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1.
A two cluster (4Fe4S) ferredoxin and a rubredoxin have been isolated from the sulfur-reducing bacterium Desulfuromonas acetoxidans. Their amino acid compositions are reported and compared to those of other iron-sulfur proteins.The ferredoxin contains 8 cysteine residues, 8 atoms of iron and 8 atoms of labile sulfur per molecule; its minimum molecular weight is 6163. The protein exhibits an absorbance ratio of A385A283 = 0.74. Storage results in a bleaching of the chromophore; the denatured ferredoxin is reconstitutable with iron and sulfide. The instability temperature is 52°C.The rubredoxin does not differ markedly from rubredoxins from other anaerobic bacteria.  相似文献   

2.
A ferredoxin and a rubredoxin from Butyribacterium methylotrophicum, which displays a carbonyl-dependent acetyl-coenzyme A synthesis, were purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The two electron carriers showed absorption spectra similar to those in Clostridium species. The ferredoxin displayed absorption peaks at 280 and 391 nm, while rubredoxin displayed absorption peaks at 279, 382, and 482 nm. Minimum molecular weights calculated from the respective amino acid compositions were 5,727 for ferredoxin and 5,488 for rubredoxin, excluding iron and inorganic sulfur atoms. Both electron carriers were isolated as monomers, according to gel-filtration data. Electron spin resonance analysis revealed that the ferredoxin was a 2[4Fe-4S]-type and that both clusters had a midpoint redox potential value of -410 mV, whereas rubredoxin contained one acid-stable iron and had a redox value of -40 mV. The coupling of these electron carriers to hydrogenase and carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activities was investigated. Rubredoxin showed higher activity towards carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, whereas ferredoxin showed higher activity towards hydrogenase.  相似文献   

3.
Complete amino acid sequences of ferredoxin and rubredoxin from Butyribacterium methylotrophicum, a methylotrophic hetero-acetogen, were determined by combination of protease digestion, Edman degradation, carboxypeptidase digestion, and/or partial acid hydrolysis. The ferredoxin was composed of 55 amino acids with a molecular weight of 5,732 excluding iron and sulfur atoms and showed a typical 2[4Fe-4S]-type ferredoxin sequence with an internal repeat at the 14-23 and 42-51 positions. The rubredoxin was composed of 53 amino acids with a molecular weight of 5,672 excluding iron atom and showed a sequence similar to those of other anaerobic rubredoxins. The sequences were compared to those of corresponding proteins from six different bacteria to construct phylogenetic trees, which showed essentially the same topology. The relationships between the ferredoxin sequences from this bacterium and those of Clostridium thermoaceticum and Methanosarcina barkeri, both of which possess a carbonyl-dependent acetyl-CoA metabolic system, are also discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Different electron carriers of the non-desulfoviridin-containing, sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (Norway strain) have been studied. Two nonheme iron proteins, ferredoxin and rubredoxin, have been purified. This ferredoxin contains four atoms of non-heme iron and acid-labile sulfur and six residues of cysteine per molecule. Its amino acid composition suggests that it is homologous with the other Desulfovibrio ferredoxins. The rubredoxin is also an acidic protein of 6,000 molecular weight and contains one atom of iron and four cysteine residues per molecule. The amino acid composition and molecular weight of the cytochrome c3 from D. desulfuricans (strain Norway 4) are reported. Its spectral properties are very similar to those of the other cytochromes c3 (molecular weight, 13,000) of Desulfovibrio and show that it contains four hemes per molecule. This cytochrome has a very low redox potential and acts as a carrier in the coupling of hydrogenase and thiosulfate reductase in extracts of Desulfovibrio gigas and Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (Norway strain) in contrast to D. gigas cytochrome c3 (molecular weight, 13,000). A comparison of the activities of the cytochrome c3 (molecular weight, 13,000) of D. gigas and that of D. desulfuricans in this reaction suggests that these homologous proteins can have different specificity in the electron transfer chain of these bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Ferredoxin, flavodoxin, and rubredoxin were purified to homogeneity from Clostridium formicoaceticum and characterized. Variation of the iron concentration of the growth medium caused substantial changes in the concentrations of ferredoxin and flavodoxin but not of rubredoxin. The ferredoxin has a molecular weight of 6,000 and is a four iron-four sulfur protein with eight cysteine residues. The spectrum is similar to that of other ferredoxins. The molar extinction coefficients are 22.6 X 10(3) and 17.6 X 10(3) at 280 and 390 nm, respectively. From 100 g wet weight of cells grown with 3.6 microM iron and with 40 microM iron, 5 and 20 mg offerredoxin were isolated, respectively. The molecular weight of rubredoxin is 5,800 and it contains one iron and four cysteines. The UV-visible absorption spectrum is dissimilar to those of other rubredoxins in that the 373 nm absorption peak is quite symmetric, lacking the characteristic 350-nm shoulder found in other rubredoxins. The flavodoxin is a 14,500-molecular-weight protein which contains 1 mol of flavin mononucleotide per mol of protein. It forms a stable, blue semiquinone upon light irradiation in the presence of EDTA or during enzymatic reduction. When cells were grown in low-iron medium, flavodoxin constituted at least 2% of the soluble cell protein; however, it was not detected in extracts of cells grown in high-iron medium. The rubredoxin and ferredoxin expressed during growth in low-iron and high-iron media are identical as judged by iron, inorganic sulfide, and amino acid analysis, as well as light absorption spectroscopy.  相似文献   

6.
Rubredoxin and two distinct ferredoxins have been purified from Desulfovibrio africanus. The rubredoxin has a molecular weight of 6000 while the ferredoxins appear to be dimers of identical subunits of approximately 6000 to 7000 molecular weight. Rubredoxin contains one iron atom, no acid-labile sulfide and four cysteine residues per molecule. Its absorbance ratio A278/A490 is 2.23 and its amino acid composition is characterized by the absence of leucine and a preponderance of acidic amino acids. The two ferredoxins, designated I and II, are readily separated on DEAE-cellulose. The amino acid compositions of ferredoxins I and II show them to be different protein species; the greater number of acidic amino acid residues in ferredoxin I than in ferredoxin II appears to account for separation based on electronic charge. Both ferredoxins contain four iron atoms, four acid-labile residues per molecule. Spectra of the two ferredoxins differ from those of ferredoxins of other Desulfovibrio species by exhibiting a pronounced absorption peak at 283 nm consistent with an unusual high content of aromatic residues. The A385/A283 absorbance ratio of ferredoxins I and II are 0.56 and 0.62, respectively. The N-terminal sequencing data of the two ferredoxins clearly indicate that ferredoxins I and II are different protein species. However, the two proteins exhibit a high degree of homology.  相似文献   

7.
A second ferredoxin protein was isolated from the thermophilic anaerobic bacterium Clostridium thermoaceticum and termed ferredoxin II. This ferredoxin was found to contain 7.9 +/- 0.3 iron atoms and 7.4 +/- 0.4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per mol of protein. Extrusion studies of the iron-sulfur centers showed the presence of two [Fe4-S4] centers per mol of protein and accounted for all of the iron present. The absorption spectrum was characterized by maxima at 390 nm (epsilon 390 = 30,400 M-1cm-1) and 280 nm (epsilon 280 = 41.400 M-1 cm-1) and by a shoulder at 300 nm. The ration of the absorbance of the pure protein at 390 nm to the absorbance at 280 nm was 0.74. Electron paramagnetic resonance data showed a weak signal in the oxidized state, and the reduced ferredoxin exhibited a spectrum typical of [Fe4-S4] clusters. Double integration of the reduced spectra showed that two electrons were necessary for the complete reduction of ferredoxin II. Amino histidine, and 1 arginine, and a molecular weight of 6,748 for the native protein. The ferredoxin is stable under anaerobic conditions for 60 min at 70 degrees C. The average oxidation-reduction potential for the two [Fe4-S4] centers was measured as -365 mV.  相似文献   

8.
In an earlier investigation (Shanmugam, K. T., Buchanan, B. B., and Arnon, D. I. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 256, 477-486) the extraction of ferredoxin from Rhodospirillum rubrum cells with the aid of a detergent (Triton X-100) and acetone revealed the existence of two types of ferredoxin (I and II) and led to the conclusion that both are membrane-bound. In the present investigation, ferredoxin and acid-labile sulfur analyses of photosynthetic membranes (chromatophores) and soluble protein extracts of the photosynthetic bacteria R. rubrum and Rhodopseudomonas spheroides showed that ferredoxins I and II are primarily components of the soluble protein fraction. After their removal, washed R. rubrum chromatophores were found to contain a considerable amount of tightly bound iron-sulfur protein(s), as evidenced by acid-labile sulfur and electron paramagnetic resonance analyses. Thus, like all other photosynthetic cells examined to date, R. rubrum cells contain both soluble ferredoxins and iron-sulfur proteins tightly bound to photosynthetic membranes. The molecular weights of ferredoxins I and II from photosynthetically grown R. rubrum cells were found to be 8,800 and 14,500, respectively. Using these molecular weights, the molar extinction coefficients at 390 nm for ferredoxins I and II were determined to be 30.3 and 17.2 mM-1 CM-1, respectively. Ferredoxin I contains 8 non-heme iron and 8 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule; ferredoxin II contains 4 non-heme iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Ferredoxin I was found only in photosynthetically grown cells whereas ferredoxin II was present in both light- and dark-grown cells. Ferredoxin II from both light- and dark-grown cells has the same molecular weight (14,500) and absorption spectrum and has 4 iron and 4 acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. Low temperature electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of oxidized and photoreduced ferredoxins I and II from R. rubrum were recorded. The EPR spectrum of oxidized ferredoxin II exhibited a single resonance line at g = 2.012. Oxidized ferredoxin I, however, exhibited a spectrum that may arise from the superimposition of two resonance lines near g = 2.012. Photoreduced ferredoxin II displayed a rhombic EPR spectrum with a g value of 1.94. Photoreduced ferredoxin I exhibited a similar EPR spectrum at a temperature of 16 K, but when the temperature was lowered to 4.5 K the spectrum of ferredoxin I changed. This temperature-dependent spectrum may result from a weak spin-spin interaction between two iron-sulfur clusters. These results are consistent with the conclusion that R. rubrum ferredoxins I and II are, respectively, 8 iron/8 sulfur and 4 iron/4sulfur proteins.  相似文献   

9.
1. A stable ferredoxin was prepared from Bacillus stearothermophilus and purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and by electrophoresis. 2. The minimum molecular weight determined from the amino acid composition was about 7900 and this was in reasonable agreement with a value of 8500 determined by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The ferredoxin contained four iron atoms and four labile sulphide groups per molecule. 3. The optical absorption, optical-rotatory-dispersion and circular-dichroism spectra are typical of ferredoxins containing 4Fe-4S clusters. 4. Oxidation-reduction titrations, combined with electron-paramagnetic-resonance (e.p.r.) spectroscopy, showed that the protein has a mid-point potential, at pH8, of -280 +/- 10mV, and that only one electron-accepting paramagnetic species is present. 5. The e.p.r. spectrum of the reduced ferredoxin is more readily saturated with microwave power at low temperatures than those of the eight-iron ferredoxins, indicating that there is another mechanism of electron-spin relaxation in the latter. 6. Mossbauer spectra of both redox states were observed over a range of temperatures and in magnetic fields. At high temperatures (77 degrees K and above) both redox states appear as quadrupole-split doublets; in the reduced state two resolved doublets are seen, suggesting appreciable localization of the additional reducing electron. 7. The average chemical shift indicates formal valences of two Fe3+ and two Fe2+ in the oxidized state and three Fe2+ and one Fe3+ in the reduced state. However, the spectra indicate that there are differing degrees of electron delocalization over the iron atoms. 8. At low temperatures (4.2 degrees K) the oxidized form shows no hyperfine magnetic interaction, even in an applied magnetic field, evidence that the oxidized ferredoxin is in a non-magnetic state as a result of antiferromagnetic coupling between the iron atoms. 9. At 4.2 degrees K the reduced form shows a broad asymmetric pattern resulting from magnetic hyperfine interaction. This contrasts with the reduced ferredoxin of Clostridium pasteurianum, which shows a doublet, suggesting that in the latter there may be interaction between the two 4Fe-4S centres. 10. In large applied magnetic fields, positive and negative hyperfine fields are seen in the Mossbauer spectra of the reduced ferredoxin, evidence for antiferromagnetic coupling between the iron atoms in the 4Fe-4S centre. The high-field spectra of the reduced ferredoxin of B. stearothermophilus are similar to those of the reduced ferredoxin of C. pasteurianum.  相似文献   

10.
The structure of a low-potential [4Fe-4S] ferredoxin from Bacillus thermoproteolyticus has been solved using anomalous scattering data from iron atoms in the diffraction data of native crystals and refined partially to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.33, with 2.3 A (1 A = 0.1 nm) resolution data. The least-squares refinement based on the Bijvoet differences has determined that the four iron atoms in the cluster are an equal distance, approximately 2.8 A, apart. The NH ... S hydrogen bonds between polypeptide nitrogen atoms, and both cysteine and inorganic sulfur atoms, are present, as in ferrodoxin from Peptococcus aerogenes. The polypeptide chain of the B. thermoproteolyticus ferredoxin has a fold closely similar to that of 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxin from P. aerogenes. The structural correspondence indicates strongly that both types of ferredoxin evolved from a common ancestor. The second cluster-binding region in P. aerogenes ferredoxin corresponds to the alpha-helix in B. thermoproteolyticus ferredoxin. The secondary-structure predictions strongly suggest that the alpha-helix is generally present in the monocluster-type ferredoxins. The conformational change to alpha-helix, insertions of a loop and a protrusion, as well as the absence of the second cluster in B. thermoproteolyticus ferredoxin, result in the lack of 2-fold symmetry present in P. aerogenes ferredoxin. So, the track of gene duplication is no longer detectable in the tertiary structure alone. The evolutionary events that may have occurred in the ferredoxins with the [4Fe-4S] cluster are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
S Aono  F O Bryant    M W Adams 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(6):3433-3439
The archaebacterium Pyrococcus furiosus is a strict anaerobe that grows optimally at 100 degrees C by a fermentative-type metabolism in which H2 and CO2 are the only detectable products. A ferredoxin, which functions as the electron donor to the hydrogenase of this organism was purified under anaerobic reducing conditions. It had a molecular weight of approximately 12,000 and contained 8 iron atoms and 8 cysteine residues/mol but lacked histidine or arginine residues. Reduction and oxidation of the ferredoxin each required 2 electrons/mol, which is consistent with the presence of two [4Fe-4S] clusters. The reduced protein gave rise to a broad rhombic electronic paramagnetic resonance spectrum, with gz = 2.10, gy = 1.86, gx = 1.80, and a midpoint potential of -345 mV (at pH 8). However, this spectrum represented a minor species, since it quantitated to only approximately 0.3 spins/mol. P. furiosus ferredoxin is therefore distinct from other ferredoxins in that the bulk of its iron is not present as iron-sulfur clusters with an S = 1/2 ground state. The apoferredoxin was reconstituted with iron and sulfide to give a protein that was indistinguishable from the native ferredoxin by its iron content and electron paramagnetic resonance properties, which showed that the novel iron-sulfur clusters were not artifacts of purification. The reduced ferredoxin also functioned as an electron donor for H2 evolution catalyzed by the hydrogenase of the mesophilic eubacterium Clostridium pasteurianum. P. furiosus ferredoxin was resistant to denaturation by sodium dodecyl sulfate (20%, wt/vol) and was remarkably thermostable. Its UV-visible absorption spectrum and electron carrier activity to P. furiosus hydrogenase were unaffected by a 12-h incubation of 95 degrees C.  相似文献   

12.
Rubredoxin and two distinct ferredoxins have been purified from Desulfovibrio africanus. The rubredoxin has a molecular weight of 6000 while the ferredoxins appear to be dimers of identical subunits of approximately 6000 to 7000 molecular weight. Rubredoxin contains one iron atom, no acid-labile sulfide and four cysteine residues per molecule. Its absorbance ratio A278/A490 is 2.23 and its amino acid composition is characterized by the absence of leucine and a preponderance of acidic amino acids.

The two ferredoxins, designated I and II, are readily separated on DEAE-cellulose. The amino acid compositions of ferredoxins I and II show them to be different protein species; the greater number of acidic amino acid residues in ferredoxin I than in ferredoxin II appears to account for separation based on electronic charge. Both ferredoxins contain four iron atoms, four acid-labile sulfur groups and either four (ferredoxin II) or six (ferredoxin I) cysteine residues per molecule. Spectra of the two ferredoxins differ from those of ferredoxins of other Desulfovibrio species by exhibiting a pronounced absorption peak at 283 nm consistent with an unusual high content of aromatic residues. The A385/A283 absorbance ratio of ferredoxins I and II are 0.56 and 0.62, respectively.

The N-terminal sequencing data of the two ferredoxins clearly indicate that ferredoxins I and II are different protein species. However, the two proteins exhibit a high degree of homology.

The physiological activity of ferredoxins I and II appears to be similar as far as the electron transfer in the phosphoroclastic reaction is concerned.  相似文献   


13.
Structure of rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris at 1.5 A resolution   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The X-ray model of rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio vulgaris has been refined against 1.5 A X-ray diffraction data collected on a diffractometer. The final model comprises 395 non-hydrogen protein atoms, and 180 solvent O atoms. The final R-value for the model with calculated H atom positions included as fixed contributions is 0.098 over all reflections greater than 2 sigma I from infinity to 1.5 A. The error in co-ordinates is estimated to be 0.08 A. The solvent model was twice redetermined during the later stages of refinement and was instrumental in its success. One sequence error has been detected and corrected (Thr21----Asp). The iron-sulfur site bond angles are distorted from true tetrahedral symmetry, as found in other rubredoxin structures. A significant deviation from tetrahedral angles is seen at C alpha atoms 9, 10, 42 and 43, interior angles of the loops binding the iron atom. The planes of two aromatic groups, Tyr4 and Trp37, are nearly parallel to, and lie under, an extended system of atoms that includes the peptide bonds preceding the first cysteine residue of each cysteine loop as well as the cysteine side-chain, the iron, and the cysteine side-chain of the opposite loop, forming a previously unrecognized extended system that may function in electron transfer.  相似文献   

14.
A three-dimensional model of an electron-transfer complex between the tetrahemic cytochrome c3 and the ferredoxin I from the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (Norway strain) has been generated through computer graphics methods. The model is based on the known X-ray structure of the cytochrome and on a model of the ferredoxin that has been derived through computer graphics modeling and energy minimization methods, from the X-ray structure of the homologous ferredoxin from Peptococcus aerogenes. Four possible models of interaction between the two molecules were examined by bringing in close proximity each of the four hemes and the redox center (4Fe-4S) of the ferredoxin and by optimizing the ion pairs interactions. One of these models shows by far the "best" structure in terms of charges, interactions, and complementarity of the topology of the contact surfaces. In this complex, the distance between the iron atoms of the ferredoxin redox center and the hemic iron atom is 11.8 A, which compares well with those found between redox centers in other complexes. The contact surface area between the two molecules is 170 A2.  相似文献   

15.
The amino acid sequence of an [8Fe-8S] ferredoxin isolated from the culture medium of Rhodospirillum rubrum, a photosynthetic purple non-sulfur bacterium, was determined by a combination of various conventional procedures. The sequence was A-Y-K-I-E-E-T-C-I-S-C-G-A-C-A-A-E-C-P-V-N-A-I-E-Q-G-D-T-I-F-V-V-N-A-D-T-C-I-D-C - G-N-C-A-N-V-C-P-V-G-A-P-V-A-E (55 amino acid residues). It lacked methionine, leucine, histidine, arginine, and tryptophan. The molecular weight was calculated to be 5,568 excluding iron and sulfur atoms. The distribution of 8 cysteine residues was exactly the same as that of clostridial-type ferredoxin, suggesting retention of the duplication of the bacterial ancestral ferredoxin gene. The extracellular ferredoxin of R. rubrum was compared with other ferredoxins observed in closely related photosynthetic bacteria and the evolutionary significance of this ferredoxin is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Ferredoxin and rubredoxin levels have been determined in DEAE-cellulose treated extracts of Clostridium acetobutylicum using specific enzymatic assays. In contrast to ferredoxin, the content of rubredoxin is affected by various culture conditions; it fluctuates in the proportions of 1 to 3 according to the growth phase, 1 to 8 according to the medium composition, and 1 to 40 according to the pH. Highest rubredoxin level is obtained at the end of the acid phase when the cells grow in chemically defined medium, the pH of which is not controlled. Such variations suggest that rubredoxin as well as rubredoxin-reductase take part in an electron transport chain system inducible by the culture conditions.  相似文献   

17.
A ferredoxin was purified as the pure state from a club moss (Lycopodium clavatum L.) and sequenced. The ferredoxin was composed of 99 amino acids and had a molecular mass of 10,728, excluding iron and sulfur atoms. The ferredoxin sequence was rather distinct from that fromMarchantia polymorpha, Equisetum andGleichenia japonica. Based on comparison of ferredoxin sequences thus far established, the phylogenetic relationship between lower vascular plants is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The composition of ferredoxin and rubredoxin from Desulfovibrio gigas was determined. Ferrodoxin contained five cysteines, two methionines, and four irons. The rubredoxin was not unique.  相似文献   

19.
1. The Mössbauer spectra of Scenedesmus ferredoxin enriched in 57Fe were measured and found to be identical with those of two other plant-type ferredoxins (from spinach and Euglena) that had been previously measured. Better resolved Mössbauer spectra of spinach ferredoxin are also reported from protein enriched in 57Fe. All these iron–sulphur proteins are known to contain two iron atoms in a molecule that takes up one electron on reduction. 2. The Mössbauer spectra at 195°K have electric hyperfine structure only and show that on reduction the electron goes to one of the iron atoms, the other appearing to remain unchanged. 3. In the oxidized state, both iron atoms are in a similar chemical state, which appears from the chemical shift and quadrupole splitting to be high-spin Fe3+, but they are in slightly different environments. In the reduced state the iron atoms are different and the molecule appears to contain one high-spin Fe2+ and one high-spin Fe3+ atom. 4. At lower temperatures (77 and 4.2°K) the spectra of both iron atoms in the reduced proteins show magnetic hyperfine structure which suggests that the iron in the oxidized state also has unpaired electrons. This provides experimental evidence for earlier suggestions that in the oxidized state there is antiferromagnetic exchange coupling, which would result in a low value for the magnetic susceptibility. 5. In a small magnetic field the spectrum of the reduced ferredoxin shows a Zeeman splitting with hyperfine field (Hn) of 180kG at the nuclei. On application of a strong magnetic field H the spectrum splits into two spectra with effective fields Hn±H, thus confirming the presence of the two antiferromagnetically coupled iron atoms. 6. These results are in agreement with the model proposed by Gibson, Hall, Thornley & Whatley (1966); in the oxidized state there are two Fe3+ atoms (high spin) antiferromagnetically coupled and on reduction of the ferredoxin by one electron one of the ferric atoms becomes Fe2+ (high spin).  相似文献   

20.
Ferredoxin was purified from the thermophilic blue-green alga, Mastigocladuslaminosus. The physicochemical properties of this ferredoxin are similar to those of other [2Fe-2S] plant ferredoxins except for its unusual thermal stability. The primary structure of the protein was determined and consists of 98 amino acid residues, 5 of which are cysteines. The positions of 4 cysteines which bind the iron atoms of the active centre are identical to those in other ferredoxins. The primary structure of the ferredoxin does not reveal any special features to account for its high thermal stability.  相似文献   

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