-nitrogenase), but unlike the case for Mo-nitrogenase, MgATP hydrolysis was also inhibited by CN-. V-Nitrogenase also released more of the four-electron-reduced intermediate, CH3NH2, than did Mo-nitrogenase. At high NaCN concentrations, V-nitrogenase directed a significant percentage of electron flux into excess NH3, and under these conditions, substantial amounts of HCHO, but no CH3OH, were detected for the first time. With azide, in contrast to the case for Mo-nitrogenase, both total electron flux and MgATP hydrolysis with V-nitrogenase were inhibited. V-Nitrogenase, unlike Mo-nitrogenase, showed no preference between the two-electron reduction to N2-plus-NH3 and the six-electron reduction to N2H4-plus-NH3. V-Nitrogenase formed more excess NH3, but reduction of the N2 produced by the two-electron reduction of N3(-) was not its source. Rather, it was formed directly by the eight-electron reduction of N3(-). Unlike Mo-nitrogenase, CO could not completely eliminate either cyanide or azide reduction by V-nitrogenase. CO did, however, eliminate the inhibition of both electron flux and MgATP hydrolysis by CN-, but not that caused by azide. These different responses to CO suggest different sites or modes of interaction for these two substrates with V-nitrogenase.  相似文献   

12.
Binding of ADP and orthophosphate during the ATPase reaction of nitrogenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The pre-steady-state ATPase activity of nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii was investigated. By using a rapid-quench technique, it has been demonstrated that with the oxidized nitrogenase complex the same burst reaction of MgATP hydrolysis occurs as observed with the reduced complex, namely 6-8 mol orthophosphate released/mol MoFe protein. It is concluded that the pre-steady-state ATPase activity is independent of electron transfer from Fe protein to MoFe protein. Results obtained from gel centrifugation experiments showed that during the steady state of reductant-independent ATP hydrolysis there is a slow dissociation of one molecule of MgADP from the nitrogenase proteins (koff less than or equal to 0.2 s-1); the second MgADP molecule dissociates much faster (koff greater than or equal to 0.6 s-1). Under the same conditions orthophosphate was found to be associated with the nitrogenase proteins. The rate of dissociation of orthophosphate from the nitrogenase complex, as estimated from the gel centrifugation experiments, is in the same order of magnitude as the steady-state turnover rate of the reductant-independent ATPase activity (0.6 mol Pi formed X s-1 X mol Av2(-1) at 22 degrees C). These data are consistent with dissociation of orthophosphate or MgADP being rate-limiting during nitrogenase-catalyzed reductant-independent ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

13.
The N(2)-fixing system of Clostridium pasteurianum operates under regulatory controls; no activity is found in cultures growing on excess NH(3). The conditions which are necessary for the synthesis and function of this system were studied in whole cells by using acetylene reduction as a sensitive assay for the presence of the N(2)-fixing system. Nitrogenase of N(2)-fixing cultures normally can fix twice as much N(2) as is needed to maintain the growth rate. When cultures that have grown for four or more generations on NH(3) exhaust NH(3) from the medium, a diauxic lag of about 90 min ensues before growth is resumed on N(2). Neither N(2)-fixing nor acetylene reduction activity can be detected before growth is resumed on N(2). N(2) is not a necessary requirement for this synthesis since under argon that contains less than 10(-8)m N(2), the N(2)-fixing system is made. If NH(3) is added to N(2)-dependent cultures, synthesis of the enzyme system is abruptly stopped, but the enzyme already present remains stable and functional for at least 6 hr (over three generations). Cultures grown under argon in a chemostat controlled by limiting ammonia have derepressed nitrogenase synthesis. If the argon is removed and replaced by N(2), partial repression of nitrogenase occurs.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation of molybdate transport by Clostridium pasteurianum.   总被引:6,自引:6,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The regulation of the molybdate (MoO42-) transport activity of Clostridium pasteurianum has been studied by observing the effects of NH3, carbamyl phosphate, MoO42-, and chloramphenicol on the ability of cells to take up MoO42-. Compared with cells fixing N2, cells grown in the presence of 1 mM NH3 are greater than 95% repressed for MoO42- transport. Uptake activity begins to increase just before NH exhaustion (under Ar or N2) and continues to increase throughout the lag period as cells shift from NH3-growing to N2-fixing conditions. When cells are shifted from N2-fixing to NH3-growing conditions the transport activity per fixed number of cells decreases by increase of bells in absence of transport synthesis. Carbamyl phosphate (greater than or equal to 15 mM) but not NH3 inhibits 58% of the in vitro uptake activity. When 1 mM carbamyl phosphate is added just before the exhaustion of NH3, the transport activity, measured 2 h later, is 100% repressed. Cells grown in the presence of high MoO42- (1mM) are 80% repressed for MoO42- transport. Synthesis of the MoO42- transport system is also completely stopped when chloramphenicol (300 mug/ml) is added just before the exhaustion oNH 3 from the medium. These findings demonstrate that the ability of cells to transport MoO42- is dependent upon new protein synthesis and can be repressed by high levels of substrate. The regulation of MoO42- uptake by NH3 or carbamyl phosphate closely parallels the regulation of nitrogenase activity. Activity of neither nitrogenase component (Fe protein or MoFe protein) was detected even 3 h after the exhaustion of the NH3 if either MoO42- was absent or if WO42- was present in place of MoO42-. The duration of the diauxic lag increases with decreasing concentration of MoO42- in the medium. If no MoO42- is present the lag continues indefinitely. If MoO42- is added late in the lag period, growth under N2-fixing conditions resumes but only after a normal induction period.  相似文献   

15.
The molybdenum-dependent nitrogenase catalyzes the multi-electron reduction of protons and N(2) to yield H(2) and 2NH(3). It also catalyzes the reduction of a number of non-physiological doubly and triply bonded small molecules (e.g. C(2)H(2), N(2)O). Carbon monoxide (CO) is not reduced by the wild-type molybdenum nitrogenase but instead inhibits the reduction of all substrates catalyzed by nitrogenase except protons. Here, we report that when the nitrogenase MoFe protein α-Val(70) residue is substituted by alanine or glycine, the resulting variant proteins will catalyze the reduction and coupling of CO to form methane (CH(4)), ethane (C(2)H(6)), ethylene (C(2)H(4)), propene (C(3)H(6)), and propane (C(3)H(8)). The rates and ratios of hydrocarbon production from CO can be adjusted by changing the flux of electrons through nitrogenase, by substitution of other amino acids located near the FeMo-cofactor, or by changing the partial pressure of CO. Increasing the partial pressure of CO shifted the product ratio in favor of the longer chain alkanes and alkenes. The implications of these findings in understanding the nitrogenase mechanism and the relationship to Fischer-Tropsch production of hydrocarbons from CO are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The nucleoside hydrolase (NH) of the Trypanosoma vivax parasite catalyzes the hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond in ribonucleosides according to the following reaction: beta-purine (or pyrimidine) nucleoside + H(2)O --> purine (pyrimidine) base + ribose. The reaction follows a highly dissociative nucleophilic displacement reaction mechanism with a ribosyl oxocarbenium-like transition state. This paper describes the first pre-steady-state analysis of the conversion of a number of purine nucleosides. The NH exhibits burst kinetics and behaves with half-of-the-sites reactivity. The analysis suggests that the NH of T. vivax follows a complex multistep mechanism in which a common slow step different from the chemical hydrolysis is rate limiting. Stopped-flow fluorescence binding experiments with ribose indicate that a tightly bound enzyme-ribose complex accumulates during the enzymatic hydrolysis of the common purine nucleosides. This is caused by a slow isomerization between a tight and a loose enzyme-ribose complex forming the rate-limiting step on the reaction coordinate.  相似文献   

17.
(1) Cyanamide (N identical to C-NH2) has been shown to be a substrate for purified Mo-nitrogenases of Klebsiella pneumoniae and Azotobacter chroococcum, with apparent Km values near 0.8 mM. (2) Reduction products were CH4, CH3NH2 and NH3 formed by pathways requiring 6 or 8 electrons: N identical to CNH2 + 6e + 6H+----CH3NH2 + NH3; N identical to CNH2 + 8e + 8H+----CH4 + 2NH3 (3) Acetylene reduction and hydrogen evolution were inhibited more than 75% by cyanamide (10 mM). Cyanamide also inhibited total electron flux at nitrogenase protein component ratios (Fe/MoFe) near 10. (4) Cyanamide was also a substrate for the recently isolated Va-nitrogenase of A. chroococcum, but with an apparent Km of 2.6 mM showed weaker binding and an 8-fold lower Vmax than did either Mo-nitrogenase. (5) The component ratios of nitrogenase proteins favouring CH4 formation was 3.5 Fe/MoFe protein and 1 Fe/VaFe protein.  相似文献   

18.
A second alternative nitrogenase complex (nitrogenase 3) was purified from a nifHDK deletion strain of Azotobacter vinelandii. The active complex is made up of two components, dinitrogenase 3 and dinitrogenase reductase 3. Dinitrogenase 3 contains two protein subunits (alpha, Mr 58,000, and beta, Mr 50,000) which assemble into at least two active configurations: alpha 2 beta 2 (dinitrogenase 3s) and alpha 1 beta 2 (dinitrogenase 3F). Dinitrogenase 3s contains 24 Fe and 18 acid-labile S2-ions per Mr 216,000, and dinitrogenase 3F contains 11 Fe and 9 acid-labile S2-ions per Mr 158,000. Dinitrogenase reductase 3 is composed of two protein subunits of identical Mr (32,500) and contains four Fe and four acid-labile S2- ions per Mr 65,000. On two-dimensional gels, the protein subunits of the nitrogenase 3 complex comigrated with the four Mo-, V-, and NH4+-repressible proteins originally designated as N2ase B: the nitrogenase hypothesized to exist in the alternative N2 fixation system first described in 1980 (P.E. Bishop, D. M. L. Jarlenski, and D. R. Hetherington, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77:7342-7346, 1980). Neutron activation analysis indicated that the nitrogenase 3 complex lacked significant amounts of Mo, V, Cr, Re, and W. Some Zn, however, was found in the dinitrogenase 3S and dinitrogenase 3F preparations. The pattern of substrate reduction efficiency was H+ greater than N2 greater than C2H2. The maximum specific activity found for N2 reduction was 38 nmol of NH3 per min per mg of protein (dinitrogenase 3S). Nitrogenase 3 was found to be extremely sensitive to O2, and activities could not be reproducibly maintained during freezing and thawing.  相似文献   

19.
Clostridium pasteurianum exhibits diauxic growth when grown in the presence of both NH(3) and N(2); no nitrogenase activity or formation was detected either serologically or by activity during growth on NH(3). During the 60-min lag that ensued after NH(3) was consumed and before growth resumed, molybdoferredoxin and azoferredoxin were first detected by activity measurements and serologically at 25 and 40 min, respectively. With the use of rifampin and dactinomycin, it was found that azoferredoxin messenger ribonucleic acid was initiated between 25 and 30 min after the inception of the lag and was completed by 38 min. An explanation of these results and their relation to possible models for the regulation of nitrogenase is given.  相似文献   

20.
Nitrogenase reactivity: methyl isocyanide as substrate and inhibitor   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have examined the interaction of methyl isocyanide with the purified component proteins of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase (Av1 and Av2). CH3NC was shown to be a potent reversible inhibitor (Ki = 158 microM) of total electron flow, apparently uncoupling magnesium adenosine 5'-triphosphate hydrolysis from electron transfer to substrate. CH3NC is a substrate (Km = 0.688 mM at Av2/Av1 = 8), and extrapolation of the data indicates that at high enough CH3NC concentration, H2 evolution can be eliminated. The products are methane plus methylamine (six electrons) and dimethylamine (four electrons). There is an excess (relative to methane) of methylamine formed, which may arise by hydrolysis of a two-electron intermediate. A rapid high-performance liquid chromatography/fluorescence method was developed for methylamine determination. The products C2H4 and C2H6 appear to be formed via a reduction followed by an insertion mechanism. CH3NC appears to be reduced at an enzyme state more oxidized than the one responsible for H2 evolution or N2 reduction. Other substrates (C2H2 greater than N2 congruent to azide greater than N2O) all both relieve CH3NC inhibition and inhibit CH3NC reduction. Both effects occur in the same relative order, implying productive (substrate) and nonproductive (inhibitor) modes of binding of CH3NC to the same site.  相似文献   

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