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Query: EC:1.12.7.2 (
hydrogenase
)
3,522
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three membrane-bound redox complexes have been reported in Desulfovibrio spp., whose genes are not found in the genomes of other sulfate reducers such as Desulfotalea psycrophila and Archaeoglobus fulgidus. These complexes contain a periplasmic
cytochrome c
subunit of the
cytochrome c
(3) family, and their presence in these organisms probably correlates with the presence of a pool of periplasmic cytochromes c(3), also absent in the two other sulfate reducers. In this work we report the isolation and characterization of the first of such complexes, Tmc from D. vulgaris Hildenborough, which is associated with the tetraheme type II
cytochrome c
(3). The isolated Tmc complex contains four subunits, including the TpIIc(3) (TmcA), an integral membrane cytochrome b (TmcC), and two cytoplasmically predicted proteins, an iron-sulfur protein (TmcB) and a tryptophan-rich protein (TmcD). Spectroscopic studies indicate the presence of eight hemes c and two hemes b in the complex pointing to an alpha(2)betagammadelta composition (TmcA(2)BCD). EPR analysis reveals the presence of a [4Fe4S](3+) center and up to three other iron-sulfur centers in the cytoplasmic subunit. Nearly full reduction of the redox centers in the Tmc complex could be obtained upon incubation with
hydrogenase
/TpIc(3), supporting the role of this complex in transmembrane transfer of electrons resulting from periplasmic oxidation of hydrogen.
...
PMID:The Tmc complex from Desulfovibrio vulgaris hildenborough is involved in transmembrane electron transfer from periplasmic hydrogen oxidation. 1692 12
Type I
cytochrome c
(3) is a key protein in the bioenergetic metabolism of Desulfovibrio spp., mediating electron transfer between periplasmic
hydrogenase
and multihaem cytochromes associated with membrane bound complexes, such as type II
cytochrome c
(3). This work presents the NMR assignment of the haem substituents in type I
cytochrome c
(3) isolated from Desulfovibrio africanus and the thermodynamic and kinetic characterisation of type I and type II cytochromes c(3) belonging to the same organism. It is shown that the redox properties of the two proteins allow electrons to be transferred between them in the physiologically relevant direction with the release of energised protons close to the membrane where they can be used by the ATP synthase.
...
PMID:Functional properties of type I and type II cytochromes c3 from Desulfovibrio africanus. 1731 53
Cytochromes are involved in a wide variety of redox reactions in living systems. Some of them contain multiple hemes such as Desulfovibrio cytochrome c3 and Shewanella small tetraheme
cytochrome c
. The significance of c-type tetraheme architectures was discussed. A cyclic heme architecture and its environment regulate the extremely low redox potentials of cytochrome c3 in addition to bis-imidazole coordination and heme exposure. Each heme in cytochrome c3 plays a different role in the electron transport to/from [NiFe]
hydrogenase
and the specific CO-binding. In contrast, the chain-like heme architecture in Shewanella small tetraheme
cytochrome c
and soluble fumarate reductase provides a pathway for directional electron transfer. Thus, the tetraheme architectures do not comprise simple heme assemblies but sophisticated devices.
...
PMID:Functional roles of the heme architecture and its environment in tetraheme cytochrome c. 1737 Sep 88
An inducible chloroplast gene expression system was developed in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii by taking advantage of the properties of the copper-sensitive
cytochrome c
(6) promoter and of the nucleus-encoded Nac2 chloroplast protein. This protein is specifically required for the stable accumulation of the chloroplast psbD RNA and acts on its 5' UTR. A construct containing the Nac2 coding sequence fused to the
cytochrome c
(6) promoter was introduced into the nac2-26 mutant strain deficient in Nac2. In this transformant, psbD is expressed in copper-depleted but not in copper-replete medium. Because psbD encodes the D2 reaction center polypeptide of photosystem II (PSII), the repression of psbD leads to the loss of PSII. We have tested this system for hydrogen production. Upon addition of copper to cells pregrown in copper-deficient medium, PSII levels declined to a level at which oxygen consumption by respiration exceeded oxygen evolution by PSII. The resulting anaerobic conditions led to the induction of
hydrogenase
activity. Because the Cyc6 promoter is also induced under anaerobic conditions, this system opens possibilities for sustained cycling hydrogen production. Moreover, this inducible gene expression system is applicable to any chloroplast gene by replacing its 5' UTR with the psbD 5' UTR in the same genetic background. To make these strains phototrophic, the 5' UTR of the psbD gene was replaced by the petA 5' UTR. As an example, we show that the reporter gene aadA driven by the psbD 5' UTR confers resistance to spectinomycin in the absence of copper and sensitivity in its presence in the culture medium.
...
PMID:Potential for hydrogen production with inducible chloroplast gene expression in Chlamydomonas. 1795 33
Three mutants deficient in hydrogen/formate uptake were obtained through screening of a transposon mutant library containing 5,760 mutants of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20. Mutations were in the genes encoding the type I tetraheme
cytochrome c
(3) (cycA), Fe
hydrogenase
(hydB), and molybdopterin oxidoreductase (mopB). Mutations did not decrease the ability of cells to produce H(2) or formate during growth. Complementation of the cycA and mopB mutants with a plasmid carrying the intact cycA and/or mopB gene and the putative promoter from the parental strain allowed the recovery of H(2) uptake ability, showing that these specific genes are involved in H(2) oxidation. The mop operon encodes a periplasm-facing transmembrane protein complex which may shuttle electrons from periplasmic
cytochrome c
(3) to the menaquinone pool. Electrons can then be used for sulfate reduction in the cytoplasm.
...
PMID:A molybdopterin oxidoreductase is involved in H2 oxidation in Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20. 1923 27
The Quinone-reductase complex (Qrc) is a respiratory complex with Type I
cytochrome c
(3):menaquinone reductase activity, recently described in sulfate-reducing bacteria. Qrc is related to the complex iron-sulfur molybdoenzyme family and to the alternative complex III. In this work we report a detailed characterization of the redox properties of the metal cofactors of Qrc using EPR spectroscopy, which allowed the determination of the reduction potentials of five out of six hemes c, one [3Fe-4S](1+/0) center and the three [4Fe-4S](2+/1+) centers. In addition, we show that Qrc forms a supercomplex with [NiFe]
hydrogenase
and TpIc(3), its physiological electron donors.
...
PMID:EPR characterization of the new Qrc complex from sulfate reducing bacteria and its ability to form a supercomplex with hydrogenase and TpIc3. 2165 11
Progress in the genetic manipulation of the Desulfovibrio strains has provided an opportunity to explore electron flow pathways during sulfate respiration. Most bacteria in this genus couple the oxidation of organic acids or ethanol with the reduction of sulfate, sulfite, or thiosulfate. Both fermentation of pyruvate in the absence of an alternative terminal electron acceptor, disproportionation of fumarate and growth on H(2) with CO(2) during sulfate reduction are exhibited by some strains. The ability to produce or consume H(2) provides Desulfovibrio strains the capacity to participate as either partner in interspecies H(2) transfer. Interestingly the mechanisms of energy conversion, pathways of electron flow and the parameters determining the pathways used remain to be elucidated. Recent application of molecular genetic tools for the exploration of the metabolism of Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough has provided several new datasets that might provide insights and constraints to the electron flow pathways. These datasets include (1) gene expression changes measured in microarrays for cells cultured with different electron donors and acceptors, (2) relative mRNA abundances for cells growing exponentially in defined medium with lactate as carbon source and electron donor plus sulfate as terminal electron acceptor, and (3) a random transposon mutant library selected on medium containing lactate plus sulfate supplemented with yeast extract. Studies of directed mutations eliminating apparent key components, the quinone-interacting membrane-bound oxidoreductase (Qmo) complex, the Type 1 tetraheme
cytochrome c
(3) (Tp1-c(3)), or the Type 1
cytochrome c
(3):menaquinone oxidoreductase (Qrc) complex, suggest a greater flexibility in electron flow than previously considered. The new datasets revealed the absence of random transposons in the genes encoding an enzyme with homology to Coo membrane-bound hydrogenase. From this result, we infer that Coo
hydrogenase
plays an important role in D. vulgaris growth on lactate plus sulfate. These observations along with those reported previously have been combined in a model showing dual pathways of electrons from the oxidation of both lactate and pyruvate during sulfate respiration. Continuing genetic and biochemical analyses of key genes in Desulfovibrio strains will allow further clarification of a general model for sulfate respiration.
...
PMID:Genetics and molecular biology of the electron flow for sulfate respiration in desulfovibrio. 2174 13
Syntrophic growth involves the oxidation of organic compounds and subsequent transfer of electrons to an H(2)- or formate-consuming micro-organism. In order to identify genes involved specifically in syntrophic growth, a mutant library of Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20 was screened for loss of the ability to grow syntrophically with Methanospirillum hungatei JF-1. A collection of 20 mutants with an impaired ability to grow syntrophically was obtained. All 20 mutants grew in pure culture on lactate under sulfidogenic conditions at a rate and to a maximum OD(600) similar to those of the parental strain. The largest number of mutations that affected syntrophic growth with lactate was in genes encoding proteins involved in H(2) oxidation, electron transfer,
hydrogenase
post-translational modification, pyruvate degradation and signal transduction. The qrcB gene, encoding a quinone reductase complex (Qrc), and cycA, encoding the periplasmic tetrahaem
cytochrome c
(3) (TpIc(3)), were required by G20 to grow syntrophically with lactate. A mutant in the hydA gene, encoding an Fe-only
hydrogenase
(Hyd), is also impaired in syntrophic growth with lactate. The other mutants grew more slowly than the parental strain in syntrophic culture with M. hungatei JF-1. qrcB and cycA were shown previously to be required for growth of G20 pure cultures with H(2) and sulfate. Washed cells of the parental strain produced H(2) from either lactate or pyruvate, but washed cells of qrcB, cycA and hydA mutants produced H(2) at rates similar to the parental strain from pyruvate and did not produce significant amounts of H(2) from lactate. Real-time quantitative PCR assays showed increases in expression of the above three genes during syntrophic growth compared with pure-culture growth with lactate and sulfate. Our work shows that Hyd, Qrc and TpIc(3) are involved in H(2) production during syntrophic lactate metabolism by D. alaskensis G20 and emphasizes the importance of H(2) production for syntrophic lactate metabolism in this strain.
...
PMID:Metabolism of H2 by Desulfovibrio alaskensis G20 during syntrophic growth on lactate. 2179 81
It is of particular interest to mimic the process of intramolecular electron relay at the active site of [FeFe]-
hydrogenase
in order to understand the mechanism of the catalytic activity of H(2) evolution. We have recently focused on using the native CXXCH peptide sequence of the C-terminal segment of
cytochrome c
(556) as a platform which holds a diiron carbonyl cluster via two cysteines and have attached a ruthenium photosensitizer via a histidine. The modified peptide with the two metal moieties is found to act as the photocatalyst for H(2) evolution with a turnover number of ~9 over 2h at pH 8.5 in the presence of ascorbate as a sacrificial reagent.
...
PMID:Photocatalytic hydrogen evolution by a diiron hydrogenase model based on a peptide fragment of cytochrome c556 with an attached diiron carbonyl cluster and an attached ruthenium photosensitizer. 2242 Sep 28
Desulfovibrio spp. are sulfate-reducing organisms characterized by having multiple periplasmic hydrogenases and formate dehydrogenases (FDHs). In contrast to enzymes in most bacteria, these enzymes do not reduce directly the quinone pool, but transfer electrons to soluble cytochromes c. Several studies have investigated electron transfer with hydrogenases, but comparatively less is known about FDHs. In this work we conducted experiments to assess potential electron transfer pathways resulting from formate oxidation in Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. This organism can grow on sulfate and on nitrate, and contains a single soluble periplasmic FDH that includes a
cytochrome c
(3) like subunit (FdhABC(3)). It has also a unique
cytochrome c
composition, including two cytochromes c not yet isolated from other species, the split-Soret and nine-heme cytochromes, besides a tetraheme type I
cytochrome c
(3) (TpIc (3)). The FDH activity and cytochrome composition of cells grown with lactate or formate and nitrate or sulfate were determined, and the electron transfer between FDH and these cytochromes was investigated. We studied also the reduction of the Dsr complex and of the monoheme
cytochrome c
-553, previously proposed to be the physiological partner of FDH. FdhABC(3) was able to reduce the c-553, TpIc (3), and split-Soret cytochromes with a high rate. For comparison, the same experiments were performed with the [NiFe]
hydrogenase
from the same organism. This study shows that FdhABC(3) can directly reduce the periplasmic
cytochrome c
network, feeding electrons into several alternative metabolic pathways, which explains the advantage of not having an associated membrane subunit.
...
PMID:Electron transfer between periplasmic formate dehydrogenase and cytochromes c in Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. 2252 66
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