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1.
Under anaerobic conditions, several species of green algae perform a light-dependent hydrogen production catalyzed by a special group of [FeFe] hydrogenases termed HydA. Although highly interesting for biotechnological applications, the direct connection between photosynthetic electron transport and hydrogenase activity is still a matter of speculation. By establishing an in vitro reconstitution system, we demonstrate that the photosynthetic ferredoxin (PetF) is essential for efficient electron transfer between photosystem I and HydA1. To investigate the electrostatic interaction process and electron transfer between PetF and HydA1, we performed site-directed mutagenesis. Kinetic analyses with several site-directed mutagenesis variants of HydA1 and PetF enabled us to localize the respective contact sites. These experiments in combination with in silico docking analyses indicate that electrostatic interactions between the conserved HydA1 residue Lys396 and the C terminus of PetF as well as between the PetF residue Glu122 and the N-terminal amino group of HydA1 play a major role in complex formation and electron transfer. Mapping of relevant HydA1 and PetF residues constitutes an important basis for manipulating the physiological photosynthetic electron flow in favor of light-driven H2 production.  相似文献   

2.
The [FeFe] hydrogenases HydA1 and HydA2 in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii catalyze the final reaction in a remarkable metabolic pathway allowing this photosynthetic organism to produce H(2) from water in the chloroplast. A [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin is a critical branch point in electron flow from Photosystem I toward a variety of metabolic fates, including proton reduction by hydrogenases. To better understand the binding determinants involved in ferredoxin:hydrogenase interactions, we have modeled Chlamydomonas PetF1 and HydA2 based on amino-acid sequence homology, and produced two promising electron-transfer model complexes by computational docking. To characterize these models, quantitative free energy calculations at atomic resolution were carried out, and detailed analysis of the interprotein interactions undertaken. The protein complex model we propose for ferredoxin:HydA2 interaction is energetically favored over the alternative candidate by 20 kcal/mol. This proposed model of the electron-transfer complex between PetF1 and HydA2 permits a more detailed view of the molecular events leading up to H(2) evolution, and suggests potential mutagenic strategies to modulate electron flow to HydA2.  相似文献   

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Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 is a facultative sediment microorganism which uses diverse compounds, such as oxygen and fumarate, as well as insoluble Fe(III) and Mn(IV) as electron acceptors. The electron donor spectrum is more limited and includes metabolic end products of primary fermenting bacteria, such as lactate, formate, and hydrogen. While the utilization of hydrogen as an electron donor has been described previously, we report here the formation of hydrogen from pyruvate under anaerobic, stationary-phase conditions in the absence of an external electron acceptor. Genes for the two S. oneidensis MR-1 hydrogenases, hydA, encoding a periplasmic [Fe-Fe] hydrogenase, and hyaB, encoding a periplasmic [Ni-Fe] hydrogenase, were found to be expressed only under anaerobic conditions during early exponential growth and into stationary-phase growth. Analyses of DeltahydA, DeltahyaB, and DeltahydA DeltahyaB in-frame-deletion mutants indicated that HydA functions primarily as a hydrogen-forming hydrogenase while HyaB has a bifunctional role and represents the dominant hydrogenase activity under the experimental conditions tested. Based on results from physiological and genetic experiments, we propose that hydrogen is formed from pyruvate by multiple parallel pathways, one pathway involving formate as an intermediate, pyruvate-formate lyase, and formate-hydrogen lyase, comprised of HydA hydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase, and a formate-independent pathway involving pyruvate dehydrogenase. A reverse electron transport chain is potentially involved in a formate-hydrogen lyase-independent pathway. While pyruvate does not support a fermentative mode of growth in this microorganism, pyruvate, in the absence of an electron acceptor, increased cell viability in anaerobic, stationary-phase cultures, suggesting a role in the survival of S. oneidensis MR-1 under stationary-phase conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 was selected for the homologous overexpression of its Fe-only hydrogenase and for the heterologous expressions of the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Scenedesmus obliquus HydA1 Fe-only hydrogenases. The three Strep tag II-tagged Fe-only hydrogenases were isolated with high specific activities by two-step column chromatography. The purified algal hydrogenases evolve hydrogen with rates of around 700 micromol H(2) min(-1) mg(-1), while HydA from C. acetobutylicum (HydA(Ca)) shows the highest activity (5,522 micromol H(2) min(-1) mg(-1)) in the direction of hydrogen uptake. Further, kinetic parameters and substrate specificity were reported. An electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) analysis of the thionin-oxidized HydA(Ca) protein indicates a characteristic rhombic EPR signal that is typical for the oxidized H cluster of Fe-only hydrogenases.  相似文献   

7.
HydE, HydF, and HydG participate in the synthesis of the complex di-iron center of [FeFe] hydrogenases. The hydE, hydF, hydG, hydA, and hydB genes of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough were cloned and His-tag pull-down assays were used to study the potential interaction between HydE, HydF, and HydG with the HydA and HydB protein subunits of the D. vulgaris [FeFe] hydrogenase. Interaction of HydE and HydG with HydA was demonstrated. HydF did not interact with HydA, and none of the accessory proteins appeared to interact with HydB. This suggests that specific protein-protein interactions may be required during [FeFe] cluster synthesis and/or insertion.  相似文献   

8.
An iron-only hydrogenase was partially purified and characterized from Desulfovibrio fructosovorans wild-type strain. The enzyme exhibits a molecular mass of 56 kDa and is composed of two distinct subunits HydA and HydB (46 and 13 kDa, respectively). The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two subunits of the enzyme were determined with the aim of designing degenerate oligonucleotides. Direct and inverse polymerase chain reaction techniques were used to clone the hydrogenase encoding genes. A 9-nucleotide region located 75 bp upstream from the translational start codon of the D. fructosovorans hydA gene was found to be highly conserved. The analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence of these genes showed the presence of a signal sequence located in the small subunit, exhibiting the consensus sequence which is likely to be involved in the specific export mechanism of hydrogenases. Two ferredoxin-like motives involved in the coordination of [4Fe-4S] clusters were identified in the N-terminal domain of the large subunit. The amino acid sequence of the [Fe] hydrogenase from D. fructosovorans was compared with the amino acid sequences from eight other hydrogenases (cytoplasmic and periplasmic). These enzymes share an overall 18% identity and 28% similarity. The identity reached 73% and 69% when the D. fructosovorans hydrogenase sequence was compared with the hydrogenase sequences from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough and Desulfovibrio vulgaris oxamicus Monticello, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrogen Metabolism in Shewanella oneidensis MR-1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 is a facultative sediment microorganism which uses diverse compounds, such as oxygen and fumarate, as well as insoluble Fe(III) and Mn(IV) as electron acceptors. The electron donor spectrum is more limited and includes metabolic end products of primary fermenting bacteria, such as lactate, formate, and hydrogen. While the utilization of hydrogen as an electron donor has been described previously, we report here the formation of hydrogen from pyruvate under anaerobic, stationary-phase conditions in the absence of an external electron acceptor. Genes for the two S. oneidensis MR-1 hydrogenases, hydA, encoding a periplasmic [Fe-Fe] hydrogenase, and hyaB, encoding a periplasmic [Ni-Fe] hydrogenase, were found to be expressed only under anaerobic conditions during early exponential growth and into stationary-phase growth. Analyses of ΔhydA, ΔhyaB, and ΔhydA ΔhyaB in-frame-deletion mutants indicated that HydA functions primarily as a hydrogen-forming hydrogenase while HyaB has a bifunctional role and represents the dominant hydrogenase activity under the experimental conditions tested. Based on results from physiological and genetic experiments, we propose that hydrogen is formed from pyruvate by multiple parallel pathways, one pathway involving formate as an intermediate, pyruvate-formate lyase, and formate-hydrogen lyase, comprised of HydA hydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase, and a formate-independent pathway involving pyruvate dehydrogenase. A reverse electron transport chain is potentially involved in a formate-hydrogen lyase-independent pathway. While pyruvate does not support a fermentative mode of growth in this microorganism, pyruvate, in the absence of an electron acceptor, increased cell viability in anaerobic, stationary-phase cultures, suggesting a role in the survival of S. oneidensis MR-1 under stationary-phase conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Chlamydomonas throughout) encodes two [FeFe]-hydrogenases, designated HYDA1 and HYDA2. While HYDA1 is considered the dominant hydrogenase, the role of HYDA2 is unclear. To study the individual functions of each hydrogenase and provide a platform for future bioengineering, we isolated the Chlamydomonas hydA1-1, hydA2-1 single mutants and the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 double mutant. A reverse genetic screen was used to identify a mutant with an insertion in HYDA2, followed by mutagenesis of the hydA2-1 strain coupled with a H(2) chemosensor phenotypic screen to isolate the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant. Genetic crosses of the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant to wild-type cells allowed us to also isolate the single hydA1-1 mutant. Fermentative, photosynthetic, and in vitro hydrogenase activities were assayed in each of the mutant genotypes. Surprisingly, analyses of the hydA1-1 and hydA2-1 single mutants, as well as the HYDA1 and HYDA2 rescued hydA1-1 hydA2-1 mutant demonstrated that both hydrogenases are able to catalyze H(2) production from either fermentative or photosynthetic pathways. The physiology of both mutant and complemented strains indicate that the contribution of HYDA2 to H(2) photoproduction is approximately 25% that of HYDA1, which corresponds to similarly low levels of in vitro hydrogenase activity measured in the hydA1-1 mutant. Interestingly, enhanced in vitro and fermentative H(2) production activities were observed in the hydA1-1 hydA2-1 strain complemented with HYDA1, while maximal H(2)-photoproduction rates did not exceed those of wild-type cells.  相似文献   

11.
Hydrogenase expression in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii can be artificially induced by anaerobic adaptation or is naturally established under sulphur deprivation. In comparison to anaerobic adaptation, sulphur-deprived algal cultures show considerably higher expression rates of the [FeFe]-hydrogenase (HydA1) and develop a 25-fold higher in vitro hydrogenase activity. Based on this efficient induction principle we have established a novel purification protocol for the isolation of HydA1 that can also be used for other green algae. From an eight liter C. reinhardtii culture 0.52 mg HydA1 with a specific activity of 741 micromol H2 min(-1) mg(-1) was isolated. Similar amounts were also purified from Chlorococcum submarinum and Chlamydomonas moewusii. The extraordinarily large yields of protein allowed a spectroscopic characterization of the active site of these smallest [FeFe]-hydrogenases for the first time. An initial analysis by EPR spectroscopy shows characteristic axial EPR signals of the CO inhibited forms that are typical for the Hox-CO state of the active site from [FeFe]-hydrogenases. However, deviations in the g-tensor components have been observed that indicate distinct differences in the electronic structure between the various hydrogenases. At cryogenic temperatures, light-induced changes in the EPR spectra were observed and are interpreted as a photodissociation of the inhibiting CO ligand.  相似文献   

12.
Carbamoylphosphate has been shown to be the educt for the synthesis of the CN ligands of the NiFe metal centre of hydrogenases from Escherichia coli. In the absence of carbamoylphosphate, cells accumulate a complex of two hydrogenase maturation proteins, namely HypC and HypD for the synthesis of hydrogenase 3. A procedure for the purification of wild-type HypD protein or of a biologically active derivative carrying the Strep-tagII((R)) at the N terminus has been developed. HypD is a monomeric protein possessing about 4 mol of iron per mol of protein. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and Mossbauer spectroscopy demonstrated that the iron is present as a diamagnetic [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster. The complex between HypC and HypD can be cross-linked by a number of thiol and primary amine-specific linkers. When HypD and HypC were overproduced side-by-side with HypE, the HypC-HypD complex contained substoichiometric amounts of HypE whose proportion in the complex could be augmented when HypF was also overproduced. HypE trapped in this complex could be carbamoylated by protein HypF and after dehydration transferred the cyano group to the HypC-HypD part of the complex. Free HypC and HypD were not cyanated by HypE-CN. An active HypC-HypD complex from anaerobic cells was inactivated by incubation with K(3)[Fe(CN)(6)] but not with K(4)[Fe(CN)(6)]. The results suggest the existence of a dynamic complex between the hydrogenase maturation proteins HypD, HypC, HypE and HypF, which is the site of ligand biosynthesis and attachment to the iron atom of the NiFe site in hydrogenase 3.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: [NiFeSe] hydrogenases are metalloenzymes that catalyze the reaction H2<-->2H+ + 2e-. They are generally heterodimeric, contain three iron-sulfur clusters in their small subunit and a nickel-iron-containing active site in their large subunit that includes a selenocysteine (SeCys) ligand. RESULTS: We report here the X-ray structure at 2.15 A resolution of the periplasmic [NiFeSe] hydrogenase from Desulfomicrobium baculatum in its reduced, active form. A comparison of active sites of the oxidized, as-prepared, Desulfovibrio gigas and the reduced D. baculatum hydrogenases shows that in the reduced enzyme the nickel-iron distance is 0.4 A shorter than in the oxidized enzyme. In addition, the putative oxo ligand, detected in the as-prepared D. gigas enzyme, is absent from the D. baculatum hydrogenase. We also observe higher-than-average temperature factors for both the active site nickel-selenocysteine ligand and the neighboring Glu18 residue, suggesting that both these moieties are involved in proton transfer between the active site and the molecular surface. Other differences between [NiFeSe] and [NiFe] hydrogenases are the presence of a third [4Fe4S] cluster replacing the [3Fe4S] cluster found in the D. gigas enzyme, and a putative iron center that substitutes the magnesium ion that has already been described at the C terminus of the large subunit of two [NiFe] hydrogenases. CONCLUSIONS: The heterolytic cleavage of molecular hydrogen seems to be mediated by the nickel center and the selenocysteine residue. Beside modifying the catalytic properties of the enzyme, the selenium ligand might protect the nickel atom from oxidation. We conclude that the putative oxo ligand is a signature of inactive 'unready' [NiFe] hydrogenases.  相似文献   

14.
On the novel H2-activating iron-sulfur center of the "Fe-only" hydrogenases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The two hydrogenases (I and II) of the anaerobic N2-fixing bacterium Clostridium pasteurianum (Cp) and the hydrogenases of the anaerobes Megasphaera elsdenii (Me) and Desulfovibrio vulgaris (strain Hildenborough, Dv), contain iron-sulfur clusters but not nickel. They are the most active hydrogenases known. All four enzymes in their reduced states give rise to EPR signals typical of [4Fe-4S]1+ clusters but exhibit novel EPR signals in their oxidized states. For example, Cp hydrogenase I exhibits a sharp rhombic EPR signal when oxidized under mild conditions but the enzyme is inactivated by over-oxidation and then exhibits an axial EPR signal. A similar axial signal is observed from mildly oxidized hydrogenase I after treatment with CO. EPR, M?ssbauer and ENDOR spectroscopy indicate that the EPR signals from the oxidized enzyme and its CO derivative arise from a novel spin-coupled Fe center. Low temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) studies reveal that an EPR-silent Fe-S cluster with S greater than 1/2 is also present in oxidized hydrogenase I. From a study of all spectroscopic properties of Cp, Dv, and Me hydrogenases, it is concluded that the H2-activating site of all four is a novel Fe-S cluster with S greater than 0 and integer, which in the oxidized state is exchange-coupled to a S = 1/2 species. The data are most consistent with the S = 1/2 species being a low spin Fe(III) center. The H2-activating site is susceptible to oxidative rearrangements to yield both active and inactive states of the enzyme. We discuss the possible implications of these finding to methods of enzyme oxidation and purification procedures currently used for hydrogenases.  相似文献   

15.
The green alga Scenedesmus obliquus is capable of both uptake and production of H(2) after anaerobic adaptation (photoreduction of CO(2) or photohydrogen production). The essential enzyme for H(2)-metabolism is a NiFe-hydrogenase with a [2Fe-2S]-ferredoxin as its natural redox partner. Western blot analysis showed that the hydrogenase is constitutively expressed. The K(m) values were 79.5 microM and 12.5 microM, determined with ferredoxin and H(2), respectively, as electron donor for the hydrogenase. In vitro, NADP(+) was reduced by H(2) in the presence of the hydrogenase, the ferredoxin and a ferredoxin-NADP reductase. From these results and considerations on the stoichiometry we propose that this light-independent electron transfer is part of the photoreduction of CO(2) in vivo. For ATP synthesis, necessary for the photoreduction of CO(2), light-dependent cyclic electron transfer around Photosystem (PS) I accompanies this 'dark reaction'. PS II fluorescence data suggest that (a) in S. obliquus H(2)-reduction might function as the anaerobic counterpart of the O(2)-dependent Mehler reaction, and (b) the presence of either a ferredoxin quinone-reductase or NAD(P)-dehydrogenase (complex I) in S. obliquus chloroplasts.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Recombinant expression and purification of metallo-enzymes, including hydrogenases, at high-yields is challenging due to complex, and enzyme specific, post-translational maturation processes. Low fidelities of maturation result in preparations containing a significant fraction of inactive, apo-protein that are not suitable for biophysical or crystallographic studies.

Principal Findings

We describe the construction, overexpression and high-yield purification of a fusion protein consisting of the algal [2Fe2S]-ferredoxin PetF (Fd) and [FeFe]-hydrogenase HydA1. The maturation of Fd-HydA1 was optimized through improvements in culture conditions and media components used for expression. We also demonstrated that fusion of Fd to the N-terminus of HydA1, in comparison to the C-terminus, led to increased expression levels that were 4-fold higher. Together, these improvements led to enhanced HydA1 activity and improved yield after purification. The strong binding-affinity of Fd for DEAE allowed for two-step purification by ion exchange and StrepTactin affinity chromatography. In addition, the incorporation of a TEV protease site in the Fd-HydA1 linker allowed for the proteolytic removal of Fd after DEAE step, and purification of HydA1 alone by StrepTactin. In combination, this process resulted in HydA1 purification yields of 5 mg L−1 of culture from E. coli with specific activities of 1000 U (U = 1 µmol hydrogen evolved mg−1 min−1).

Significance

The [FeFe]-hydrogenases are highly efficient enzymes and their catalytic sites provide model structures for synthetic efforts to develop robust hydrogen activation catalysts. In order to characterize their structure-function properties in greater detail, and to use hydrogenases for biotechnological applications, reliable methods for rapid, high-yield expression and purification are required.  相似文献   

17.
The membrane-bound hydrogenase of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum has been purified 490-fold with a yield of 5.8%. The enzyme was homogeneous by disc gel electrophoresis. A method for the permanent, oxygen-insensitive, staining of hydrogenase on polyacrylamide gels is described. The enzyme is a monomer of molecular weight about 66,000 containing four iron and four acid-labile sulfur atoms per molecule. The electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum at 20 °K exhibits a strong signal in the oxidized state only with g > 2—this is characteristic of high potential iron-sulfur protein. The hydrogenase is thermostable and also resistant to both denaturation agents and oxygen inactivation. Carbon monoxide reversibly inhibits the enzyme but metal-complexing and thiol-blocking reagents have little effect on activity. The enzyme will catalyze both H2 evolution and H2 uptake in the presence of many artificial electron carriers but the two activities differ in their pH optima. There is a correlation between H2 evolution activity and the redox potential of the mediator dye. Ferredoxins and pyridine nucleotides do not readily interact with the hydrogenase. We have shown that irradiation of a solution containing methyl viologen, EDTA, proflavin, and R. rubrum hydrogenase will evolve hydrogen continuously for over 9 h. However, the enzyme evolves hydrogen at only very low rates from in vitro chloroplast-ferredoxin and chloroplast-methyl viologen systems. R. rubrum hydrogenase has a number of properties in common with the hydrogenases purified from two other photosynthetic bacteria, Chromatium and Thiocapsa, but is distinct from the hydrogenases of nonphotosynthetic bacteria.  相似文献   

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19.
Desulfovibrio fructosovorans possesses two periplasmic hydrogenases (a nickel-iron and an iron hydrogenase) and a cytoplasmic NADP-dependent hydrogenase. The hydAB genes encoding the periplasmic iron hydrogenase were replaced, in the wild-type strain as well as in single mutants depleted of one of the other two hydrogenases, by the acc1 gene encoding resistance to gentamycin. Molecular characterization and remaining activity measurements of the resulting single and double mutants were performed. All mutated strains exhibited similar growth when H(2) was the electron donor but they grew differently on fructose, lactate or pyruvate as electron donors. Our results indicate that the loss of one enzyme might be compensated by another even though hydrogenases have different localization in the cells.  相似文献   

20.
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