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1.
The pathway of autotrophic CO2 fixation in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum has been investigated by long term labelling of the organism with isotopic acetate and pyruvate while exponentially growing on H2 plus CO2. Maximally 2% of the cell carbon were derived from exogeneous tracer, 98% were synthesized from CO2. Since growth was obviously autotrophic the labelled compounds functioned as tracers of the cellular acetyl CoA and pyruvate pool during cell carbon synthesis from CO2. M. thermoautotrophicum growing in presence of U-14C acetate incorporated 14C into cell compounds derived from acetyl CoA (N-acetyl groups) as well as into compounds derived from pyruvate (alanine), oxaloacetate (aspartate), -ketoglutarate (glutamate), hexosephosphates (galactosamine), and pentosephosphates (ribose). The specific radioactities of N-acetylgroups and of the three amino acids were identical. The hexosamine exhibited a two times higher specific radioactivity, and the pentose a 1.6 times higher specific radioactivity than e.g. alanine. M. thermoautotrophicum growing in presence of 3-14C pyruvate, however, did not incorporate 14C into cell compounds directly derived from acetyl CoA. Those compounds derived from pyruvate, dicarboxylic acids and hexosephosphates became labelled. The specific radioactivities of alanine, aspartate and glutamate were identical; the hexosamine had a specific radioactivity twice as high as e.g. alanine.The finding that pyruvate was not incorporated into compounds derived from acetyl CoA, whereas acetate was incorporated into derivatives of acetyl CoA and pyruvate in a 1:1 ratio demonstrates that pyruvate is synthesized by reductive carboxylation of acetyl CoA. The data further provide evidence that in this autotrophic CO2 fixation pathway hexosephosphates and pentosephosphates are synthesized from CO2 via acetyl CoA and pyruvate.  相似文献   

2.
The Gram positive anaerobeAcetobacterium woodii is able to grow autotrophically with a mixture of H2 and CO2 as the energy and carbon source. The question, by which pathway CO2 is assimilated, was studied using long term isotope labeling.Autotrophically growing cultures produced acetate parallel to cell proliferation, and, when U-[14C]acetate was present as tracer, incorporated radioactivity into all cell fractions. The specific radioactivity and the label positions were determined for those representative cell compounds which biosynthetically originated directly from acetyl CoA (N-acetyl groups), pyruvate (alanine), oxaloacetate (aspartate), -ketoglutarate (glutamate), and hexosephosphates (glucosamine). Per mol compound the same amount of labeled acetate was incorporated into N-acetyl groups, alanine (C-2, C-3), aspartate (C-2, C-3), and twice the amount into glutamate (C-2, C-3, C-4, C-5) and into glucosamine. Consequently, the unlabeled carbon atoms of the C3–C6 compounds must have been derived from CO2 by carboxylation subsequent to acetyl CoA synthesis. When 0.2 mM 2-[14C]pyruvate was added to autotrophically growing cultures, also a substantial amount of radioactivity was incorporated. Two important differences in comparison to the acetate experiment were observed: The N-acetyl groups were almost unlabeled and glutamate contained the same specific radioactivity as alanine or aspartate.These data showed that acetyl CoA is the central intermediate for biosynthesis and excluded the operation of the Calvin cycle inA. woodii. The results were consistent with the operation of a different autotrophic CO2 fixation pathway in which CO2 is converted into acetyl CoA by total synthesis via methyltetrahydrofolate; acetyl CoA is then further reductively carboxylated to pyruvate.  相似文献   

3.
Growth of Thermoproteus neutrophilus at 85°C was studied using an improved mineral medium with CO2, CO2 plus acetate, CO2 plus propionate, or CO2 plus succinate as carbon sources; sulfur reduction with H2 to H2S was the sole source of energy. None of the carbon compounds added was oxidized to CO2. The organism grew autotrophically with a generation time of 9–14 h, up to a cell density of 0.5 g dry weight per liter (2×109 cells/ml). Propionate did not stimulate, succinate slightly stimulated the growth rate. Acetate, even at low concentrations (0.5 mM), stimulated the growth rate, the generation time being shortened to 3–4 h. Acetate provided 70% of the cell carbon, which shows that Thermoproteus neutrophilus is a facultative autotroph. The path of these carbon precursors into cell compounds was studied by 14C long-term labelling and investigation of enzyme activities. Propionate could not be used as a major carbon source and was incorporated only into isoleucine, probably via the citramalate pathway. Acetate was a preferred carbon source which suppressed autotrophic CO2 fixation: acetate grown cells exhibited an incomplete citric acid cycle in which 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase was present, but fumarate reductase was repressed. The succinate incorporation pattern and enzyme pattern indicated that autotrophic CO2 fixation proceeded via a yet to be defined reductive citric acid cycle.  相似文献   

4.
The pivotal role of acetyl coenzyme A in CO2 assimilation by autotrophic methanogenic bacteria has been demonstrated by pulse-labelling of growing Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum with 14CO2. After very short incubation with 14CO2 (1.5 s) approximately 1% of label incorporated into the soluble cell fraction was contained in acetyl coenzyme A. The percentage distribution of 14C within acetyl CoA markedly decreased with time, which is indicative for acetyl CoA being an immediate 14CO2 fixation product. Label in the acetate molecule first appeared in the carboxyl carbon, but the methyl carbon became equally labelled within only 10 s. The acetyl CoA was compared with authentic material by various criterions and its cellular concentration was determined to be 52 M. This small cellular pool size of acetyl CoA as compared to e.g. alanine (6.4 mM) provides an explanation for the observed labelling kinetics. The data are fully consistent with autotrophic carbon assimilation via a total synthesis of acetyl coenzyme A from 2 CO2.Dedicated to Professor Dr. Gerhart Drews on occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

5.
The autotrophic carbon fixation pathway was studied in the thermophilic hydrogen oxidizing eubacterium Aquifex pyrophilus and in the thermophilic sulfur reducing archaebacterium Thermoproteus neutrophilus. Neither organism contained ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity suggesting that the Calvin cycle is not operating. Rather, all enzymes of the reductive citric acid cycle were found in A. pyrophilus. In T. neutrophilus ATP citrate lyase activity was detected which has not been achieved so far; this finding corroborates earlier work suggesting the presence of the reductive citric acid cycle in this archaebacterium. The reductive citric acid cycle for autotrophic CO2 fixation now has been documented in the eubacterial branches of the proteobacteria, in green sulfur bacteria, and in the thermophilic Knallgas bacteria as well as in the branch of the sulfur dependent archaebacteria.  相似文献   

6.
Earlier labeling experiments have shown that autotrophically grown Acetobacterium woodii assimilates cell carbon via direct acetyl CoA formation from 2 CO2, rather than via the Calvin cycle. Cell extracts contained the enzymes required for biosynthesis starting from acetyl CoA and CO2. Notably, pyruvate synthase, pyruvate phosphate dikinase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxytransphosphorylase were present in sufficiently high activities. Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity could not be detected. The observed enzyme pattern was consistent with the postulated biosynthetic pathway as deduced from 14C-labeling experiments.  相似文献   

7.
The pathway of autotrophic CO2 fixation was studied in the phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus and in the aerobic thermoacidophilic archaeon Metallosphaera sedula. In both organisms, none of the key enzymes of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle, the reductive citric acid cycle, and the reductive acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) pathway were detectable. However, cells contained the biotin-dependent acetyl-CoA carboxylase and propionyl-CoA carboxylase as well as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The specific enzyme activities of the carboxylases were high enough to explain the autotrophic growth rate via the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle. Extracts catalyzed the CO2-, MgATP-, and NADPH-dependent conversion of acetyl-CoA to 3-hydroxypropionate via malonyl-CoA and the conversion of this intermediate to succinate via propionyl-CoA. The labelled intermediates were detected in vitro with either 14CO2 or [14C]acetyl-CoA as precursor. These reactions are part of the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle, the autotrophic pathway proposed for C. aurantiacus. The investigation was extended to the autotrophic archaea Sulfolobus metallicus and Acidianus infernus, which showed acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA carboxylase activities in extracts of autotrophically grown cells. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity is unexpected in archaea since they do not contain fatty acids in their membranes. These aerobic archaea, as well as C. aurantiacus, were screened for biotin-containing proteins by the avidin-peroxidase test. They contained large amounts of a small biotin-carrying protein, which is most likely part of the acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA carboxylases. Other archaea reported to use one of the other known autotrophic pathways lacked such small biotin-containing proteins. These findings suggest that the aerobic autotrophic archaea M. sedula, S. metallicus, and A. infernus use a yet-to-be-defined 3-hydroxypropionate cycle for their autotrophic growth. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase and propionyl-CoA carboxylase are proposed to be the main CO2 fixation enzymes, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase may have an anaplerotic function. The results also provide further support for the occurrence of the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle in C. aurantiacus.  相似文献   

8.
Chloroflexus aurantiacus OK-70 fl secreted 3-hydroxypropionate (3HP) during phototrophic growth. The greatest amounts were secreted by cells grown on propionate (0.35 mM 3HP) while the lowest levels were found in autotrophically grown cultures (1.5 M). Large amounts of 2-fluoro,3-hydroxypropionate were formed by autotrophically grown cells exposed to fluoroacetate (FAc). Increased levels of 3HP were observed in these cultures when incubated with acctate. The secretion of 3HP was further stimulated by 0.2 mM KCN, an inhibitor of CO2 fixation, but only in the presence of acetate. The pathway of 3HP formation was studied by using 13C-labelled substrates and NMR. The 3HP formed in the presence of C1-labelled acetate and FAc was labelled at C3 and somewhat less at C2 while with C2-labelled acetate as the tracer 3HP was labelled predominantly at C2. The carboxyl group was derived from CO2. The 3HP formed by cells grown on propionate and 13CO2 was labelled at all carbon atoms, the label content of C2 and C3 was about 25 and 65% of that of C1 respectively. It is suggested that 3HP is an intermediate in a pathway for acetate assimilation and in a new reductive carboxylic acid cycle for autotrophic CO2 fixation.Abbreviations 3HP 3-hydroxypropionate - 2F3HP 2,fluoro,3-hydroxypropionate - FAc fluoroacetate - GC gas chromatography - MS mass spectrometry - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance  相似文献   

9.
The incorporation of 14CO2 by an exponentially growing culture of the autotrophic bacterium Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum has been studied. The distribution of radioactivity during 2s–120s incubation periods has been analyzed by chromatography and radioautography. After a 2 s incubation most of the radioactivity of the ethanolsoluble fraction was present in the amino acids alanine, glutamate, glutamine and aspartate, whereas phosphorylated compounds were only weakly labelled. The percentage of the total radioactivity fixed, which was contained in the principal early labelled amino acid alanine, increased in the first 20 s and only then decreased, indicating that alanine is derived from primary products of CO2 fixation.The labelling patterns of alanine produced during various incubation times have been determined by degradation. After a 2 s 14CO2 pulse, 61% of the radioactivity was located in C-1, 23% in C-2, and 16% in C-3. The results are consistent with the operation of a previously proposed autotrophic CO2 assimilation pathway which involves the formation of acetyl CoA from 2 CO2 via one-carbon unit intermediates, followed by the reductive carboxylation of acetyl CoA to pyruvate.  相似文献   

10.
The autotrophic CO2 fixation pathway inAcidianus brierleyi, a facultatively anaerobic thermoacidophilic archaebacterium, was investigated by measuring enzymatic activities from autotrophic, mixotrophic, and heterotrophic cultures. Contrary to the published report that the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle operates inA. brierleyi, the enzymatic activity of ATP:citrate lyase, the key enzyme of the cycle, was not detected. Instead, activities of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and propionyl-CoA carboxylase, key enzymes of the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle, were detected only whenA. brierleyi was growing autotrophically. We conclude that a modified 3-hydroxypropionate pathway operates inA. brierleyi.Abbreviations TCA tricarboxylic acid - BV Benzyl viologen  相似文献   

11.
For Crenarchaea, two new autotrophic carbon fixation cycles were recently described. Sulfolobales use the 3-hydroxypropionate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle, with acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA)/propionyl-CoA carboxylase as the carboxylating enzyme. Ignicoccus hospitalis (Desulfurococcales) uses the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle, with pyruvate synthase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase being responsible for CO2 fixation. In the two cycles, acetyl-CoA and two inorganic carbons are transformed to succinyl-CoA by different routes, whereas the regeneration of acetyl-CoA from succinyl-CoA proceeds via the same route. Thermoproteales would be an exception to this unifying concept, since for Thermoproteus neutrophilus, the reductive citric acid cycle was proposed as a carbon fixation mechanism. Here, evidence is presented for the operation of the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle in this archaeon. All required enzyme activities were detected in large amounts. The key enzymes of the cycle were strongly upregulated under autotrophic growth conditions, indicating their involvement in autotrophic CO2 fixation. The corresponding genes were identified in the genome. 14C-labeled 4-hydroxybutyrate was incorporated into the central building blocks in accordance with the key position of this compound in the cycle. Moreover, the results of previous 13C-labeling studies, which could be reconciled with a reductive citric acid cycle only when some assumptions were made, were perfectly in line with the new proposal. We conclude that the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle is operating in CO2 fixation in the strict anaerobic Thermoproteales as well as in Desulfurococcales.Two new autotrophic carbon fixation cycles have recently been discovered in the Crenarchaea, one of the two subgroups of the Archaea. The 3-hydroxypropionate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle functions in the aerobic autotrophic Sulfolobales (7) and the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle (Fig. (Fig.1)1) in the anaerobic autotrophic Ignicoccus hospitalis, belonging to the Desulfurococcales (27). These pathways have in common the synthesis of succinyl-coenzyme A (CoA) from acetyl-CoA and two inorganic carbons, although this is accomplished in quite different ways and using different carboxylases. In the 3-hydroxypropionate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle, acetyl-CoA/propionyl-CoA carboxylase fixes two molecules of bicarbonate, and in the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle, pyruvate synthase and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase are the two carboxylating enzymes. Yet, the regenerations of acetyl-CoA, the primary CO2 acceptor, from succinyl-CoA are similar in the two pathways.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle for autotrophic CO2 fixation, as proposed for T. neutrophilus. Enzymes: 1, pyruvate synthase (reduced MV); 2, pyruvate-water dikinase; 3, PEP carboxylase; 4, malate dehydrogenase (NADH); 5, fumarate hydratase; 6, fumarate reductase (reduced MV); 7, succinyl-CoA synthetase (ADP forming); 8, succinyl-CoA reductase (NADPH); 9, succinic semialdehyde reductase (NADPH); 10, 4-hydroxybutyrate-CoA ligase (AMP forming); 11, 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase; 12, crotonyl-CoA hydratase; 13, (S)-3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase (NAD+); 14, acetoacetyl-CoA β-ketothiolase. Fdred, reduced ferredoxin.Acetyl-CoA regeneration is as follows. The CO2 fixation product succinyl-CoA is reduced to 4-hydroxybutyrate, which is activated to 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA and then dehydrated to crotonyl-CoA by 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase. This radical [4Fe-4S] and flavin adenine dinucleotide-containing dehydratase (11, 37) is considered a key enzyme of the 4-hydroxybutyrate part of each pathway. Its product, crotonyl-CoA, is further converted to acetoacetyl-CoA and then to two acetyl-CoA molecules, closing the cycle and generating an additional molecule of acetyl-CoA for biosynthesis. Therefore, two different autotrophic pathways in different crenarchaeal orders share many common enzymes and intermediates.In this context, the order Thermoproteales would constitute an exception within the Crenarchaea, since the reductive citric acid cycle was proposed for Thermoproteus neutrophilus (6, 48-50, 55) and Pyrobaculum islandicum (26). T. neutrophilus is a strictly anaerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon growing autotrophically by reducing sulfur with hydrogen at 85°C and neutral pH (19). It can also assimilate organic compounds, such as acetate or succinate, but only in the presence of CO2 and H2, i.e., in a mixotrophic way (48).In the reductive citric acid cycle, succinyl-CoA is further transformed with 2 CO2 to citrate, followed by citrate cleavage to oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA. This requires two characteristic enzymes, 2-oxoglutarate synthase (2-oxoglutarate-ferredoxin oxidoreductase) and ATP citrate lyase. The proposal of the functioning of the reductive citric acid cycle in T. neutrophilus was based on the results of a 13C retrobiosynthetic analysis of the central carbon metabolism, using 13C-labeled succinate and acetate as an additional carbon source, following its incorporation into cellular building blocks. The 13C enrichment data of, e.g., glutamate, which is directly derived from 2-oxoglutarate, were consistent with the operation of a reductive citric acid cycle only when further assumptions were made (55). The activities of the enzymes of this cycle were demonstrated with extracts of autotrophically grown cells. However, the measured 2-oxoglutarate synthase and ATP-citrate lyase activity levels were very low and could not support the reported growth rate under autotrophic conditions (6, 48).The recent sequencing of the genome of Pyrobaculum aerophilum, belonging to the Thermoproteales (20), revealed a surprising feature, the presence of a 4-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydratase gene without the presence of an ATP-citrate lyase gene. Similar gene patterns are found in the genomes of T. neutrophilus as well as Pyrobaculum calidifontis and P. islandicum, sequenced by the DOE Joint Genome Institute (http://www.jgi.doe.gov/). This indicates a possible functioning of the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle in Thermoproteales and brings into question the involvement of the reductive citric acid cycle in autotrophic CO2 fixation. This study has reinvestigated the pathway of autotrophic CO2 fixation in Thermoproteus neutrophilus. We provide different lines of evidence for the operation of the dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate cycle.  相似文献   

12.
The involvement of reactions of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in autotrophic CO2 fixation in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum was investigated. The incorporation of succinate into glutamate (=-ketoglutarate), aspartate (=oxaloacetate) and alanine (=pyruvate) was studied. The organism was grown on H2 plus CO2 at pH 6.5 in the presence of 1 mM [U-14C-]succinate. Significant amounts of the dicarboxylic acid were incorporated into cellular material under these conditions. Alanine, aspartate, and glutamate were isolated and their specific radioactivities were determined. Only glutamate was found to be labelled. Degradation of glutamate revealed that C-1 of glutamate was derived from CO2 and C-2-C-5 from succinate indicating that in M. thermoautotrophicum -ketoglutarate is synthesized via reductive carboxylation of succinyl CoA. The finding that succinate was not incorporated into alanine and aspartate excludes that oxaloacetate and pyruvate are synthesized from -ketoglutarate via isocitrate or citrate. This is taken as evidence that a complete reductive carboxylic acid cycle is not involved here in autotrophic CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

13.
Archaeoglobus lithotrophicus is a hyperthermophilic Archaeon that grows on H2 and sulfate as energy sources and CO2 as sole carbon source. The autotrophic sulfate reducer was shown to contain all the enzyme activities and coenzymes of the reductive carbon monoxide dehydrogenase pathway for autotrophic CO2 fixation as operative in methanogenic Archaea. With the exception of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase these enzymes and coenzymes were also found in A. profundus. This organism grows lithotrophically on H2 and sulfate, but differs from A. lithotrophicus in that it cannot grow autotrophically: A. profundus requires acetate and CO2 for biosynthesis. The absence of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase in A. profundus is substantiated by the observation that this organism, in contrast to A. lithotrophicus, is not mini-methanogenic and contains only relatively low concentrations of corrinoids.Abbreviations F 420 coenzyme F420 - MFR methanofuran - CHO-MFR formylmethanofuran - H 4MPT 5,6,7,8-tetrahydromethanopterin - CHO–H 4MPT N5 formyl-H4MPT - CHH4MPT+N5 methenyl-H4MPT - CH 2=H4MPT N5, N10 methylene-H4MPT - CH 3–H4MPT N5 methyl-H4MPT - H 4F tetrahydrofolate - I U 1 mol/min - t d doubling time  相似文献   

14.
The activity of two carboxylating enzymes was studied in the green filamentous bacteriumChloroflexus aurantiacus. The carboxylation reaction involving pyruvate synthase was optimized using14CO2 and cell extracts. Pyruvate synthase was shown to be absent from cells ofCfl. aurantiacus OK-70 and present (in a quantity sufficient to account for autotrophic growth) in cells ofCfl. aurantiacus B-3. Differences in the levels of acetyl CoA carboxylase activity were revealed between cells of the strains studied grown under different conditions. The data obtained confirm the operation of different mechanisms of autotrophic CO2 assimilation inCfl. aurantiacus B-3 andCfl. aurantiacus OK-70: in the former organism, it is the reductive cycle of dicarboxylic acids, and in the latter one, it is the 3-hydroxypropionate cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Chlorobium limicola was grown on a mineral salts medium with CO2 as the main carbon source supplemented with specifically labeled 14C propionate and the incorporation of 14C into alanine ( intracellular pyruvate), aspartate ( oxaloacetate), and glutamate ( -ketoglutarate) was studied in long term labeling experiments. During growth in presence of propionate 30% of the cell carbon were derived from propionate and 70% from CO2. Propionate was not oxidized to CO2.All three amino acids were found to be labeled. The labeling patterns indicate that propionate was assimilated via propionyl CoA, methylmalonyl CoA and succinyl CoA. When 1-14C propionate was the labeled precursor no radioactivity was found in the carboxyl group(s) of alanine, aspartate and glutamate, excluding the incorporation of propionate into the amino acids via succinate oxidation to fumarate. With 1-14C propionate preferentially aspartate (C-3) and glutamate (C-2) became labeled, with 2-14C propionate alanine (C-3) and glutamate (C-4). These findings indicate that propionate was incorporated into the amino acids via succinyl CoA, -ketoglutarate, isocitrate, and citrate, followed by a si-type cleavage of citrate to oxaloacetate and acetyl CoA (or acetate). Similar experiments with U-14C acetate confirm these conclusions. Thus, all reactions of the proposed reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle could be demonstrated in autotrophically growing cells.  相似文献   

16.
Desulfobacter postgatei is an acetate-oxidizing, sulfate-reducing bacterium that metabolizes acetate via the citric acid cycle. The organism has been reported to contain a si-citrate synthase (EC 4.1.3.7) which is activated by AMP and inorganic phosphate. It is show now, that the enzyme mediating citrate formation is an ATP-citrate lyase (EC 4.1.3.8) rather than a citrate synthase. Cell extracts (160,000xg supernatant) catalyzed the conversion of oxaloacetate (apparent K m=0.2 mM), acetyl-CoA (app. K m=0.1 mM), ADP (app. K m=0.06 mM) and phosphate (app. K m=0.7 mM) to citrate, CoA and ATP with a specific activity of 0.3 mol·min-1·mg-1 protein. Per mol citrate formed 1 mol of ATP was generated. Cleavage of citrate (app. K m=0.05 mM; V max=1.2 mol · min-1 · mg-1 protein) was dependent on ATP (app. K m=0.4 mM) and CoA (app. K m=0.05 mM) and yielded oxaloacetate, acetyl-CoA, ADP, and phosphate as products in a stoichiometry of citrate:CoA:oxaloacetate:ADP=1:1:1:1. The use of an ATP-citrate lyase in the citric acid cycle enables D. postgatei to couple the oxidation of acetate to 2 CO2 with the net synthesis of ATP via substrate level phosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
Chlorobium limicola has been proposed to assimilate CO2 autotrophically via a reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle rather than via the Calvin cycle. This proposal has been a matter of considerable controversy. In order to determine which pathway is operative, the bacterium was grown on a mineral salts medium with CO2 as the main carbon source supplemented with specifically labeled 14C-pyruvate, and the incorporation of 14C into alanine (intracellular pyruvate), aspartate (oxaloacetate), glutamate (-ketoglutarate), and glucose (hexosephosphate) was measured in exponentially growing cells in long term labeling experiments. During growth in presence of pyruvate, 20% of the cell carbon were derived from pyruvate in the medium, 80% from CO2. Since pyruvate was not oxidized to CO2, only those compounds should become labeled which were synthesized from CO2 via pyruvate.The three amino acids and glucose were found to be labeled. Alanine had one fifth the specific radioactivity of the extracellular pyruvate, indicating that 20% of the intracellular pyruvate pool were derived from pyruvate in the medium, 80% were synthesized from CO2. Glucose had twice the specific radioactivity of alanine, showing that hexosephosphate synthesis from CO2 proceeded via the pyruvate pool. The latter finding is not consistent with the operation of the Calvin cycle, in which pyruvate is not an intermediate. The specific radioactivities of aspartate (oxaloacetate) and of glutamate (-ketoglutarate) were practically identical but considerably lower than that of alanine ( intracellular pyruvate). These findings are compatible with the operation of a reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle as mechanism of autotrophic CO2 fixation. Degradation studies of the cell components support this interpretation. Offprint requests to: G. Fuchs  相似文献   

18.
Chlorofluexus aurantiacus OK-70 fl was grown photoautotrophically with hydrogen as the electron source. The lowest doubling time observed was 26 h.The mechanism of CO2 fixation in autotrophically grown cells was studied. The presence of ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate carboxylase and phosphoribulokinase could not be demonstrated. Carbon isotope fractionation (13C) was small, and alanine and aspartate but not 3-phosphoglycerate were the major labelled compounds in short term 14CO2 labelling. Thus CO2 is not fixed by the Calvin cycle.Fluoroacetate (FAc) completely inhibited protein synthesis in cultures and caused a slight citrate accumulation. However, CO2 fixation continued and increased polyglucose formation occurred. Under these conditions added acetate was metabolized to polyglucose, as were glycine, serine, glyoxylate and succinate, but to a lesser extent; little or no formate or CO was utilised.Glyoxylate inhibited CO2 fixation in vivo, indicating that pyruvate is formed from acetyl-CoA and CO2 by pyruvate synthase. Two key enzymes of the reductive TCA cycle, citrate lyase and -ketoglutarate synthase were not detected in cell free extracts, but pyruvate synthase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase were demonstrated. It is concluded that acetyl-CoA is a central intermediate in the CO2 fixation process, but the mechanism of its synthesis is not clear.Abbreviations Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase - TCA cycle tricarboxylic acid cycle - FAc monofluoroacetate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - MV methyl viologen - TTC triphenyltetrazolium chloride - PMS phenazine methosulfate  相似文献   

19.
A modified 3-hydroxypropionate cycle has been proposed as the autotrophic CO2 fixation pathway for the thermoacidophilic crenarchaeon Metallosphaera sedula. The cycle requires the reductive conversion of 3-hydroxypropionate to propionyl-coenzyme A (propionyl-CoA). The specific activity of the 3-hydroxypropionate-, CoA-, and MgATP-dependent oxidation of NADPH in autotrophically grown cells was 0.023 μmol min−1mg protein−1. The reaction sequence is catalyzed by at least two enzymes. The first enzyme, 3-hydroxypropionyl-CoA synthetase, catalyzes the following reaction: 3-hydroxypropionate + ATP + CoA → 3-hydroxypropionyl-CoA + AMP + PPi. The enzyme was purified 95-fold to a specific activity of 18 μmol min−1 mg protein−1 from autotrophically grown M. sedula cells. An internal peptide sequence was determined and a gene encoding a homologous protein identified in the genome of Sulfolobus tokodaii; similar genes were found in S. solfataricus and S. acidocaldarius. The gene was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, and the His-tagged protein was purified. Both the native enzyme from M. sedula and the recombinant enzyme from S. tokodaii not only activated 3-hydroxypropionate to its CoA ester but also activated propionate, acrylate, acetate, and butyrate; however, with the exception of propionate, the affinities for these substrates were reduced. 3-Hydroxypropionyl-CoA synthetase is up-regulated eightfold in autotrophically versus heterotrophically grown M. sedula, supporting its proposed role during CO2 fixation in this archaeon and possibly other members of the Sulfolobaceae family.  相似文献   

20.
It has been proposed that in some anaerobic facultatively autotrophic bacteria the acetyl CoA/CO dehydrogenase pathway is operating both in the reductive and in the oxidative direction, depending on the growth conditions. One of these anaerobes, the Gram-negative sulfate-reducing cubacterium Desulfobacterium autotrophicum, was examined for enzymes of the proposed pathway. All the required enzyme activities were present in sufficient amounts both in autotrophically and in heterotrophically grown cells, provided that the cellular tetrahydropterin rather than tetrahydrofolate was used as cosubstrate in some of the enzyme assays. The question arises whether two sets of enzymes are operating in the reductive and oxidative direction, respectively. The key enzyme of this pathway, CO dehydrogenase, which was reasonably oxygen stable, was analysed by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and anaerobic activity staining. Extracts from heterotrophically grown cells exhibited five enzyme activity bands. Extracts from autotrophically grown cells showed the same pattern but an additional activity band appeared.  相似文献   

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