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1.
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   

2.
Two pathways of hydrogen uptake in Nostoc muscorum are apparent using either oxygen or nitrogen as electron acceptor. Hydrogen uptake (under argon with some oxygen as electron acceptor assayed in the dark; oxyhydrogen reaction) is found to be more active in dense, light-limited cultures than in thin cultures when light is not limiting. Addition of bicarbonate inhibits this hydrogen uptake, because photosynthesis is stimulated. In a cell-free hydrogenase assay, a 10-fold increase of the activity can be measured, after the cells having been kept under lightlimiting conditions. After incubation under light-saturating conditions, no hydrogen uptake is found, when filaments are assayed under argon plus some oxygen. Assaying these cells under a nitrogen atmosphere, a strong hydrogen uptake occurs. The corresponding cell-free hydrogenase assay exhibits low hydrogenase activity. Furthermore, the hydrogen uptake by intact filaments under nitrogen in the light apparently is correlated with nitrogenase activity. These studies give evidence that, under certain physiological conditions, hydrogen uptake of heterocysts proceeds directly via nitrogenase, with no hydrogenase involved.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU (diuron) 3-3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - pev packed cell volume  相似文献   

3.
Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) was shown to contain two distinct hydrogenases, a soluble hydrogenase and a membrane-bound hydrogenase. This is the first report of a membrane-bound hydrogenase in methanotrophs. Both enzymes were expressed apparently constitutively under normal growth conditions. The soluble hydrogenase was capable of reducing NAD(+) with molecular hydrogen. The activities of both soluble and particulate methane monooxygenases could be driven by molecular hydrogen. This confirmed that molecular hydrogen could be used as a source of reducing power for methane oxidation. Hydrogen-driven methane monooxygenase activities tolerated elevated temperatures and moderate oxygen concentrations. The significance of these findings for biotechnological applications of methanotrophs is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A new hydrogen bacterium has been isolated by enrichment culture on propane. It is a strictly aerobic, Gram-positive, non acid-fast bacterium, characterized by filamentous growth, and has been tentatively assigned to Nocardia opaca (strain 1 b).It grows heterotrophically, on many organic compounds (71 out of 138 tested substrates including organic acids and sugars), on hydrocarbons (C11–C18) as well as under autotrophic conditions (under an atmosphere of hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide=8:1:1) In the absence of a nitrogen source storage materials, mainly carbohydrates, are accumulated.Hydrogenase is an inducible enzyme. Under appropriate growth conditions the specific hydrogenase activity reaches high values: 2700 enzyme units/g cell protein. The formation of hydrogenase is repressed by fructose. With increasing oxygen concentrations during growth the specific hydrogenase activity decreases. In resting cell oxygen progressively inhibits the oxyhydrogen reaction.Cell-free extracts of autotrophically grown cells are able to reduce oxygen benzyl-and methyl viologen, dichlorphenolindophenol, methylene blue and nicotinamide adeninedinucleotide with hydrogen.  相似文献   

5.
Flavin-based electron bifurcation has recently been characterized as an essential energy conservation mechanism that is utilized by hydrogenotrophic methanogenic Archaea to generate low-potential electrons in an ATP-independent manner. Electron bifurcation likely takes place at the flavin associated with the α subunit of heterodisulfide reductase (HdrA). In Methanococcus maripaludis the electrons for this reaction come from either formate or H2 via formate dehydrogenase (Fdh) or Hdr-associated hydrogenase (Vhu). However, how these enzymes bind to HdrA to deliver electrons is unknown. Here, we present evidence that the δ subunit of hydrogenase (VhuD) is central to the interaction of both enzymes with HdrA. When M. maripaludis is grown under conditions where both Fdh and Vhu are expressed, these enzymes compete for binding to VhuD, which in turn binds to HdrA. Under these conditions, both enzymes are fully functional and are bound to VhuD in substoichiometric quantities. We also show that Fdh copurifies specifically with VhuD in the absence of other hydrogenase subunits. Surprisingly, in the absence of Vhu, growth on hydrogen still occurs; we show that this involves F420-reducing hydrogenase. The data presented here represent an initial characterization of specific protein interactions centered on Hdr in a hydrogenotrophic methanogen that utilizes multiple electron donors for growth.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The existence of a hydrogen uptake host-regulated (Hup-hr) phenotype was established among the soybean bradyrhizobia. The Hup-hr phenotype is characterized by the expression of uptake hydrogenase activity in symbiosis with cowpea but not soybean. Uptake hydrogenase induction is not possible under free-living cultural conditions by using techniques developed for uptake hydrogenase-positive (Hup+) Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Hydrogen oxidation by Hup-hr phenotype USDA 61 in cowpea symbioses was significant because hydrogen evolution from nitrogen-fixing nodules was not detected. An examination for uptake hydrogenase activity in soybean and cowpea with 123 strains diverse in origin and serology identified 16 Hup+ and 28 Hup-hr phenotype strains; the remainder appeared to be Hup. The Hup-hr phenotype was associated with serogroups 31, 76, and 94, while strains belonging to serogroups 6, 31, 110, 122, 123, and 38/115 were Hup+. Hup+ strains of the 123 serogroup typed positive with USDA 129-specific antiserum. The presence of the uptake hydrogenase protein in cowpea bacteroids of Hup+ strains was demonstrated with immunoblot analyses by using antibodies against the 65-kDa subunit of uptake hydrogenase purified from strain SR470. However, the hydrogenase protein of Hup-hr strains was not detected. Results of Southern hybridization analyses with pHU1 showed the region of DNA with hydrogenase genes among Hup+ strains to be similar. Hybridization was also obtained with Hup-hr strains by using a variety of cloned DNA as probes including hydrogenase structural genes. Both hydrogenase structural genes also hybridized with the DNA of four Hup strains.  相似文献   

8.
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   

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

10.
Abstract The enzyme activities responsible for the evolution and consumption of hydrogen in three unicellular cyanobacteria were investigated. Gloeothece sp. 6909 and Cyanothece sp. 7822 performed an oxygen-tolerant nitrogen fixation, whereas the nitrogenase activity of Synechococcus sp. 7425 was much more sensitive to oxygen. While in Gloeothece the net hydrogen production during nitrogen fixation was relatively low due to recycling by an uptake hydrogenase, little hydrogen consumption was detected in Cyanothece and Synechococcu . On the other hand a reversible hydrogenase was demonstrated in the latter strains. However, only Cyanothece shows hydrogenase-catalysed hydrogen production in vivo under anaerobic conditions in the dark. It is suggested that hydrogen is a fermentation product, and that the physiological function of this reversible hydrogenase is the removal of excess reduction equivalents under such conditions.  相似文献   

11.
In order to evaluate energy efficiency of nitrogen fixation by the Lotus corniculatus/Rhizobium loti symbiosis, Uruguayan R. loti strains were tested for hydrogen-uptake (Hup) status. Nodules induced in L. corniculatus by all eight R. loti strains tested evolved high amounts of hydrogen (2.0–8.7 mol H2/h.g nodule fresh weight). This production of hydrogen corresponds to 38–69% of total nitrogenase activity estimated as acetylene reduction, suggesting that hydrogen is not recycled within these nodules. This was confirmed by the lack of hydrogenase activity in bacteroid suspensions. Additionally, no hybridization signals were observed in total DNA restriction digests from these strains when a DNA fragment containing part of hydrogenase structural genes from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae was used as probe. Cosmid pHU52, containing the complete gene cluster required for hydrogen oxidation in Bradyrhizobium japonicum, was introduced into two R. loti strains. Transconjugants from only one of the strains were able to express hydrogenase activity in vegetative cells incubated under the derepression conditions described for B. japonicum. Bacteroids induced by both transconjugant strains in L. corniculatus and Lotus tenuis expressed hydrogenase activity in nodules. The level of hydrogenase activity induced in L. tenuis nodules was two-fold higher than those induced in L. corniculatus. This implies the existence of a strong host effect on hydrogenase expression in this symbiotic system.  相似文献   

12.
Effect of temperature on nitrogenase functioning in cowpea nodules   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity of a cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp cv Caloona) symbiosis formed with a Rhizobium strain (176A27) lacking uptake hydrogenase and maintained under conditions of a 12-hour day at an air temperature of 30°C (800-1000 microeinsteins per square meter per second) and a 12-hour night at an air temperature of 20°C showed a marked diurnal variation in ratio of nitrogen fixed to hydrogen evolved. As little as 0.3 micromole nitrogen was fixed per micromole hydrogen evolved in the photoperiod versus up to 0.6 in the dark period. In plants maintained under the same diurnal illumination regime but at constant (day and night) air temperature (30°C), this difference was abolished and a relatively constant ratio of nitrogen fixed to hydrogen evolved (around 0.3 micromole per micromole) was observed day and night. Exposure of nodulated roots to a range of temperatures maintained for 2 hours in a single photoperiod indicated that, whereas hydrogen evolution increased with increasing temperature from 15°C to a maximum around 35°C, nitrogen fixation was largely unaffected over this temperature range. Both functions of the enzyme declined sharply at temperatures above 38°C. A similar general response of nitrogen fixation to root temperature was observed in glasshouse-grown, sand-cultured plants maintained under a range of temperatures (from 15 to 35°C) for a 14-day period in mid vegetative growth. The effect of temperature on the proportion of electrons allocated to proton reduction compared with nitrogen reduction showed a linearly increasing relationship (correlation coefficient = 0.96) between 15°C and 47°C.  相似文献   

13.
1. Unicellular algae possessing a hydrogenase system (Scenedesmus and other species), and having been adapted by anaerobic incubation to the hydrogen metabolism, reduce oxygen to water according to the equation O2 + 2H2 → 2H2O. 2. The oxyhydrogen reaction proceeds undisturbed only in the presence of carbon dioxide, which simultaneously is reduced according to the equation CO2 + 2H2 → H2O + (CH2O) = (carbohydrate). 3. The maximum yield of the induced reduction is one-half molecule of carbon dioxide reduced for each molecule of oxygen absorbed. 4. Partial reactions are recognizable in the course of the formation of water and it is with the absorption of the second equivalent of hydrogen that the carbon dioxide reduction appears to be coupled. 5. The velocity of the reaction increases in proportion to the partial pressure of oxygen, but only up to a certain point where any excess of oxygen causes the inactivation of the hydrogenase system. The reaction then ends prematurely. 6. During the oxyhydrogen reaction little or no oxygen is consumed for normal respiratory processes. 7. Small concentrations of cyanide, affecting neither photosynthesis nor photoreduction in the same cells, first inhibit the induced reduction of carbon dioxide and then lead to a complete inactivation of the hydrogenase system. 8. Hydroxylamine, added after adaptation, has either no inhibitory effect at all, or prevents solely the induced reduction of carbon dioxide without inactivating the hydrogenase system. 9. Dinitrophenol prevents the dark reduction of carbon dioxide while the reduction of oxygen continues to the formation of water. 10. Glucose diminishes the absorption of hydrogen, probably in its capacity as a competing hydrogen donor. 11. The induced reduction of carbon dioxide can be described as an oxido-reduction similar to that produced photochemically in the same cells.  相似文献   

14.
Ten seaweed species were surveyed for simultaneous photoevolution of hydrogen and oxygen. In an attempt to induce hydrogenase activity (as measured by hydrogen photoproduction) the seaweeds were maintained under anaerobiosis in CO2-free seawater for varying lengths of time. Although oxygen evolution was observed in every alga studied, hydrogen evolution was not observed. One conclusion of this research is that, in contrast to the microscopic algae, there is not a single example of a macroscopic alga for which the photoevolution of hydrogen has been observed, in spite of the fact that there are now at least nine macroscopic algal species known for which hydrogenase activity has been reported (either by dark hydrogen evolution or light-activated hydrogen uptake). These results are in conflict with the conventional view that algal hydrogenase can catalyze a multiplicity of reactions, one of which is the photoproduction of molecular hydrogen. Two possible explanations for the lack of hydrogen photoproduction in macroscopic algae are presented. It is postulated that electron acceptors other than carbon dioxide can take up reducing equivalents from Photosystem I to the measurable exclusion of hydrogen photoproduction. Alternatively, the hydrogenase system in macroscopic algae may be primarily a hydrogen-uptake system with respect to light-activated reactions. A simple kinetic argument based on recent measurements of the photosynthetic turnover times of simultaneous light-activated hydrogen and oxygen production is presented that supports the second explanation.  相似文献   

15.
The Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase enzyme was used as a reporter molecule for genetic fusions in Rhodobacter capsulatus. DNA fragments that were from the upstream region of the hydrogenase structural operon hupSLM and contained 5' hupS sequences were fused in frame to a promoterless lacZ gene, yielding fusion proteins comprising the putative signal sequence and the first 22 amino acids of the HupS protein joined to the eight amino acid of beta-galactosidase. We demonstrate the usefulness of the hupS::lacZ fusion in monitoring regulation of hydrogenase gene expression. The activities of plasmid-determined beta-galactosidase and chromosome-encoded hydrogenase changed in parallel in response to various growth conditions (light or dark, aerobiosis or anaerobiosis, and presence or absence of ammonia or of H2), showing that changes in hydrogenase activity were due to changes in enzyme synthesis. Molecular hydrogen stimulated hydrogenase synthesis in dark, aerobic cultures and in illuminated, anaerobic cultures. Analysis of hupS::lacZ expression in various mutants indicated that neither the hydrogenase structural genes nor NifR4 (sigma 54) was essential for hydrogen regulation of hydrogenase synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Scenedesmus obliquus and Chlorella vulgaris cells had active hydrogenase after dark anaerobic adaptation. Illumination of these algae with visible light led to an initial production of small quantities of hydrogen gas which soon ceased owing to production of oxygen by photolysis of water. The presence of oxygen-absorbing systems in a separate chamber, not in contact with the algae, gave only a slight stimulation of hydrogen production. Addition of sodium dithionite directly to the algae led to an extensive light-dependent production of hydrogen. This stimulation was due to oxygen removal by dithionite and not to its serving as an electron donor. 3-(3,4-Dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, an inhibitor of photosystem II, abolished all hydrogen photoproduction. Hydrogen evolution was not accompanied by CO2 production and little difference was noted between autotrophically and heterotrophically grown cells. Hydrogen was not produced in a photosystem II mutant of Scenedesmus even in the presence of dithionite, establishing that water was the source of hydrogen via photosystems II and I. Hydrogen production was stimulated by the presence of glucose and glucose oxidase as an oxygen-absorbing system. Oxygen inhibited hydrogen photoproduction, even if oxygen was undetectable in the gas phase, if the algal solution did not contain an oxygen absorber. It was demonstrated that under these conditions hydrogenase was still active and the inability to produce hydrogen was probably due to oxidation of the coupling electron carrier.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
20.
Mycobacteria are a group of obligate aerobes that require oxygen for growth, but paradoxically have the ability to survive and metabolize under hypoxia. The mechanisms responsible for this metabolic plasticity are unknown. Here, we report on the adaptation of Mycobacterium smegmatis to slow growth rate and hypoxia using carbon-limited continuous culture. When M. smegmatis is switched from a 4.6 h to a 69 h doubling time at a constant oxygen saturation of 50%, the cells respond through the down regulation of respiratory chain components and the F1Fo-ATP synthase, consistent with the cells lower demand for energy at a reduced growth rate. This was paralleled by an up regulation of molecular machinery that allowed more efficient energy generation (i.e. Complex I) and the use of alternative electron donors (e.g. hydrogenases and primary dehydrogenases) to maintain the flow of reducing equivalents to the electron transport chain during conditions of severe energy limitation. A hydrogenase mutant showed a 40% reduction in growth yield highlighting the importance of this enzyme in adaptation to low energy supply. Slow growing cells at 50% oxygen saturation subjected to hypoxia (0.6% oxygen saturation) responded by switching on oxygen scavenging cytochrome bd, proton-translocating cytochrome bc1-aa3 supercomplex, another putative hydrogenase, and by substituting NAD+-dependent enzymes with ferredoxin-dependent enzymes thus highlighting a new pattern of mycobacterial adaptation to hypoxia. The expression of ferredoxins and a hydrogenase provides a potential conduit for disposing of and transferring electrons in the absence of exogenous electron acceptors. The use of ferredoxin-dependent enzymes would allow the cell to maintain a high carbon flux through its central carbon metabolism independent of the NAD+/NADH ratio. These data demonstrate the remarkable metabolic plasticity of the mycobacterial cell and provide a new framework for understanding their ability to survive under low energy conditions and hypoxia.  相似文献   

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