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1.
Wolinella succinogenes can grow by anaerobic respiration with nitrate or nitrite using formate as electron donor. Two forms of nitrite reductase were isolated from the membrane fraction of W. succinogenes. One form consisted of a 58 kDa polypeptide (NrfA) that was identical to the periplasmic nitrite reductase. The other form consisted of NrfA and a 22 kDa polypeptide (NrfH). Both forms catalysed nitrite reduction by reduced benzyl viologen, but only the dimeric form catalysed nitrite reduction by dimethylnaphthoquinol. Liposomes containing heterodimeric nitrite reductase, formate dehydrogenase and menaquinone catalysed the electron transport from formate to nitrite; this was coupled to the generation of an electrochemical proton potential (positive outside) across the liposomal membrane. It is concluded that the electron transfer from menaquinol to the catalytic subunit (NrfA) of W. succinogenes nitrite reductase is mediated by NrfH. The structural genes nrfA and nrfH were identified in an apparent operon (nrfHAIJ) with two additional genes. The gene nrfA encodes the precursor of NrfA carrying an N-terminal signal peptide (22 residues). NrfA (485 residues) is predicted to be a hydrophilic protein that is similar to the NrfA proteins of Sulfurospirillum deleyianum and of Escherichia coli. NrfH (177 residues) is predicted to be a membrane-bound tetrahaem cytochrome c belonging to the NapC/NirT family. The products of nrfI and nrfJ resemble proteins involved in cytochrome c biogenesis. The C-terminal third of NrfI (902 amino acid residues) is similar to CcsA proteins from Gram-positive bacteria, cyanobacteria and chloroplasts. The residual N-terminal part of NrfI resembles Ccs1 proteins. The deduced NrfJ protein resembles the thioredoxin-like proteins (ResA) of Helicobacter pylori and of Bacillus subtilis, but lacks the common motif CxxC of ResA. The properties of three deletion mutants of W. succinogenes (DeltanrfJ, DeltanrfIJ and DeltanrfAIJ) were studied. Mutants DeltanrfAIJ and DeltanrfIJ did not grow with nitrite as terminal electron acceptor or with nitrate in the absence of NH4+ and lacked nitrite reductase activity, whereas mutant DeltanrfJ showed wild-type properties. The NrfA protein formed by mutant DeltanrfIJ seemed to lack part of the haem C, suggesting that NrfI is involved in NrfA maturation.  相似文献   

2.
Enzymology and bioenergetics of respiratory nitrite ammonification   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Nitrite is widely used by bacteria as an electron acceptor under anaerobic conditions. In respiratory nitrite ammonification an electrochemical proton potential across the membrane is generated by electron transport from a non-fermentable substrate like formate or H(2) to nitrite. The corresponding electron transport chain minimally comprises formate dehydrogenase or hydrogenase, a respiratory quinone and cytochrome c nitrite reductase. The catalytic subunit of the latter enzyme (NrfA) catalyzes nitrite reduction to ammonia without liberating intermediate products. This review focuses on recent progress that has been made in understanding the enzymology and bioenergetics of respiratory nitrite ammonification. High-resolution structures of NrfA proteins from different bacteria have been determined, and many nrf operons sequenced, leading to the prediction of electron transfer pathways from the quinone pool to NrfA. Furthermore, the coupled electron transport chain from formate to nitrite of Wolinella succinogenes has been reconstituted by incorporating the purified enzymes into liposomes. The NrfH protein of W. succinogenes, a tetraheme c-type cytochrome of the NapC/NirT family, forms a stable complex with NrfA in the membrane and serves in passing electrons from menaquinol to NrfA. Proteins similar to NrfH are predicted by open reading frames of several bacterial nrf gene clusters. In gamma-proteobacteria, however, NrfH is thought to be replaced by the nrfBCD gene products. The active site heme c group of NrfA proteins from different bacteria is covalently bound via the cysteine residues of a unique CXXCK motif. The lysine residue of this motif serves as an axial ligand to the heme iron thus replacing the conventional histidine residue. The attachment of the lysine-ligated heme group requires specialized proteins in W. succinogenes and Escherichia coli that are encoded by accessory nrf genes. The proteins predicted by these genes are unrelated in the two bacteria but similar to proteins of the respective conventional cytochrome c biogenesis systems.  相似文献   

3.
The rumen bacterium Wolinella succinogenes grows by respiratory nitrate ammonification with formate as electron donor. Whereas the enzymology and coupling mechanism of nitrite respiration is well known, nitrate reduction to nitrite has not yet been examined. We report here that intact cells and cell fractions catalyse nitrate and chlorate reduction by reduced viologen dyes with high specific activities. A gene cluster encoding components of a putative periplasmic nitrate reductase system (napA, G, H, B, F, L, D) was sequenced. The napA gene was inactivated by inserting a kanamycin resistance gene cassette. The resulting mutant did not grow by nitrate respiration and did not reduce nitrate during growth by fumarate respiration, in contrast to the wild type. An antigen was detected in wild-type cells using an antiserum raised against the periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapA) from Paracoccus pantotrophus. This antigen was absent in the W. succinogenes napA mutant. It is concluded that the periplasmic nitrate reductase NapA is the only respiratory nitrate reductase in W. succinogenes, although a second nitrate-reducing enzyme is apparently induced in the napA mutant. The nap cluster of W. succinogenes lacks a napC gene whose product is thought to function in quinol oxidation and electron transfer to NapA in other bacteria. The W. succinogenes genome encodes two members of the NapC/NirT family, NrfH and FccC. Characterization of corresponding deletion mutants indicates that neither of these two proteins is required for nitrate respiration. A mutant lacking the genes encoding respiratory nitrite reductase (nrfHA) had wild-type properties with respect to nitrate respiration. A model of the electron transport chain of nitrate respiration is proposed in which one or more of the napF, G, H and L gene products mediate electron transport from menaquinol to the periplasmic NapAB complex. Inspection of the W. succinogenes genome sequence suggests that ammonia formation from nitrate is catalysed exclusively by periplasmic respiratory enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Members of the NapC/NrfH family are multihaem c-type cytochromes that exchange electrons with oxidoreductases situated at the outside of the cytoplasmic membrane or in the periplasmic space of many proteobacteria. They form a group of membrane-bound quinol dehydrogenases that are essential components of several electron transport chains, for example those of periplasmic nitrate respiration and respiratory nitrite ammonification. Knowledge of the structure-function relationships of NapC/NrfH proteins is scarce and only one high-resolution structure (Desulfovibrio vulgaris NrfH) is available. In the present study, several Wolinella succinogenes mutants that produce variants of NrfH, the membrane anchor of the cytochrome c nitrite reductase complex, were constructed and characterized in order to improve the understanding of the putative menaquinol-binding site, the maturation and function of the four covalently bound haem c groups and the importance of the N-terminal transmembrane segment. Based on amino acid sequence alignments, a homology model for W. succinogenes NrfH was constructed that underlines the overall conservation of tertiary structure in spite of a low sequence homology. The results support the proposed architecture of the menaquinol-binding site in D. vulgaris NrfH, demonstrate that each histidine residue arranged in one of the four CX(2)CH haem c-binding motifs is essential for NrfH maturation in W. succinogenes, and indicate a limited flexibility towards the length and structure of the transmembrane region.  相似文献   

5.
The cytochrome c nitrite reductase complex (NrfHA) is the terminal enzyme in the electron transport chain catalysing nitrite respiration of Wolinella succinogenes. The catalytic subunit NrfA is a pentahaem cytochrome c containing an active site haem group which is covalently bound via the cysteine residues of a unique CWTCK motif. The lysine residue serves as the axial ligand of the haem iron. The other four haem groups of NrfA are bound by conventional haem-binding motifs (CXXCH). The nrfHAIJ locus was restored on the genome of the W. succinogenes DeltanrfAIJ deletion mutant by integration of a plasmid, thus enabling the expression of modified alleles of nrfA and nrfI. A mutant (K134H) was constructed which contained a nrfA gene encoding a CWTCH motif instead of CWTCK. NrfA of strain K134H was found to be synthesized with five bound haem groups, as judged by matrix-assisted laser-desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry. Its nitrite reduction activity with reduced benzyl viologen was 40% of the wild-type activity. Ammonia was formed as the only product of nitrite reduction. The mutant did not grow by nitrite respiration and its electron transport activity from formate to nitrite was 5% of that of the wild-type strain. The predicted nrfI gene product is similar to proteins involved in system II cytochrome c biogenesis. A mutant of W. succinogenes (stopI) was constructed that contained a nrfHAIJ gene cluster with the nrfI codons 47 and 48 altered to stop codons. The NrfA protein of this mutant did not catalyse nitrite reduction and lacked the active site haem group, whereas the other four haem groups were present. Mutant (K134H/stopI) which contained the K134H modification in NrfA in addition to the inactivated nrfI gene had essentially the same properties as strain K134H. NrfA from strain K134H/stopI contained five haem groups. It is concluded that NrfI is involved in haem attachment to the CWTCK motif in NrfA but not to any of the CXXCH motifs. The nrfI gene is obviously dispensable for maturation of a modified NrfA protein containing a CWTCH motif instead of CWTCK. Therefore, NrfI might function as a specific haem lyase that recognizes the active site lysine residue of NrfA. A similar role has been proposed for NrfE, F and G of Escherichia coli, although these proteins share no overall sequence similarity to NrfI and belong to system I cytochrome c biogenesis, which differs fundamentally from system II.  相似文献   

6.
Nitrate respiration catalysed by the ε-proteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes relies on the NapAGHBFLD system that comprises periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapA) and various other Nap proteins required for electron transport from menaquinol to NapA or maturation of Nap components. The W. succinogenes Nap system is unusual as electron transfer to NapA was shown previously to depend on both subunits of the predicted menaquinol dehydrogenase complex NapGH but did not require a cytochrome c of the NapC/NrfH family. Nonetheless, minor residual growth by nitrate respiration was observed in napG and napH gene inactivation mutants. Here, the question is addressed whether alternative membrane-bound menaquinol dehydrogenases, like NrfH and NosGH, involved in nitrite or N2O reduction systems, are able to functionally replace NapGH. The phenotypes of various gene deletion mutants as well as strains expressing chimeric nap / nos operons demonstrate that NosH is able to donate electrons to the respiratory chain of nitrate respiration at a physiologically relevant rate, whereas NrfH and NosG are not. The iron-sulphur protein NapG was shown to form a complex with NapH in the membrane but was detected in the periplasmic cell fraction in the absence of NapH. Likewise, NosH is able to bind NapG. Each of the eight poly-cysteine motifs present in either NapG or NapH was shown to be essential for nitrate respiration. The NapG homologue NosG could not substitute for NapG, even after adjusting the cysteine spacing to that of NapG, implying that NapG and NosG are specific adapter proteins that channel electrons into either the Nap or Nos system. The current model on the structure and function of the NapGH menaquinol dehydrogenase complex is presented and the composition of the electron transport chains that deliver electrons to periplasmic reductases for either nitrate, nitrite or N2O is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Many sulphate reducing bacteria can also reduce nitrite, but relatively few isolates are known to reduce nitrate. Although nitrate reductase genes are absent from Desulfovibrio vulgaris strain Hildenborough, for which the complete genome sequence has been reported, a single subunit periplasmic nitrate reductase, NapA, was purified from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans strain 27774, and the structural gene was cloned and sequenced. Chromosome walking methods have now been used to determine the complete sequence of the nap gene cluster from this organism. The data confirm the absence of a napB homologue, but reveal a novel six-gene organisation, napC-napM-napA-napD-napG-napH. The NapC polypeptide is more similar to the NrfH subgroup of tetraheme cytochromes than to NapC from other bacteria. NapM is predicted to be a tetra-heme c-type cytochrome with similarity to the small tetraheme cytochromes from Shewanella oneidensis. The operon is located close to a gene encoding a lysyl-tRNA synthetase that is also found in D. vulgaris. We suggest that electrons might be transferred to NapA either from menaquinol via NapC, or from other electron donors such as formate or hydrogen via the small tetraheme cytochrome, NapM. We also suggest that, despite the absence of a twin-arginine targeting sequence, NapG might be located in the periplasm where it would provide an alternative direct electron donor to NapA.  相似文献   

8.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains deficient in the genes for cytochrome c1, a subunit of the cytochrome bc1 complex, or the tetraheme membrane protein NapC, which is similar to NirT of Pseudomonas stutzeri, were constructed and their growth was investigated. The cytochrome c1 mutant could not grow under anaerobic conditions with nitrite as an electron acceptor and did not reduce nitrite in spite of its producing active nitrite reductase. NirM (cytochrome c551) and azurin, which are the direct electron donors for nitrite reductase, were reduced by succinate in the presence of the membrane fraction from the wild-type strain as a mediator but not in the presence of that from the cytochrome c1 mutant. These results indicated that cytochrome bc1 complex was necessary for electron transfer from the membrane quinone pool to nitrite reductase. The NapC mutant grew anaerobically at the expense of nitrite, indicating that NapC was not necessary for nitrite reduction.  相似文献   

9.
Oxidation of membrane-bound quinol molecules is a central step in the respiratory electron transport chains used by biological cells to generate ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. A novel family of cytochrome c quinol dehydrogenases that play an important role in bacterial respiratory chains was recognised in recent years. Here, we describe the first structure of a cytochrome from this family, NrfH from Desulfovibrio vulgaris, which forms a stable complex with its electron partner, the cytochrome c nitrite reductase NrfA. One NrfH molecule interacts with one NrfA dimer in an asymmetrical manner, forming a large membrane-bound complex with an overall alpha(4)beta(2) quaternary arrangement. The menaquinol-interacting NrfH haem is pentacoordinated, bound by a methionine from the CXXCHXM sequence, with an aspartate residue occupying the distal position. The NrfH haem that transfers electrons to NrfA has a lysine residue from the closest NrfA molecule as distal ligand. A likely menaquinol binding site, containing several conserved and essential residues, is identified.  相似文献   

10.
The cytochrome c nitrite reductase is isolated from the membranes of the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 as a heterooligomeric complex composed by two subunits (61 kDa and 19 kDa) containing c-type hemes, encoded by the genes nrfA and nrfH, respectively. The extracted complex has in average a 2NrfA:1NrfH composition. The separation of ccNiR subunits from one another is accomplished by gel filtration chromatography in the presence of SDS. The amino-acid sequence and biochemical subunits characterization show that NrfA contains five hemes and NrfH four hemes. These considerations enabled the revision of a vast amount of existing spectroscopic data on the NrfHA complex that was not originally well interpreted due to the lack of knowledge on the heme content and the oligomeric enzyme status. Based on EPR and M?ssbauer parameters and their correlation to structural information recently obtained from X-ray crystallography on the NrfA structure [Cunha, C.A., Macieira, S., Dias, J.M., Almeida, M.G., Gon?alves, L.M.L., Costa, C., Lampreia, J., Huber, R., Moura, J.J.G., Moura, I. & Rom?o, M. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 17455-17465], we propose the full assignment of midpoint reduction potentials values to the individual hemes. NrfA contains the high-spin catalytic site (-80 mV) as well as a quite unusual high reduction potential (+150 mV)/low-spin bis-His coordinated heme, considered to be the site where electrons enter. In addition, the reassessment of the spectroscopic data allowed the first partial spectroscopic characterization of the NrfH subunit. The four NrfH hemes are all in a low-spin state (S = 1/2). One of them has a gmax at 3.55, characteristic of bis-histidinyl iron ligands in a noncoplanar arrangement, and has a positive reduction potential.  相似文献   

11.
Microorganisms employ diverse mechanisms to withstand physiological stress conditions exerted by reactive or toxic oxygen and nitrogen species such as hydrogen peroxide, organic hydroperoxides, superoxide anions, nitrite, hydroxylamine, nitric oxide or NO-generating compounds. This study identified components of the oxidative and nitrosative stress defence network of Wolinella succinogenes, an exceptional Epsilonproteobacterium that lacks both catalase and haemoglobins. Various gene deletion-insertion mutants were constructed, grown by either fumarate respiration or respiratory nitrate ammonification and subjected to disc diffusion, growth and viability assays under stress conditions. It was demonstrated that mainly two periplasmic multihaem c-type cytochromes, namely cytochrome c peroxidase and cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA), mediated resistance to hydrogen peroxide. Two AhpC-type peroxiredoxin isoenzymes were shown to be involved in protection against different organic hydroperoxides. The phenotypes of two superoxide dismutase mutants lacking either SodB or SodB2 implied that both isoenzymes play important roles in oxygen and superoxide stress defence although they are predicted to reside in the cytoplasm and periplasm respectively. NrfA and a cytoplasmic flavodiiron protein (Fdp) were identified as key components of nitric oxide detoxification. In addition, NrfA (but not the hybrid cluster protein Hcp) was found to mediate resistance to hydroxylamine stress. The results indicate the presence of a robust oxidative and nitrosative stress defence network and identify NrfA as a multifunctional cytochrome c involved in both anaerobic respiration and stress protection.  相似文献   

12.
Pathways of electron transport to periplasmic nitrate (NapA) and nitrite (NrfA) reductases have been investigated in Campylobacter jejuni, a microaerophilic food-borne pathogen. The nap operon is unusual in lacking napC (encoding a tetra-haem c-type cytochrome) and napF, but contains a novel gene of unknown function, napL. The iron-sulphur protein NapG has a major role in electron transfer to the NapAB complex, but we show that slow nitrate-dependent growth of a napG mutant can be sustained by electron transfer from NrfH, the electron donor to the nitrite reductase NrfA. A napL mutant possessed approximately 50% lower NapA activity than the wild type but showed normal growth with nitrate as the electron acceptor. NrfA was constitutive and was shown to play a role in protection against nitrosative stress in addition to the previously identified NO-inducible single domain globin, Cgb. However, nitrite also induced cgb expression in an NssR-dependent manner, suggesting that growth of C. jejuni with nitrite causes nitrosative stress. This was confirmed by lack of growth of cgb and nssR mutants, and slow growth of the nrfA mutant, in media containing nitrite. Thus, NrfA and Cgb together provide C. jejuni with constitutive and inducible components of a robust defence against nitrosative stress.  相似文献   

13.
Members of the multihaem cytochrome c family such as pentahaem cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA) or octahaem hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (Hao) are involved in various microbial respiratory electron transport chains. Some members of the Hao subfamily, here called εHao proteins, have been predicted from the genomes of nitrate/nitrite‐ammonifying bacteria that usually lack NrfA. Here, εHao proteins from the host‐associated Epsilonproteobacteria Campylobacter fetus and Campylobacter curvus and the deep‐sea hydrothermal vent bacteria Caminibacter mediatlanticus and Nautilia profundicola were purified as εHao‐maltose binding protein fusions produced in Wolinella succinogenes. All four proteins were able to catalyze reduction of nitrite (yielding ammonium) and hydroxylamine whereas hydroxylamine oxidation was negligible. The introduction of a tyrosine residue at a position known to cause covalent trimerization of Hao proteins did neither stimulate hydroxylamine oxidation nor generate the Hao‐typical absorbance maximum at 460 nm. In most cases, the εHao‐encoding gene haoA was situated downstream of haoC, which predicts a tetrahaem cytochrome c of the NapC/NrfH family. This suggested the formation of a membrane‐bound HaoCA assembly reminiscent of the menaquinol‐oxidizing NrfHA complex. The results indicate that εHao proteins form a subfamily of ammonifying cytochrome c nitrite reductases that represents a ‘missing link’ in the evolution of NrfA and Hao enzymes.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Dissimilatory nitrite reductase was isolated from anaerobically nitrate-grown Vibrio fischeri cells and purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The enzyme catalyzes the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. Upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, under either nonreducing or reducing conditions, the purified nitrite reductase migrated as a single protein band of Mr 57,000. Gel filtration chromatography revealed a native molecular weight of 58,000, indicating the enzyme as isolated to be present in the monomeric form. Purified nitrite reductase exhibited typical c-type cytochrome absorption spectra with the reduced alpha-band at 552.5 nm. Heme content analysis using the purified preparation indicated the enzyme to contain 5.5 heme c groups per molecule. Iron analysis showed the presence of 5.62 g iron atoms per mole of enzyme and no nonheme irons were detected. These results clearly indicate that, similar to the dissimilatory nitrite reductases from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, Wolinella succinogenes, and Escherichia coli, the V. fischeri nitrite reductase is a hexaheme c-type cytochrome. Amino acid composition of V. fischeri also revealed close similarities to those of the other three hexaheme nitrite reductases previously studied. Based on this information, it is concluded that the four ammonia-forming, dissimilatory nitrite reductases isolated to date represent a homologous group of proteins with the distinct property of being hexaheme c-type cytochromes.  相似文献   

16.
Cytochrome c nitrite reductase is a multicenter enzyme that uses a five-coordinated heme to perform the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonium. In the sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, the enzyme is purified as a NrfA2NrfH complex that houses 14 hemes. The number of closely-spaced hemes in this enzyme and the magnetic interactions between them make it very difficult to study the active site by using traditional spectroscopic approaches such as EPR or UV-Vis. Here, we use both catalytic and non-catalytic protein film voltammetry to simply and unambiguously determine the reduction potential of the catalytic heme over a wide range of pH and we demonstrate that proton transfer is coupled to electron transfer at the active site.  相似文献   

17.
Hydrogenase and fumarate reductase isolated from Wolinella succinogenes were incorporated into liposomes containing menaquinone. The two enzymes were found to be oriented solely to the outside of the resulting proteoliposomes. The proteoliposomes catalyzed fumarate reduction by H2 which generated an electrical proton potential (Delta(psi) = 0.19 V, negative inside) in the same direction as that generated by fumarate respiration in cells of W. succinogenes. The H+/e ratio brought about by fumarate reduction with H2 in proteoliposomes in the presence of valinomycin and external K+ was approximately 1. The same Delta(psi) and H+/e ratio was associated with the reduction of 2,3-dimethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone (DMN) by H2 in proteoliposomes containing menaquinone and hydrogenase with or without fumarate reductase. Proteoliposomes containing menaquinone and fumarate reductase with or without hydrogenase catalyzed fumarate reduction by DMNH2 which did not generate a Delta(psi). Incorporation of formate dehydrogenase together with fumarate reductase and menaquinone resulted in proteoliposomes catalyzing the reduction of fumarate or DMN by formate. Both reactions generated a Delta(psi) of 0.13 V (negative inside). The H+/e ratio of formate oxidation by menaquinone or DMN was close to 1. The results demonstrate for the first time that coupled fumarate respiration can be restored in liposomes using the well characterized electron transport enzymes isolated from W. succinogenes. The results support the view that Delta(psi) generation is coupled to menaquinone reduction by H2 or formate, but not to menaquinol oxidation by fumarate. Delta(psi) generation is probably caused by proton uptake from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane during menaquinone reduction, and by the coupled release of protons from H2 or formate oxidation on the periplasmic side. This mechanism is supported by the properties of two hydrogenase mutants of W. succinogenes which indicate that the site of quinone reduction is close to the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c nitrite reductase catalyzes the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. This second part of the respiratory pathway of nitrate ammonification is a key step in the biological nitrogen cycle. The x-ray structure of the enzyme from the epsilon-proteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes has been solved to a resolution of 1.6 A. It is a pentaheme c-type cytochrome whose heme groups are packed in characteristic motifs that also occur in other multiheme cytochromes. Structures of W. succinogenes nitrite reductase have been obtained with water bound to the active site heme iron as well as complexes with two inhibitors, sulfate and azide, whose binding modes and inhibitory functions differ significantly. Cytochrome c nitrite reductase is part of a highly optimized respiratory system found in a wide range of Gram-negative bacteria. It reduces both anionic and neutral substrates at the distal side of a lysine-coordinated high-spin heme group, which is accessible through two different channels, allowing for a guided flow of reaction educt and product. Based on sequence comparison and secondary structure prediction, we have demonstrated that cytochrome c nitrite reductases constitute a protein family of high structural similarity.  相似文献   

19.
The decahaem homodimeric cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA) is expressed within the periplasm of a wide range of Gamma-, Delta- and Epsilon-proteobacteria and is responsible for the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. This allows nitrite to be used as a terminal electron acceptor, facilitating anaerobic respiration while allowing nitrogen to remain in a biologically available form. NrfA has also been reported to reduce nitric oxide (a reaction intermediate) and sulfite to ammonia and sulfide respectively, suggesting a potential secondary role as a detoxification enzyme. The protein sequences and crystal structures of NrfA from different bacteria and the closely related octahaem nitrite reductase from Thioalkalivibrio nitratireducens (TvNir) reveal that these enzymes are homologous. The NrfA proteins contain five covalently attached haem groups, four of which are bis-histidine-co-ordinated, with the proximal histidine being provided by the highly conserved CXXCH motif. These haems are responsible for intraprotein electron transfer. The remaining haem is the site for nitrite reduction, which is ligated by a novel lysine residue provided by a CXXCK haem-binding motif. The TvNir nitrite reductase has five haems that are structurally similar to those of NrfA and three extra bis-histidine-coordinated haems that precede the NrfA conserved region. The present review compares the protein sequences and structures of NrfA and TvNir and discusses the subtle differences related to active-site architecture and Ca2+ binding that may have an impact on substrate reduction.  相似文献   

20.
Shewanella spp. demonstrate great variability in the use of terminal electron acceptors in anaerobic respiration; these include nitrate, fumarate, DMSO, trimethylamine oxide, sulphur compounds and metal oxides. These pathways open up possible applications in bioremediation. The wide variety of respiratory substrates for Shewanella is correlated with the evolution of several multi-haem membrane-bound, periplasmic and outer-membrane c-type cytochromes. The 21 kDa c-type cytochrome CymA of the freshwater strain Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 has an N-terminal membrane anchor and a globular tetrahaem periplasmic domain. According to sequence alignments, CymA is a member of the NapC/NirT family. This family of redox proteins is responsible for electron transfer from the quinone pool to periplasmic and outer-membrane-bound reductases. Prior investigations have shown that the absence of CymA results in loss of the ability to respire with Fe(III), fumarate and nitrate, indicating that CymA is involved in electron transfer to several terminal reductases. Here we describe the expression, purification and characterization of a soluble, truncated CymA ('CymA). Potentiometric studies suggest that there are two pairs of haems with potentials of -175 and -261 mV and that 'CymA is an efficient electron donor for the soluble fumarate reductase, flavocytochrome c(3).  相似文献   

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