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1.
Strains of all 18 species of the family Rhodospirillaceae (nonsulfur photosynthetic bacteria) were studied for their comparative nitrogen-fixing abilities. All species, with the exception of Rhodocyclus purpureus, were capable of growth with N2 as the sole nitrogen source under photosynthetic (anaerobic) conditions. Most rapid growth on N2 was observed in strains of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata. Within the genus Rhodopseudomonas, the species R. capsulata, R. sphaeroides, R. viridis, R. gelatinosa, and R. blastica consistently showed the highest in vivo nitrogenase rates (with the acetylene reduction technique); nitrogenase rates in other species of Rhodopseudomonas and in most species of Rhodospirillum were notably lower. Chemotrophic (dark microaerobic) nitrogen fixation occurred in all species with the exception of one strain of Rhodospirillum fulvum; oxygen requirements for dark N2 fixation varied considerably among species and even within strains of the same species. We conclude that the capacity to fix molecular nitrogen is virtually universal among members of the Rhodospirillaceae but that the efficacy of the process varies considerably among species.  相似文献   

2.
Photoproduction of H2 and activation of H2 for CO2 reduction (photoreduction) by Rhodopseudomonas capsulata are catalyzed by different enzyme systems. Formation of H2 from organic compounds is mediated by nitrogenase and is nto inhibited by an atmosphere of 99% H2. Cells grown photoheterotrophically on C4 dicarboxylic acids (with glutamate as N source) evolve H2 from the C4 acids and also from lactate and pyruvate; cells grown on C3 carbon sources, however, are inactive with the C4 acids, presumably because they lack inducible transport systems. Ammonia is known to inhibit N2 fixation by photosynthetic bacteria, and it also effectively prevents photoproduction of H2; these effects are due to inhibition and, in part, inactivation of nitrogenase. Biosynthesis of the latter, as measured by both H2 production and acetylene reduction assays, is markedly increased when cells are grown at high light intensity; synthesis of the photoreduction system, on the other hand, is not appreciably influenced by light intensity during photoheterotrophic growth. The photoreduction activity of cells grown on lactate + glutamate (which contain active nitrogenase) is greatly activated by NH4+, but this effect is not observed in cells grown with NH4+ as N source (nitrogenase repressed) or in a Nif- mutant that is unable to produce H2. Lactate, malate, and succinate, which are readily used as growth substrates by R. capsulata and are excellent H donors for photoproduction of H2, abolish photoreduction activity. The physiological significances of this phenomenon and of the reciprocal regulatory effects of NH4+ on H2 production and photoreduction are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Mechanism of nitrogenase switch-off by oxygen.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Oxygen caused a reversible inhibition (switch-off) of nitrogenase activity in whole cells of four strains of diazotrophs, the facultative anaerobe Klebsiella pneumoniae and three strains of photosynthetic bacteria (Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans and Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strains AD2 and BK5). In K. pneumoniae 50% inhibition of acetylene reduction was attained at an O2 concentration of 0.37 microM. Cyanide (90 microM), which did not affect acetylene reduction but inhibited whole-cell respiration by 60 to 70%, shifted the O2 concentration that caused 50% inhibition of nitrogenase activity to 2.9 microM. A mutant strain of K. pneumoniae, strain AH11, has a respiration rate that is 65 to 75% higher than that of the wild type, but its nitrogenase activity is similar to wild-type activity. Acetylene reduction by whole cells of this mutant was inhibited 50% by 0.20 microM O2. Inhibition by CN- of 40 to 50% of the O2 uptake in the mutant shifted the O2 concentration that caused 50% inhibition of nitrogenase to 1.58 microM. Thus, when the respiration rates were lower, higher oxygen concentrations were required to inhibit nitrogenase. Reversible inhibition of nitrogenase activity in vivo was caused under anaerobic conditions by other electron acceptors. Addition of 2 mM sulfite to cell suspensions of R. capsulata B10 and R. sphaeroides inhibited nitrogenase activity. Nitrite also inhibited acetylene reduction in whole cells of the photodenitrifier R. sphaeroides but not in R. capsulata B10, which is not capable of enzymatic reduction of NO2-. Lower concentrations of NO2- were required to inhibit the activity in NO3- -grown cells, which have higher activities of nitrite reductase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris cells grown on limiting nitrogen produced four- to eightfold higher nitrogenase specific activity relative to cells sparged with N2. The high activity of N-limited cells was the result of overproduction of the nitrogenase proteins. This was shown by four independent techniques: (i) titration of the Mo-Fe protein in cell-free extracts with Fe protein from Azotobacter vinelandii; (ii) direct detection of the subunits of Mo-Fe protein by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; (iii) monitoring of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum of Mo-Fe protein in whole cells; and (iv) immunological assay of the Fe protein level with an antiserum against the homologous protein of Rhodospirillum rubrum. The derepressed level of nitrogenase found in N2-grown cells was not due to an increased turnover of nitrogenase. The apparent half-lives of nitrogenase in N2-grown and N-limited cells were 58 and 98 h, respectively, but were too long to account for the difference in enzyme level. Half-lives were determined by measuring nitrogenase after repression of de novo synthesis by ammonia and subsequent release of nitrogenase switch-off by methionine sulfoximine. Observations were extended to R. rubrum, Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, and Rhodomicrobium vannielii and indicated that overproduction of nitrogenase under nitrogen limitation is not an exceptional property of R. palustris, but rather a general property of phototrophic bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
The marine purple nonsulfur bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas sulfidophila, strain W4, was capable of photosynthetic growth on dinitrogen and malate. Higher growth rates were observed when either glutamate or ammonia replaced dinitrogen as nitrogen source and when bicarbonate was omitted from the culture medium. Although ammonia was released from cells growing on malate and N2, no nitrogenase activity could be detected unless -ketoglutarate was added to the culture medium. No nitrogenase activity was found in cultures grown in the presence of NH 4 + . In cultures grown on glutamate as nitrogen source, nitrogenase and hydrogenase activities were found to be 5.4 nmol C2H2 reduced · min-1 · mg-1 dry weight and 50 nmol methylene blue reduced · min-1 · mg-1 dry weight respectively. Such activities are significantly lower than those observed for other members of the Rhodospirillaceae e.g. Rhodopseudomonas capsulata. However, the hydrogenase activity would be sufficient to recycle all H2 produced by nitrogenase. It was indeed observed that growing cells did not evolve molecular hydrogen during photoheterotrophic growth and that H2 stimulated nitrogenase activity in resting cells of R. sulfidophila. The nitrogenase from this bacterium proved to be extremely sensitive to low concentrations of oxygen, half-inhibition occurring at between 1–1.5% O2 in the gas phase, depending on the bacterial concentration. Light was essential for nitrogenase activity. No activity was found during growth in the dark under extremely low oxygen concentrations (1–2% O2), which are still sufficient to support good growth. Resting cell suspensions prepared from such cultures were unable to reduce acetylene upon illumination. Optimum nitrogenase activities were broadly defined over the temperature range, 30–38°C, and between pH 6.9 and 8.0. The results are discussed in comparison with the non-marine purple nonsulfur bacterium, R. capsulata, which somewhat resembles R. sulfidophila.  相似文献   

6.
Effect of oxygen on acetylene reduction by photosynthetic bacteria   总被引:9,自引:7,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The effect of dissolved oxygen concentration on nitrogenase activity was studied in three species of photosynthetic bacteria. The O2 concentration in the cell suspension was measured with an O2 electrode inserted into the reaction vessel. Acetylene reduction by whole cells of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, Rhodospirillum rubrum, and Chromatium vinosum strain D was inhibited 50% by 0.73, 0.32, and 0.26 microM O2, respectively. The inhibition of the activity by O2 in R. capsulata usually was reversed completely by reestablishing anaerobic conditions. In R. rubrum and C. vinosum the inhibition was only partially reversible. The respiration rate of R. capsulata was the highest of the three, that of R. rubrum was intermediate, and that of C. vinosum was lowest. R. capsulata and R. rubrum cells were broken after their acetylene reduction activity in vivo had been completely inhibited by O2, and nitrogenase was found to be active in vitro. A concentration of cyanide that did not affect acetylene reduction activity, but which inhibited 75 to 90% of the O2 uptake by whole cells of R. capsulata, shifted the O2 concentration causing 50% inhibition of nitrogenase activity from 0.73 microM to 2.03 microM. These results are in accordance with the assumption that within a limited range of O2 concentrations, the respiratory activity of the cells is enough to scavenge the O2 and to keep the interior of the cells essentially anaerobic. It is suggested that O2 inhibits nitrogenase activity by competing for a limited supply of electrons. When cyanide is present, respiration is slower but is adequate to keep the nitrogenase environment in the cell anaerobic. The lower respiration rate may allow a greater proportion of the electrons to be used for acetylene reduction.  相似文献   

7.
In contrast to wild-type cells, glutamine auxotrophs of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas capsulata synthesize nitrogenase, produce H2 (catalyzed by nitrogenase), and continue to reduce dinitrogen to ammonia in the presence of exogenous NH4+. The glutamine synthetase activity of such mutants is less than 2% of that observed in the wild type. It appears that glutamine synthetase plays a significant role in regulation of nitrogenase synthesis in R. capsulata.  相似文献   

8.
The phototrophic purple bacterium Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, strain 2R, can assimilate ammonium by means of glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase. A higher activity of glutamine synthetase is displayed by cells grown in the medium with glutamate or in the atmosphere of molecular nitrogen. The activity of glutamate synthase also rises when cells grow in the atmosphere of N2. However, in contrast to glutamine synthetase, the activity of glutamate synthase does not decrease in the presence of considerable NH4+ amounts. The glutamine synthetase of R. sphaeroides is modified by adenylylation/deadenylylation. In the presence of nitrogenase in R. sphaeroides, the glutamine synthetase is found mainly in the deadenylylation state. Methionine sulfone, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, partly restores the activity of nitrogenase in the presence of ammonium, and prevents adenylylation of glutamine synthetase.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrogenase activity was found in cells of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain B10 cultured under a variety of growth conditions either anaerobically in the light or aerobically in the dark. The highest activities were found routinely in cells grown in the presence of H2. The hydrogenase of R. capsulata was localized in the particulate fraction of the cells. High hydrogenase activities were usually observed in cells possessing an active nitrogenase. The hydrogen produced by the nitrogenase stimulated the activity of hydrogenase in growing cells. However, the synthesis of hydrogenase was not closely linked to the synthesis of nitrogenase. Hydrogenase was present in dark-grown cultures, whereas nitrogenase synthesis was not significant in the absence of light. Unlike nitrogenase, hydrogenase was present in cultures grown on NH4+. Conditions were established which allowed the synthesis of either nitrogenase or hydrogenase by resting cells. We concluded that hydrogenase can be synthesized independently of nitrogenase.  相似文献   

10.
The thermophilic green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium tepidum grew with N2, NH4+, or glutamine as the sole nitrogen source under phototrophic (anaerobic-light) conditions. Growth on N2 required increased buffering capacity to stabilize uncharacterized pH changes that occurred during diazotrophic growth. Increased sulfide levels were stimulatory for growth on N2. Levels of nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) in N2-grown C. tepidum cells were very high, among the highest ever reported for anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria. Maximal acetylene reduction rates in C. tepidum cells were observed at 48 to 50 degrees C, which is about 15 degrees C higher than the optimum temperature for nitrogenase activity in mesophilic chlorobia, and nitrogenase activity in C. tepidum responded to addition of ammonia by a "switch-off/switch-on" mechanism like that in phototrophic purple bacteria. C. tepidum cells assimilated ammonia mainly via the glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthase pathway, elevated levels of both of these enzymes being present in cells grown on N2. These results show that N2 fixation can occur in green sulfur bacteria up to at least 60 degrees C and that regulatory mechanisms important in control of nitrogenase activity in mesophilic anoxygenic phototrophs also appear to regulate thermally active forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
thiK and thiL loci of Escherichia coli.   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Nitrogenase proteins were isolated from cultures of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas capsulata grown on a limiting amount of ammonia. Under these conditions, the nitrogenase N2ase A was active in vivo, and nitrogenase activity in vitro was not dependent upon manganese and the activating factor. The nitrogenase proteins were also isolated from nitrogen-limited cultures in which the in vivo nitrogenase activity had been stopped by an ammonia shock. This nitrogenase activity, N2ase R, showed an in vitro requirement for manganese and the activating factor for maximal activity. The Mo-Fe protein (dinitrogenase) was composed of two dissimilar subunits with molecular weights of 55,000 and 59,500; the Fe protein (dinitrogenase reductase), from either type of culture, was composed of a single subunit (molecular weight), 33,500). The metal and acid labile sulfur contents of both nitrogenase proteins were similar to those found for previously isolated nitrogenases. The Fe proteins from both N2ase A and N2ase R contained phosphate and ribose, 2 mol of each per mol of N2ase R Fe protein and about 1 mol of each per mol of N2ase A Fe protein. The greatest difference between the two types of Fe protein was that the N2ase R Fe protein contained about 1 mol per mol of an adenine-like molecule, whereas the N2ase A Fe protein content of this compound was insignificant. These results are compared with various models previously presented for the short-term regulation of nitrogenase activity in the photosynthetic bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
Acetylene reduction by nitrogenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum, unlike that by other nitrogenases, was recently found by other investigators to require an activation of the iron protein of nitrogenase by an activating system comprising a chromatophore membrane component, adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP), and divalent metal ions. In an extension of this work, we observed that the same activating system was also required for nitrogenase-linked H(2) evolution. However, we found that, depending on their nitrogen nutrition regime, R. rubrum cells produced two forms of nitrogenase that differed in their Fe protein components. Cells whose nitrogen supply was totally exhausted before harvest yielded predominantly a form of nitrogenase (A) whose enzymatic activity was not governed by the activating system, whereas cells supplied up to harvest time with N(2) or glutamate yielded predominantly a form of nitrogenase (R) whose enzymatic activity was regulated by the activating system. An unexpected finding was the rapid (less than 10 min in some cases) intracellular conversion of nitrogenase A to nitrogenase R brought about by the addition to nitrogen-starved cells of glutamine, asparagine, or, particularly, ammonia. This finding suggests that mechanisms other than de novo protein synthesis were involved in the conversion of nitrogenase A to the R form. The molecular weights of the Fe protein and Mo-Fe protein components from nitrogenases A and R were the same. However, nitrogenase A appeared to be larger in size, because it had more Fe protein units per Mo-Fe protein than did nitrogenase R. A distinguishing property of the Fe protein from nitrogenase R was its ATP requirement. When combined with the Mo-Fe protein (from either nitrogenase A or nitrogenase R), the R form of Fe protein required a lower ATP concentration but bound or utilized more ATP molecules during acetylene reduction than did the A form of Fe protein. No differences between the Fe proteins from the two forms of nitrogenase were found in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum, midpoint oxidation-reduction potential, or sensitivity to iron chelators.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrogen-starved purple non-sulphur bacteria have an active unregulated form of nitrogenase (nitrogenase A); however, the nitrogenase of a glutamine synthetase-negative mutant of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, when nitrogen-starved, was predominantly inactive and required activation by Mn2+ and activating-factor protein. This regulatory form of nitrogenase has been called nitrogenase R. Treatment of wild-type cells (containing nitrogenase A) with methionine sulphoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, converted the enzyme into nitrogenase R. Glutamine synthetase thus appears to control the intracellular concentrations of nitrogenase A and R and in this way regulates nitrogenase activity in the photosynthetic bacterium.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract The regulatory properties of Rhodospirillum rubrum nitrogenase reduced by either the endogenous electron donor (ferredoxin) or an artificial donor (dithionite) were examined. The nitrogenase obtained from glutamate-grown cells required activating enzyme for maximum activity with either reductant. The activating enzyme requirement of ferredoxin-dependent nitrogenase activity implies a physiological significance of the activating enzyme in R. rubrum. Rhodopseudomonas capsulata nitrogenase also required activating enzyme when dithionite was the reductant, but there appeared to be no activating enzyme requirement with ferredoxin as the reductant. Because the catalytic activity of the enzyme was very low under these conditions, the physiological significance of activating enzyme in this organism remains in question.  相似文献   

15.
The phototrophic alpha‐proteobacterium, Rhodopseudomonas palustris, is a model for studies of regulatory and physiological parameters that control the activity of nitrogenase. This enzyme produces the energy‐rich compound H2, in addition to converting N2 gas to NH3. Nitrogenase is an ATP‐requiring enzyme that uses large amounts of reducing power, but the electron transfer pathway to nitrogenase in R. palustris was incompletely known. Here, we show that the ferredoxin, Fer1, is the primary but not sole electron carrier protein encoded by R. palustris that serves as an electron donor to nitrogenase. A flavodoxin, FldA, is also an important electron donor, especially under iron limitation. We present a model where the electron bifurcating complex, FixABCX, can reduce both ferredoxin and flavodoxin to transfer electrons to nitrogenase, and we present bioinformatic evidence that FixABCX and Fer1 form a conserved electron transfer pathway to nitrogenase in nitrogen‐fixing proteobacteria. These results may be useful in the design of strategies to reroute electrons generated during metabolism of organic compounds to nitrogenase to achieve maximal activity.  相似文献   

16.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the conversion of dinitrogen gas (N(2)) and protons to ammonia and hydrogen gas (H(2)). This is a catalytically difficult reaction that requires large amounts of ATP and reducing power. Thus, nitrogenase is not normally expressed or active in bacteria grown with a readily utilized nitrogen source like ammonium. nifA* mutants of the purple nonsulfur phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris have been described that express nitrogenase genes constitutively and produce H(2) when grown with ammonium as a nitrogen source. This raised the regulatory paradox of why these mutants are apparently resistant to a known posttranslational modification system that should switch off the activity of nitrogenase. Microarray, mutation analysis, and gene expression studies showed that posttranslational regulation of nitrogenase activity in R. palustris depends on two proteins: DraT2, an ADP-ribosyltransferase, and GlnK2, an NtrC-regulated P(II) protein. GlnK2 was not well expressed in ammonium-grown NifA* cells and thus not available to activate the DraT2 nitrogenase modification enzyme. In addition, the NifA* strain had elevated nitrogenase activity due to overexpression of the nif genes, and this increased amount of expression overwhelmed a basal level of activity of DraT2 in ammonium-grown cells. Thus, insufficient levels of both GlnK2 and DraT2 allow H(2) production by an nifA* mutant grown with ammonium. Inactivation of the nitrogenase posttranslational modification system by mutation of draT2 resulted in increased H(2) production by ammonium-grown NifA* cells.  相似文献   

17.
  1. The disappearance of nitrate from suspensions of intact, washed cells of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain N22DNAR+ was measured with an ion selective electrode. In samples taken from phototrophic cultures grown to late exponential phase, nitrate disappearance was partially inhibited by light but was not affected by the presence of ammonium. Nitrate disappearance from samples from low density cultures in the early exponential phase of growth was first inhibited and later stimulated by light. In these cells ammonium ions inhibited the light-dependent but not the dark disappearance of nitrate. It is concluded that cells in the early exponential phase of growth possess both an ammonium-sensitive, assimilatory pathway for nitrate reduction (NRI) and an ammonium-insensitive pathway for nitrate reduction (NRII) which is linked to respiratory electron flow and energy conservation. In cells harvested in late exponential phase only the respiratory pathway for pitrate reduction is detectable.
  2. Nitrate reduction, as judged by the oxidation of reduced methyl viologen by anaerobic cell suspensions, was measured at high rates in those strains of R. capsulata (AD2, BK5, N22DNAR+) which are believed to possess NRII activity but not in those strains (Kbl, R3, N22) which only manifest the ammonium-sensitive NRI pathway. On this basis we have used nitrate-dependent oxidation of reduced methyl viologen as a diagnostic test for the nitrate reductase of NRII in cells harvested from cultures of R. capsulata strain AD2. The activity was readily detectable in cells from cultures grown aerobically in the dark with ammonium nitrate as source of nitrogen. When the oxygen supply to the culture was withdrawn, the level of methyl viologen-dependent nitrate reductase increased considerably and nitrite accumulated in the culture medium. Upon reconnecting the oxygen supply, methyl viologen-dependent nitrate reductase activity decreased and the reduction of nitrate to nitrite in the culture was inhibited. It is concluded that the respiratory nitrate reductase activity is regulated by the availability of electron transport pathways that are linked to the generation of a proton electrochemical gradient.
  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.
Purple photosynthetic bacteria produce H2 from organic compounds by an anaerobic light-dependent electron transfer process in which nitrogenase functions as the terminal catalyst. It has been established that the H2-evolving function of nitrogenase is inhibited by N2 and ammonium salts, and is maximally expressed in cells growing photoheterotrophically with certain amino acids as sources of nitrogen. In the present studies with Rhodopseudomonas capsulata, nutritional factors affecting the rate and magnitude of H2 photoproduction in cultures growing with amino acid nitrogen sources were examined. The highest H2 yields and rates of formation were observed with the organic acids: lactate, pyruvate, malate, and succinate in media containing glutamate as the N source; under optimal conditions with excess lactate, H2 was produced at rates of ca. 130 ml/h per g(dry weight) of cells. Hydrogen production is significantly influenced by the N/C ratio in the growth substrates; when this ratio exceeds a critical value, free ammonia appears in the medium and H2 is not evolved. In the "standard" lactate + glutamate system, both H2 production and growth are "saturated" at a light intesity of ca. 600 ft-c (6,500 lux). Evolution of H2, however, occurs during growth at lithe intensities as low as 50 to 100 ft-c (540 to 1,080 lux), i.e., under conditions of energy limitation. In circumstances in which energy conversion rate and supplies of reducing power exceed the capacity of the biosynthetic machinery, energy-dependent H2 production presumably represents a regulatory device that facilitates "energy-idling." It appears that even when light intensity (energy) is limiting, a significant fraction of the available reducing power and adenosine 5'-triphosphate is diverted to nitrogenase, resulting in H2 formation and a bioenergetic burden to the cell.  相似文献   

20.
Regulatory properties of the nitrogenase fromRhodopseudomonas palustris   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ammonium salts, glutamine, asparagine, and urea cause an immediate inactivation (switch-off) of light-dependent acetylene reduction in intact cells of the photosynthetic bacteriumRhodopseudomonas palustris. This effect is reversible showing the same kinetic pattern of inactivation and reactivation with all effector compounds. Its duration depends on the amount of effector added to the cells. Both nitrogenase components are found catalytically active in a cell-free preparation after enzyme switch-off in vivo. Involvement of the ammonia assimilating system in this regulatory mechanism is indicated by the following observations: ammonia uptake during the switch-off period, resumption of acetylene reduction after disappearance of ammonia from the outer medium, and persistence of enzyme switch-off with dihydrogen and thiosulfate as electron donors in the absence of an additional carbon source. Nitrogenase activity in crude extracts is non-linear with time and is stimulated by manganese ions. After resolution of nitrogenase into its MoFe-protein and Fe-protein these properties are lost, indicating the presence of an activating factor. Nitrogenase ofR. palustris cross reacts reciprocally with the complementary proteins ofAzotobacter vinelandii, but not with those ofClostridium pasteurianum.Abbreviations CCCP m-chlorocarbonyl cyanide phenyl hydrazone - DNP 2,4-dinitrophenol - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine--2-ethane sulfonic acid - NOQNO 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide - TES N-tris[hydroxymethyl]methyl-2-aminoethane sulfonic acid  相似文献   

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