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Query: EC:1.12.7.2 (hydrogenase)
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An eight-iron, eight-sulfur ferredoxin from Rhizobium japonicum bacteroids of soybean root nodules has been purified to apparent homogeneity as judged by disc gel electrophoresis. The purification procedure included chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Bio-Gel P-60, and hydroxylapatite. Specific activities of several purified preparations of bacteroid ferredoxin ranged from 1700 to 1900 nmol of C2H4 produced . min-1 . mg-1 in the reaction mediating electron transfer between illuminated chloroplasts and bacteroid nitrogenase. A molecular weight of 6740 for the protein was determined by low speed sedimentation equilibrium and a molecular weight of 6500 was estimated from the mobility of bacteroid ferredoxin relative to the mobility of standard proteins during sodium dodecyl sulfate disc gel electrophoresis. All of the common amino acids were present except arginine, methionine, and tryptophan. The absorbance spectrum of the oxidized protein exhibited maxima at 285 nm and 380 nm with a shoulder near 305 nm. The A380/A285 ratio was 0.76 and the extinction coefficient at 380 nm for the oxidized protein was found to be 30,800 M-1. Equilibration of bacteroid ferredoxin with methyl viologen at various potentials revealed a midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of -484 mV. Spectrophotometric examination of iron-sulfur clusters extruded from bacteroid ferredoxin with benzenethiol and the transfer of its iron-sulfur clusters to other ferredoxins established the presence of two [4Fe-4S] clusters in a molecule of bacteroid ferredoxin. The EPR spectrum of oxidized ferredoxin consisted of a small signal at g = 2.02 integrating to 0.19 spin/molecule. The EPR spectrum of ferredoxin reduced with 5-deazaflavin exhibited a signal with features at g values of 1.88, 1.94, 2.01, and 2.07, and integrated to 1.7 spins/molecule. The EPR properties of bacteroid ferredoxin are characteristic of a ferredoxin operating between the 1+ and 2+ oxidation levels. Bacteroid ferredoxin mediated electron transfer to clostridial hydrogenase, but was not reduced by the clostridial phosphoroclastic system in the presence of pyruvate. Bacteroid ferredoxin reduced by illuminated 5-deazariboflavin also supported a high rate of C2H2 reduction by bacteroid nitrogenase which was free of Na2S2O4. It was concluded, on this basis, that bacteroid ferredoxin has the capability of functioning as the electron donor for nitrogenase in R. japonicum.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a ferredoxin from Rhizobium japonicum bacteroids. 624 15

The absorption spectrum of the hydrogenase from Chromatium, which contains four iron atoms and four atoms of acid-labile sulfide, in 80% dimethylsulfoxide or hexamethylphosphoramide suggests the presence of a single [4Fe-4S] cluster. The EPR spectra of the oxidized enzyme in air, argon or carbon monoxide are the same with signals centered at g = 2.01. The enzyme reduced by hydrogen is EPR silent. The EPR spectrum is consistent with a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Chromatium hydrogenase and the hydrogenase from Proteus vulgaris show relative stability towards denaturation by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), urea, guanidine and organic solvents.
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PMID:Characterization and stability of hydrogenase from Chromatium. 625 69

The nitrogen-fixing, aerobic hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium Alcaligenes latus forms hydrogenase when growing lithoautotrophically with hydrogen as electron donor and carbon dioxide as sole carbon source or when growing heterotrophically with N2 as sole nitrogen source. The hydrogenase is membrane-bound and relatively oxygen-sensitive. The enzymes formed under both conditions are identical on the basis of the following criteria: molecular mass, mobility in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Km value for hydrogen (methylene blue reduction), stability properties, localization, and cross-reactivity to antibodies raised against the 'autotrophic' hydrogenase. The hydrogenase was solubilized by Triton X-100 and deoxycholate treatment and purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose C1-4B, DEAE-Sephacel and Matrix Gel Red A under hydrogen to homogeneity to a specific activity of 113 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein (methylene blue reduction). SDS gel electrophoresis revealed two nonidentical subunits of molecular weights of 67 000 and 34 000, corresponding to a total molecular weight of 101 000. The pure enzyme was able to reduce FAD, FMN, riboflavin, flavodoxin isolated from Megasphaera elsdenii, menadione and horse heart cytochrome c as well as various artificial electron acceptors. The reversibility of the hydrogenase function was demonstrated by H2 evolution from reduced methyl viologen.
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PMID:Purification and properties of the membrane-bound hydrogenase from N2-fixing Alcaligenes latus. 630 22

The NAD-reducing hydrogenase of Nocardia opaca 1 b was found to be a soluble, cytoplasmic enzyme. N. opaca 1 b does not contain an additional membrane-bound hydrogenase. The soluble enzyme was purified to homogeneity with a yield of 19% and a final specific activity of 45 mumol H2 oxidized min-1 mg protein-1. NAD reduction with H2 was completely dependent on the presence of divalent metal ions (Ni2+, Co2+, Mg2+, Mn2+) or of high salt concentrations (0.5-1.5 M). The most specific effect was caused by NiCl2, whose optimal concentration turned out to be 1 mM. The stimulation of activity by salts was the greater the less chaotrophic the anion. Maximal activity was achieved in 0.5 M potassium phosphate. Hydrogenase was also activated by protons. The pH optimum in 50 mM triethanolamine/HCl buffer containing 1 mM NiCl2 was 7.8-8.0. In the absence of Ni2+, hydrogenase was only active at pH values below 7.0. The reduction of other electron acceptors was not dependent on metal ions or salts, even though an approximately 1.5-fold stimulation of the reactions by 0.1-10 microM NiCl2 was observed. With the most effective electron acceptor, benzyl viologen, a 50-fold higher specific activity was determined than with NAD. The total molecular weight of hydrogenase has been estimated to be 200 000 (gel filtration) and 178 000 (sucrose density gradient centrifugation, and sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis) respectively. The enzyme is a tetramer consisting of non-identical subunits with molecular weights of 64 000, 56 000, 31 000 and 27 000. It was demonstrated by electrophoretic analyses that in the absence of NiCl2 and at alkaline pH values the native hydrogenase dissociates into two subunit dimers. The first dimer was dark yellow coloured, completely inactive and composed of subunits with molecular weights of 64 000 and 31 000. The second dimer was light yellow, inactive with NAD but still active with methyl viologen. It was composed of subunits with molecular weights of 56 000 and 27 000. Immunological comparison of the hydrogenase of N. opaca 1 b and the soluble hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 revealed that these two NAD-linked hydrogenases are partially identical proteins.
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PMID:Effect of nickel on activity and subunit composition of purified hydrogenase from Nocardia opaca 1 b. 631 36

Ferredoxin, cytochrome c3 and hydrogenase are specific partners of the sulfate reduction pathway of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans Norway and might be exemplary for electron exchange mechanism studies. Cytochrome c3 contains four low redox potential haems for 13 000 molecular weight. Two ferredoxins isolated from the same bacteria are dimers of 6 000 molecular weight per subunit (Ferredoxin I: one (4 Fe-4S) cluster per subunit, ferredoxin II: two (4 Fe-4 S) clusters per subunit). The amino acid sequence of ferredoxin I is reported and compared to the ferredoxin II sequence. The structural characteristics of ferredoxins and cytochrome c3 should allow a discussion on the nature of the interaction. 1H-NMR spectra of ferredoxin I and cytochrome c3 in the absence and presence of ferredoxin are presented.
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PMID:Electron transfer mechanism and interaction studies between cytochrome C3 and ferredoxin. 632 23

Uptake hydrogenase (EC 1.12) from Azotobacter vinelandii has been purified 250-fold from membrane preparations. Purification involved selective solubilization of the enzyme from the membranes, followed by successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-100, and hydroxylapatite. Freshly isolated hydrogenase showed a specific activity of 110 mumol of H2 uptake (min X mg of protein)-1. The purified hydrogenase still contained two minor contaminants that ran near the front on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The enzyme appears to be a monomer of molecular weight near 60,000 +/- 3,000. The pI of the protein is 5.8 +/- 0.2. With methylene blue or ferricyanide as the electron acceptor (dyes such as methyl or benzyl viologen with negative midpoint potentials did not function), the enzyme had pH optima at pH 9.0 or 6.0, respectively, It has a temperature optimum at 65 to 70 degrees C, and the measured half-life for irreversible inactivation at 22 degrees C by 20% O2 was 20 min. The enzyme oxidizes H2 in the presence of an electron acceptor and also catalyzes the evolution of H2 from reduced methyl viologen; at the optimal pH of 3.5, 3.4 mumol of H2 was evolved (min X mg of protein)-1. The uptake hydrogenase catalyzes a slow deuterium-water exchange in the absence of an electron acceptor, and the highest rate was observed at pH 6.0. The Km values varied widely for different electron acceptors, whereas the Km for H2 remained virtually constant near 1 to 2 microM, independent of the electron acceptors.
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PMID:Purification and properties of membrane-bound hydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. 637 82

The uptake hydrogenase of chemolithotrophically grown Rhizobium japonicum was purified to apparent homogeneity with a final specific activity of 69 mumol of H2 oxidized per min per mg of protein. The procedure included Triton extraction of broken membranes and DEAE-cellulose and Sephacryl S-200 chromatographies. The purified protein contained two polypeptides separable only by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. They comigrated on native polyacrylamide gels and sucrose density gradients. The molecular weights were ca. 60,000 and 30,000. Densitometric scans of the sodium dodecyl sulfate gels indicated a molar ratio of 1.03 +/- 0.03. Antiserum was developed against the 60-kilodalton polypeptide for use in hydrogenase detection by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The antiserum did not cross-react with the 30-kilodalton polypeptide. Native gel electrophoresis of Triton-extracted cells grown in the presence of 63Ni showed comigration of the hydrogenase and radioactive Ni.
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PMID:Some properties of the nickel-containing hydrogenase of chemolithotrophically grown Rhizobium japonicum. 638 83

Chromatium vinosum hydrogenases I and II were purified to specific activities of 9.6 and 28.0 units/mg protein, respectively. They have the same isoelectric point (pI = 4.1), and their visible spectra are typical of iron-sulfur proteins. Hydrogenase II in general was more stable than hydrogenase I. Both enzymes lost their activities slowly during storage in air, and this inactivation was more apparent in preparations of hydrogenase I. Bovine serum albumin helped to stabilize hydrogenase I against thermal and storage inactivation. The pH optima of H2-evolution activity of hydrogenases I and II were 7.4 and 5.4, respectively. Neither enzyme was able to evolve H2 from reduced ferredoxins as the sole electron carrier, but ferredoxins had an effect on the activity with methyl viologen as carrier to hydrogenase I. None of the natural compounds tested was able to serve as a physiological donor for H2 production. Hydrogenase I was more susceptible than hydrogenase II to inhibition by heavy metal ions and other enzyme inhibitors. Both enzymes were reversibly inhibited by CO with Ki values of 12 and 6 Torr for hydrogenase I and II, respectively. Hydrogenase I was more sensitive to denaturation by urea and guanidinium chloride while hydrogenase II was more susceptible to sodium dodecyl sulfate. Both enzymes were rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by dimethyl sulfoxide. Hydrogenase I evolved H2 from methyl viologen and ferredoxin photoreduced by chloroplasts. The enzymes differed in their iron and acid-labile sulfur contents.
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PMID:Comparison of the properties of two hydrogenases from the photosynthetic bacterium Chromatium vinosum. 638 61

Methanol:5-hydroxybenzimidazolylcobamide methyltransferase from Methanosarcina barkeri has been purified to approximately 90% homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and QAE-A50 Sephadex columns. The molecular weight, estimated by gel electrophoresis, was found to be 122,000, and the enzyme contained two different subunits with molecular weights of 34,000 and 53,000, which indicates an alpha 2 beta structure. The enzyme contains three or four molecules of 5-hydroxybenzimidazolylcobamide, which could be removed by treatment of the enzyme with 2-mercaptoethanol or sodium dodecyl sulfate. In both cases the enzyme dissociated into its subunits. For stability, the enzyme required the presence of divalent cations such as Mg2+, Mn2+, Sr2+, Ca2+, or Ba2+. ATP, GTP, or CTP was needed in a reductive activation process of the enzyme. This activation was brought about by a mixture of H2, ferredoxin, and hydrogenase, but also by CO, which is thought to reduce the corrinoid chemically. The CO dehydrogenase-like activity of the methyltransferase is discussed.
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PMID:Purification and properties of methanol:5-hydroxybenzimidazolylcobamide methyltransferase from Methanosarcina barkeri. 643 59

Desulfovibrio vulgaris Madison and Thermodesulfobacterium commune contained functionally distinct hydrogenase activities, one which exchanged 3H2 into 3H2O and was inhibited by carbon monoxide and a second activity which produced H2 in the presence of CO. Cell suspensions of D. vulgaris used either lactate, pyruvate, or CO as the electron donor for H2 production in the absence of sulfate. Both sulfidogenic species produced and consumed hydrogen as a trace gas during growth on lactate or pyruvate as electron donors and on thiosulfate or sulfate as electron acceptors. Higher initial levels of hydrogen were detected during growth on lactate-sulfate than on pyruvate-sulfate. D. vulgaris but not T. commune also produced and then consumed CO during growth on organic electron donors and sulfate or thiosulfate. High partial pressures of exogenous H2 inhibited growth and substrate consumption when D. vulgaris was cultured on pyruvate alone but not when it was metabolizing pyruvate plus sulfate or lactate plus sulfate. The data are discussed in relation to supporting two different models for the physiological function of H2 metabolism during growth of sulfidogenic bacteria on organic electron donors plus sulfate. A trace H2 transformation model is proposed for control of redox processes during growth on either pyruvate or lactate plus sulfate, and an obligate H2 cycling model is proposed for chemiosmotic energy coupling during growth on CO plus sulfate.
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PMID:Physiological function of hydrogen metabolism during growth of sulfidogenic bacteria on organic substrates. 648 May 53


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