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1.
Biological nitrogen fixation, the reduction of chemically inert dinitrogen to bioavailable ammonia, is a central process in the global nitrogen cycle highly relevant for life on earth. N2 reduction to NH3 is catalyzed by nitrogenases exclusively synthesized by diazotrophic prokaryotes. All diazotrophs have a molybdenum nitrogenase containing the unique iron‐molybdenum cofactor FeMoco. In addition, some diazotrophs encode one or two alternative Mo‐free nitrogenases that are less efficient at reducing N2 than Mo‐nitrogenase. To permit biogenesis of Mo‐nitrogenase and other molybdoenzymes when Mo is scarce, bacteria synthesize the high‐affinity molybdate transporter ModABC. Generally, Mo supports expression of Mo‐nitrogenase genes, while it represses production of Mo‐free nitrogenases and ModABC. Since all three nitrogenases and ModABC can reach very high levels at suitable Mo concentrations, tight Mo‐mediated control saves considerable resources and energy. This review outlines the similarities and differences in Mo‐responsive regulation of nitrogen fixation and molybdate transport in diverse diazotrophs.  相似文献   

2.
The cofactors of Mo-, V-, Fe-dependent nitrogenases are believed to be highly homologous in structure despite the different types of heterometals (Mo, V, and Fe) they contain. Previously, a precursor form of the FeMo cofactor (FeMoco) was captured on NifEN, a scaffold protein for FeMoco biosynthesis. This all-Fe precursor closely resembles the Fe/S core structure of the FeMoco and, therefore, could reasonably serve as a precursor for all nitrogenase cofactors. Here, we report the heterologous incorporation of V and Fe into the NifEN-associated FeMoco precursor. EPR and activity analyses indicate that V and Fe can be inserted at much reduced efficiencies compared with Mo, and incorporation of both V and Fe is enhanced in the presence of homocitrate. Further, native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis experiments suggest that NifEN undergoes a significant conformational rearrangement upon metal insertion, which allows the subsequent NifEN–MoFe protein interactions and the transfer of the cofactor between the two proteins. The combined outcome of these in vitro studies leads to the proposal of a selective mechanism that is utilized in vivo to maintain the specificity of heterometals in nitrogenase cofactors, which is likely accomplished through the redox regulation of metal mobilization by different Fe proteins (encoded by nifH, vnfH, and anfH, respectively), as well as the differential interactions between these Fe proteins and their respective scaffold proteins (NifEN and VnfEN) in the Mo-, V-, and Fe-dependent nitrogenase systems.  相似文献   

3.
Biological nitrogen fixation, the main source of new nitrogen to the Earth's ecosystems, is catalysed by the enzyme nitrogenase. There are three nitrogenase isoenzymes: the Mo‐nitrogenase, the V‐nitrogenase and the Fe‐only nitrogenase. All three types require iron, and two of them also require Mo or V. Metal bioavailability has been shown to limit nitrogen fixation in natural and managed ecosystems. Here, we report the results of a study on the metal (Mo, V, Fe) requirements of Azotobacter vinelandii, a common model soil diazotroph. In the growth medium of A. vinelandii, metals are bound to strong complexing agents (metallophores) excreted by the bacterium. The uptake rates of the metallophore complexes are regulated to meet the bacterial metal requirement for diazotrophy. Under metal‐replete conditions Mo, but not V or Fe, is stored intracellularly. Under conditions of metal limitation, intracellular metals are used with remarkable efficiency, with essentially all the cellular Mo and V allocated to the nitrogenase enzymes. While the Mo‐nitrogenase, which is the most efficient, is used preferentially, all three nitrogenases contribute to N2 fixation in the same culture under metal limitation. We conclude that A. vinelandii is well adapted to fix nitrogen in metal‐limited soil environments.  相似文献   

4.
Samples of the dithionite-reduced FeFe protein (the dinitrogenase component of the Fe-only nitrogenase) from Rhodobacter capsulatus have been investigated by 57Fe M?ssbauer spectroscopy and by Fe and Zn EXAFS as well as XANES spectroscopy. The analyses were performed on the basis of data known for the FeMo cofactor and the P cluster of Mo nitrogenases. The prominent Fourier transform peaks of the Fe K-edge spectrum are assigned to Fe-S and Fe-Fe interactions at distances of 2.29 A and 2.63 A, respectively. A significant contribution to the Fe EXAFS must be assigned to an Fe backscatterer shell at 3.68 A, which is an unprecedented feature of the trigonal prismatic arrangement of iron atoms found in the FeMo cofactor of nitrogenase MoFe protein crystal structures. Additional Fe...Fe interactions at 2.92 A and 4.05 A clearly indicate that the principal geometry of the P cluster is also conserved. M?ssbauer spectra of 57Fe-enriched FeFe protein preparations were recorded at 77 K (20 mT) and 4.2 K (20 mT, 6.2 T), whereby the 4.2 K high-field spectrum clearly demonstrates that the cofactor of the Fe-only nitrogenase (FeFe cofactor) is diamagnetic in the dithionite-reduced ("as isolated") state. The evaluation of the 77 K spectrum is in agreement with the assumption that this cofactor contains eight Fe atoms. In the literature, several genetic and biochemical lines of evidence are presented pointing to a significant structural similarity of the FeFe, the FeMo and and the FeV cofactors. The data reported here provide the first spectroscopic evidence for a structural homology of the FeFe cofactor to the heterometal-containing cofactors, thus substantiating that the FeFe cofactor is the largest iron-sulfur cluster so far found in nature.  相似文献   

5.
6.
7.
Unlike wild type, certain Mo-dependent nitrogenases, which are expressed in non-N2-fixing mutant strains of Azotobacter vinelandii and have single amino acid substitutions within a region of the MoFe protein alpha-subunit proposed to encompass an FeMo cofactor-binding domain, are able to catalyze the reduction of acetylene by both two and four electrons to yield ethylene and ethane, respectively (Scott, D. J., May, H. D., Newton, W. E., Brigle, K. E., and Dean, D. R. (1990) Nature 343, 188-190). Although the V-dependent nitrogenase is also able to catalyze the reduction of acetylene to the same two- and four-electron products (Dilworth, M. J., Eady, R. R., Robson, R. L., and Miller, R. W. (1987) Nature 327, 167-168), we find that ethane formation from acetylene catalyzed by the altered Mo-dependent nitrogenases occurs by a different mechanism, which is distinguished by: (i) an increased sensitivity to CO; (ii) the absence of a lag; and (iii) no temperature dependence of product distribution among ethylene and ethane during acetylene reduction. An altered MoFe protein, which was purified from one such mutant strain having the alpha-subunit glutaminyl 191 residue substituted by lysyl, exhibited both a changed S = 3/2 EPR spectrum and changes in the distribution of electrons to various products when compared to wild type. Also, unlike wild type, this altered MoFe protein catalyzed proton reduction that is inhibited by carbon monoxide (CO). Because proton reduction catalyzed by a nitrogenase that has a FeMo cofactor with citrate rather than homocitrate as its organic constituent (Liang, J., Madden, M., Shah, V. K., and Burris, R. H. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 8577-8581) is also inhibited by CO, the possibility arose that changes in the polypeptide environment of FeMo cofactor might have caused a rearrangement in its molecular structure or composition. However, this possibility was ruled out by biochemical reconstitution studies (using FeMo cofactor isolated from both the wild-type and altered MoFe proteins), which were monitored by EPR spectroscopy and resulting catalytic activity.  相似文献   

8.

Background

This study examines the structural features and phylogeny of the α subunits of 69 full-length NifD (MoFe subunit), VnfD (VFe subunit), and AnfD (FeFe subunit) sequences.

Methodology/Principal Findings

The analyses of this set of sequences included BLAST scores, multiple sequence alignment, examination of patterns of covariant residues, phylogenetic analysis and comparison of the sequences flanking the conserved Cys and His residues that attach the FeMo cofactor to NifD and that are also conserved in the alternative nitrogenases. The results show that NifD nitrogenases fall into two distinct groups. Group I includes NifD sequences from many genera within Bacteria, including all nitrogen-fixing aerobes examined, as well as strict anaerobes and some facultative anaerobes, but no archaeal sequences. In contrast, Group II NifD sequences were limited to a small number of archaeal and bacterial sequences from strict anaerobes. The VnfD and AnfD sequences fall into two separate groups, more closely related to Group II NifD than to Group I NifD. The pattern of perfectly conserved residues, distributed along the full length of the Group I and II NifD, VnfD, and AnfD, confirms unambiguously that these polypeptides are derived from a common ancestral sequence.

Conclusions/Significance

There is no indication of a relationship between the patterns of covariant residues specific to each of the four groups discussed above that would give indications of an evolutionary pathway leading from one type of nitrogenase to another. Rather the totality of the data, along with the phylogenetic analysis, is consistent with a radiation of Group I and II NifDs, VnfD and AnfD from a common ancestral sequence. All the data presented here strongly support the suggestion made by some earlier investigators that the nitrogenase family had already evolved in the last common ancestor of the Archaea and Bacteria.  相似文献   

9.
Tetrathiomolybdate inhibits iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo cofactor) binding to component I of nitrogenase. Molybdenum-iron cluster (a subcomponent of FeMo cofactor) and tetrathiomolybdate inhibited FeMo cofactor activation of inactive nitrogenase component I in extracts of Azotobacter vinelandii and Klebsiella pneumoniae mutant strains defective in the biosynthesis of FeMo cofactor. Addition of tetrathiotungstate, the tungsten analog of tetrathiomolybdate, to the mutant extracts had no significant inhibitory effect on subsequent activation by FeMo cofactor.  相似文献   

10.
The pairs of nitrogen fixation genes nifDK and nifEN encode for the α and β subunits of nitrogenase and for the two subunits of the NifNE protein complex, involved in the biosynthesis of the FeMo cofactor, respectively. Comparative analysis of the amino acid sequences of the four NifD, NifK, NifE, and NifN in several archaeal and bacterial diazotrophs showed extensive sequence similarity between them, suggesting that their encoding genes constitute a novel paralogous gene family. We propose a two-step model to reconstruct the possible evolutionary history of the four genes. Accordingly, an ancestor gene gave rise, by an in-tandem paralogous duplication event followed by divergence, to an ancestral bicistronic operon; the latter, in turn, underwent a paralogous operon duplication event followed by evolutionary divergence leading to the ancestors of the present-day nifDK and nifEN operons. Both these paralogous duplication events very likely predated the appearance of the last universal common ancestor. The possible role of the ancestral gene and operon in nitrogen fixation is also discussed. Received: 21 June 1999 / Accepted: 1 March 2000  相似文献   

11.
19F NMR and x-ray absorption experiments have been performed with both the isolated FeMo cofactor and the MoFe protein of nitrogenase in search of direct evidence for substrate or inhibitor binding. Using 19F NMR as a probe and p-CF3C6H4S- as the receptor ligand, the data show that the nitrogenase inhibitors CN- and CH3NC bind to the isolated FeMo cofactor-RFS- complex in N-methylformamide with a finite formation constant. Their binding increases the electronic relaxation time of the complex and increases the life-time of the FeMo cofactor-p-CF3C6H4S- bond, Parallel molybdenum K edge and extended x-ray absorption fine structure experiments show that CH3NC does not bind to molybdenum. Although CO and N3- both relieve CN- and CH3NC inhibition of electron flow through nitrogenase, unlike the latter, they do not appear to bind to isolated FeMo cofactor. In experiments with the dithionite-reduced MoFe protein, we did not detect any changes in the molybdenum K edge or extended x-ray absorption fine structure spectra upon addition of CO, N2, C2H2, NaCN, CH3NC, or azide demonstrating that either these substrates and inhibitors do not bind to molybdenum or that the FeMo cofactor site of nitrogenase is inaccessible to substrate binding except under turnover conditions.  相似文献   

12.
We have constructed a strain of Azotobacter vinelandii which has deletions in the genes for both the molybdenum (Mo) and vanadium (V) nitrogenases. This strain fixed nitrogen in medium that did not contain Mo or V. Growth and nitrogenase activity were inhibited by Mo and V. In highly purified medium, growth was limited by iron. Addition of other metals (Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Re, Ti, W, and Zn) did not stimulate growth. Like the V-nitrogenase, the nitrogenase synthesized by the double deletion strain reduced acetylene to both ethylene and ethane (C2H6/C2H4 ratio, 0.046). There was an approximately 10-fold increase in ethane production when Mo was added to the deletion strain grown in medium lacking Mo and V. This change in reactivity may be due to the incorporation of an Mo-containing cofactor into the nitrogenase synthesized by the double-deletion strain. A strain synthesizing the V-nitrogenase did not show a similar increase in ethane production. The growth characteristics of the double-deletion strain, together with the metal composition reported for a nitrogenase isolated from a tungstate-tolerant strain lacking genes for the molydenum enzyme grown in the absence of Mo and V (J. R. Chisnell, R. Premakumar, and P. E. Bishop, J. Bacteriol. 170:27-33, 1988) show that A. vinelandii can synthesize a nitrogenase which lacks both Mo and V. Reduction of dinitrogen by nitrogenase can therefore occur at a center lacking both these metals.  相似文献   

13.
Methanosarcina barkeri 227 possesses two clusters of genes potentially encoding nitrogenases. We have previously demonstrated that one cluster, called nif2, is expressed under molybdenum (Mo)-sufficient conditions, and the deduced amino acid sequences for nitrogenase structural genes in that cluster most closely resemble those for the Mo nitrogenase of the gram-positive eubacterium Clostridium pasteurianum. The previously cloned nifH1 from M. barkeri shows phylogenetic relationships with genes encoding components of eubacterial Mo-independent eubacterial alternative nitrogenases and other methanogen nitrogenases. In this study, we cloned and sequenced nifD1 and part of nifK1 from M. barkeri 227. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded by nifD1 from M. barkeri showed great similarity with vnfD gene products from vanadium (V) nitrogenases, with an 80% identity at the amino acid level with the vnfD gene product from Anabaena variabilis. Moreover, there was a small open reading frame located between nifD1 and nifK1 with clear homology to vnfG, a hallmark of eubacterial alternative nitrogenases. Stimulation of diazotrophic growth of M. barkeri 227 by V in the absence of Mo was demonstrated. The unusual complement of nif genes in M. barkeri 227, with one cluster resembling that from a gram-positive eubacterium and the other resembling a eubacterial V nitrogenase gene cluster, suggests horizontal genetic transfer of those genes.  相似文献   

14.
Bellenger  J. P.  Darnajoux  R.  Zhang  X.  Kraepiel  A. M. L. 《Biogeochemistry》2020,149(1):53-73

Biological nitrogen fixation (BNF), a key reaction of the nitrogen cycle, is catalyzed by the enzyme nitrogenase. The best studied isoform of this metalloenzyme requires molybdenum (Mo) at its active center to reduce atmospheric dinitrogen (N2) into bioavailable ammonium. The Mo-dependent nitrogenase is found in all diazotrophs and is the only nitrogenase reported in diazotrophs that form N2-fixing symbioses with higher plants. In addition to the canonical Mo nitrogenase, two alternative nitrogenases, which use either vanadium (V) or iron (Fe) instead of Mo are known to fix nitrogen. They have been identified in ecologically important groups including free-living bacteria in soils and freshwaters and as symbionts of certain cryptogamic covers. Despite the discovery of these alternative isoforms more than 40 years ago, BNF is still believed to primarily rely on Mo. Here, we review existing studies on alternative nitrogenases in terrestrial settings, spanning inland forests to coastal ecosystems. These studies show frequent Mo limitation of BNF, ubiquitous distribution of alternative nitrogenase genes and significant contributions of alternative nitrogenases to N2 fixation in ecosystems ranging from the tropics to the subarctic. The effect of temperature on nitrogenase isoform activity and regulation is also discussed. We present recently developed methods for measuring alternative nitrogenase activity in the field and discuss the associated analytical challenges. Finally, we discuss how the enzymatic diversity of nitrogenase forces a re-examination of existing knowledge gaps and our understanding of BNF in nature.

  相似文献   

15.
We report the use of electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy to examine how the metal sites in the FeMo-cofactor cluster of the resting nitrogenase MoFe protein respond to addition of the substrates acetylene and methyl isocyanide and the inhibitor carbon monoxide. 1H, 57Fe and 95Mo ENDOR measurements were performed on the wild-type and the NifV(-)proteins from Klebsiella pneumoniae. Among the molecules tested, only the addition of acetylene to either protein induced widespread changes in the 57Fe ENDOR spectra. Acetylene also induced increases in intensity from unresolved protons in the proton ENDOR spectra. Thus we conclude that acetylene may bind to the resting-state MoFe protein to perturb the FeMo-cofactor environment. On the other hand, the present results show that methyl isocyanide and carbon monoxide do not substantially alter the FeMo cofactor's geometric and electronic structures. We interpret this as lack of interaction between those two molecules and the FeMo cofactor in the resting state MoFe protein. Thus, although it is generally accepted that substrates or inhibitors bind to the FeMo-cofactor only under turnover condition, this work provides evidence that at least one substrate can perturb the active site of nitrogenase under non-catalytic conditions.  相似文献   

16.
The Fe protein of nitrogenase has three separate functions. Much is known about the regions of the protein that are critical to its function as an electron donor to the MoFe protein, but almost nothing is known about the regions of the protein that are critical to its functions in either FeMo cofactor biosynthesis or FeMo cofactor insertion. Using computer modeling and information obtained from Fe protein mutants that were made decades ago by chemical mutagenesis, we targeted a surface residue Glu(146) as potentially being involved in FeMo cofactor biosynthesis and/or insertion. The Azotobacter vinelandii strain expressing an E146D Fe protein variant grows at approximately 50% of the wild type rate. The purified E146D Fe protein is fully functional as an electron donor to the MoFe protein, but the MoFe protein synthesized by that strain is partially ( approximately 50%) FeMo cofactor-deficient. The E146D Fe protein is fully functional in an in vitro FeMo cofactor biosynthesis assay, and the strain expressing this protein accumulates "free" FeMo cofactor. Assays that compared the ability of wild type and E146D Fe proteins to participate in FeMo cofactor insertion demonstrate, however, that the mutant is severely altered in this last reaction. This is the first known mutation that only influences the insertion reaction.  相似文献   

17.
Engineering nitrogenase in eukaryotes is hampered by its genetic complexity and by the oxygen sensitivity of its protein components. Of the three types of nitrogenases, the Fe-only nitrogenase is considered the simplest one because its function depends on fewer gene products than the homologous and more complex Mo and V nitrogenases. Here, we show the expression of stable Fe-only nitrogenase component proteins in the low-oxygen mitochondria matrix of S. cerevisiae. As-isolated Fe protein (AnfH) was active in electron donation to NifDK to reduce acetylene into ethylene. Ancillary proteins NifU, NifS and NifM were not required for Fe protein function. The FeFe protein existed as apo-AnfDK complex with the AnfG subunit either loosely bound or completely unable to interact with it. Apo-AnfDK could be activated for acetylene reduction by the simple addition of FeMo-co in vitro, indicating preexistence of the P-clusters even in the absence of coexpressed NifU and NifS. This work reinforces the use of Fe-only nitrogenase as simple model to engineer nitrogen fixation in yeast and plant mitochondria.  相似文献   

18.
We have examined three strains of Azotobacter vinelandii, which contain defined deletions within the nifH, nifB, or nifE genes. All three strains accumulate inactive FeMo cofactor-deficient forms of the MoFe protein of nitrogenase. These forms can be activated in vitro by addition of isolated FeMo cofactor in N-methylformamide. Although the phenotypes of these strains are superficially the same, our characterizations demonstrate that the FeMo cofactor-deficient MoFe protein synthesized by the delta nifH strain is quite different from that synthesized by either the delta nifB or delta nifE strains. These differences include the following: 1) the activation of the delta nifH protein requires MgATP, whereas the activation of the delta nifB and delta nifE proteins does not; 2) the delta nifH extracts can be activated with FeMo cofactor to wild-type levels of activity, whereas delta nifB and delta nifE extracts cannot; 3) the delta nifH protein is markedly less heat stable than the delta nifB and delta nifE proteins; and 4) the migration of the delta nifH protein on native gels is very different when compared with delta nifB and delta nifE, which look like each other. These data can be explained if the nifB and nifE gene products are only involved in FeMo cofactor biosynthesis, whereas the nifH gene product is involved in both the initial synthesis of FeMo cofactor and in the insertion of preformed FeMo cofactor into the MoFe protein. A model is presented that suggests that the FeMo cofactor-deficient MoFe protein synthesized by the delta nifH strain is the one that normally participates in MoFe protein assembly in wild-type cells.  相似文献   

19.
Life on Earth depends on N2-fixing microbes to make ammonia from atmospheric N2 gas by the nitrogenase enzyme. Most nitrogenases use Mo as a cofactor; however, V and Fe are also possible. N2 fixation was once believed to have evolved during the Archean-Proterozoic times using Fe as a cofactor. However, δ15N values of paleo-ocean sediments suggest Mo and V cofactors despite their low concentrations in the paleo-oceans. This apparent paradox is based on an untested assumption that only soluble metals are bioavailable. In this study, laboratory experiments were performed to test the bioavailability of mineral-associated trace metals to a model N2-fixing bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii. N2 fixation was observed when Mo in molybdenite, V in cavansite, and Fe in ferrihydrite were used as the sole sources of cofactors, but the rate of N2 fixation was greatly reduced. A physical separation between minerals and cells further reduced the rate of N2 fixation. Biochemical assays detected five siderophores, including aminochelin, azotochelin, azotobactin, protochelin, and vibrioferrin, as possible chelators to extract metals from minerals. The results of this study demonstrate that mineral-associated trace metals are bioavailable as cofactors of nitrogenases to support N2 fixation in those environments that lack soluble trace metals and may offer a partial answer to the paradox.  相似文献   

20.
在紫外可见光谱区内,固氮酶铁钼辅基〔(Mo_2Fe_(12)S_(12))4-〕均无特征吸收峰,不含高柠檬酸盐。含双钼的铁硫簇〔(Mo_2Fe_(6~12)S_(6~12))~(1~4)-〕的电荷数、颜色与该金属簇中的亚铁量成对应关系,并都有较高的生物重组活性.  相似文献   

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