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1.
Thiocapsa. roseopersicina BBS has four active [NiFe] hydrogenases, providing an excellent opportunity to examine their metabolic linkages to the cellular redox processes. Hyn is a periplasmic membrane-associated hydrogenase harboring two additional electron transfer subunits: Isp1 is a transmembrane protein, while Isp2 is located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. In this work, the connection of HynSL to various electron transport pathways is studied. During photoautotrophic growth, electrons, generated from the oxidation of thiosulfate and sulfur, are donated to the photosynthetic electron transport chain via cytochromes. Electrons formed from thiosulfate and sulfur oxidation might also be also used for Hyn-dependent hydrogen evolution which was shown to be light and proton motive force driven. Hyn-linked hydrogen uptake can be promoted by both sulfur and nitrate. The electron flow from/to HynSL requires the presence of Isp2 in both directions. Hydrogenase-linked sulfur reduction could be inhibited by a QB site competitive inhibitor, terbutryne, suggesting a redox coupling between the Hyn hydrogenase and the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Based on these findings, redox linkages of Hyn hydrogenase are modeled.  相似文献   

2.
A correlation between the rate of ATP synthesis by F0F1 ATP synthase and formate oxidation by formate hydrogen lyase (FHL) has been found in inside-out membrane vesicles of the Escherichia coli mutant JW 136 (Δhyahyb) with double deletions of hydrogenases 1 and 2, grown anaerobically on glucose in the absence of external electron acceptors at pH 6.5. ATP synthesis was suppressed by the H+-ATPase inhibitors N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, sodium azide, and the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone. Copper ions inhibited formate-dependent hydrogenase and ATP-synthase activities but did not affect the ATPase activity of the vesicles. The maximal rate of ATP synthesis (0.83 μmol/min per mg protein) was determined at simultaneous application of sodium formate, ADP, and inorganic phosphate, and was stimulated by K+ ions. The results confirm the assumption of a dual role of hydrogenase 3, the formate hydrogen lyase subunit that can couple the reduction of protons to H2 and their translocation through membrane with chemiosmotic synthesis of ATP.  相似文献   

3.
While annotation of the genome sequence of Clostridium thermocellum has allowed predictions of pathways catabolizing cellobiose to end products, ambiguities have persisted with respect to the role of various proteins involved in electron transfer reactions. A combination of growth studies modulating carbon and electron flow and multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mass spectrometry measurements of proteins involved in central metabolism and electron transfer was used to determine the key enzymes involved in channeling electrons toward fermentation end products. Specifically, peptides belonging to subunits of ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NADH:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (NFOR) were low or below MRM detection limits when compared to most central metabolic proteins measured. The significant increase in H2 versus ethanol synthesis in response to either co-metabolism of pyruvate and cellobiose or hypophosphite mediated pyruvate:formate lyase inhibition, in conjunction with low levels of ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NFOR, suggest that highly expressed putative bifurcating hydrogenases play a substantial role in reoxidizing both reduced ferredoxin and NADH simultaneously. However, product balances also suggest that some of the additional reduced ferredoxin generated through increased flux through pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase must be ultimately converted into NAD(P)H either directly via NADH-dependent reduced ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (NfnAB) or indirectly via NADPH-dependent hydrogenase. While inhibition of hydrogenases with carbon monoxide decreased H2 production 6-fold and redirected flux from pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase to pyruvate:formate lyase, the decrease in CO2 was only 20 % of that of the decrease in H2, further suggesting that an alternative redox system coupling ferredoxin and NAD(P)H is active in C. thermocellum in lieu of poorly expressed ferredoxin-dependent hydrogenase and NFOR.  相似文献   

4.
Clostridium pasteurianum has two distinct hydrogenases, the bidirectional hydrogenase and the H2-oxidizing (uptake) hydrogenase. The H2-oxidizing hydrogenase has been purified (up to 970-fold) to a specific activity of 17,600 μmol H2 oxidized/min·mg protein (5 mM methylene blue) or 3.5 μmol H2 produced/min·mg protein (1 mM methyl viologen). The uptake hydrogenase has a Mr of 53,000 (one polypeptide chain). Depending upon how protein was measured, the Fe and S= contents (gatom/mol) were 4.7 and 5.2 (by the dye-binding assay) or 7.2 and 8.0 (by the Lowry method). Both reduced and oxidized forms of the enzyme gave electron paramagnetic resonance signals. The activation energy for H2-production and H2-oxidation by the uptake hydrogenase was 59.1 and 31.2 kJ/mol, respectively. In the exponential phase of growth, the ratio of uptake hydrogenase/bidirectional hydrogenase in NH3-grown cells was much lower than that in N2-fixing cells.  相似文献   

5.
The crystal structure of the membrane-associated [NiFe] hydrogenase from Allochromatium vinosum has been determined to 2.1 Å resolution. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy on dissolved crystals showed that it is present in the Ni-A state (> 90%). The structure of the A. vinosum [NiFe] hydrogenase shows significant similarities with [NiFe] hydrogenase structures derived from Desulfovibrio species. The amino acid sequence identity is ∼ 50%. The bimetallic [NiFe] active site is located in the large subunit of the heterodimer and possesses three diatomic non-protein ligands coordinated to the Fe (two CN , one CO). Ni is bound to the protein backbone via four cysteine thiolates; two of them also bridge the two metals. One of the bridging cysteines (Cys64) exhibits a modified thiolate in part of the sample. A mono-oxo bridging ligand was assigned between the metal ions of the catalytic center. This is in contrast to a proposal for Desulfovibrio sp. hydrogenases that show a di-oxo species in this position for the Ni-A state. The additional metal site located in the large subunit appears to be a Mg2+ ion. Three iron-sulfur clusters were found in the small subunit that forms the electron transfer chain connecting the catalytic site with the molecular surface. The calculated anomalous Fourier map indicates a distorted proximal iron-sulfur cluster in part of the crystals. This altered proximal cluster is supposed to be paramagnetic and is exchange coupled to the Ni3+ ion and the medial [Fe3S4]+ cluster that are both EPR active (S = 1/2 species). This finding of a modified proximal cluster in the [NiFe] hydrogenase might explain the observation of split EPR signals that are occasionally detected in the oxidized state of membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenases as from A. vinosum.  相似文献   

6.
Three functional NiFe hydrogenases were previously characterized in Thiocapsa roseopersicina BBS: two of them are attached to the periplasmic membrane (HynSL and HupSL), and one is localized in the cytoplasm (HoxEFUYH). The ongoing genome sequencing project revealed the presence of genes coding for another soluble Hox-type hydrogenase enzyme (hox2FUYH). Hox2 is a heterotetrameric enzyme; no indication for an additional subunit was found. Detailed comparative in vivo and in vitro activity and expression analyses of HoxEFUYH (Hox1) and the newly discovered Hox2 enzyme were performed. Functional differences between the two soluble NiFe hydrogenases were disclosed. Hox1 seems to be connected to both sulfur metabolism and dark/photofermentative processes. The bidirectional Hox2 hydrogenase was shown to be metabolically active under specific conditions: it can evolve hydrogen in the presence of glucose at low sodium thiosulfate concentration. However, under nitrogen-fixing conditions, it can oxidize H2 but less than the other hydrogenases in the cell.Hydrogenases are metalloenzymes involved in microbial hydrogen metabolism. A great variety of them have been identified and studied in various microorganisms and grouped on the basis of their metal content as NiFe, FeFe, and iron-sulfur cluster free hydrogenases (10, 42, 43). The basic protein structure of NiFe hydrogenases is heterodimeric, while FeFe hydrogenases are mostly composed of a single amino acid chain with multiple iron-sulfur clusters (28, 43, 44). Well-defined maturation proteins assist for the assembly and activation of hydrogenase enzymes; NiFe hydrogenases require a more complex accessory machinery than FeFe enzymes (2, 3, 24).Thiocapsa roseopersicina BBS is a photosynthetic purple sulfur bacterium belonging to the Chromatiaceae family (4). It prefers to utilize reduced sulfur compounds for anaerobic photochemolithoautotrophic growth, but simple organic substrates such as glucose or acetate can be also used as extra carbon, energy, and electron sources. It can be cultivated under aerobic (nonphotosynthetic) conditions in the presence of organic compounds. In the absence of other nitrogen sources, it is able to fix molecular nitrogen; this process is accompanied by H2 production. T. roseopersicina was earlier shown to possess at least three NiFe hydrogenases varying in their in vivo functions, localizations, and compositions. Hyn and Hup hydrogenases are attached to the membrane facing the periplasmic side (6, 18, 30). Hyn is a bidirectional enzyme with extraordinary stability (17). Recent study has demonstrated that the HynSL subunits are physiologically connected to cellular redox processes via the Isp1 and Isp2 proteins, which play an essential role in electron transfer (27). The second membrane-associated enzyme, Hup, is involved in H2 oxidation and shows homology to uptake hydrogenases, which recycle H2 produced by the nitrogenase enzyme complex or present in the environment. Next to the hydrogenase small and large subunits (HupSL), a b-type cytochrome, HupC, was demonstrated to be part of the in vivo active enzyme as a transmitter of electrons to the quinone pool (27). In several bacteria, e.g., Rhodobacter capsulatus (7) and Ralstonia eutropha (15, 20), the expression of the hydrogenase(s) was shown to be regulated by the hydrogen level in the environment. The genes encoding the hydrogen-sensing system also exist in T. roseopersicina (hupUV, hupT, and hupR), but the hupTUV genes proved to be silent in the wild-type strain—only hupR is expressed—which is why expression of hupSL genes is constitutive (16).A Hox-type soluble hydrogenase was also identified in T. roseopersicina (31); it is a representative of the bidirectional heteromultimeric cytoplasmic NiFe hydrogenases (37, 39). Enzymes belonging to this group are basically composed of two moieties: hydrogenase (HoxYH) and diaphorase (HoxFU) heterodimers. Additional subunits were identified in few cases. In R. eutropha H16, two HoxI proteins completing the Hox complex were suggested to provide a binding domain for NADPH (5). HoxE has been identified as the fifth subunit of heteropentameric NAD+-reducing Hox hydrogenases in several cyanobacteria, Allochromatium vinosum and T. roseopersicina (21, 31, 37). In-frame deletion of the hoxE gene ceased both the H2-producing and -oxidizing activities of Hox in vivo, but these were not affected in vitro. Consequently, an electron transfer role of the HoxE subunit was suggested (31, 32).The possibility of the presence of further hydrogenases in T. roseopersicina was noted few years ago (31). In the hynSL hupSL hoxH triple-mutant strain (GB112131), a small in vivo and in vitro hydrogenase activity could be measured under photomixotrophic growth conditions (both CO2 and organic compounds are used for growth) at the late growth phase. This residual activity could not be detected in the hypF mutant strain (M539). Since HypF protein has an essential role in the maturation process of all NiFe hydrogenases (9), these results suggested the presence of a previously unknown hydrogenase. Here we describe the identification and characterization of the second Hox-type hydrogenase, emphasizing the functional similarities and differences between the two soluble enzymes of this bacterium. In order to distinguish between the two Hox-type enzymes unequivocally, the HoxEFUYH complex will be renamed Hox1 and the newly described Hox2FUYH enzyme is called Hox2.  相似文献   

7.
Molecular hydrogen (H2) is considered as an ideal energy carrier to replace fossil fuels in future. Biotechnological H2 production driven by oxygenic photosynthesis appears highly promising, as biocatalyst and H2 syntheses rely mainly on light, water, and CO2 and not on rare metals. This biological process requires coupling of the photosynthetic water oxidizing apparatus to a H2-producing hydrogenase. However, this strategy is impeded by the simultaneous release of oxygen (O2) which is a strong inhibitor of most hydrogenases. Here, we addressed this challenge, by the introduction of an O2-tolerant hydrogenase into phototrophic bacteria, namely the cyanobacterial model strain Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. To this end, the gene cluster encoding the soluble, O2-tolerant, and NAD(H)-dependent hydrogenase from Ralstonia eutropha (ReSH) was functionally transferred to a Synechocystis strain featuring a knockout of the native O2 sensitive hydrogenase. Intriguingly, photosynthetically active cells produced the O2 tolerant ReSH, and activity was confirmed in vitro and in vivo. Further, ReSH enabled the constructed strain Syn_ReSH+ to utilize H2 as sole electron source to fix CO2. Syn_ReSH+ also was able to produce H2 under dark fermentative conditions as well as in presence of light, under conditions fostering intracellular NADH excess. These findings highlight a high level of interconnection between ReSH and cyanobacterial redox metabolism. This study lays a foundation for further engineering, e.g., of electron transfer to ReSH via NADPH or ferredoxin, to finally enable photosynthesis-driven H2 production.  相似文献   

8.
[FeFe] hydrogenases catalyze H2 production using the H-cluster, an iron-sulfur cofactor that contains carbon monoxide (CO), cyanide (CN), and a dithiolate bridging ligand. The HydE, HydF, and HydG maturases assist in assembling the H-cluster and maturing hydrogenases into their catalytically active form. Characterization of these maturases and in vitro hydrogenase activation methods have helped elucidate steps in the H-cluster biosynthetic pathway such as the HydG-catalyzed generation of the CO and CN ligands from free tyrosine. We have refined our cell-free approach for H-cluster synthesis and hydrogenase maturation by using separately expressed and purified HydE, HydF, and HydG. In this report, we illustrate how substrates and protein constituents influence hydrogenase activation, and for the first time, we show that each maturase can function catalytically during the maturation process. With precise control over the biomolecular components, we also provide evidence for H-cluster synthesis in the absence of either HydE or HydF, and we further show that hydrogenase activation can occur without exogenous tyrosine. Given these findings, we suggest a new reaction sequence for the [FeFe] hydrogenase maturation pathway. In our model, HydG independently synthesizes an iron-based compound with CO and CN ligands that is a precursor to the H-cluster [2Fe]H subunit, and which we have termed HydG-co. We further propose that HydF is a transferase that stabilizes HydG-co and also shuttles the complete [2Fe]H subcluster to the hydrogenase, a translocation process that may be catalyzed by HydE. In summary, this report describes the first example of reconstructing the [FeFe] hydrogenase maturation pathway using purified maturases and subsequently utilizing this in vitro system to better understand the roles of HydE, HydF, and HydG.  相似文献   

9.
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 μmol H2 min−1 mg−1, while HydA from C. acetobutylicum (HydACa) shows the highest activity (5,522 μmol H2 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 HydACa protein indicates a characteristic rhombic EPR signal that is typical for the oxidized H cluster of Fe-only hydrogenases.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The purple sulfur phototrophic bacterium Thiocapsa roseopersicina BBS synthesizes at least three NiFe hydrogenases (Hox, Hup, Hyn). We characterized the physiological H2 consumption/evolution reactions in mutants having deletions of the structural genes of two hydrogenases in various combinations. This made possible the separation of the functionally distinct roles of the three hydrogenases. Data showed that Hox hydrogenase (unlike the Hup and Hyn hydrogenases) catalyzed the dark fermentative H2 evolution and the light-dependent H2 production in the presence of thiosulfate. Both Hox+ and Hup+ mutants demonstrated light-dependent H2 uptake stimulated by CO2 but only the Hup+ mutant was able to mediate O2-dependent H2 consumption in the dark. The ability of the Hox+ mutant to evolve or consume hydrogen was found to depend on a number of interplaying factors including both growth and reaction conditions (availability of glucose, sulfur compounds, CO2, H2, light). The study of the redox properties of Hox hydrogenase supported the reversibility of its action. Based on the results a scheme is suggested to describe the role of Hox hydrogenase in light-dependent and dark hydrogen metabolism in T. roseopersicina BBS.  相似文献   

12.
Purification of Hydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A method is described which results in a 2750-fold purification of hydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, yielding a preparation which is approximately 40% pure. With a saturating amount of ferredoxin as the electron mediator, the specific activity of pure enzyme was calculated to be 1800 micromoles H2 produced per milligram protein per minute. The molecular weight was determined to be 4.5 × 104 by gel filtration and 4.75 × 104 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme has an abundance of acidic side groups, contains iron, and has an activation energy of 55.1 kilojoules per mole for H2 production; these properties are similar to those of bacterial hydrogenases. The enzyme is less thermally stable than most bacterial hydrogenases, however, losing 50% of its activity in 1 hour at 55°C. The Km of purified hydrogenase for ferredoxin is 10 micromolar, and the binding of these proteins to each other is enhanced under slightly acidic conditions. Purified hydrogenase also accepts electrons from a variety of artificial electron mediators, including sodium metatungstate, sodium silicotungstate, and several viologen dyes. A lag period is frequently observed before maximal activity is expressed with these artificial electron mediators, although the addition of sodium thiosulfate at least partially overcomes this lag.  相似文献   

13.
In this paper, the hydrogen (H2)-dependent discoloration of azo dye amaranth by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 was investigated. Experiments with hydrogenase-deficient strains demonstrated that periplasmic [Ni–Fe] hydrogenase (HyaB) and periplasmic [Fe–Fe] hydrogenase (HydA) are both respiratory hydrogenases of dissimilatory azoreduction in S. oneidensis MR-1. These findings suggest that HyaB and HydA can function as uptake hydrogenases that couple the oxidation of H2 to the reduction of amaranth to sustain cellular growth. This constitutes to our knowledge the first report of the involvement of [Fe-Fe] hydrogenase in a bacterial azoreduction process. Assays with respiratory inhibitors indicated that a menaquinone pool and different cytochromes were involved in the azoreduction process. High-performance liquid chromatography analysis revealed that flavin mononucleotide and riboflavin were secreted in culture supernatant by S. oneidensis MR-1 under H2-dependent conditions with concentration of 1.4 and 2.4 μmol g protein-1, respectively. These endogenous flavins were shown to significantly accelerate the reduction of amaranth at micromolar concentrations acting as electron shuttles between the cell surface and the extracellular azo dye. This work may facilitate a better understanding of the mechanisms of azoreduction by S. oneidensis MR-1 and may have practical applications for microbiological treatments of dye-polluted industrial effluents.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Hydrogenases are enzymes involved in hydrogen metabolism, utilizing H2 as an electron source. [NiFe] hydrogenases are heterodimeric Fe-S proteins, with a large subunit containing the reaction center involving Fe and Ni metal ions and a small subunit containing one or more Fe-S clusters. Maturation of the [NiFe] hydrogenase involves assembly of nonproteinaceous ligands on the large subunit by accessory proteins encoded by the hyp operon. HypE is an essential accessory protein and participates in the synthesis of two cyano groups found in the large subunit. We report the crystal structure of Escherichia coli HypE at 2.0-Å resolution. HypE exhibits a fold similar to that of PurM and ThiL and forms dimers. The C-terminal catalytically essential Cys336 is internalized at the dimer interface between the N- and C-terminal domains. A mechanism for dehydration of the thiocarbamate to the thiocyanate is proposed, involving Asp83 and Glu272. The interactions of HypE and HypF were characterized in detail by surface plasmon resonance and isothermal titration calorimetry, revealing a Kd (dissociation constant) of ~400 nM. The stoichiometry and molecular weights of the complex were verified by size exclusion chromatography and gel scanning densitometry. These experiments reveal that HypE and HypF associate to form a stoichiometric, hetero-oligomeric complex predominantly consisting of a [EF]2 heterotetramer which exists in a dynamic equilibrium with the EF heterodimer. The surface plasmon resonance results indicate that a conformational change occurs upon heterodimerization which facilitates formation of a productive complex as part of the carbamate transfer reaction.  相似文献   

16.
[Fe] hydrogenase (iron–sulfur-cluster-free hydrogenase) catalyzes the reversible reduction of methenyltetrahydromethanopterin (methenyl-H4MPT+) with H2 to methylene-H4MPT, a reaction involved in methanogenesis from H2 and CO2 in many methanogenic archaea. The enzyme harbors an iron-containing cofactor, in which a low-spin iron is complexed by a pyridone, two CO and a cysteine sulfur. [Fe] hydrogenase is thus similar to [NiFe] and [FeFe] hydrogenases, in which a low-spin iron carbonyl complex, albeit in a dinuclear metal center, is also involved in H2 activation. Like the [NiFe] and [FeFe] hydrogenases, [Fe] hydrogenase catalyzes an active exchange of H2 with protons of water; however, this activity is dependent on the presence of the hydride-accepting methenyl-H4MPT+. In its absence the exchange activity is only 0.01% of that in its presence. The residual activity has been attributed to the presence of traces of methenyl-H4MPT+ in the enzyme preparations, but it could also reflect a weak binding of H2 to the iron in the absence of methenyl-H4MPT+. To test this we reinvestigated the exchange activity with [Fe] hydrogenase reconstituted from apoprotein heterologously produced in Escherichia coli and highly purified iron-containing cofactor and found that in the absence of added methenyl-H4MPT+ the exchange activity was below the detection limit of the tritium method employed (0.1 nmol min−1 mg−1). The finding reiterates that for H2 activation by [Fe] hydrogenase the presence of the hydride-accepting methenyl-H4MPT+ is essentially required. This differentiates [Fe] hydrogenase from [FeFe] and [NiFe] hydrogenases, which actively catalyze H2/H2O exchange in the absence of exogenous electron acceptors.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Recently, a novel group of [NiFe]-hydrogenases has been defined that appear to have a great impact in the global hydrogen cycle. This so-called group 5 [NiFe]-hydrogenase is widespread in soil-living actinobacteria and can oxidize molecular hydrogen at atmospheric levels, which suggests a high affinity of the enzyme toward H2. Here, we provide a biochemical characterization of a group 5 hydrogenase from the betaproteobacterium Ralstonia eutropha H16. The hydrogenase was designated an actinobacterial hydrogenase (AH) and is catalytically active, as shown by the in vivo H2 uptake and by activity staining in native gels. However, the enzyme does not sustain autotrophic growth on H2. The AH was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography and consists of two subunits with molecular masses of 65 and 37 kDa. Among the electron acceptors tested, nitroblue tetrazolium chloride was reduced by the AH at highest rates. At 30°C and pH 8, the specific activity of the enzyme was 0.3 μmol of H2 per min and mg of protein. However, an unexpectedly high Michaelis constant (Km) for H2 of 3.6 ± 0.5 μM was determined, which is in contrast to the previously proposed low Km of group 5 hydrogenases and makes atmospheric H2 uptake by R. eutropha most unlikely. Amperometric activity measurements revealed that the AH maintains full H2 oxidation activity even at atmospheric oxygen concentrations, showing that the enzyme is insensitive toward O2.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Recent physiological and ecological studies have challenged the long-held belief that microbial metabolism of molecular hydrogen (H2) is a niche process. To gain a broader insight into the importance of microbial H2 metabolism, we comprehensively surveyed the genomic and metagenomic distribution of hydrogenases, the reversible enzymes that catalyse the oxidation and evolution of H2. The protein sequences of 3286 non-redundant putative hydrogenases were curated from publicly available databases. These metalloenzymes were classified into multiple groups based on (1) amino acid sequence phylogeny, (2) metal-binding motifs, (3) predicted genetic organisation and (4) reported biochemical characteristics. Four groups (22 subgroups) of [NiFe]-hydrogenase, three groups (6 subtypes) of [FeFe]-hydrogenases and a small group of [Fe]-hydrogenases were identified. We predict that this hydrogenase diversity supports H2-based respiration, fermentation and carbon fixation processes in both oxic and anoxic environments, in addition to various H2-sensing, electron-bifurcation and energy-conversion mechanisms. Hydrogenase-encoding genes were identified in 51 bacterial and archaeal phyla, suggesting strong pressure for both vertical and lateral acquisition. Furthermore, hydrogenase genes could be recovered from diverse terrestrial, aquatic and host-associated metagenomes in varying proportions, indicating a broad ecological distribution and utilisation. Oxygen content (pO2) appears to be a central factor driving the phylum- and ecosystem-level distribution of these genes. In addition to compounding evidence that H2 was the first electron donor for life, our analysis suggests that the great diversification of hydrogenases has enabled H2 metabolism to sustain the growth or survival of microorganisms in a wide range of ecosystems to the present day. This work also provides a comprehensive expanded system for classifying hydrogenases and identifies new prospects for investigating H2 metabolism.  相似文献   

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