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1.
Depending on the reduction-oxidation state of the cell, some methanogenic bacteria synthesize or hydrolyze 8-hydroxyadenylylated coenzyme F420 (coenzyme F390). These two reactions are catalyzed by coenzyme F390 synthetase and hydrolase, respectively. To gain more insight into the mechanism of the former reaction, coenzyme F390 synthetase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg was purified 89-fold from cell extract to a specific activity of 0.75 mumol.min-1.mg of protein-1. The monomeric enzyme consisted of a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 41 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. ftsA, the gene encoding coenzyme F390 synthetase, was cloned and sequenced. It encoded a protein of 377 amino acids with a predicted M(r) of 43,280. FtsA was found to be similar to domains found in the superfamily of peptide synthetases and adenylate-forming enzymes. FtsA was most similar to gramicidin S synthetase II (67% similarity in a 227-amino-acid region) and sigma-(L-alpha-aminoadipyl)-L-cysteine-D-valine synthetase (57% similarity in a 193-amino-acid region). Coenzyme F390 synthetase, however, holds an exceptional position in the superfamily of adenylate-forming enzymes in that it does not activate a carboxyl group of an amino or hydroxy acid but an aromatic hydroxyl group of coenzyme F420.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Cell extracts of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (strain delta H) were found to perform a hydrogen-dependent reduction of factor 390 (F390), the 8-adenylyl derivative of coenzyme F420. Upon resolution of cell extracts, F390-reducing activity copurified with the coenzyme F420-dependent hydrogenase. This indicates that F390 serves as a substrate of that enzyme. Activity towards F390 was approximately 40-fold lower than that towards coenzyme F420 (0.12 and 5.2 mumol.min-1.mg of protein-1, respectively). In addition, cell extracts catalyzed the hydrolysis of F390 to AMP and coenzyme F420. This hydrolysis required the presence of thiols (6 mM) and much ionic strength (1 M KCl) and was reversibly inhibited by oxygen. The reaction proceeded optimally at pH 8.2 and was Mn dependent. Conditions for F390 hydrolysis in cell extracts are in many respects opposite to those previously described for F390 synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The membrane-associated coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase of Methanobacterium formicicum was purified 87-fold to electrophoretic homogeneity. The enzyme contained alpha, beta, and gamma subunits (molecular weights of 43,000, 36,700, and 28,800, respectively) and formed aggregates (molecular weight, 1,020,000) of a coenzyme F420-active alpha 1 beta 1 gamma 1 trimer (molecular weight, 109,000). The hydrogenase contained 1 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), 1 mol of nickel, 12 to 14 mol of iron, and 11 mol of acid-labile sulfide per mol of the 109,000-molecular-weight species, but no selenium. The isoelectric point was 5.6. The amino acid sequence I-N3-P-N2-R-N1-EGH-N6-V (where N is any amino acid) was conserved in the N-termini of the alpha subunits of the F420-hydrogenases from M. formicicum and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and of the largest subunits of nickel-containing hydrogenases from Desulfovibrio baculatus, Desulfovibrio gigas, and Rhodobacter capsulatus. The purified F420-hydrogenase required reductive reactivation before assay. FAD dissociated from the enzyme during reactivation unless potassium salts were present, yielding deflavoenzyme that was unable to reduce coenzyme F420. Maximal coenzyme F420-reducing activity was obtained at 55 degrees C and pH 7.0 to 7.5, and with 0.2 to 0.8 M KCl in the reaction mixture. The enzyme catalyzed H2 production at a rate threefold lower than that for H2 uptake and reduced coenzyme F420, methyl viologen, flavins, and 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin. Specific antiserum inhibited the coenzyme F420-dependent but not the methyl viologen-dependent activity of the purified enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography of coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase purified from Methanobacterium formicicum depleted protein-bound FAD and eliminated the ability to reduce coenzyme F420. Preincubation of the FAD-depleted hydrogenase with FAD restored 85% of the coenzyme F420-reducing activity. FMN did not replace FAD. A Kd of 12 microM was estimated for FAD. Analysis of the reactivated hydrogenase following molecular sieve column chromatography showed that FAD was bound to protein. The results indicate that protein-bound FAD is reversibly removed from the coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase and that this flavin is required for the reduction of coenzyme F420.  相似文献   

8.
The cytological localization of the 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin (coenzyme F420)-reducing hydrogenase of Methanosarcina barkeri Fusaro was determined by immunoelectron microscopy, using a specific polyclonal rabbit antiserum raised against the homogeneous deazaflavin-dependent enzyme. In Western blot (immunoblot) experiments this antiserum reacted specifically with the native coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase, but did not cross-react with the coenzyme F420-nonreducing hydrogenase activity also detectable in crude extracts prepared from methanol-grown Methanosarcina cells. Immunogold labelling of ultrathin sections of anaerobically fixed methanol-grown cells from the exponential growth phase revealed that the coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase was predominantly located in the vicinity of the cytoplasmic membrane. From this result we concluded that the deazaflavin-dependent hydrogenase is associated with the cytoplasmic membrane in intact cells of M. barkeri during growth on methanol as the sole methanogenic substrate, and a possible role of this enzyme in the generation of the electrochemical proton gradient is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract Cell-free extracts of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (strain ΔH) converted the 8-OH-5-deazaflavin coenzyme F420 to factor 390, a 8-adenylyl derivative (F420-AMP). Activity was only observed upon exposure of the crude cell-free extract to oxygen. The ability to synthesize F390 was lost when crude cell-free extract was subsequently brought to an anaerobic reducing environment. The enzymatic reaction used ATP and oxidized coenzyme F420 as substrates and inorganic pyrophosphate was formed next to F390. GTP could be used instead of ATP resulting in a guanylylated derivative. The crude cell-free extract showed K m values of 154 μM for coenzyme F420 and 2.4 mM for ATP. A partially purified enzyme preparation exhibited a K eq of 0.32. In accordance, coenzyme F420 and ATP could be synthesized from F390 and PPi by the reverse reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The ability of hydrolytic products of coenzyme F420 to substitute for F420 in the hydrogenase and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-liniked hydrogenase systems of Methanobacterium strain M.o.H. was kinetically determined. The nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked hydrogenase system was employed to quantitate the levels of F420 in a number of methanogenic bacteria as well as in some nonmethanogens. Methanobacterium ruminantium and Methanosarcina barkeri contained low levels of F420, whereas other methanogens tested contained high levels (100 to 400 mg/kg of cells). F420 from six of the seven methanogens was tested by thin-layer electrophoresis and was found to be electrophoretically identical to that purified from Methanobacterium strain M.o.H. The only exception was M. barkeri, which contained a more electronegative derivative of F420. Acetobacterium woodii, Escherichia coli, and yeast extract contained no compounds able to substitute for F420 in the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-linked hydrogenase system.  相似文献   

11.
Methanosphaera stadtmanae (DSM 3091) is a methanogen that requires H2 and CH3OH for methanogenesis. The organism does not possess an F420-dependent hydrogenase and only low levels of F420. It does however possess NADP+:F420 oxidoreductase activity. The NADP+:F420 oxidoreductase, the enzyme which catalyses the electron transfer between NADP+ and F420 in this organism, was purified and characterized. NAD+, NADH, FMN, and FAD could not be used as electron acceptors. Optimal pH for F420 reduction was 6.0, and 8.5 for NADP+ reduction. During the purification process, it was noted that precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 increased total activity 16-fold but reduced the stability of the enzyme. However, recombination of cell-free extracts with resuspended 65-90% (NH4)2SO4 pellet returned activity to near cell-free extract levels. Neither high salt or protease inhibitors were effective in stabilizing the activity of the partially purified enzyme. The purified enzyme from M. stadtmanae possessed a molecular weight of 148 kDa as determined by gel filtration chromatography and native-PAGE, consisting of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits of 60, 50, and 45 kDa, respectively, using SDS-PAGE. The Km values were 370 microM for NADP+, 142 microM for NADPH, 62.5 microM for F420, and 7.7 microM for F420H2. These values were different from the Km values observed in the cell-free extract.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Soluble formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum was purified 71-fold with a yield of 35%. Purification was performed anaerobically in the presence of 10 mM sodium azide which stabilized the enzyme. The purified enzyme reduced, with formate, 50 mumol of methyl viologen per min per mg of protein and 8.2 mumol of coenzyme F420 per min per mg of protein. The apparent Km for 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin, a hydrolytic derivative of coenzyme F420, was 10-fold greater (63 microM) than for coenzyme F420 (6 microM). The purified enzyme also reduced flavin mononucleotide (Km = 13 microM) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (Km = 25 microM) with formate, but did not reduce NAD+ or NADP+. The reduction of NADP+ with formate required formate dehydrogenase, coenzyme F420, and coenzyme F420:NADP+ oxidoreductase. The formate dehydrogenase had an optimal pH of 7.9 when assayed with the physiological electron acceptor coenzyme F420. The optimal reaction rate occurred at 55 degrees C. The molecular weight was 288,000 as determined by gel filtration. The purified formate dehydrogenase was strongly inhibited by cyanide (Ki = 6 microM), azide (Ki = 39 microM), alpha,alpha-dipyridyl, and 1,10-phenanthroline. Denaturation of the purified formate dehydrogenase with sodium dodecyl sulfate under aerobic conditions revealed a fluorescent compound. Maximal excitation occurred at 385 nm, with minor peaks at 277 and 302 nm. Maximal fluorescence emission occurred at 455 nm.  相似文献   

14.
The oxidation of F420H2 (reduced coenzyme F420) is a key reaction in the final step of methanogenesis. This step is catalyzed in Methanolobus tindarius by the membrane-bound F420H2-dehydrogenase which was purified 31-fold to apparent homogeneity. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme was 120 kDa. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of five different subunits of apparent molecular masses of 45 kDa, 40 kDa, 22 kDa, 18 kDa and 17 kDa. The purified F420H2-dehydrogenase, which was yellowish, contained 16 +/- 2 mol iron and 16 +/- 3 mol acid-labile sulfur/mol enzyme. No flavin could be detected. The oxygen-stable enzyme catalyzed the oxidation of F420H2 (apparent Km = 5.4 microM) with methylviologen and metronidazole as electron acceptors at a specific rate of 13 mumol.min-1.mg-1 (kcat = 25.5 s-1). The isoelectric point was at pH 5.0. The temperature optimum was at 37 degrees C and the pH optimum at 6.8.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
I J Braks  M Hoppert  S Roge    F Mayer 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(24):7677-7687
The F420-reducing hydrogenase and the non-F420-reducing hydrogenase (EC 1.12.99.1.) were isolated from a crude extract of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum Marburg. Electron microscopy of the negatively stained F420-reducing hydrogenase revealed that the enzyme is a complex with a diameter of 15.6 nm. It consists of two ring-like, stacked, parallel layers each composed of three major protein masses arranged in rotational symmetry. Each of these masses appeared to be subdivided into smaller protein masses. Electron microscopy of negatively stained samples taken from intermediate steps of the purification process revealed the presence of enzyme particles bound to inside-out membrane vesicles. Linker particles of 10 to 20 kDa which mediate the attachment of the hydrogenase to the cytoplasmic membrane were seen. Immunogold labelling confirmed that the F420-reducing hydrogenase is a membrane-bound enzyme. Electron microscopy of the negatively stained purified non-F420-reducing hydrogenase revealed that the enzyme is composed of three subunits exhibiting different diameters (5, 4, and 2 to 3 nm). According to immunogold labelling experiments, approximately 70% of the non-F420-reducing hydrogenase protein molecules were located at the cell periphery; the remaining 30% were cytoplasmic. No linker particles were observed for this enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
Factor 390 (F390), an adenylylated or guanylylated derivative of the methanogen coenzyme factor 420 (F420), was previously detected in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum cells exposed to air. Of six other methanogenic species that have now been tested, only Methanobacterium formicicum was found to produce F390 upon oxygen exposure. Aerobic conditions led to an immediate cessation of methanogenesis, whereas only 51% of cellular F420 was slowly converted to F390 over 4 h in Mb.formicicum at 37 degrees C. F390 formation is reversible. When oxidized cells were re-introduced into anoxic medium, F390 reverted to F420 prior to recovery of methanogenesis. Anaerobic cultures of Mb.formicicum were subjected to alternative stresses such as exposure to heavy metals, methanogenesis inhibitors and eubacterial alarmone-producing chemicals; however, only oxygen was found to induce F390 formation.  相似文献   

18.
A methylviologen and 8-hydroxy-5-deazaflavin(F420)-reducing hydrogenase was purified over 800-fold to near homogeneity from the archaebacterium Methanococcus voltae with 10 U mg-1 F420-reducing activity. It is the only hydrogenase in this organism. The enzyme showed Km values of 16 microM for F420 and 1.2 mM for methylviologen. A turnover number of 1050 min-1 was calculated for the minimal active unit. The protein tends to aggregate. The molecular mass of the minimal active unit is 105 kDa. Larger molecules of 745 kDa were regularly observed. The enzyme was resolved into subunits with molecular masses of 55 kDa, 45 kDa, 37 kDa and 27 kDa by SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Reversible conversion of an anionic into an uncharged form was observed by DEAE-cellulose chromatography with concomitant changes in substrate specificities. The methylviologen-reducing activity was heat-resistant up to 65 degrees C and was not affected by antiserum raised against the native enzyme, while F420 reduction was inactivated by both treatments. Nickel and selenium contents were determined as 0.6-0.7 mol each, FAD content as 1 mol and iron as 4.5 mol/mol protein (105 kDa), respectively. Electron micrographs taken from the purified enzyme show ring-shaped molecules of 18 nm diameter, which represent the high-molecular-mass species of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The ultrastructural locations of the coenzyme F420-reducing formate dehydrogenase and coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase of Methanobacterium formicicum were determined using immunogold labeling of thin-sectioned, Lowicryl-embedded cells. Both enzymes were located predominantly at the cell membrane. Whole cells displayed minimal F420-dependent formate dehydrogenase activity or F420-dependent hydrogenase activity, and little activity was released upon osmotic shock treatment, suggesting that these enzymes are not soluble periplasmic proteins. Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences of the formate dehydrogenase subunits revealed no hydrophobic regions that could qualify as putative membrane-spanning domains.Abbreviation PBST Phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.1% (v/v) Triton X-100  相似文献   

20.
To identify the electron acceptor of the methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, we have purified the enzyme to homogeneity. The purified enzyme is absolutely dependent on coenzyme F420 (a 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin derivative) for activity. Several alternative electron acceptors are ineffectual in the reaction. Changes in the absorption spectra of reaction mixtures indicate that 1.1 mol of coenzyme F420 is reduced per mol of substrate oxidized. The reaction is reversible and the equilibrium favors oxidation of methylenetetrahydromethanopterin.  相似文献   

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