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1.
Summary In most methanogenic archaea, two hydrogenase systems that can catalyze the reduction of coenzyme F420 (F420) with H2 are present: (1) the F420-reducing hydrogenase, which is a nickel iron-sulfur flavoprotein composed of three different subunits, and (2) the N 5, N10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase system, which is composed of H2-forming methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase and F420-dependent methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase, both metal-free proteins without an apparent prosthetic group. We report here that in nickel-limited chemostat cultures of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, the specific activity of the F420-reducing Ni/Fe-hydrogenase was essentially zero, whereas that of the H2-forming methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase was six times higher, and that of the F420-dependent methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase was four times higher than in cells grown under non-nickel-limited conditions. This evidence supports the hypothesis that when M. thermoautotrophicum grows under conditions of nickel limitation, the reduction of F420 with H2 is catalyzed by the metal-free methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase system. Received: 9 September 1997 / Accepted: 30 October 1997  相似文献   

2.
Archaeoglobus fulgidus is an extremely thermophilic archaebacterium that can grow at the expense of lactate oxidation with sulfate to CO2 and H2S. The organism contains coenzyme F420, tetrahydromethanopterin, and methanofuran which are coenzymes previously thought to be unique for methanogenic bacteria. We report here that the bacterium contains methylenetetrahydromethanopterin: F420 oxidoreductase (20 U/mg), methenyltetrahydromethanopterin cyclohydrolase (0.9 U/mg), formyltetrahydromethanopterin: methanofuran formyltransferase (4.4 U/mg), and formylmethanofuran: benzyl viologen oxidoreductase (35 mU/mg). Besides these enzymes carbon monoxide: methyl viologen oxidoreductase (5 U/mg), pyruvate: methyl viologen oxidoreductase (0.7 U/mg), and membranebound lactate: dimethylnaphthoquinone oxidoreductase (0.1 U/mg) were found. 2-Oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, which is a key enzyme of the citric acid cycle, was not detectable. From the enzyme outfit it is concluded that in A. fulgidus lactate is oxidized to CO2 via a modified acetyl-CoA/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway involving C1-intermediates otherwise only used by methanogenic bacteria.Non-standard abbreviations APS adenosine 5-phosphosulfate - BV benzyl viologen - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DMN 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone - DTT DL-1,4-dithiothreitol - H4F tetrahydrofolate - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH2 H4MPT, methylene-H4MPT - CH H4MPT, methenyl-H4MPT - Mes morpholinoethane sulfonic acid - MFR methanofuran - Mops morpholinopropane sulfonic acid - MV methyl viologen - Tricine N-tris(hydroxymethyl)-methylglycine - U mol product formed per min  相似文献   

3.
The sulfate-reducing Archaeoglobus fulgidus contains a number of enzymes previously thought to be unique for methanogenic Archaea. The purification and properties of two of these enzymes, of formylmethanofuran: tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase and of N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase (coenzyme F420 dependent) are described here. A comparison of the N-terminal amino acid sequences and of other molecular properties with those of the respective enzymes from three methanogenic Archaea revealed a high degree of similarity.Abbreviations H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - F420 coenzyme - F420 formyltransferase, formylmethanofuran: tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase - methylene-H4MPT dehydrogenase N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase - methylene-H4MPT recductase N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase - cyclohydrolase N 5,N 10-methenyltetrahydromethanopterin cyclohydrolase - APS adenosine 5-phosphosulfate - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino) propane sulfonic acid - TRICINE N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine - MES morpholinoethanesulfonic acid - 1 U 1 mol/min  相似文献   

4.
Methanopyrus kandleri belongs to a novel group of abyssal methanogenic archaebacteria that can grow at 110°C on H2 and CO2 and that shows no close phylogenetic relationship to any methanogen known so far. Methyl-coenzyme M reductase, the enzyme catalyzing the methane forming step in the energy metabolism of methanogens, was purified from this hyperthermophile. The yellow protein with an absorption maximum at 425 nm was found to be similar to the methyl-coenzyme M reductase from other methanogenic bacteria in that it was composed each of two -, - and -subunits and that it contained the nickel porphinoid coenzyme F430 as prosthetic group. The purified reductase was inactive. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the -subunit was determined. A comparison with the N-terminal sequences of the -subunit of methyl-coenzyme M reductases from other methanogenic bacteria revealed a high degree of similarity.Besides methyl-coenzyme M reductase cell extracts of M. kandleri were shown to contain the following enzyme activities involved in methanogenesis from CO2 (apparent Vmax at 65°C): formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase, 0.3 U/mg protein; formyl-methanofuran: tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase, 13 U/mg; N 5,N10-methenyltetrahydromethanopterin cyclohydrolase, 14 U/mg; N 5,N10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase (H2-forming), 33 U/mg; N 5,N10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase (coenzyme F420 dependent), 4 U/mg; heterodisulfide reductase, 2 U/mg; coenzyme F420-reducing hydrogenase, 0.01 U/mg; and methylviologen-reducing hydrogenase, 2.5 U/mg. Apparent Km values for these enzymes and the effect of salts on their activities were determined.The coenzyme F420 present in M. kandleri was identified as coenzyme F420-2 with 2 -glutamyl residues.Abbreviations H–S-CoM coenzyme M - CH3–S-CoM methylcoenzyme M - H–S-HTP 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate - MFR methanofuran - CHO-MFR formyl-MFR - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CHO–H4MPT N 5-formyl-H4MPT - CH=H4MPT+ N 5,N10-methenyl-H4MPT - CH2=H4MPT N 5,N10-methylene-H4MPT - CH3–H4MPT N 5-methyl-H4MPT - F420 coenzyme F420 - 1 U= 1 mol/min  相似文献   

5.
Archaeoglobus lithotrophicus is a hyperthermophilic Archaeon that grows on H2 and sulfate as energy sources and CO2 as sole carbon source. The autotrophic sulfate reducer was shown to contain all the enzyme activities and coenzymes of the reductive carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway for autotrophic CO2 fixation as operative in methanogenic Archaea. With the exception of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase these enzymes and coenzymes were also found in A. profundus. This organism grows lithotrophically on H2 and sulfate, but differs from A. lithotrophicus in that it cannot grow autotrophically: A. profundus requires acetate and CO2 for biosynthesis. The absence of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase in A. profundus is substantiated by the observation that this organism, in contrast to A. lithotrophicus, is not mini-methanogenic and contains only relatively low concentrations of corrinoids.Abbreviations F 420 coenzyme F420 - MFR methanofuran - CHO-MFR formylmethanofuran - H 4MPT 5,6,7,8-tetrahydromethanopterin - CHO–H 4MPT N5 formyl-H4MPT - CHH4MPT+N5 methenyl-H4MPT - CH 2=H4MPT N5, N10 methylene-H4MPT - CH 3–H4MPT N5 methyl-H4MPT - H 4F tetrahydrofolate - I U 1 mol/min - t d doubling time  相似文献   

6.
The cell extract protein content of acetate- and methanol-grown Methanosarcina thermophila TM-1 was examined by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. More than 100 mutually exclusive spots were present in acetate- and methanol-grown cells. Spots corresponding to acetate kinase, phosphotransacetylase, and the five subunits of the carbon monoxide dehydrogenase complex were identified in acetate-grown cells. Activities of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase, formylmethanofuran:tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase, 5,10-methenyltetrahydromethanopterin cyclohydrolase, methylene tetrahydromethanopterin:coenzyme F420 oxidoreductase, formate dehydrogenase, and carbonic anhydrase were examined in acetate- and methanol-grown Methanosarcina thermophila. Levels of formyltransferase in either acetate- or methanol-grown Methanosarcina thermophila were approximately half the levels detected in H2-CO2-grown Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum. All other enzyme activities were significantly lower in acetate- and methanol-grown Methanosarcina thermophila.  相似文献   

7.
Archaeoglobus fulgidus, a sulfate-reducing Archaeon with a growth temperature optimum of 83°C, uses the 5-deazaflavin coenzyme F420 rather than pyridine nucleotides in catabolic redox processes. The organism does, however, require reduced pyridine nuclcotides for biosynthetic purposes. We describe here that the Archaeon contains a coenzyme F420-dependent NADP reductase which links anabolism to catabolism. The highly thermostable enzyme was purfied 3600-fold by affinity chromatography to apparent homogeneity in a 60% yield. The native enzyme with an apparent molecular mass of 55 kDa was composed of only one type of subunit of apparent molecular mass of 28 kDa. Spectroscopic analysis of the enzyme did not reveal the presence of any chromophoric prosthetic group. The purified enzyme catalyzed the reversible reduction of NADP (apparent K M 40 M) with reduced F420 (apparent K M 20M) with a specific activity of 660 U/mg (apparent V max) at pH 8.0 (pH optimum) and 80°C (temperature optimum). It was specific for both coenzyme F420 and NADP. Sterochemical investigations showed that the F420-dependent NADP reductase was Si face specific with respect to C5 of F420 and Si face specific with respect to C4 of NADP.Abbreviations F420 coenzyme F420 - F420H2 1,5-dihydrocoenzyme F420 - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH=H4MPT N5, N10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin - MFR methanofuran - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - methylene-H4MPT dehydrogenase N5, N10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase - 1 U = 1 mol/min  相似文献   

8.
Washed membranes prepared from H2+CO2- or formate-grown cells of Methanococcus voltae catalyzed the oxidation of coenzyme F420H2 and the reduction of the heterodisulfide (CoB–S–S–CoM) of 2-mercaptoethanesulfonate and 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate, which is the terminal electron acceptor of the methanogenic pathway. The reaction followed a 1:1 stoichiometry according to the equation: F420H2 + COB–S–S–CoM → F420 + CoM–SH + CoB–SH. These findings indicate that the reaction depends on a membrane-bound F420H2-oxidizing enzyme and on the heterodisulfide reductase, which remains partly membrane-bound after cell lysis. To elucidate the nature of the F420H2-oxidizing protein, washed membranes were solubilized with detergent, and the enzyme was purified by sucrose density centrifugation, anion-exchange chromatography, and gel filtration. Several lines of evidence indicate that F420H2 oxidation is catalyzed by a membrane-associated F420-reducing hydrogenase. The purified protein catalyzed the H2-dependent reduction of methyl viologen and F420. The apparent molecular mass and the subunit composition (43, 37, and 27 kDa) are almost identical to those of the F420-reducing hydrogenase that has already been purified from Mc. voltae. Moreover, the N-terminus of the 37-kDa subunit is identical to the amino acid sequence deduced from the fruG gene of the operon encoding the selenium-containing F420-reducing hydrogenase from Mc. voltae. A distinct F420H2 dehydrogenase, which is present in methylotrophic methanogens, was not found in this organism. Received: 18 September 1998 / Accepted: 2 November 1998  相似文献   

9.
Cell extracts (100,000×g) of acetate grown Methanosarcina barkeri (strain MS) catalyzed CH4 and CO2 formation from acetyl-CoA with specific activities of 50 nmol·min-1·mg protein-1. CH4 formation was found to be dependent on tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) (apparent K M=4 μM), coenzyme M (H-S-CoM), and 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (H-S-HTP=component B) rather than on methanofuran (MFR) and coenzyme F420 (F420). Methyl-H4MPT was identified as an intermediate. This compound accumulated when H-S-CoM and H-S-HTP were omitted from the assays. These and previous results indicate that methanogenesis from acetate proceeds via acetyl phosphate, acetyl-CoA, methyl-H4MPT, and CH3-S-CoM as intermediates. The disproportionation of formaldehyde to CO2 and CH4 was also studied. This reaction was shown to be dependent on H4MPT, MFR, F420, H-S-CoM, and H-S-HTP.  相似文献   

10.
Methylene-H4MPT reductase was found to be present in Archaeoglobus fulgidus in a specific activity of 1 U/mg. The reductase was purified 410-fold. The native enzyme showed an apparent molecular mass of approximately 200 kDa. Sodium dodecylsulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of only 1 polypeptide of apparent molecular mass 35 kDa. The ultraviolet/visible spectrum of the reductase was almost identical to that of albumin indicating the absence of a chromophoric prosthetic group. The reductase was dependent on reduced coenzyme F420 as electron donor. Neither NADH, NADPH, nor reduced viologen dyes could substitute for the reduced deazaflavin. From reciprocal plots, which showed an intersecting patter, a K m for methylene-H4MPT of 16 M, a K m for F420H2 of 4 M, and a V max of 450 U/mg (Kcat=265 s-1) were obtained. The enzyme was found to be rapidly inactivated when incubated at 80°C in 100 mM Tris/HCl pH 7. The rate of inactivation, however, decreased to essentially zero in the presence of either F420 (0.2 mM), methylene-H4MPT (0.2 mM), albumin (1 mg/ml), or KCl (0.5 M). The N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined and found to be similar to that of methylene-H4MPT reductase (F420-dependent) from the methanogens Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, Methanosarcina barkeri, and Methanopyrus kandleri. The purification and some properties of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase from A. fulgidus are also described.Abbreviations H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH2=H4MPT N 5,N 10-methylene-H4MPT - CH3–H4MPT N 5-methyl-H4MPT - CHH4MPT methenyl-H4MPT - F420 coenzyme F420 - MFR methanofuran - CHO-MFR formyl-MFR - 1 U 1 mol/min  相似文献   

11.
Cell-free extracts of Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum were found to contain high activities of the following oxidoreductases (at 60°C): pyruvate dehydrogenase (coenzyme A acetylating), 275 nmol/min per mg of protein; α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (coenzyme A acylating), 100 nmol/min per mg; fumarate reductase, 360 nmol/min per mg; malate dehydrogenase, 240 nmol/min per mg; and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, 100 nmol/min per mg. The kinetic properties (apparent Vmax and KM values), pH optimum, temperature dependence of the rate, and specificity for electron acceptors/donors of the different oxidoreductases were examined. Pyruvate dehydrogenase and α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase were shown to be two separate enzymes specific for factor 420 rather than for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), NADP, or ferredoxin as the electron acceptor. Both activities catalyzed the reduction of methyl viologen with the respective α-ketoacid and a coenzyme A-dependent exchange between the carboxyl group of the α-ketoacid and CO2. The data indicate that the two enzymes are similar to pyruvate synthase and α-ketoglutarate synthase, respectively. Fumarate reductase was found in the soluble cell fraction. This enzyme activity coupled with reduced benzyl viologen as the electron donor, but reduced factor 420, NADH, or NADPH was not effective. The cells did not contain menaquinone, thus excluding this compound as the physiological electron donor for fumarate reduction. NAD was the preferred coenzyme for malate dehydrogenase, whereas NADP was preferred for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The organism also possessed a factor 420-dependent hydrogenase and a factor 420-linked NADP reductase. The involvement of the described oxidoreductases in cell carbon synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Methanogenic archaea growing on ethanol or isopropanol as the electron donor for CO2 reduction to CH4 contain either an NADP-dependent or a coenzyme F420-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase. We report here that in both groups of methanogens, the N 5, N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase and the N 5, N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase, two enzymes involved in CO2 reduction to CH4, are specific for F420. This raised the question how F420H2 is regenerated in the methanogens with an NADP-dependent alcohol dehydrogenase. We found that these organisms contain catabolic activities of an enzyme catalyzing the reduction of F420 with NADPH. The F420-dependent NADP reductase from Methanogenium organophilum was purified and characterized. The N-terminal amino acid sequence showed 42% sequence identity to a putative gene product in Methanococcus jannaschii, the total genome of which has recently been sequenced. Received: 12 May 1997 / Accepted: 1 July 1997  相似文献   

13.
The activities of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase, methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase, methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase, and heterodisulfide reductase were tested in cell extracts of 10 different methanogenic bacteria grown on H2/CO2 or on other methanogenic substrates. The four activities were found in all the organisms investigated: Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum,M. wolfei, Methanobrevibacter arboriphilus, Methanosphaera stadtmanae, Methanosarcina barkeri (strains Fusaro and MS), Methanothrix soehngenii, Methanospirillum hungatei, Methanogenium organophilum, and Methanococcus voltae. Cell extracts of H2/CO2 grown M. barkeri and of methanol grown M. barkeri showed the same specific activities suggesting that the four enzymes are of equal importance in CO2 reduction to methane and in methanol disproportionation to CO2 and CH4. In contrast, cell extracts of acetate grown M. barkeri exhibited much lower activities of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase and methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase suggesting that these two enzymes are not involved in methanogenesis from acetate. In M. stadtmanae, which grows on H2 and methanol, only heterodisulfide reductase was detected in activities sufficient to account for the in vivo methane formation rate. This finding is consistent with the view that the three other oxidoreductases are not required for methanol reduction to methane with H2.  相似文献   

14.
The dehydrogenation of N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin (CH2=H4MPT) to N 5,N 10-methenyltetrahydromethanopterin (CH≡H4MPT+) is an intermediate step in the oxidation of methanol to CO2 in Methanosarcina barkeri. The reaction is catalyzed by CH2=H4MPT dehydrogenase, which was found to be specific for coenzyme F420 as electron acceptor; neither NAD, NADP nor viologen dyes could substitute for the 5-deazaflavin. The dehydrogenase was anaerobically purified almost 90-fold to apparent homogeneity in a 32% yield by anion exchange chromatography on DEAE Sepharose and Mono Q HR, and by affinity chromatography on Blue Sepharose. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed only one protein band with an apparent mass of 31 kDa. The apparent molecular mass of the native enzyme determined by polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis was 240 kDa. The ultraviolet/visible spectrum of the purified enzyme was almost identical to that of albumin suggesting the absence of a chromophoric prosthetic group. Reciprocal plots of the enzyme activity versus the substrate concentrations were linear: the apparent K m for CH2=H4MPT and for coenzyme F420 were found to be 6 μM and 25 μM, respectively. Vmax was 4,000 μmol min-1·mg-1 protein (kcat=2,066 s-1) at pH 6 (the pH optimum) and 37°C. The Arrhenius activation energy was 40 kJ/mol. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was found to be 50% identical with that of the F420-dependent CH2=H4MPT dehydrogenase isolated from H2/CO2 grown Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum.  相似文献   

15.
Acetate-grown cells of Methanosarcina barkeri MS were found to form methane from H2:CO2 at the same rate as hydrogen-grown cells. Cells grown on acetate had similar levels of soluble F420-reactive hydrogenase I, and higher levels of cytochrome-linked hydrogenase II compared to hydrogen-grown cells. The hydrogenase I and II activities in the crude extract of acetate-grown cells were separated by differential binding properties to an immobilized Cu2+ column. Hydrogenase II did not react with ferredoxin or F420, whereas hydrogenase I coupled to both ferredoxin and F420. A reconstituted soluble protein system composed of purified CO dehydrogenase, F420-reactive hydrogenase I fraction, and ferredoxin produced H2 from CO oxidation at a rate of 2.5 nmol/min · mg protein. Membrane-bound hydrogenase II coupled H2 consumption to the reduction of CoM-S-S-HTP and the synthesis of ATP. The differential function of hydrogenase I and II is ascribed to ferredoxin-linked hydrogen production from CO and cytochrome b-linked H2 consumption coupled to methanogenesis and ATP synthesis, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
It was recently reported that the extreme thermophile Methanopyrus kandleri contains only a H2-forming N 5, N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase which uses protons as electron acceptor. We describe here the presence in this Archaeon of a second N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase which is coenzyme F420-dependent. This enzyme was purified and characterized. The enzyme was colourless, had an apparent molecular mass of 300 kDa, an isoelectric point of 3.7±0.2 and was composed of only one type of subunit of apparent molecular mass of 36 kDa. The enzyme activity increased to an optimum with increasing salt concentrations. Optimal salt concentrations were e.g. 2 M (NH4)2SO4, 2 M Na2HPO4, 1.5 M K2HPO4, and 2 M NaCl. In the absence of salts the enzyme exhibited almost no activity. The salts affected mainly the V max rather than the K m of the enzyme. The catalytic mechanism of the dehydrogenase was determined to be of the ternary complex type, in agreement with the finding that the enzyme lacked a chromophoric prosthetic group. In the presence of M (NH4)2SO4 the V max was 4000 U/mg (k cat=2400 s-1) and the K m for N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin and for coenzyme F420 were 80 M and 20 M, respectively. The enzyme was relatively heat-stable and lost no activity when incubated anaerobically in 50 mM K2HPO4 at 90°C for one hour. The N-terminal amino acid sequence was found to be similar to that of the F420-dependent N 5, N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, Methanosarcina barkeri, and Archaeoglobus fulgidus.Abbreviations H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - F420 coenzyme F420 - CH2=H4MPT N 5,N 10-methylenetrahydromethanopterin - CHH4MPT+ N 5,N 10-methenyltetrahydromethanopterin - methylene-H4MPT dehydrogenase N 5,N 10-methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase - Mops N-morpholinopropane sulfonic acid - Tricine N-[Tris(hydroxymethyl)-methyl]glycine - 1 U = 1 mol/min  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
We measured F420-dependent N5,N10-methylenetetrahydro-methanopterin dehydrogenase, N5, N10-methenyltetrahydro-methanopterin cyclohydrolase, and F420-reducing hydrogenase levels in Methanosarcina barkeri grown on various substrates. Variation in dehydrogenase levels during growth on a specific substrate was usually <3-fold, and much less for cyclohydrolase. H2–CO2-, methanol-, and H2–CO2+ methanol-grown cells had roughly equivalent levels of dehydrogenase and cyclohydrolase. In acetate-grown cells cyclohydrolase level was lowered 2 to 3-fold and dehydrogenase 10 to 80-fold; this was not due to repression by acetate, since, if cultures growing on acetate were supplemented with methanol or H2–CO2, dehydrogenase levels increased 14 to 19-fold, and cyclohydrolase levels by 3 to 4-fold. Compared to H2–CO2- or methanol-grown cells, acetate-or H2–CO2 + methanol-grown cells had lower levels of and less growth phase-dependent variation in hydrogenase activity. Our data are consistent with the following hypotheses: 1. M. barkeri oxidizes methanol via a portion of the CO2-reduction pathway operated in the reverse direction. 2. When steps from CO2 to CH3-S-CoM in the CO2-reduction pathway (in either direction) are not used for methanogenesis, hydrogenase activity is lowered.Abbreviations MF methanofuran - H4MPT 5,6,7,8-tetrahydromethanopterin - HS-HTP 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate - CoM-S-S-HTP heterodisulfide of HS-CoM and HS-HTP - F420 coenzyme F420 (a 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deaza-riboflavin derivative) - H2F420 reduced coenzyme F420 - HC+=H4MPT N5,N10-methenyl-H4MPT - H2C=H4MPT N5,N10-methylene-H4MPT - H3C=H4MPT N5-methyl-H4MPT - BES 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

19.
High rates of methanogenesis from acetate and ATP were observed from cell-free extracts of the thermophilic acetotrophic methanogen Methanothrix (Methanosaeta) thermophila strain CALS-1 when cultures were grown in a pH auxostat fed with acetic acid. Specific methanogenic activities ranged from 50–300 nmol min–1 (mg protein)–1, which was comparable to those for whole cells. In contrast to results with Methanosarcina spp., the reaction did not require high levels of H2 in the headspace. CO was inhibitory to methanogenesis from acetate. The inhibition by CO and the lack of effect of H2 on methanogenesis from acetate resemble previous results with whole cells of CALS-1. Protein concentrations in extracts > 5 mg/ml were required for good activity, and the optimum temperature for the methanogenesis was near 65° C. ATP was required in substrate quantities and was converted mainly to AMP. The maximum CH4/ATP stoichiometry obtained was near 1.0, consistent with acetate activation using an acetyl-CoA synthetase mechanism that converts ATP to AMP and pyrophosphate. Methanogenesis in extracts was inhibited by bromoethane sulfonate and cyanide, indicating the involvement of methylcoenzyme M methylreductase and a carbon monoxide dehydrogenase complex with methanogenesis from acetate. These results are consistent with acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) as the form of activated acetate involved in methanogenesis from acetate in strain CALS-1, but no activity could be obtained from extracts using acetyl-CoA as a substrate. Received: 18 March 1996 / Accepted: 14 June 1996  相似文献   

20.
Clostridium acetobutylicum strain P262 utilized lactate at a rapid rate [600 nmol min–1 (mg protein)–1], but lactate could not serve as the sole energy source. When acetate was provided as a co-substrate, the growth rate was 0.05 h–1. Butyrate, carbon dioxide and hydrogen were the end products of lactate and acetate utilization, and the stoichiometry was 1 lactate + 0.4 acetate → 0.7 butyrate + 0.6 H2 + 1 CO2. Lactate-grown cells had twofold lower hydrogenase than glucose-grown cells, and the lactate-grown cells used acetate as an alternative electron acceptor. The cells had a poor affinity for lactate (Ks = 1.1 mM), and there was no evidence for active transport. Lactate utilization was catabolyzed by an inducible NAD-independent lactate dehydrogenase (iLDH) that had a pH optimum of 7.5. The iLDH was fivefold more active with d-lactate than l-lactate, and the K m for d-lactate was 3.2 mM. Lactate-grown cells had little butyraldehyde dehydrogenase activity, and this defect did not allow the conversion of lactate to butanol. Received: 17 October 1994 / Accepted: 30 January 1995  相似文献   

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