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1.
The large subunit (HycE, 569 amino acids) of Escherichia coli hydrogenase 3 produces hydrogen from formate via its Ni–Fe-binding site. In this paper, we engineered HycE for enhanced hydrogen production by an error-prone polymerase chain reaction (epPCR) using a host that lacked hydrogenase activity via the hyaB hybC hycE mutations. Seven enhanced HycE variants were obtained with a novel chemochromic membrane screen that directly detected hydrogen from individual colonies. The best epPCR variant contained eight mutations (S2T, Y50F, I171T, A291V, T366S, V433L, M444I, and L523Q) and had 17-fold higher hydrogen-producing activity than wild-type HycE. In addition, this variant had eightfold higher hydrogen yield from formate compared to wild-type HycE. Deoxyribonucleic acid shuffling using the three most-active HycE variants created a variant that has 23-fold higher hydrogen production and ninefold higher yield on formate due to a 74-amino acid carboxy-terminal truncation. Saturation mutagenesis at T366 of HycE also led to increased hydrogen production via a truncation at this position; hence, 204 amino acids at the carboxy terminus may be deleted to increase hydrogen production by 30-fold. This is the first random protein engineering of a hydrogenase.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The structural genes (hup) of the H2 uptake hydrogenase of Rhodobacter capsulatus were isolated from a cosmid gene library of R. capsulatus DNA by hybridization with the structural genes of the H2 uptake hydrogenase of Bradyrhizobium japonicum. The R. capsulatus genes were localized on a 3.5 kb HindIII fragment. The fragment, cloned onto plasmid pAC76, restored hydrogenase activity and autotrophic growth of the R. capsulatus mutant JP91, deficient in hydrogenase activity (Hup-). The nucleotide sequence, determined by the dideoxy chain termination method, revealed the presence of two open reading frames. The gene encoding the large subunit of hydrogenase (hupL) was identified from the size of its protein product (68108 dalton) and by alignment with the NH2 amino acid protein sequence determined by Edman degradation. Upstream and separated from the large subunit by only three nucleotides was a gene encoding a 34 256 dalton polypeptide. Its amino acid sequence showed 80% identity with the small subunit of the hydrogenase of B. japonicum. The gene was identified as the structural gene of the small subunit of R. capsulatus hydrogenase (hupS). The R. capsulatus hydrogenase also showed homology, but to a lesser extent, with the hydrogenase of Desulfovibrio baculatus and D. gigas. In the R. capsulatus hydrogenase the Cys residues, (13 in the small subunit and 12 in the large subunit) were not arranged in the typical configuration found in [4Fe–4S] ferredoxins.  相似文献   

3.
In the presence of carbon monoxide, the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum induces expression of proteins which allow the organism to metabolize carbon monoxide in the net reaction CO + H2O --> CO2 + H2. These proteins include the enzymes carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) and a CO-tolerant hydrogenase. In this paper, we present the complete amino acid sequence for the large subunit of this hydrogenase and describe the properties of the crude enzyme in relation to other known hydrogenases. The amino acid sequence deduced from the CO-induced hydrogenase large-subunit gene (cooH) shows significant similarity to large subunits of other Ni-Fe hydrogenases. The closest similarity is with HycE (58% similarity and 37% identity) from Escherichia coli, which is the large subunit of an Ni-Fe hydrogenase (isoenzyme 3). The properties of the CO-induced hydrogenase are unique. It is exceptionally resistant to inhibition by carbon monoxide. It also exhibits a very high ratio of H2 evolution to H2 uptake activity compared with other known hydrogenases. The CO-induced hydrogenase is tightly membrane bound, and its inhibition by nonionic detergents is described. Finally, the presence of nickel in the hydrogenase is addressed. Analysis of wild-type R. rubrum grown on nickel-depleted medium indicates a requirement for nickel for hydrogenase activity. However, analysis of strain UR294 (cooC insertion mutant defective in nickel insertion into CODH) shows that independent nickel insertion mechanisms are utilized by hydrogenase and CODH. CooH lacks the C-terminal peptide that is found in other Ni-Fe hydrogenases; in other systems, this peptide is cleaved during Ni processing.  相似文献   

4.
The maturation of [NiFe]-hydrogenases is a catalysed process in which the activities of at least seven proteins are involved. The last step consists of the endoproteolytic cleavage of the precursor of the large subunit after the [NiFe]-metal centre has been assembled. The amino acid sequence requirements for the endopeptidase HycI involved in the C-terminal processing of HycE, the large subunit of the hydrogenase 3 from Escherichia coli, were investigated. Mutational alteration of the amino acid residues neighbouring the cleavage site showed that proteolysis still occurred when chemically similar amino acids were exchanged. Processing was blocked, however, in a variant in which the methionine at the C-terminal side was replaced by a glutamate residue. Truncation of the precursor from the C-terminal end rendered variants amenable to maturation even when two-thirds of the extension were removed but abolished proteolysis upon further deletion of a cluster of six basic amino acids. A construct in which the C-terminal extension from the large subunit of the hydrogenase 2 was fused to the mature part of the large subunit of hydrogenase 3 was neither processed by HycI nor by HybD, the endopeptidase specific for the large subunit of hydrogenase 2. The maturation endopeptidase, therefore, exhibits a relaxed sequence constraint in recognition of its cleavage site and does not require the entire C-terminal extension. The results point to an interaction of the C-terminus with some domain of the large subunit, rendering a conformation amenable to recognition by the endopeptidase.  相似文献   

5.
The maturation of [NiFe]-hydrogenases is a catalyzed process involving the activities of at least seven proteins. The last step consists of the endoproteolytic cleavage of the precursor of the large subunit, after the [NiFe]-metal center has been assembled. The HycI endopeptidase is involved in the C-terminal processing of HycE, the large subunit of hydrogenase 3 from Escherichia coli. Although HycI has been well characterized biochemically, the crystallization of the protein has been quite challenging. Here, we present the crystal structure of HycI at 1.70 Å resolution. The crystal structure resembles the recently reported solution structure (NMR) of the same protein and the holo-HyPD structure of the same family, but a significant conformational change is observed at the L5 loop, as compared with the solution structures of HycI and HyPD. In our crystal structure, three specific metal binding sites (Ca1-3) were identified and these metal ions are possibly involved in the C-terminal cleavage of HycE.  相似文献   

6.
7.

Background  

The last step in the maturation process of the large subunit of [NiFe]-hydrogenases is a proteolytic cleavage of the C-terminal by a hydrogenase specific protease. Contrary to other accessory proteins these hydrogenase proteases are believed to be specific whereby one type of hydrogenases specific protease only cleaves one type of hydrogenase. In cyanobacteria this is achieved by the gene product of either hupW or hoxW, specific for the uptake or the bidirectional hydrogenase respectively. The filamentous cyanobacteria Nostoc punctiforme ATCC 29133 and Nostoc sp strain PCC 7120 may contain a single uptake hydrogenase or both an uptake and a bidirectional hydrogenase respectively.  相似文献   

8.
Chung KC  Zamble DB 《FEBS letters》2011,(2):43081-294
The multi-step biosynthesis of the [NiFe]-hydrogenase enzyme involves a variety of accessory proteins. To further understand this process, a Strep-tag II variant of the large subunit of Escherichia coli hydrogenase 3, HycE, was constructed to enable isolation of protein complexes. A complex with SlyD, a chaperone protein implicated in hydrogenase production through association with the nickel-binding accessory protein HypB, was observed. A SlyD–HycE interaction preceding both iron and nickel insertion to the enzyme was detected, mediated by the chaperone domain of SlyD, and independent of HypB. These results support a model of several roles for SlyD during hydrogenase maturation.

Structured summary

HycEphysically interacts with HypA, HypB and SlyD by cross linking study (view interaction)HycEphysically interacts with DnaK and GroEL by cross linking study (view interaction)HypBphysically interacts with SlyD by cross linking study (view interaction)HycEphysically interacts with SlyD by cross linking study (view interaction 1, 2)  相似文献   

9.
A double mutant (JH103K10) was created from hydrogenase constitutive mutant (JH103) by replacement of a chromosomal 0.60 kb nickel metabolism related locus with a kanamycin resistance gene. The double mutant required 10 to 20 times more nickel (Ni) to achieve near parental strain levels of hydrogenase activity. In the absence of nickel, both JH103K10 and JH103 synthesized high levels of (inactive) hydrogenase apoprotein (large subunit, 65 kDa). With nickel, the double mutant JH103K10 synthesized the same level of hydrogenase apoenzyme (65-kDa subunit) as the JH103 parent strain; however, whole cell hydrogenase activity in JH103K10 was less than half of that in JH103, and the CPM (due to 63Ni in hydrogenase) of membranes and the calculated ratio of nickel per unit of hydrogenase enzyme of the double mutant were 40% of that in JH103. Therefore, the difference in hydrogenase activities between the double mutant and the Hupck strain can be accounted for by different abilities of the strains to incorporate nickel into the hydrogenase apoenzyme. The addition of nickel ions to previously Ni-starved and then chloramphenicol-treated Bradyrhizobium japonicum whole cells (JH103 and JH103K10) resulted in (an in vivo) restoration of hydrogenase activity, suggesting that the apoprotein synthesized in the Ni-free cultures could be activated by addition of nickel even in the absence of protein synthesis. The extent of reconstitution of active hydrogenase by nickel was greater in the absence of chloramphenicol. Hydrogenase apoprotein could not be activated by nickel in vitro even with the addition of ATP. The successful in vivo but not in vitro results suggest that enzymatic but cell-disruption labile factors are required for Ni incorporation into hydrogenase.  相似文献   

10.
Nickel delivery during maturation of Escherichia coli [NiFe] hydrogenase 3 includes the accessory proteins HypA, HypB, and SlyD. Although the isolated proteins have been characterized, little is known about how they interact with each other and the hydrogenase 3 large subunit, HycE. In this study the complexes of HypA and HycE were investigated after modification with the Strep-tag II. Multiprotein complexes containing HypA, HypB, SlyD, and HycE were observed, consistent with the assembly of a single nickel insertion cluster. An interaction between HypA and HycE did not require the other nickel insertion proteins, but HypB was not found with the large subunit in the absence of HypA. The HypA-HycE complex was not detected in the absence of the HypC or HypD proteins, involved in the preceding iron insertion step, and this interaction is enhanced by nickel brought into the cell by the NikABCDE membrane transporter. Furthermore, without the hydrogenase 1, 2, and 3 large subunits, complexes between HypA, HypB, and SlyD were observed. These results support the hypothesis that HypA acts as a scaffold for assembly of the nickel insertion proteins with the hydrogenase precursor protein after delivery of the iron center. At different stages of the hydrogenase maturation process, HypA was observed at or near the cell membrane by using fluorescence confocal microscopy, as was HycE, suggesting membrane localization of the nickel insertion event.  相似文献   

11.
The formation of a complex between the specific chaperone-type protein HypC and the precursor form of the large subunit HycE in the maturation pathway of hydrogenase 3 from Escherichia coli has been studied by targeted replacement of amino acids in both proteins. HypC and its homologs contain the motif MC(L/I/V)(G/A)(L/I/V)P at the amino terminus, from which the methionine residue is post-translationally removed. The exchange of the cysteine residue led to complete loss of the ability to interact with the precursor form of HycE, but replacement of the proline residue had no effect. Site-directed replacement of the conserved cysteine residues in HycE involved in nickel binding was also performed. Exchange of Cys(241) resulted in the inability of the HycE variant to interact with HypC and to incorporate nickel. The variants of HycE in which Cys(244) and Cys(531) were replaced by alanine residues were unable to incorporate nickel, although the mutated proteins could interact with HypC. Intriguingly, the precursor of HycE in which the Cys(534) residue was exchanged could form the complex with HypC, could incorporate nickel, and was C-terminally processed, but it delivered an inactive enzyme. Our findings are in favor of a model in which binding of HypC masks Cys(241); Cys(244) and Cys(531) bind the iron and nickel moieties, respectively; and C534 closes the bridge between the two metals after C-terminal processing has taken place.  相似文献   

12.
The immunological relationship of the hydrogenase in Frankia KB5 to hydrogenases in other microorganisms was investigated using antisera raised against holo-[NiFe]-hydrogenases isolated from Alcaligenes latus, Azotobacter vinelandii, Ralstonia eutropha, and the small and large hydrogenase subunits from Bradyrhizobium japonicum. The antisera raised against the A. latus, R. eutropha, and B. japonicum (large subunit) polypeptides were found to recognize two polypeptides, corresponding to the unprocessed and processed forms of the hydrogenase subunit in Frankia KB5. None of the antisera, including the antibodies produced against the small hydrogenase subunit isolated from B. japonicum, recognized any polypeptide related to the small hydrogenase subunit in Frankia KB5. An immunogold localization study of the intracellular distribution of hydrogenase in Frankia KB5, with the cryo-section technique, showed that labeling in the membrane of both hyphae and vesicles was positively correlated with hydrogenase activity. Received: 6 November 2000 / Accepted: 18 December 2000  相似文献   

13.
The role of HoxX in hydrogenase biosynthesis of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 was re-examined. The previously characterized hoxX deletion mutant HF344 and a newly constructed second hoxX mutant carrying a smaller in-frame deletion were studied. The second mutant was impaired in the activity of both the soluble and the membrane-bound hydrogenase. The two hydrogenase activities were reduced by approximately 50% due to delayed processing of the active-site-containing large subunits, while hydrogenase gene expression was not affected. We conclude that the mutation in mutant HF344 causes polarity resulting in the observed regulatory phenotype of this mutant. The data presented in this report point to an enhancing function of HoxX in the conversion of the soluble hydrogenase and of the membrane-bound hydrogenase large-subunit precursor. Thus, hoxX encodes a member of the Hyp proteins that are required for the formation of active hydrogenase and was accordingly renamed hypX. Received: 15 June 1998 / Accepted: 5 August 1998  相似文献   

14.
In Rhodobacter capsulatus, the hupL gene encoding the large subunit of the uptake-hydrogenase (Hup) enzyme complex was mutated by insertion of an interposon. The mutant neither synthesized an active hydrogenase nor grew photoautotrophically. Under conditions of nitrogen (N) limitation, photoheterotrophic cultures of the wild type and the mutant evolved H2 by activity of the nitrogenase enzyme complex. When grown with glutamate as an N source and either d,l-malate or l-lactate as carbon sources, the efficiency of H2 production by the HupL mutant was higher than 90%, whereas wild-type cultures exhibited efficiencies of 54% (with d,l-malate) and 64% (with l-lactate), respectively. With NH inf4 sup+ as the N source, efficiencies of H2 production were 70% (mutant) and 52% (wild type). Correspondence to: J. Oelze  相似文献   

15.
Escherichia coli HypC plays an important role in the maturation process of the pre-maturated HycE, the large subunit of hydrogenase 3. It serves as an iron transfer as well as a chaperone protein during the maturation process of pre-HycE, and interacts with both HypD and HycE. The N-terminal cysteine residue of HypC plays a key role in the protein-protein interactions. Here, we present the three-dimensional structure of E. coli HypC, the first solution structure of HupF/HypC family. Our result demonstrates that E. coli HypC consists of a typical OB-fold beta-barrel with two C-terminal helixes. Sequence alignment and structural comparison reveal that the hydrophobic region on the surface of E. coli HypC, as well as the highly flexible C-terminal helixes, may involve in the interactions of E. coli HypC with other proteins.  相似文献   

16.
 The nucleotide sequence of the xynA gene, encoding extracellular xylanase A of Thermotoga neapolitana, was determined. The xynA gene was 3264 base pairs (bp) long and encoded a putative polypeptide of 1055 amino acids. Three different domains were identified by sequence comparison and functional analysis of proteins with N- and/or C-terminal deletions. The core domain displayed significant homology to members of the glycosyl hydrolase family 10. N- and C-terminal domains were dispensable for enzymatic activity and seemed to be responsible for thermostability and cellulose binding, respectively. The intact gene and its truncated variants were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified for biochemical characterization. The enzyme was shown to act as an endo-1,4-β-xylanase, but minor activities against lichenan, barley glucan, methylumbelliferyl cellobioside and p-nitrophenyl xyloside were also detected. The specific activity and pH and temperature optima for hydrolysis of oat xylan were 111.3 U⋅mg-1, 5.5 and 102°C, respectively. The endoxylanase was stable at 90°C and retained 50% activity when incubated for 2 h at 100°C. Received: 19 May 1995/Received revision: 31 July 1995/Accepted: 7 September 1995  相似文献   

17.
TheEscherichia coli genesdicF anddicB encode division inhibitors, which prevent the synthesis and activity, respectively, of the essential division protein FtsZ. A mutation at the C-terminal end of the RNA polymerase subunit renders cells resistant to both inhibitors. In the mutant strain the level of theftsZ gene product is higher than in the wild type. Disruption ofrpoS, which encodes the stationary phase sigma factor S, lowers FtsZ protein levels in the mutant, and partially restores sensitivity to the inhibitors.  相似文献   

18.
The HypB protein from Bradyrhizobium japonicum is a metal-binding GTPase required for hydrogenase expression. In-frame mutagenesis of hypB resulted in strains that were partially or completely deficient in hydrogenase expression, depending on the degree of disruption of the gene. Complete deletion of the gene yielded a strain (JHΔEg) which lacked hydrogenase activity under all conditions tested, including the situation as bacteroids from soybean nodules. Mutant strain JHΔ23H lacking only the N-terminal histidine-rich region (38 amino acids deleted, 23 of which are His residues) expressed partial hydrogenase activity. The activity of strain JHΔ23H was low in comparison to the wild type in 10–50 nM nickel levels, but could be cured to nearly wild-type levels by including 50 μM nickel during the derepression incubation. Studies on strains harbouring the hup promoter–lacZ fusion plasmid showed that the complete deletion of hypB nearly abolished hup promoter activity, whereas the histidine deletion mutant had 60% of the wild-type promoter activity in 50 μM NiCl2. Further evidence that HypB is required for hup promoter-binding activity was obtained from gel-shift assays. HypB could not be detected by immunoblotting when the cells were cultured heterotrophically, but when there was a switch to microaerobic conditions (1% partial pressure O2, 10% partial pressure H2) HypB was detected, and its expression preceded hydrogenase synthesis by 3–6 h. 63Ni accumulation by whole cells showed that both of the mutant strains accumulate less nickel than the wild-type strain at all time points tested during the derepression incubation. Wild-type cultures that received nickel during the HypB expression-specific period and were then washed and derepressed for hydrogenase without nickel had activities comparable to those cells that were derepressed for hydrogenase with nickel for the entire time period. In contrast to the wild type, strain JHΔ23H cultures supplied with nickel only during the HypB expression period achieved hydrogenase activities that were 30% of those cultures supplied with nickel for the entire hydrogenase derepression period. These results indicate that the loss of the metal-binding area of HypB causes a decrease in the ability of the cells to sequester and store nickel for later use in one or more hydrogenase expression steps.  相似文献   

19.
InAzotobacter chroococcum the hydrogenase gene (hup) cluster spans about 14 kb of DNA. The genes coding for the small and large subunits,hupSL, are located at the 5 end, and a cluster of genes,hupABYCDE, resembling theEscherichia coli hyp operon, is located at the 3 end. In this study, we determined the effect of adding nickel to the medium used for the growth ofhup mutants. Hydrogenase activity was restored tohupA andhupB mutants, but nothupY, hupD, orhupE mutants, by the addition of nickel to the growth medium, suggesting that the products ofhupA andhupB are somehow involved in nickel metabolism. The restoration of hydrogenase activity to thehupB mutant required protein synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Hydrogenase of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans ATCC 19859 was purified from cells grown lithoautotrophically with 80% hydrogen, 8.6% carbon dioxide, and 11.4% air. Hydrogenase was located in the 140,000 ×g supernatant in cell-free extracts. The enzyme was purified 7.3-fold after chromatography on Procion Red and Q-Sepharose with a yield of 19%, resulting in an 85% pure preparation with a specific activity of 6.0 U (mg protein)–1. With native PAGE, a mol. mass of 100 and 200 kDa was determined. With SDS-PAGE, two subunits of 64 (HoxG) and of 34 kDa (HoxK) were observed. Hydrogenase reacted with methylene blue and other artificial electron acceptors, but not with NAD. The optimum of enzyme activity was at pH 9 and at 49° C. Hydrogenase contained 0.72 mol nickel and 6.02 mol iron per mol enzyme. The relationship of the T. ferrooxidans hydrogenase to other proteins was examined. A 9.5-kb EcoRI fragment of T. ferrooxidans ATCC 19859 hybridized with a 2.2-kb XhoI fragment from Alcaligenes eutrophus encoding the membrane-bound hydrogenase. Antibodies against this enzyme did not react with the T. ferrooxidans hydrogenase in Western blot analysis. The N-terminal amino acid sequence (40 amino acids) of HoxK was 46% identical to that of the hydrogen sensor HupU of Bradyrhizobium japonicum and 39% identical to that of the HupS subunit of the Desulfovibrio baculatus hydrogenase. The N-terminal sequence of 20 amino acids of HoxG of T. ferrooxidans was 83.3% identical to that of the 60-kDa subunit. HupL, of the hydrogenase of Anabaena sp. Sequences of ten internal peptides of HoxG were 50–100% identical to the respective sequences of HupL of the Anabaena sp. hydrogenase. Received: 17 November 1995 / Accepted: 2 February 1996  相似文献   

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