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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)
The soluble
hydrogenase
(hydrogen: NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.12.1.2) from Alcaligenes eutrophus H 16 was purified 68-fold with a yield of 20% and a final specific activity (NAD reduction) of about 54 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein. The enzyme was shown to be homogenous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Its molecular weight and isoelectric point were determined to be 205 000 and 4.85 respectively. The oxidized
hydrogenase
, as purified under aerobic conditions, was of high stability but not reactive. Reductive activation of the enzyme by H2, in the presence of catalytic amounts of NADH, or by reducing agents caused the
hydrogenase
to become unstable. The purified enzyme, in its active state, was able to reduce NAD, FMN, FAD, menaquinone, ubiquinone, cytochrome c, methylene blue, methyl viologen, benzyl viologen, phenazine methosulfate, janus green, 2,6-dichlorophenoloindophenol, ferricyanide and even oxygen. In addition to
hydrogenase
activitiy, the enzyme exhibited also
diaphorase
and NAD(P)H oxidase activity. The reversibility of
hydrogenase
function (i.e. H2 evolution from NADH, methyl viologen and benzyl viologen) was demonstrated. With respect to H2 as substrate,
hydrogenase
showed negative cooperativity; the Hill coefficient was n = 0.4. The apparent Km value for H2 was found to be 0.037 mM. The absorption spectrum of
hydrogenase
was typical for non-heme iron proteins, showing maxima (shoulders) at 380 and 420 nm. A flavin component could be extracted from native
hydrogenase
characterized by its absorption bands at 375 and 447 nm and a strong fluorescense at 526 nm.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of soluble hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus H 16. 18 26
By crossed immunoelectrophoresis with antibodies against the NAD-linked
hydrogenase
the presence of three
hydrogenase
protein species was demonstrated in crude extracts of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16. Protein 1 (antigen 1) exhibited NAD-reducing activity and was shown to be identical with the native heterotetrameric enzyme. Protein 2 (antigen 2) was catalytically inactive in the antibody-precipitated form and corresponded to the beta subunit (56 kDa) of the holoenzyme. Protein 3 (antigen 3) was serologically distinct from antigen 2 and catalyzed NADH-oxidizing (
diaphorase
) activity, suggesting that it either consists of the alpha peptide or of the alpha and gamma subunits of the
diaphorase
dimer. Tandem immunoelectrophoresis revealed that antigen 2 was the predominant protein species in cells cultivated under nickel deficiency. Low concentrations of the
diaphorase
-active antigen 3 were also detected under these conditions. Extracts from mutants defective in the catalytic activity of NAD-reducing
hydrogenase
still contained the four polypeptides. This was shown by immunodiffusion and immunoblotting with antibodies raised against the individual subunits. However, as observed with nickel-deficient cells, no complete tetrameric protein could be identified, and the dominant subunit species (70-80%) was the beta peptide.
...
PMID:Identification of distinct NAD-linked hydrogenase protein species in mutants and nickel-deficient wild-type cells of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16. 211 62
The effect of redox potential on the catalytic activities of the soluble
hydrogenase
from the hydrogen bacterium Alcaligenes eutrophus Z1 was studied. Several transitions were observed on the enzyme catalytic activity vs potential profiles. The coenzyme-dependent activities of the
hydrogenase
, its
diaphorase
activity and activity toward NAD, are controlled by the Em -300 mV, while the process of hydrogen evolution from reduced methyl viologen is governed by the midpoint redox potential of -435 mV. This value of Em was independent of pH in the range 5 to 8. The redox potential of the medium appears to be one of the major factors determining the
hydrogenase
activation, inactivation, and catalytic properties. It is suggested that a change in the redox state of the enzyme electron transport chain is followed by structural rearrangements within the protein affecting both the
hydrogenase
catalytic activity and stability. The probable mechanism of enzyme activity regulation is discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of redox potential on the catalytic properties of the NAD-dependent hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus Z1. 253 63
The effects of NO on the H2-oxidizing and
diaphorase
activities of the soluble
hydrogenase
from Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 were investigated. With fully activated enzyme, NO (8-150 nM in solution) inhibited H2 oxidation in a time- and NO-concentration-dependent process. Neither H2 nor NAD+ appeared to protect the enzyme against the inhibition. Loss of activity in the absence of an electron acceptor was about 10 times slower than under turnover conditions. The inhibition was partially reversible; approx. 50% of full activity was recoverable after removal of the NO. Recovery was slower in the absence of an electron acceptor than in the presence of H2 plus an electron acceptor. The
diaphorase
activity of the unactivated
hydrogenase
was not affected by NO concentrations of up to 200 microM in solution. Exposure of the unactivated
hydrogenase
to NO irreversibly inhibited the ability of the enzyme to be fully activated for H2-oxidizing activity. The enzyme also lost its ability to respond to H2 during activation in the presence of NADH. The results are interpreted in terms of a complex inhibition that displays elements of (1) a reversible slow-binding inhibition of H2-oxidizing activity, (2) an irreversible effect on H2-oxidizing activity and (30 an irreversible inhibition of a regulatory component of the enzyme. Possible sites of action for NO are discussed.
...
PMID:Reversible and irreversible effects of nitric oxide on the soluble hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus H16. 305 36
By preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 8.5, and in the absence of nickel ions, two types of subunit dimers of the NAD-linked
hydrogenase
from Nocardia opaca 1b were separated and isolated, and their properties were compared with each other as well as with the properties of the native enzyme. The intact
hydrogenase
contained 14.3 +/- 0.4 labile sulphur, 13.6 +/- 1.1 iron and 3.8 +/- 0.1 nickel atoms and approximately 1 FMN molecule per enzyme molecule. The oxidized
hydrogenase
showed an absorption spectrum with maxima (shoulders) at 380 nm and 420 nm and an electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrum with a signal at g = 2.01. The midpoint redox potential of the Fe-S cluster giving rise to this signal was +25 mV. In the reduced state,
hydrogenase
gave characteristic low-temperature (10-20 K) and high-temperature (greater than 40 K) ESR spectra which were interpreted as due to [4Fe-4S] and [2Fe-2S] clusters, respectively. The midpoint redox potentials of these clusters were determined to be -420 mV and -285 mV, respectively. The large
hydrogenase
dimer, consisting of subunits with relative molecular masses Mr, of 64000 and 31000, contained 9.9 +/- 0.4 S2- and 9.3 +/- 0.5 iron atoms per protein molecule. This dimer contained the FMN molecule, but no nickel. The absorption and ESR spectra of the large dimer were qualitatively similar to the spectra of the whole enzyme. This dimer did not show any
hydrogenase
activity, but reduced several electron acceptors with NADH as electron donor (
diaphorase
activity). The small
hydrogenase
dimer, consisting of subunits with Mr of 56000 and 27000, was demonstrated to have substantially different properties. For iron and labile sulphur average values of 3.9 and 4.3 atoms/dimer molecule have been determined, respectively. The dimer contained, in addition, about 2 atoms of nickel and was free of flavins. In the oxidized state this dimer showed an absorption spectrum with a broad band in the 400-nm region and a characteristic ESR signal at g = 2.01. The reduced form of the dimer was ESR-silent. The small dimer alone was
diaphorase
-inactive and did not reduce NAD with H2, but it displayed high H2-uptake activities with viologen dyes, methylene blue and FMN, and H2-evolving activity with reduced methyl viologen. Hydrogen-dependent NAD reduction was fully restored by recombining both subunit dimers, although the reconstituted enzyme differed from the original in its activity towards artificial acceptors and the ESR spectrum in the oxidized state.
...
PMID:Content and localization of FMN, Fe-S clusters and nickel in the NAD-linked hydrogenase of Nocardia opaca 1b. 608 43
An 8.9-kb segment with
hydrogenase
genes from the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis has been cloned and sequenced. The sequences show homology to the methyl-viologen-reducing hydrogenases from archaebacteria and, even more striking, to the NAD(+)-reducing enzymes from Alcaligenes eutrophus and Nocardia opaca as well as to the NADP(+)-dependent protein from Desulfovibrio fructosovorans. The cluster from A. variabilis contains genes coding for both the
hydrogenase
heterodimer (hoxH and hoxY) and for the
diaphorase
moiety (hoxU and hoxF) described for the A. eutrophus enzyme. In A. variabilis the gene cluster is split by two open reading frames (between hoxY and hoxH and between hoxU and hoxY, respectively), and a probably non-coding 0.9-kb segment in an unusual way. The hoxH partial sequence from Anabaena 7119 and Anacystis nidulans was amplified by PCR. Using the labeled segment from A. 7119 as probe, Southern analysis revealed homologous gene segments in the cyanobacteria A. 7119, Anabaena cylindrica, Anacystis nidulans and A. variabilis. The
bidirectional hydrogenase
from A. nidulans was purified and digests were sequenced. The amino acid sequences obtained showed partial identities to the amino acid sequences deduced from the DNA data of the 8.9-kb segment from A. variabilis. Therefore the 8.9-kb segment contains the genes coding for the bidirectional, reversible
hydrogenase
from cyanobacteria. Crude extracts from A. nidulans perform NAD(P)H-dependent H2 evolution corroborating the molecular biological demonstration of the NAD(P)(+)-dependent
hydrogenase
in cyanobacteria.
...
PMID:Molecular biological analysis of a bidirectional hydrogenase from cyanobacteria. 758 54
Formation of enzymatically active [NiFe] hydrogenases is dependent on a number of posttranslational steps, including metal attachment to a precursor of the catalytic subunit, truncation of a small C-terminal peptide from the precursor, and oligomerisation of the subunits. Two amino acid replacements were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis at the C-terminal proteolytic cleavage site of HoxH, the Ni-containing subunit of the cytoplasmic NAD-reducing
hydrogenase
of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16. Replacement of Ala465, the first residue of the 24-amino-acid cleaved polypeptide, by Pro yielded a form of HoxH that was blocked in C-terminal proteolysis. This HoxH subunit, although capable of binding Ni, was blocked in formation of a stable tetrameric holoenzyme. In the second mutant, the C-terminal extension of HoxH was eliminated by substituting the Ala codon for a translational stop codon. Although this mutant subunit was able to form the oligomeric holoenzyme, it was devoid of Ni. Both mutant proteins contained only traces of H2-activating functions. H2-dependent reduction of NAD and benzylviologen, and D2/H+-exchange activity were almost completely abolished, while the NADH oxidoreductase activity, mediated by the
diaphorase
moiety of the
hydrogenase
, was retained. These results allow the following conclusions: the C-terminal extension of HoxH is neccessary to direct specific Ni insertion into the
hydrogenase
; subunit assembly to the holoenzyme is not dependent on Ni insertion; and a precursor with the C-terminal peptide is not competent for assembly.
...
PMID:C-terminal extension of the H2-activating subunit, HoxH, directs maturation of the NAD-reducing hydrogenase in Alcaligenes eutrophus. 915 77
The cytoplasmic, NAD-reducing
hydrogenase
(SH) of Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 is a heterotetrameric enzyme which contains several cofactors and undergoes a complex maturation during biogenesis. HoxH is the Ni-carrying subunit, and together with HoxY it forms the
hydrogenase
dimer. HoxF and HoxU represent the flavin-containing
diaphorase
moiety, which is closely related to NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase and mediates NADH oxidation. A variety of mutations were introduced into the four SH structural genes to obtain mutant enzymes composed of monomeric and dimeric forms. A deletion removing most of hoxF, hoxU, and hoxY led to the expression of a HoxH monomer derivative which was proteolytically processed at the C terminus like the wild-type polypeptide. While the
hydrogenase
dimer, produced by a strain deleted of hoxF and hoxU, displayed H2-dependent dye-reducing activity, the monomeric form did not mediate the activation of H2, although nickel was incorporated into HoxH. Deletion of hoxH and hoxY led to the production of HoxFU dimers which displayed NADH:oxidoreductase activity. Mixing the
hydrogenase
and the
diaphorase
moieties in vitro reconstituted the structure and catalytic function of the SH holoenzyme.
...
PMID:Subforms and in vitro reconstitution of the NAD-reducing hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus. 949 38
The bidirectional, NAD+-dependent
hydrogenase
from cyanobacteria is encoded by the structural genes hoxFUYH, which have been found to be clustered, though interspersed with different open reading frames (ORFs), in the heterocystous, N2-fixing Anabaena variabilis and in the unicellular Synechocystis PCC 6803. In another unicellular, non N2-fixing cyanobacterium, Anacystis nidulans, hoxF has now been identified as being separated by at least 16 kb from the residual structural genes hoxUYH. An ORF (termed hoxE gene) is located immediately upstream of hoxF in A. nidulans and in Synechocystis. Its deduced amino acid sequence shows similarities to the NuoE subunit of NADH dehydrogenase I of E. coli, to the homologous subunit of respiratory complex I in mitochondria, and also to the first 104 amino acids of HoxF in A. nidulans and Synechocystis. The diversity in the arrangement of
hydrogenase
genes in cyanobacteria is puzzling. The subunits HoxE, HoxF, and HoxU of the
diaphorase
part of the
bidirectional hydrogenase
have been discussed to be shared both by respiratory complex I and
bidirectional hydrogenase
in cyanobacteria. Different hoxU mutants were obtained by inserting a lacZKmR cassette into the gene both in A. nidulans and Anacystis PCC 7942. Such mutants showed reduced H2-evolution activities catalyzed by the
bidirectional hydrogenase
, but had nonimpaired respiratory O2-uptake. A common link between respiratory complex I and the
diaphorase
part of the
bidirectional hydrogenase
in cyanobacteria may still exist, but this hypothesis could not be verified in the present study by analyzing defined mutants impaired in one of the
diaphorase
genes.
...
PMID:Unusual gene arrangement of the bidirectional hydrogenase and functional analysis of its diaphorase subunit HoxU in respiration of the unicellular cyanobacterium anacystis nidulans 954 59
Neutral red (NR) functioned as an electronophore or electron channel enabling either cells or membranes purified from Actinobacillus succinogenes to drive electron transfer and proton translocation by coupling fumarate reduction to succinate production. Electrically reduced NR, unlike methyl or benzyl viologen, bound to cell membranes, was not toxic, and chemically reduced NAD. The cell membrane of A. succinogenes contained high levels of benzyl viologen-linked
hydrogenase
(12.2 U), fumarate reductase (13.1 U), and
diaphorase
(109.7 U) activities. Fumarate reductase (24.5 U) displayed the highest activity with NR as the electron carrier, whereas
hydrogenase
(1.1 U) and
diaphorase
(0.8 U) did not. Proton translocation by whole cells was dependent on either electrically reduced NR or H2 as the electron donor and on the fumarate concentration. During the growth of Actinobacillus on glucose plus electrically reduced NR in an electrochemical bioreactor system versus on glucose alone, electrically reduced NR enhanced glucose consumption, growth, and succinate production by about 20% while it decreased acetate production by about 50%. The rate of fumarate reduction to succinate by purified membranes was twofold higher with electrically reduced NR than with hydrogen as the electron donor. The addition of 2-(n-heptyl)-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide to whole cells or purified membranes inhibited succinate production from H2 plus fumarate but not from electrically reduced NR plus fumarate. Thus, NR appears to replace the function of menaquinone in the fumarate reductase complex, and it enables A. succinogenes to utilize electricity as a significant source of metabolic reducing power.
...
PMID:Utilization of electrically reduced neutral red by Actinobacillus succinogenes: physiological function of neutral red in membrane-driven fumarate reduction and energy conservation. 1019 2
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