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1.
The activity of hydrogenase in intact cells of the unicellular cyanobacterium Cyanothece PCC 7822 was investigated using a mass spectrometer with a permeable membrane inlet. A small hydrogenase-catalyzed hydrogen production was observed with nitrate-grown cells under anoxic conditions in the dark. The same cells were also capable of a much greater rate of hydrogen uptake, induced by oxygen as well as light. Light-induced hydrogen uptake was inhibited by uncoupler. In contrast, addition of uncoupler caused a four-fold stimulation of anoxic hydrogen production in the dark. It is suggested that anoxic hydrogen production is the result of fermentative metabolism.Cyanobacteria are generally considered to have at least two distinct hydrogenases (Houchins 1984). One is a membrane-bound uptake hydrogenase which appears to be associated with nitrogen fixation, removing the hydrogen produced by nitrogenase with the concomitant production of reductant or ATP (Eisbrenner et al. 1978). The second is a reversible hydrogenase located in the cytoplasm and not closely linked to nitrogen metabolism. The reversible character of this enzyme can be demonstrated in the presence of suitable electron donors or acceptors; hydrogen consumption and evolution occur at similar rates (Lambert and Smith 1980).A reversible hydrogenase capable of reducing protons with the artificial electron donor couple dithionite and methyl viologen is widely distributed amongst cyanobacteria. However its physiological role remains unclear. The enzyme appears to be sensitive to oxygen, and consequently in vivo activity can only be demonstrated under anoxic conditions (Houchins 1984).On the basis of in vivo measurements with tritium and the observed low K m for hydrogen, the function of the reversible hydrogenase of the heterocystous cyanobacterium Anabaena has been proposed to be the uptake of hydrogen as a means of collecting additional reducing power during growth in light-limited anoxic environments (Spiller et al. 1983; Houchins 1984). However, Hallenbeck et al. (1981) reported a modest production of hydrogen by intact filaments of Anabaena.An example of a function of the reversible hydrogenase in the production of hydrogen is provided by the nonheterocystous filamentous cyanobacterium Oscillatoria limnetica. This organism is capable of shifting between oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis (Oren and Padan 1978). In the latter case sulfide is the electron donor supporting photoreduction of CO2 via photosystem I only. However when CO2 is limiting, excess reducing equivalents are removed by a reversible hydrogenase (Belkin and Padan 1978). This hydrogen production probably enables the organism to continue photophosphorylation under these conditions.We recently reported that the unicellular cyanobacterium Cyanothece 7822 is capable of hydrogenase-catalyzed hydrogen production in vivo, without the addition of artificial reductants (Van der Oost et al. 1987). In this paper we have investigated the in vivo activity of the hydrogenase in Cyanothece by monitoring the concentrations of dissolved H2 and O2 in the cell suspension using a mass spectrometer with a permeable membrane inlet.Abbreviations DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU N-(3,4-dichlorophenyl) N,N-dimethylurea - FCCP carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone - PBQ phenyl benzoquinone  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogen metabolism and energy costs of nitrogen fixation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract The high energy costs of biological nitrogen fixation are partly caused by hydrogen production during the reduction of dinitrogen to ammonia. Some nitrogen-fixing organisms can recycle the evolved hydrogen via a membrane-bound uptake hydrogenase. The energetic aspects of hydrogen metabolism and nitrogen fixation are discussed.
Studies on both isolated nitrogenase proteins and nitrogen-fixing chemostat cultures show that energy limitation will result in a high hydrogen production by nitrogenase. In plant- Rhizobium symbiosis, the supply of oxygen or photosynthetate is the limiting factor for nitrogen fixation. In both cases, nitrogen fixation is energy-limited, and it is concluded that a large amount of hydrogen is produced during nitrogen fixation in these symbioses.
Hydrogen reoxidation yields less energy than the oxidation of endogenous substrates, and therefore expression of hydrogenase under oxygen-limited conditions is energetically unfavourable. Moreover, hydrogen reoxidation can never completely regain the energy invested during hydrogen production. The controversial reports of the effect of hydrogen reoxidation on the efficiency of nitrogen fixation are being discussed.
The determination of the energy costs of nitrogen fixation (expressed as the amount of ATP needed to fix 1 mol of N2) using chemostat cultures is described. Calculations show that the nitrogenase-catalysed hydrogen production has more influence on the efficiency of nitrogen fixation than the absence or presence of a hydrogen uptake system.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Probes carrying the Anabaena sp. strain PCC 7120 nitrogenase reductase (nifH) and nitrogenase (nifK and nifD) genes were hybridized to Southern blots of DNA from the unicellular, aerobic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Gloeothece sp. strain PCC 6909 and from the filamentous cyanobacterium Calothrix sp. strain PCC 7601. These data suggest that the Gloeothece sp. nif structural proteins must be similar to those of other diazotrophs and that the ability for aerobic nitrogen fixation does not reside in the nif protein complex. We also found that the nif structural genes of Gloeothece sp. are clustered, whereas those of Calothrix sp. are arranged more like those of Anabaena sp.  相似文献   

5.
The temporal and spatial accumulation of cyanophycin was studied in two unicellular strains of cyanobacteria, the diazotrophic Cyanothece sp. strain ATCC 51142 and the non-diazotrophic Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803. Biochemistry and electron microscopy were used to monitor the dynamics of cyanophycin accumulation under nitrogen-sufficient and nitrogen-deficient conditions. In Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 grown under 12 h light/12 h dark nitrogen-fixing conditions, cyanophycin was temporally regulated relative to nitrogenase activity and accumulated in granules after nitrogenase activity commenced. Cyanophycin granules reached a maximum after the peak of nitrogenase activity and eventually were utilized completely. Knock-out mutants were constructed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cphA and cphB genes to analyze the function of these genes and cyanophycin accumulation under nitrogen-deficient growth conditions. The mutants grew under such conditions, but needed to degrade phycobilisomes as a nitrogen reserve. Granules could be seen in some wild-type cells after treatment with chloramphenicol, but were never found in Delta cphA and Delta cphB mutants. These results led to the conclusion that cyanophycin is temporally and spatially regulated in nitrogen-fixing strains such as Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142 and represents a key nitrogen reserve in these organisms. However, cyanophycin appeared to play a less important role in the non-diazotrophic unicellular strains and phycobilisomes appeared to be the main nitrogen reserve.  相似文献   

6.
Two marine, unicellular aerobic nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria, Cyanothece strain BH63 and Cyanothece strain BH68, were isolated from the intertidal sands of the Texas Gulf coast in enrichment conditions designed to favor rapid growth. By cell morphology, ultrastructure, a GC content of 40%, and aerobic nitrogen fixation ability, these strains were assigned to the genus Cyanothece. These strains can use molecular nitrogen as the sole nitrogen source and are capable of photoheterotrophic growth in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and glycerol. The strains demonstrated a doubling time of 10 to 14 h in the presence of nitrate and 16 to 20 h under nitrogen-fixing conditions. Rapid growth of nitrogen-fixing cultures can be obtained in continuous light even when the cultures are continuously shaken or bubbled with air. Under 12-h alternating light and dark cycles, the aerobic nitrogenase activity was confined to the dark phase. The typical rates of aerobic nitrogenase activity in Cyanothece strains BH63 and BH68 were 1,140 and 1,097 nmol of C2H2 reduced per mg (dry weight) per h, respectively, and nitrogenase activity was stimulated twofold by light. Ultrastructural observations revealed that numerous inclusion granules formed between the photosynthetic membranes in cells grown under nitrogen-fixing conditions. These Cyanothece strains posses many characteristics that make them particularly attractive for a detailed analysis of the interaction of nitrogen fixation and photosynthesis in an aerobic diazotroph.  相似文献   

7.
Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133 is a nitrogen-fixing, heterocystous cyanobacterium of symbiotic origin. During nitrogen fixation, it produces molecular hydrogen (H(2)), which is recaptured by an uptake hydrogenase. Gas exchange in cultures of N. punctiforme ATCC 29133 and its hydrogenase-free mutant strain NHM5 was studied. Exchange of O(2), CO(2), N(2), and H(2) was followed simultaneously with a mass spectrometer in cultures grown under nitrogen-fixing conditions. Isotopic tracing was used to separate evolution and uptake of CO(2) and O(2). The amount of H(2) produced per molecule of N(2) fixed was found to vary with light conditions, high light giving a greater increase in H(2) production than N(2) fixation. The ratio under low light and high light was approximately 1.4 and 6.1 molecules of H(2) produced per molecule of N(2) fixed, respectively. Incubation under high light for a longer time, until the culture was depleted of CO(2), caused a decrease in the nitrogen fixation rate. At the same time, hydrogen production in the hydrogenase-deficient strain was increased from an initial rate of approximately 6 micro mol (mg of chlorophyll a)(-1) h(-1) to 9 micro mol (mg of chlorophyll a)(-1) h(-1) after about 50 min. A light-stimulated hydrogen-deuterium exchange activity stemming from the nitrogenase was observed in the two strains. The present findings are important for understanding this nitrogenase-based system, aiming at photobiological hydrogen production, as we have identified the conditions under which the energy flow through the nitrogenase can be directed towards hydrogen production rather than nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In cyanobacterial membranes photosynthetic light reaction and respiration are intertwined. It was shown that the single hydrogenase of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is connected to the light reaction. We conducted measurements of hydrogenase activity, fermentative hydrogen evolution and photohydrogen production of deletion mutants of respiratory electron transport complexes. All single, double and triple mutants of the three terminal respiratory oxidases and the ndhB-mutant without a functional complex I were studied. After activating the hydrogenase by applying anaerobic conditions in the dark hydrogen production was measured at the onset of light. Under these conditions respiratory capacity and amount of photohydrogen produced were found to be inversely correlated. Especially the absence of the quinol oxidase induced an increased hydrogenase activity and an increased production of hydrogen in the light compared to wild type cells. Our results support that the hydrogenase as well as the quinol oxidase function as electron valves under low oxygen concentrations. When the activities of photosystem II and I (PSII and PSI) are not in equilibrium or in case that the light reaction is working at a higher pace than the dark reaction, the hydrogenase is necessary to prevent an acceptor side limitation of PSI, and the quinol oxidase to prevent an overreduction of the plastoquinone pool (acceptor side of PSII). Besides oxygen, nitrate assimilation was found to be an important electron sink. Inhibition of nitrate reductase resulted in an increased fermentative hydrogen production as well as higher amounts of photohydrogen.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
Franziska Gutthann 《BBA》2007,1767(2):161-169
In cyanobacterial membranes photosynthetic light reaction and respiration are intertwined. It was shown that the single hydrogenase of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is connected to the light reaction. We conducted measurements of hydrogenase activity, fermentative hydrogen evolution and photohydrogen production of deletion mutants of respiratory electron transport complexes. All single, double and triple mutants of the three terminal respiratory oxidases and the ndhB-mutant without a functional complex I were studied. After activating the hydrogenase by applying anaerobic conditions in the dark hydrogen production was measured at the onset of light. Under these conditions respiratory capacity and amount of photohydrogen produced were found to be inversely correlated. Especially the absence of the quinol oxidase induced an increased hydrogenase activity and an increased production of hydrogen in the light compared to wild type cells. Our results support that the hydrogenase as well as the quinol oxidase function as electron valves under low oxygen concentrations. When the activities of photosystem II and I (PSII and PSI) are not in equilibrium or in case that the light reaction is working at a higher pace than the dark reaction, the hydrogenase is necessary to prevent an acceptor side limitation of PSI, and the quinol oxidase to prevent an overreduction of the plastoquinone pool (acceptor side of PSII). Besides oxygen, nitrate assimilation was found to be an important electron sink. Inhibition of nitrate reductase resulted in an increased fermentative hydrogen production as well as higher amounts of photohydrogen.  相似文献   

13.
It has been shown that some aerobic, unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacteria temporally separate photosynthetic O2 evolution and oxygen-sensitive N2 fixation. Cyanothece sp. ATCC strain 51142 is an aerobic, unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacterium that fixes N2 during discrete periods of its cell cycle. When the bacteria are maintained under diurnal light-dark cycles, N2 fixation occurs in the dark. Similar cycling is observed in continuous light, implicating a circadian rhythm. Under N2-fixing conditions, large inclusion granules form between the thylakoid membranes. Maximum granulation, as observed by electron microscopy, occurs before the onset of N2 fixation, and the granules decrease in number during the period of N2 fixation. The granules can be purified from cell homogenates by differential centrifugation. Biochemical analyses of the granules indicate that these structures are primarily carbohydrate, with some protein. Further analyses of the carbohydrate have shown that it is a glucose polymer with some characteristics of glycogen. It is proposed that N2 fixation is driven by energy and reducing power stored in these inclusion granules. Cyanothece sp. strain ATCC 51142 represents an excellent experimental organism for the study of the protective mechanisms of nitrogenase, metabolic events in cyanobacteria under normal and stress conditions, the partitioning of resources between growth and storage, and biological rhythms.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Hydrogen uptake is thought to increase the efficiency of nitrogen fixation by recycling H2 produced by nitrogenase that would otherwise be lost by diffusion. Here we demonstrate the capacity of eight Rhizobium strains to take up molecular hydrogen. Uptake by nodule homogenates from Robinia pseudoacacia was measured amperometrically under nitrogenase repression. Markedly lower activities were found than in soybean nodules. In addition hydrogenase activity was detected by the ability of bacteroids to reduce methylene blue in the presence of hydrogen. It was demonstrated that hydrogenase structural genes are present in the black locust symbiont, Rhizobium sp. strain R1, using hybridization with a plasmid, which contained hydrogenase genes from R. leguminosarum bv. viceae.  相似文献   

15.
Several unicellular and filamentous, nitrogen-fixing and non-nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterial strains have been investigated on the molecular and the physiological level in order to find the most efficient organisms for photobiological hydrogen production. These strains were screened for the presence or absence of hup and hox genes, and it was shown that they have different sets of genes involved in H2 evolution. The uptake hydrogenase was identified in all N2-fixing cyanobacteria, and some of these strains also contained the bidirectional hydrogenase, whereas the non-nitrogen fixing strains only possessed the bidirectional enzyme. In N2-fixing strains, hydrogen was mainly produced by the nitrogenase as a by-product during the reduction of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia. Therefore, hydrogen production was investigated both under non-nitrogen-fixing conditions and under nitrogen limitation. It was shown that the hydrogen uptake activity is linked to the nitrogenase activity, whereas the hydrogen evolution activity of the bidirectional hydrogenase is not dependent or even related to diazotrophic growth conditions. With regard to large-scale hydrogen evolution by N2-fixing cyanobacteria, hydrogen uptake-deficient mutants have to be used because of their inability to re-oxidize the hydrogen produced by the nitrogenase. On the other hand, fermentative H2 production by the bidirectional hydrogenase should also be taken into account in further investigations of biological hydrogen production.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - MV methyl viologen  相似文献   

16.
17.
Cyanobacteria are oxygenic photosynthetic prokaryotes and play a crucial role in the Earth's carbon and nitrogen cycles. The photoautotrophic cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 has the ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen in heterocysts and produce hydrogen as a byproduct through a nitrogenase. In order to improve hydrogen production, mutants from Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 are constructed by inactivation of the uptake hydrogenase (ΔhupL) and the bidirectional hydrogenase (ΔhoxH) in previous studies. Here the proteomic differences of enriched heterocysts between these mutants cultured in N2‐fixing conditions are investigated. Using a label‐free quantitative proteomics approach, a total of 2728 proteins are identified and it is found that 79 proteins are differentially expressed in the ΔhupL and 117 proteins in the ΔhoxH variant. The results provide for the first time comprehensive information on proteome regulation of the uptake hydrogenase and the bidirectional hydrogenase, as well as systematic data on the hydrogen related metabolism in Anabaena sp. PCC 7120.  相似文献   

18.
D M Pederson  A Daday  G D Smith 《Biochimie》1986,68(1):113-120
The hydrogenase activities of the heterocystous cyanobacteria Anabaena cylindrica and Mastigocladus laminosus are nickel dependent, based on their inability to consume hydrogen with various electron acceptors or produce hydrogen with dithionite-reduced methyl viologen, after growth in nickel-depleted medium. Upon addition of nickel ions to nickel-deficient cultures of A. cylindrica, the hydrogenase activity recovered in a manner which was protein synthesis-dependent, the recovery being inhibited by chloramphenicol. We have used the nickel dependence of the hydrogenase as a probe of the possible roles of H2 consumption in enhancing nitrogen fixation, and particularly for protecting nitrogenase against oxygen inhibition. Although at the usual growth temperatures (25 degrees for A. cylindrica and 40 degrees for M. laminosus), the cells consume H2 vigorously in an oxyhydrogen reaction after growth in the presence of nickel ions, we have not found that the reaction confers any significant additional protection of nitrogenase, either at aerobic pO2 (for both organisms) or at elevated pO2 (for A. cylindrica). However, at elevated temperatures (e.g., 40 degrees for A. cylindrica and 48 degrees for M. laminosus) a definite protective effect was observed. At these temperatures both organisms rapidly lost acetylene reduction activity under aerobic conditions. When hydrogen gas (10%) was present, the cells retained approximately 50% of the nitrogenase activity observed under anaerobic conditions (argon gas phase). No such protection by hydrogen gas was observed with nickel-deficient cells. Studies with cell-free extracts of A. cylindrica showed that the predominant effect of temperature was not due to thermal inactivation of nitrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
Hydrogen production by C. reinhardtii seems a promising alternative as a source of non-polluting biofuel. Hydrogen is generated as a result of combining free protons and electrons (supplied by ferredoxin) through the activity of an oxygen-sensitive hydrogenase. Thus, substantial hydrogen production is only observed in the light under anaerobic conditions. These require a reduced rate of photosynthetic oxygen evolution which is usually achieved by impairing photosystem II through sulphur starvation. Several approaches have been conducted to enhance and extend hydrogen production by addressing problems such as the mechanism of hydrogenase inhibition by oxygen, the stressing impact on the cells of the culture conditions, the use of starch as an alternate source of electrons under reduced photosynthetic activity, and the need of maintaining a balance between oxygen evolution and consumption. The photosynthetic enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) appears as suitable objective for biotechnological optimization of hydrogen production because of its relevance controlling the hydrogenase main competitor electron sink (the Calvin-Benson cycle), as well as starch accumulation and photorespiratory oxygen consumption. Possible strategies for increasing hydrogen generation based on alteration of Rubisco properties and/or catabolism through site-directed mutagenesis are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Cyanobacteria are able to use solar energy for the production of hydrogen. It is generally accepted that cyanobacterial NiFe-hydrogenases are reduced by NAD(P)H. This is in conflict with thermodynamic considerations, as the midpoint potentials of NAD(P)H do not suffice to support the measured hydrogen production under physiological conditions. We show that flavodoxin and ferredoxin directly reduce the bidirectional NiFe-hydrogenase of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 in vitro. A merodiploid ferredoxin-NADP reductase mutant produced correspondingly more photohydrogen. We furthermore found that the hydrogenase receives its electrons via pyruvate:flavodoxin/ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR)-flavodoxin/ferredoxin under fermentative conditions, enabling the cells to gain ATP. These results strongly support that the bidirectional NiFe-hydrogenases in cyanobacteria function as electron sinks for low potential electrons from photosystem I and as a redox balancing device under fermentative conditions. However, the selective advantage of this enzyme is not known. No strong phenotype of mutants lacking the hydrogenase has been found. Because bidirectional hydrogenases are widespread in aquatic nutrient-rich environments that are capable of triggering phytoplankton blooms, we mimicked those conditions by growing cells in the presence of increased amounts of dissolved organic carbon and dissolved organic nitrogen. Under these conditions the hydrogenase was found to be essential. As these conditions close the two most important sinks for reduced flavodoxin/ferredoxin (CO2-fixation and nitrate reduction), this discovery further substantiates the connection between flavodoxin/ferredoxin and the NiFe-hydrogenase.  相似文献   

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