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1.
Klebsiella pneumoniae accumulates molybdenum during nitrogenase derepression. The molybdenum is primarily in nitrogenase component I in the form of iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co). Mutations in any of three genes (nifB, nifN, and nifE) involved in the biosynthesis of FeMo-co resulted in very low molybdenum accumulation and in a molybdenum-free nitrogenase component I. A mutant lacking both subunits of nitrogenase component I accumulated 60% of the amount of molybdenum present in the wild type. The molybdenum was in protein-bound form and behaved differently than that in the wild type with respect to electrophoretic mobility, size, and extractability by organic solvents. Two forms of molybdenum could be extracted from the protein fraction of the mutant; one of them was not detected in the wild type, and the other behaved like FeMo-co in nonaqueous gel filtration chromatography. Crude extracts of this mutant were able to complement in vitro K. pneumoniae or Azotobacter vinelandii mutants unable to produce FeMo-co. These data show that biosynthesis of FeMo-co does not require the presence of nitrogenase component I. In its absence, FeMo-co is accumulated on a different protein, presumably an intermediate in the normal FeMo-co biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

2.
The major part of biological nitrogen fixation is catalysed by the molybdenum nitrogenase that carries at its active site the iron and molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co). The nitrogen fixation (nif) genes required for the biosynthesis of FeMo-co are derepressed in the absence of a source of fixed nitrogen. The nifB gene product is remarkable because it assembles NifB-co, a complex cluster proposed to comprise a [6Fe-9S-X] cluster, from simpler [Fe-S] clusters common to other metabolic pathways. NifB-co is a common intermediate of the biosyntheses of the cofactors present in the molybdenum, vanadium and iron nitrogenases. In this work, the expression of the Azotobacter vinelandii nifB gene was uncoupled from its natural nif regulation to show that NifB protein levels are lower in cells growing diazotrophically than in cells growing at the expense of ammonium. A. vinelandii carries a duplicated copy of the ATPase component of the ubiquitous ClpXP protease (ClpX2), which is induced under nitrogen fixing conditions. Inactivation of clpX2 resulted in the accumulation of NifB and NifEN and a defect in diazotrophic growth, especially when iron was in short supply. Mutations in nifE, nifN and nifX or in nifA also affected NifB accumulation, suggesting that NifB susceptibility to degradation might vary during its catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

3.
The Azotobacter vinelandii NafY protein (nitrogenase accessory factor Y) is able to bind either to the iron molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) or to apodinitrogenase and is believed to facilitate the transfer of FeMo-co into apodinitrogenase. The NafY protein has two domains: an N-terminal domain (residues Met1-Leu98) and a C-terminal domain (residues Glu99-Ser232), referred here to as the "core domain." The core domain of NafY is shown here to be capable of binding the FeMo cofactor of nitrogenase but unable to bind to apodinitrogenase in the absence of the first domain. The three-dimensional molecular structure of the core domain of NafY has been solved to 1.8-A resolution, revealing that the protein consists of a mixed five-stranded beta-sheet flanked by five alpha-helices that belongs to the ribonuclease H superfamily. As such, this represents a new fold capable of binding FeMo-co, where the only previous example was that seen in dinitrogenase.  相似文献   

4.
We have constructed a strain of Azotobacter vinelandii which has deletions in the genes for both the molybdenum (Mo) and vanadium (V) nitrogenases. This strain fixed nitrogen in medium that did not contain Mo or V. Growth and nitrogenase activity were inhibited by Mo and V. In highly purified medium, growth was limited by iron. Addition of other metals (Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Re, Ti, W, and Zn) did not stimulate growth. Like the V-nitrogenase, the nitrogenase synthesized by the double deletion strain reduced acetylene to both ethylene and ethane (C2H6/C2H4 ratio, 0.046). There was an approximately 10-fold increase in ethane production when Mo was added to the deletion strain grown in medium lacking Mo and V. This change in reactivity may be due to the incorporation of an Mo-containing cofactor into the nitrogenase synthesized by the double-deletion strain. A strain synthesizing the V-nitrogenase did not show a similar increase in ethane production. The growth characteristics of the double-deletion strain, together with the metal composition reported for a nitrogenase isolated from a tungstate-tolerant strain lacking genes for the molydenum enzyme grown in the absence of Mo and V (J. R. Chisnell, R. Premakumar, and P. E. Bishop, J. Bacteriol. 170:27-33, 1988) show that A. vinelandii can synthesize a nitrogenase which lacks both Mo and V. Reduction of dinitrogen by nitrogenase can therefore occur at a center lacking both these metals.  相似文献   

5.
The iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) of nitrogenase contains molybdenum, iron, sulfur, and homocitrate in a ratio of 1:7:9:1. In vitro synthesis of FeMo-co has been established, and the reaction requires an ATP-regenerating system, dithionite, molybdate, homocitrate, and at least NifB-co (the metabolic product of NifB), NifNE, and dinitrogenase reductase (NifH). The typical in vitro FeMo-co synthesis reaction involves mixing extracts from two different mutant strains of Azotobacter vinelandii defective in the biosynthesis of cofactor or an extract of a mutant strain complemented with the purified missing component. Surprisingly, the in vitro synthesis of FeMo-co with only purified components failed to generate significant FeMo-co, suggesting the requirement for one or more other components. Complementation of these assays with extracts of various mutant strains demonstrated that NifX has a role in synthesis of FeMo-co. In vitro synthesis of FeMo-co with purified components is stimulated approximately threefold by purified NifX. Complementation of these assays with extracts of A. vinelandii DJ42. 48 (DeltanifENX DeltavnfE) results in a 12- to 15-fold stimulation of in vitro FeMo-co synthesis activity. These data also demonstrate that apart from the NifX some other component(s) is required for the cofactor synthesis. The in vitro synthesis of FeMo-co with purified components has allowed the detection, purification, and identification of an additional component(s) required for the synthesis of cofactor.  相似文献   

6.
Lei S  Pulakat L  Gavini N 《FEBS letters》2000,482(1-2):149-153
Azotobacter vinelandii carries three different and genetically distinct nitrogenase systems on its chromosome. Expression of all three nitrogenases is repressed by high concentrations of fixed nitrogen. Expression of individual nitrogenase systems is under the control of specific metal availability. We have isolated a novel type of A. vinelandii DJ54 revertant, designated A. vinelandii BG54, which carries a defined deletion in the nifH gene and is capable of diazotrophic growth in the presence of molybdenum. Inactivation of nifDK has no effect on growth of this mutant strain in nitrogen-free medium suggesting that products of the nif system are not involved in supporting diazotrophic growth of A. vinelandii BG54. Similar to the wild type, A. vinelandii BG54 is also sensitive to 1 mM tungsten. Tn5-B21 mutagenesis to inactivate the genes specific to individual systems revealed that the structural genes for vnf nitrogenase are required for diazotrophic growth of A. vinelandii BG54. Analysis of promoter activity of different nif systems revealed that the vnf promoter is activated in A. vinelandii BG54 in the presence of molybdenum. Based on these data we conclude that A. vinelandii BG54 strain utilizes vnf nitrogenase proteins to support its diazotrophic growth.  相似文献   

7.
Transformation was used to perform ratio test crosses with mutant strains of Azotobacter vinelandii unable to fix N2. Mutations that simultaneously eliminated both components of nitrogenase (nif-1 and nif-2) were tightly linked. The nif-45 mutation that resulted in the absence of an active molybdenum cofactor was closer to nif-1 and nif-2 than to any of the other nif mutations. Strains that lacked component I carried mutations that were closely linked to each other. Mutations that probably were located in the structural genes for components I and II appeared to be relatively close to each other on the A. vinelandii genome.  相似文献   

8.
The x-ray crystal structure of NifV(-) Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase MoFe protein (NifV(-) Kp1) has been determined and refined to a resolution of 1.9 A. This is the first structure for a nitrogenase MoFe protein with an altered cofactor. Moreover, it is the first direct evidence that the organic acid citrate is not just present, but replaces homocitrate as a ligand to the molybdenum atom of the iron molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco). Subsequent refinement of the structure revealed that the citrate was present at reduced occupancy.  相似文献   

9.
The NifEN protein complex serves as a molecular scaffold where some of the steps for the assembly of the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) of nitrogenase take place. A His-tagged version of the NifEN complex has been previously purified and shown to carry two identical [4Fe-4S] clusters of unknown function and a [Fe-S]-containing FeMo-co precursor. We have improved the purification of the his-NifEN protein from a DeltanifHDK strain of Azotobacter vinelandii and have found that the amounts of iron and molybdenum within NifEN were significantly higher than those reported previously. In an in vitro FeMo-co synthesis system with purified components, the NifEN protein served as a source of both molybdenum and a [Fe-S]-containing FeMo-co precursor, showing significant FeMo-co synthesis activity in the absence of externally added molybdate. Thus, the NifEN scaffold protein, purified from DeltanifHDK background, contained the Nif-Bco-derived Fe-S cluster and molybdenum, although these FeMo-co constituents were present at different levels within the protein complex.  相似文献   

10.
Tetrathiomolybdate inhibits iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo cofactor) binding to component I of nitrogenase. Molybdenum-iron cluster (a subcomponent of FeMo cofactor) and tetrathiomolybdate inhibited FeMo cofactor activation of inactive nitrogenase component I in extracts of Azotobacter vinelandii and Klebsiella pneumoniae mutant strains defective in the biosynthesis of FeMo cofactor. Addition of tetrathiotungstate, the tungsten analog of tetrathiomolybdate, to the mutant extracts had no significant inhibitory effect on subsequent activation by FeMo cofactor.  相似文献   

11.
Five modifications of the preparative procedure for isolating iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) from the molybdenum-iron (MoFe) protein of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase have been developed. This variety of isolation methods has established that no single component of the original isolation protocol, i.e. Tris, Cl-, citrate, HPO4(2-), N,N-dimethylformamide, and N-methylformamide, is essential for the effective isolation and/or structural stability of FeMoco, although any of them may act as ligands to FeMoco when present. The acid-bse status (effective pH) of the extracting solvent is a key adjustable parameter in the isolation procedure. The new procedures produced FeMoco with yields, metal analysis, charge, EPR spectrum, and specific activity (after reconstituting crude extracts from A. vinelandii UW45 mutant cells) essentially identical with FeMoco isolated by the original procedure. After purification, FeMoco apparently contains molybdenum, iron, and sulfide in a 1:7:4 ratio with N-methylformamide as a ligand but no amino acid residues, common sugars, coenzyme A, or lipoic acid. Reaction with o-phenanthroline allows quantitation of both adventitious and FeMoco-associated iron. Correlations of total activity after UW45 reconstitution with molybdenum, total iron, and o-phenanthroline-resistant iron contents show that only the last gives a consistent relationship of 35 +/- 5 nmol of C2H4/min/ng atom of Fe. Both o-phenanthroline and EDTA interact with FeMoco to abolish its EPR signal in reactions reversible by additions of Fe2+ or Zn2+, respectively. These and related reactions point against the presence of an endogenous organic component in FeMoco and toward the presence of exogenous ligands and imply a relatively labile coordination sphere whose nature may be determinable by a systematic investigation.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Under anaerobic conditions the molybdenum-iron protein (MoFe protein) from Azotobacter vinelandii can be reversibly oxidized with thionine. Electron paramagnetic resonance studies reveal that the oxidation proceeds in two distinct phases: the MoFe protein can be oxidized by four electrons without loss of the EPR signal from the S = 3/2 cofactor centers. A second oxidation step, involving two electrons, leads to the disappearance of the cofactor EPR signal. In order to correlate the events during the thionine titration with redox reactions involving individual iron centers we have studied the MoFe proteins from A vinelandii and Clostridium pasteurianum with M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Spectra were taken in the temperature range from 1.5 K to 200 K in applied magnetic fields of up to 54 kG. Analysis of the M?ssbauer data allows us to draw three major conclusions: (1) the holoprotein contains 30 +/- 2 iron atoms. (2) Most probably, 12 iron atoms belong to two, apparently identical, iron clusters (labeled M) which we have shown previously to be structural components of the iron and molybdenum containing cofactor of nitrogenase. The M-centers can be stabilized in three distinct oxidation states, MOXe- in equilibrium MNe- in equilibrium MR. The diamagnetic (S = 0) state MOX is attained by oxidation of the native state MN with either thionine or oxygen. MR is observed under nitrogen fixing conditions. (3) The data strongly suggest that 16 iron atoms are associated with four iron centers which we propose to call P-clusters. Each P-cluster contains four spin-coupled iron atoms. In the native protein the P-clusters are in the diamagnetic state PN, yielding the M?ssbauer signature which we have labeled previously 'components D and Fe2+'. Three irons of the D-type and one iron of the Fe2+-type appear to comprise a P-cluster. A one-electron oxidation yields the paramagnetic state POX. Although the state POX is characterized by half-integral electronic spin a peculiar combination of zero-field splitting parameters and spin relaxation renders this state EPR-silent. Spectroscopically, the P-clusters are novel structures; there is, however, evidence that they are closely related to familiar 4Fe-4S centers.  相似文献   

14.
Aim: To characterize the complementary production of two types of siderophores in Azotobacter vinelandii. Methods and Results: In an iron‐insufficient environment, nitrogen‐fixing A. vinelandii produces peptidic (azotobactin) and catechol siderophores for iron uptake to be used as a nitrogenase cofactor. Molybdenum, another nitrogenase cofactor, was also found to affect the production level of siderophores. Wild‐type cells excreted azotobactin into molybdenum‐supplemented and iron‐insufficient medium, although catechol siderophores predominate in molybdenum‐free environments. Two gene clusters were identified to be involved in the production of azotobactin and catechol siderophores through gene annotation and disruption. Azotobactin‐deficient mutant cells produced catechol siderophores under the molybdenum‐supplemented and iron‐insufficient conditions, whereas catechol siderophore–deficient mutant cells extracellularly secreted excess azotobactin under iron‐deficient condition independent of the concentration of molybdenum. This evidence suggests that a complementary siderophore production system exists in A. vinelandii. Conclusions: Molybdenum was found to regulate the production level of two types of siderophores. Azotobacter vinelandii cells are equipped with a complementary production system for nitrogen fixation in response to a limited quantity of metals. Significance and Impact of the Study: This is the first study identifying A. vinelandii gene clusters for the biosynthesis of two types of siderophores and clarifying the relationship between them.  相似文献   

15.
Competition experiments between wild-type Azotobacter vinelandii and a mutant lacking Mo-independent nitrogenase 3 indicate that nitrogenase 3 provides an advantage during diazotrophic growth on agar media containing 100 to 500 nM Na2MoO4 but not in liquid media under the same conditions. Expression of nitrogenase 3 in wild-type cells growing on agar surfaces was verified with an anfH-lacZ fusion and by detection of nitrogenase 3 subunits. These results show that nitrogenase 3 is important for diazotrophic growth on agar medium at molybdenum concentrations that are not limiting for Mo-dependent diazotrophic growth in liquid medium.  相似文献   

16.
A mutant form of the nitrogenase iron protein with a deletion of residue Leu 127, located in the switch II region of the nucleotide binding site, forms a tight, inactive complex with the nitrogenase molybdenum iron (MoFe) protein in the absence of nucleotide. The structure of this complex generated with proteins from Azotobacter vinelandii (designated the L127Delta-Av2-Av1 complex) has been crystallographically determined in the absence of nucleotide at 2.2 A resolution and with bound MgATP (introduced by soaking) at 3.0 A resolution. As observed in the structure of the complex between the wild-type A. vinelandii nitrogenase proteins stabilized with ADP.AlF(4-), the most significant conformational changes in the L127Delta complex occur in the Fe-protein component. While the interactions at the interface between the MoFe-protein and Fe-proteins are conserved in the two complexes, significant differences are evident at the subunit-subunit interface of the dimeric Fe-proteins, with the L127Delta-Av2 structure having a more open conformation than the wild-type Av2 in the complex stabilized by ADP.AlF(4-). Addition of MgATP to the L127Delta-Av2-Av1 complex results in a further increase in the separation between Fe-protein subunits so that the structure more closely resembles that of the wild-type, nucleotide-free, uncomplexed Fe-protein, rather than the Fe-protein conformation in the ADP.AlF(4-) complex. The L127Delta mutation precludes key interactions between the Fe-protein and nucleotide, especially, but not exclusively, in the region corresponding to the switch II region of G-proteins, where the deletion constrains Gly 128 and Asp 129 from forming hydrogen bonds to the gamma-phosphate and activating water for attack on this group, respectively. These alterations account for the inability of this mutant to support mechanistically productive ATP hydrolysis. The ability of the L127Delta-Av2-Av1 complex to bind MgATP demonstrates that dissociation of the nitrogenase complex is not required for nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The Azotobacter vinelandii genes encoding the nitrogenase structural components are clustered and ordered: nifH (Fe protein)-nifD (MoFe protein alpha subunit)-nifK (MoFe protein beta subunit). In this study various A. vinelandii mutant strains which contain defined deletions within the nitrogenase structural genes were isolated and studied. Mutants deleted for the nifD or nifK genes were still able to accumulate significant amounts of the unaltered MoFe protein subunit as well as active Fe protein. Extracts of such nifD or nifK deletion strains had no MoFe protein activity. However, active MoFe protein could be reconstituted by mixing extracts of the mutant strains. These results establish an approach for the purification of the individual MoFe protein subunits. Mutants lacking either or both of the MoFe protein subunits were still able to synthesize the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-cofactor), indicating that in A. vinelandii the FeMo-cofactor is preassembled and inserted into the MoFe protein. In contrast, a mutant strain lacking both the Fe protein and the MoFe protein failed to accumulate any detectable FeMo-cofactor. The further utility of specifically altered A. vinelandii strains for the study of the assembly, structure, and reactivity of nitrogenase is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Aerial oxidation of the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase has been shown to yield either the tetrathiomolybdate ion ([MoS4]2-) or the oxotrithiomolybdate ion ([MoOS3]2-), depending on the reaction conditions. Thus, when N-methylformamide (NMF) solutions of FeMoco either were titrated with measured aliquots of air or were diluted with air-saturated NMF, [MoOS3]2- was found to be the predominant product while dilution of NMF solutions of FeMoco with air-saturated methanol produced [MoS4]2- almost exclusively. Similar aerial oxidation of solutions of chemically synthesized Fe-Mo-S clusters showed that significant information about the molybdenum environment in these species could be deduced from the nature of the elicited thiomolybdates. The differences in decomposition products as a function of solvent are postulated to be due to the loss through precipitation of the reducing agent sodium dithionite on addition of methanol but not NMF. These overall decomposition results are discussed in the context of recent X-ray absorption spectroscopic data which suggest the presence of an 'MoS3' core in FeMoco. A possible mechanism whereby [MoS4]2- might be rapidly formed from this core is presented.  相似文献   

20.
The X-ray crystal structure of Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase component 1 (Kp1) has been determined and refined to a resolution of 1.6 A, the highest resolution reported for any nitrogenase structure. Models derived from three 1.6 A resolution X-ray data sets are described; two represent distinct oxidation states, whilst the third appears to be a mixture of both oxidized and reduced states (or perhaps an intermediate state). The structures of the protein and the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) appear to be largely unaffected by the redox status, although the movement of Ser beta90 and a surface helix in the beta subunit may be of functional significance. By contrast, the 8Fe-7S P-cluster undergoes discrete conformational changes involving the movement of two iron atoms. Comparisons with known component 1 structures reveal subtle differences in the FeMoco environment, which could account for the lower midpoint potential of this cluster in Kp1. Furthermore, a non-proline- cis peptide bond has been identified in the alpha subunit that may have a functional role. It is within 10 A of the FeMoco and may have been overlooked in other component 1 models. Finally, metal-metal and metal-sulphur distances within the metal clusters agree well with values derived from EXAFS studies, although they are generally longer than the values reported for the closely related protein from Azotobacter vinelandii. A number of bonds between the clusters and their ligands are distinctly longer than the EXAFS values, in particular, those involving the molybdenum atom of the FeMoco.  相似文献   

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