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1.
Methylenetetratetrahydromethanopterin reductase (Mer) is involved in CO(2) reduction to methane in methanogenic archaea and catalyses the reversible reduction of methylenetetrahydromethanopterin (methylene-H(4)MPT) to methyl-H(4)MPT with coenzyme F(420)H(2), which is a reduced 5'-deazaflavin. Mer was recently established as a TIM barrel structure containing a nonprolyl cis-peptide bond but the binding site of the substrates remained elusive. We report here on the crystal structure of Mer in complex with F(420) at 2.6 A resolution. The isoalloxazine ring is present in a pronounced butterfly conformation, being induced from the Re-face of F(420) by a bulge that contains the non-prolyl cis-peptide bond. The bindingmode of F(420) is very similar to that in F(420)-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase Adf despite the low sequence identity of 21%. Moreover, binding of F(420) to the apoenzyme was only associated with minor conformational changes of the polypeptide chain. These findings allowed us to build an improved model of FMN into its binding site in bacterial luciferase, which belongs to the same structural family as Mer and Adf and also contains a nonprolyl cis-peptide bond in an equivalent position.  相似文献   

2.
The FMNH(2)-dependent alkanesulfonate monooxygenase SsuD catalyzes the conversion of alkanesulfonates to the corresponding aldehyde and sulfite. The enzyme allows Escherichia coli to use a wide range of alkanesulfonates as sulfur sources for growth when sulfate or cysteine are not available. The structure of SsuD was solved using the multiwavelength anomalous dispersion method from only four ordered selenium sites per asymmetric unit (one site per 20,800 Da). The final model includes 328 of 380 amino acid residues and was refined to an R-factor of 23.5% (R(free)=27.5%) at 2.3A resolution. The X-ray crystal structure of SsuD shows a homotetrameric state for the enzyme, each subunit being composed of a TIM-barrel fold enlarged by four insertion regions that contribute to intersubunit interactions. SsuD is structurally related to a bacterial luciferase and an archaeal coenzyme F(420)-dependent reductase in spite of a low level of sequence identity with these enzymes. The structural relationship is not limited to the beta-barrel region; it includes most but not all extension regions and shows distinct properties for the SsuD TIM-barrel. A likely substrate-binding site is postulated on the basis of the SsuD structure presented here, results from earlier biochemical studies, and structure relatedness to bacterial luciferase. SsuD is related to other FMNH(2)-dependent monooxygenases that show distant sequence relationship to luciferase. Thus, the structure reported here provides a model for enzymes belonging to this family and suggests that they might all fold as TIM-barrel proteins.  相似文献   

3.
2,4,6-Trinitrophenol (picric acid) and 2,4-dinitrophenol were readily biodegraded by the strain Nocardioides simplex FJ2-1A. Aerobic bacterial degradation of these pi-electron-deficient aromatic compounds is initiated by hydrogenation at the aromatic ring. A two-component enzyme system was identified which catalyzes hydride transfer to picric acid and 2,4-dinitrophenol. Enzymatic activity was dependent on NADPH and coenzyme F420. The latter could be replaced by an authentic preparation of coenzyme F420 from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. One of the protein components functions as a NADPH-dependent F420 reductase. A second component is a hydride transferase which transfers hydride from reduced coenzyme F420 to the aromatic system of the nitrophenols. The N-terminal sequence of the F420 reductase showed high homology with an F420-dependent NADP reductase found in archaea. In contrast, no N-terminal similarity to any known protein was found for the hydride-transferring enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum deltaH was grown in a fed-batch fermentor and in a chemostat under a variety of 80% hydrogen-20% CO2 gassing regimes. During growth or after the establishment of steady-state conditions, the cells were analyzed for the content of adenylylated coenzyme F420 (factor F390-A) and other methanogenic cofactors. In addition, cells collected from the chemostat were measured for methyl coenzyme M reductase isoenzyme (MCR I and MCR II) content as well as for specific activities of coenzyme F420-dependent and H2-dependent methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase (F420-MDH and H2-MDH, respectively), total (viologen-reducing) and coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase (FRH), factor F390 synthetase, and factor F390 hydrolase. The experiments were performed to investigate how the intracellular F390 concentrations changed with the growth conditions used and how the variations were related to changes in levels of enzymes that are known to be differentially expressed. The levels of factor F390 varied in a way that is consistently understood from the biochemical mechanisms underlying its synthesis and degradation. Moreover, a remarkable correlation was observed between expression levels of MCR I and II, F420-MDH, and H2-MDH and the cellular contents of the factor. These results suggest that factor F390 is a reporter compound for hydrogen limitation and may act as a response regulator of methanogenic metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
The partial purification of the formate dehydrogenase from cell-free extracts of Methanobacterium formicicum decreased the rate of coenzyme F420 reduction 175-fold relative to the rate of methyl viologen reduction. FAD, isolated from this organism, reactivated the coenzyme F420-dependent activity of purified formate dehydrogenase and restored the activity ratio (coenzyme F420/methyl viologen) to near that in cell-free extracts. Neither flavin mononucleotide nor FADH2 replaced FAD. The reduced form of FAD inhibited the reactivation of coenzyme F420-dependent formate dehydrogenase activity by the oxidized form. The results suggest that native formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum contains noncovalently bound FAD that is required for coenzyme F420-dependent activity.  相似文献   

6.
What stabilizes the unique Ni(I) state of the active form of coenzyme F(430) and of methylcoenzyme M reductase, the enzyme responsible for the last methane-evolving step of biological methanogenesis? A survey of F(430) model compounds suggests that the monoanionic nature of the F(430) ligand goes a long way toward explaining the stability of Ni(I) F(430). Second, nature appears to have manipulated the stereochemistry of the macrocycle, particularly that of the 12- and 13- substituents, so that the cofactor is sterically constrained against ruffling and forced to adopt a relatively planar conformation with long Ni--N distances. Third, the carbonyl substituent at the 15-meso position electronically stabilizes the Ni(I) state of the cofactor. With regard to the mechanism of methylcoenzyme M reductase, the most reasonable mechanism, in our opinion, involves a Ni(I)-mediated homolytic cleavage of the S--CH(3) bond in methylcoenzyme M, followed immediately by the quenching of the methyl radical by coenzyme B (a thiol) to produce methane.  相似文献   

7.
The 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (coenzyme F420)-reducing and methyl-viologen-reducing hydrogenase of the anaerobic methanogenic archaebacterium Methanosarcina barkeri strain Fusaro has been purified 64-fold to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. The purified enzyme had a final specific activity of 11.5 mumol coenzyme F420 reduced.min-1.mg protein-1 and the yield was 4.8% of the initial deazaflavin-reducing activity. The hydrogenase exists in two forms with molecular masses of approximately 845 kDa and 198 kDa. Both forms reduce coenzyme F420 and methyl viologen and are apparently composed of the same three subunits with molecular masses of 48 kDa (alpha), 33 kDa (beta) and 30 kDa (gamma). The aerobically purified enzyme was catalytically inactive. Conditions for anaerobic reductive activation in the presence of hydrogen, 2-mercaptoethanol and KCl or methyl viologen were found to yield maximal hydrogenase activity. Determination of the apparent Km of coenzyme F420 and methyl viologen gave values of 25 microM and 3.3 mM, respectively. The respective turnover numbers of the high molecular mass form of the hydrogenase are 353 s-1 and 9226 s-1.  相似文献   

8.
Methanocaldococcus jannaschii is a hypertheromphilic, strictly hydrogenotrophic, methanogenic archaeon of ancient lineage isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent. It requires sulfide for growth. Sulfite is inhibitory to the methanogens. Yet, we observed that M. jannaschii grows and produces methane with sulfite as the sole sulfur source. We found that in this organism sulfite induces a novel, highly active, coenzyme F(420)-dependent sulfite reductase (Fsr) with a cell extract specific activity of 0.57 mumol sulfite reduced min(-1) mg(-1) protein. The cellular level of Fsr protein is comparable to that of methyl-coenzyme M reductase, an enzyme essential for methanogenesis and a possible target for sulfite. Purified Fsr reduces sulfite to sulfide using reduced F(420) (H(2)F(420)) as the electron source (K(m): sulfite, 12 microm; H(2)F(420), 21 microm). Therefore, Fsr provides M. jannaschii an anabolic ability and protection from sulfite toxicity. The N-terminal half of the 70-kDa Fsr polypeptide represents a H(2)F(420) dehydrogenase and the C-terminal half a dissimilatory-type siroheme sulfite reductase, and Fsr catalyzes the corresponding partial reactions. Previously described sulfite reductases use nicotinamides and cytochromes as electron carriers. Therefore, this is the first report of a coenzyme F(420)-dependent sulfite reductase. Fsr homologs were found only in Methanopyrus kandleri and Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus, two strictly hydrogenotrophic thermophilic methanogens. fsr is the likely ancestor of H(2)F(420) dehydrogenases, which serve as electron input units for membrane-based energy transduction systems of certain late evolving archaea, and dissimilatory sulfite reductases of bacteria and archaea. fsr could also have arisen from lateral gene transfer and gene fusion events.  相似文献   

9.
The structure of coenzyme F(420) in Mycobacterium smegmatis was examined using proton NMR, amino acid analysis, and HPLC. The two major F(420) structures were shown to be composed of a chromophore identical to that of F(420) from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, with a side chain of a ribityl residue, a lactyl residue and five or six glutamate groups (F(420)-5 and F(420)-6). Peptidase treatment studies suggested that L-glutamate groups are linked by gamma-glutamyl bonds in the side chain. HPLC analysis indicated that Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium bovis BCG, and Mycobacterium fortuitum have F(420)-5 and F(420)-6 as the predominant structures, whereas Mycobacterium avium contains F(420)-5, F(420)-6 and F(420)-7 in significant amounts. 7,8-Didemethyl 8-hydroxy 5-deazariboflavin (FO), an intermediate in F(420) biosynthesis, accounted for about 1-7% of the total deazaflavin in cells. Peptidase treatment of F(420) created F(420) derivatives that may be useful for the assay of enzymes involved in F(420) biosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Li H  Graupner M  Xu H  White RH 《Biochemistry》2003,42(32):9771-9778
The protein product of the Methanococcus jannaschii MJ0768 gene has been expressed in Escherichia coli, purified to homogeneity, and shown to catalyze the GTP-dependent addition of two l-glutamates to the l-lactyl phosphodiester of 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin (F(420)-0) to form F(420)-0-glutamyl-glutamate (F(420)-2). Since the reaction is the fifth step in the biosynthesis of coenzyme F(420), the enzyme has been designated as CofE, the product of the cofE gene. Gel filtration chromatography indicates CofE is a dimer. The enzyme has no recognized sequence similarity to any previously characterized proteins. The enzyme has an absolute requirement for a divalent metal ion and a monovalent cation. Among the metal ions tested, a mixture of Mn(2+), Mg(2+), and K(+) is the most effective. CofE catalyzes amide bond formation with the cleavage of GTP to GDP and inorganic phosphate, likely involving the activation of the free carboxylate group of F(420)-0 to give an acyl phosphate intermediate. Evidence for the occurrence of this intermediate is presented. A reaction mechanism for the enzyme is proposed and compared with other members of the ADP-forming amide bond ligase family.  相似文献   

11.
Factor F390 is the 8-OH adenylated form of the deazaflavin coenzyme F420, which is a central electron carrier in methanogenic bacteria. The enzymes catalysing the formation of F390 from ATP and F420 (F390 synthetase) and its hydrolysis into AMP and F420 (F390 hydrolase) were isolated and partially purified from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. Both enzymes were oxygen-stable. The F390 synthetase tended to coelute with coenzyme F420 reducing hydrogenase during all purification steps. The 30-fold purified enzyme was still contaminated with the hydrogenase. The F390 hydrolase was purified 135-fold to a specific activity of 8.6 mumol/min/mg protein. The colourless enzyme consisted of one polypeptide of approximately 27,000 kd.  相似文献   

12.
5,10-Methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase was purified 22-fold to apparent homogeneity from the methanogenic bacterium Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. The enzyme catalyzes the reduction of 5,10-methylene- to 5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin. The electron carrier coenzyme F420 is specifically used as the cosubstrate. The reductase reaction may proceed in both directions, methylene reduction is, however, thermodynamically favored. In addition, the velocity of the reaction in this direction exceeds the reverse reaction by a factor of 26. The reductase is composed of a single subunit with an estimated Mr = 35,000. The active enzyme does not contain a flavin prosthetic group or iron-sulfur clusters, in contrast to 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductases purified from eukaryotic and eubacterial sources, which catalyze an analogous reaction as the methanogenic reductase.  相似文献   

13.
The di-iron flavoprotein F(420)H(2) oxidase found in methanogenic Archaea catalyzes the four-electron reduction of O(2) to 2H(2)O with 2 mol of reduced coenzyme F(420)(7,8-dimethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin). We report here on crystal structures of the homotetrameric F(420)H(2) oxidase from Methanothermobacter marburgensis at resolutions of 2.25 A, 2.25 A and 1.7 A, respectively, from which an active reduced state, an inactive oxidized state and an active oxidized state could be extracted. As found in structurally related A-type flavoproteins, the active site is formed at the dimer interface, where the di-iron center of one monomer is juxtaposed to FMN of the other. In the active reduced state [Fe(II)Fe(II)FMNH(2)], the two irons are surrounded by four histidines, one aspartate, one glutamate and one bridging aspartate. The so-called switch loop is in a closed conformation, thus preventing F(420) binding. In the inactive oxidized state [Fe(III)FMN], the iron nearest to FMN has moved to two remote binding sites, and the switch loop is changed to an open conformation. In the active oxidized state [Fe(III)Fe(III)FMN], both irons are positioned as in the reduced state but the switch loop is found in the open conformation as in the inactive oxidized state. It is proposed that the redox-dependent conformational change of the switch loop ensures alternate complete four-electron O(2) reduction and redox center re-reduction. On the basis of the known Si-Si stereospecific hydride transfer, F(420)H(2) was modeled into the solvent-accessible pocket in front of FMN. The inactive oxidized state might provide the molecular basis for enzyme inactivation by long-term O(2) exposure observed in some members of the FprA family.  相似文献   

14.
The obligate aceticlastic methanogen Methanosaeta thermophila uses a membrane-bound ferredoxin:heterodisulfide oxidoreductase system for energy conservation. We propose that the system is composed of a truncated form of the F(420)H(2) dehydrogenase, methanophenazine, and the heterodisulfide reductase. Hence, the electron transport chain is distinct from those of well-studied Methanosarcina species.  相似文献   

15.
F(420) is a flavin-like redox-active coenzyme commonly used by archaea and some eubacteria in a variety of biochemical reactions in methanogenesis, the formation of secondary metabolites, the degradation of nitroaromatic compounds, activation of nitroimidazofurans, and F(420)-dependent photolysis in DNA repair. Coenzyme F(420)-2 biosynthesis from 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin (Fo) and lactaldehyde involves six enzymatic steps and five proteins (CofA, CofB, CofC, CofD, and CofE). CofE, a F(420)-0:gamma-glutamyl ligase, is responsible for the last two enzymatic steps; it catalyses the GTP-dependent addition of two L-glutamate residues to F(420)-0 to form F(420)-2. CofE is found in archaea, the aerobic actinomycetes, and cyanobacteria. Here, we report the first crystal structure of the apo-F(420)-0:gamma-glutamyl ligase (CofE-AF) from Archaeoglobus fulgidus and its complex with GDP at 2.5 A and 1.35 A resolution, respectively. The structure of CofE-AF reveals a novel protein fold with an intertwined, butterfly-like dimer formed by two-domain monomers. GDP and Mn(2+) are bound within the putative active site in a large groove at the dimer interface. We show that the enzyme adds a glutamate residue to both F(420)-0 and F(420)-1 in two distinct steps. CofE represents the first member of a new structural family of non-ribosomal peptide synthases.  相似文献   

16.
Formate hydrogenlyase activity in a cell extract of Methanobacterium formicicum was abolished by removal of coenzyme F420; addition of purified coenzyme F420 restored activity. Formate hydrogenlyase activity was reconstituted with three purified components from M. formicicum: coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase, coenzyme F420-reducing formate dehydrogenase, and coenzyme F420. The reconstituted system required added flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) for maximal activity. Without FAD, the formate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase rapidly lost coenzyme F420-dependent activity relative to methyl viologen-dependent activity. Immunoadsorption of formate dehydrogenase or coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase from the cell extract greatly reduced formate hydrogenlyase activity; addition of the purified enzymes restored activity. The formate hydrogenlyase activity was reversible, since both the cell extract and the reconstituted system produced formate from H2 plus CO2 and HCO3-.  相似文献   

17.
The modified flavin coenzyme F(420) is found in a restricted number of microorganisms. It is widely distributed in mycobacteria, however, where it is important in energy metabolism, and in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is implicated in redox processes related to non-replicating persistence. In Mtb, the F(420)-dependent glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase FGD1 provides reduced F(420) for the in vivo activation of the nitroimidazopyran prodrug PA-824, currently being developed for anti-tuberculosis therapy against both replicating and persistent bacteria. The structure of M. tuberculosis FGD1 has been determined by x-ray crystallography both in its apo state and in complex with F(420) and citrate at resolutions of 1.90 and 1.95 A(,) respectively. The structure reveals a highly specific F(420) binding mode, which is shared with several other F(420)-dependent enzymes. Citrate occupies the substrate binding pocket adjacent to F(420) and is shown to be a competitive inhibitor (IC(50) 43 microm). Modeling of the binding of the glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) substrate identifies a positively charged phosphate binding pocket and shows that G6P, like citrate, packs against the isoalloxazine moiety of F(420) and helps promote a butterfly bend conformation that facilitates F(420) reduction and catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
The 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (coenzyme F420) reducing hydrogenase from the obligate anaerobe Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum delta H has been purified 41-fold to apparent homogeneity. The major active enzyme form is a high molecular weight aggregate of Mr ca. 800,000, composed of three subunits, alpha (Mr 47K), beta (Mr 31K), and gamma (Mr 26K). The hydrogenase is purified aerobically in reversibly inhibited form, and conditions for anaerobic reductive activation with H2, high salt, thiols, and electron acceptors have been defined. The minimal species transferring electrons from H2 to coenzyme F420 appears to be an alpha beta delta (Mr 115K) complex. The tightly associated redox cofactors per 115K species are 0.6-0.7 nickel atom, 0.8-0.9 flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), and 13-14 iron atoms in iron-sulfur centers. The subunits have been separated by denaturing gel electrophoresis, which has permitted determination of amino acid composition, subunit N-terminal sequencing, and preparation of subunit-directed antibodies. There is iron associated with the alpha-subunit, but placement of the nickel and FAD has not been established.  相似文献   

19.
Graupner M  White RH 《Biochemistry》2001,40(36):10859-10872
The biochemical route for the formation of the phosphodiester bond in coenzyme F(420), one of the methanogenic coenzymes, has been established in the methanoarchaea Methanosarcina thermophila and Methanococcus jannaschii. The first step in the formation of this portion of the F(420) structure is the GTP-dependent phosphorylation of L-lactate to 2-phospho-L-lactate and GDP. The 2-phospho-L-lactate represents a new natural product that was chemically identified in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, M. thermophila, and Mc. jannaschii. Incubation of cell extracts of both M. thermophila and Mc. jannaschii with [hydroxy-(18)O, carboxyl-(18)O(2)]lactate and GTP produced 2-phospho-L-lactate with the same (18)O distribution as found in both the starting lactate and the lactate recovered from the incubation. These results indicate that the carboxyl oxygens are not involved in the phosphorylation reaction. Incubation of Sephadex G-25 purified cell extracts of M. thermophila or Mc. jannaschii with 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin (Fo), 2-phospho-L-lactate, and GTP or ATP lead to the formation of F(420)-0 (F(420) with no glutamic acids). This transformation was shown to involve two steps: (i) the GTP- or ATP-dependent activation of 2-phospho-L-lactate to either lactyl(2)diphospho-(5')guanosine (LPPG) or lactyl(2)diphospho-(5')adenosine (LPPA) and (ii) the reaction of the resulting LPPG or LPPA with Fo to form F(420)-0 with release of GMP or AMP. Attempts to identify LPPG or LPPA intermediates by incubation of cell extracts with L-[U-(14)C]lactate, [U-(14)C]2-phospho-L-lactate, or [8-(3)H]GTP were not successful owing to the instability of these compounds toward hydrolysis. Synthetically prepared LPPG and LPPA had half-lives of 10 min at 50 degrees C (at pH 7.0) and decomposed into GMP or AMP and 2-phospho-L-lactate via cyclic 2-phospho-L-lactate. No evidence for the functioning of the cyclic 2-phospho-L-lactate in the in vitro biosynthesis could be demonstrated. Incubation of cell extracts of M. thermophila or Mc. jannaschii with either LPPG or LPPA and Fo generated F(420)-0. In summary, this study demonstrates that the formation of the phosphodiester bond in coenzyme F(420) follows a reaction scheme like that found in one of the steps of the DNA ligase reaction and in the biosynthesis of coenzyme B(12) and phospholipids.  相似文献   

20.
Cofactor F420 is a 5'-deazaflavin derivative first discovered in methanogenic archaea but later found also to be present in some bacteria. As a coenzyme, it is involved in hydride transfer reactions and as a prosthetic group in the DNA photolyase reaction. We report here for the first time on the crystal structure of an F420-dependent oxidoreductase bound with F420. The structure of F420H2:NADP+ oxidoreductase resolved to 1.65 A contains two domains: an N-terminal domain characteristic of a dinucleotide-binding Rossmann fold and a smaller C-terminal domain. The nicotinamide and the deazaflavin part of the two coenzymes are bound in the cleft between the domains such that the Si-faces of both face each other at a distance of 3.1 A, which is optimal for hydride transfer. Comparison of the structures bound with and without substrates reveals that of the two substrates NADP has to bind first, the binding being associated with an induced fit.  相似文献   

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