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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)

A hydrogen gas (H(2)) biosensor was developed in which hydrogenase (H(2)ase) was immobilized and sandwiched between two layers of a montmorillonite clay and poly(butylviologen) (PBV) mixture on a glass carbon electrode. The immobilized PBV efficiently enhanced the electron transfer among the electrode, H(2)ase, and methyl viologen in solution. Both PBV and methyl viologen acted as the electron carrier in the clay-PBV-H(2)ase modified electrode. The clay-PBV-H(2)ase electrode catalyzed the oxidation of H(2) to protons (H(+)) with the electrons being transferred by viologen groups to the electrode. The activation energy of this process was 38+/-2 kJ/mol at pH 7. The catalytic current of the clay-PBV-H(2)ase electrode increased linearly when exposed to increasing concentrations of H(2) gas. In contrast, this electrode showed no activity when exposed to three combustible compounds, namely, carbon monoxide, methane and methanol. The optimum pH range for the oxidation of H(2) by the clay-PBV-H(2)ase electrode was from 7 to 10. Electron transfer process in the clay-PBV-H(2)ase electrode is discussed.
Biosens Bioelectron 2002 Sep
PMID:A hydrogen biosensor made of clay, poly(butylviologen), and hydrogenase sandwiched on a glass carbon electrode. 1219 27

The hydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase levels in Syntrophobacter fumaroxidans and Methanospirillum hungatei were studied in syntrophic propionate-oxidizing cultures and compared to the levels in axenic cultures of both organisms. Cells grown syntrophically were separated from each other by Percoll gradient centrifugation. In S. fumaroxidans both formate dehydrogenase and hydrogenase levels were highest in cells which were grown syntrophically, while the formate-H(2) lyase activities were comparable under the conditions tested. In M. hungatei the formate dehydrogenase and formate-H(2) lyase levels were highest in cells grown syntrophically, while the hydrogenase levels in syntrophically grown cells were comparable to those in cells grown on formate. Reconstituted syntrophic cultures from axenic cultures immediately resumed syntrophic growth, and the calculated growth rates of these cultures were highest for cells which were inoculated from the axenic S. fumaroxidans cultures that exhibited the highest formate dehydrogenase activities. The results suggest that formate is the preferred electron carrier in syntrophic propionate-oxidizing cocultures of S. fumaroxidans and M. hungatei.
Appl Environ Microbiol 2002 Sep
PMID:Biochemical evidence for formate transfer in syntrophic propionate-oxidizing cocultures of Syntrophobacter fumaroxidans and Methanospirillum hungatei. 1220 Feb 72

The activity, protein, and isoenzymic profiles of glutamate de-hydrogenase (GDH) and glutamine synthetase (GS) were studied during development and ripening of avocado (Percea americana Mill. cv Hass) fruit. During fruit development, the activity and protein content of both GDH and GS remained relatively constant. In contrast, considerable changes in these enzymes were observed during ripening of avocado fruit. The specific activity of GDH increased about 4-fold, coincident with a similar increase in GDH protein content and mRNA levels. On the other hand, GS specific activity showed a decline at the end of the ripening process. On the isoenzymic profile of GDH, changes in the prevalence of the seven isoenzymes were found, with a predominance of the more cathodal isoenzymes in the unripe and of the most anodal isoenzymes in the ripe fruit. Two-dimensional electrophoresis revealed that avocado fruit GDH consists of two subunits whose association gives rise to seven isoenzymes. The results support the view that the predominance of the more anodal isoenzymes in the overripe fruit was due to the accumulation of the [alpha]-polypeptide.
Plant Physiol 1994 Sep
PMID:Regulation of Glutamate Dehydrogenase and Glutamine Synthetase in Avocado Fruit during Development and Ripening. 1223 22

The unicellular non-N(2)-fixing cyanobacterium Gloeocapsa alpicola CALU 743 contains a bidirectional hydrogenase. Parts of all structural genes, encoding the hydrogenase, were identified, cloned and sequenced. When comparing the sequences with analogous sequences from other cyanobacteria the highest similarity was observed with hox genes from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The hydrogenase activity increased considerably when the cells were grown aerobically in a medium with limiting concentrations of nitrate. However, the relative abundances of hoxH and hoxY transcripts, detected by RT-PCR, did not change significantly, demonstrating that the increase in the activity of G. alpicola hydrogenase was not a result of the increase of the transcription. In contrast, in Anabaena variabilis the induction of a bidirectional hydrogenase activity correlated with the relative level of hoxH and hoxY transcripts.
FEMS Microbiol Lett 2002 Sep 10
PMID:Identification of hox genes and analysis of their transcription in the unicellular cyanobacterium Gloeocapsa alpicola CALU 743 growing under nitrate-limiting conditions. 1235 Dec 36

This paper describes the kinetics and intimate mechanisms associated with cyanation of [2Fe3S] assemblies to give species structurally related to the subsite of all-iron hydrogenase. Stopped-flow FTIR spectroscopy has enabled the quantitation of the dynamics of five well-defined steps that experimentally illustrate the role of bridging carbonyls in the assembly of the dicyanide species, how on-off sulfur ligation can have a dramatic effect on cyanation kinetics and how the [2Fe3S] core stabilises bridging carbonyl species.
Chemistry 2002 Sep 02
PMID:The di-iron subsite of all-iron hydrogenase: mechanism of cyanation of a synthetic [2Fe3S]-carbonyl assembly. 1236 Sep 45

F(420)-non-reducing hydrogenase (Mvh) from Methanothermobacter marburgensis is a [NiFe] hydrogenase composed of the three subunits MvhA, MvhG, and MvhD. Subunits MvhA and MvhG form the basic hydrogenase module conserved in all [NiFe] hydrogenases, whereas the 17-kDa MvhD subunit is unique to Mvh. The function of this extra subunit is completely unknown. In this work, the physiological function of this hydrogenase, and in particular the role of the MvhD subunit, is addressed. In cells of Mt. marburgensis from Ni(2+)-limited chemostat cultures the amount of Mvh decreased about 70-fold. However, the amounts of mvh transcripts did not decrease in these cells as shown by competitive RT-PCR, arguing against a regulation at the level of transcription. In cells grown in the presence of non-limiting amounts of Ni(2+), Mvh was found in two chromatographically distinct forms-a free form and in a complex with heterodisulfide reductase. In cells from Ni(2+)-limited chemostat cultures, Mvh was only found in a complex with heterodisulfide reductase. The EPR spectrum of the purified enzyme reduced with sodium dithionite was dominated by a signal with g(zyx)=2.006, 1.936 and 1.912. The signal could be observed at temperatures up to 80 K without broadening, indicative of a [2Fe-2S] cluster. Subunit MvhD contains five cysteine residues that are conserved in MvhD homologues of other organisms. Four of these conserved cysteine residues can be assumed to coordinate the [2Fe-2S] cluster that was detected by EPR spectroscopy. The MvhG subunit contains 12 cysteine residues, which are known to ligate three [4Fe-4S] clusters. Data base searches revealed that in some organisms, including the Methanosarcina species and Archaeoglobus fulgidus, a homologue of mvhD is fused to the 3' end of an hdrA homologue, which encodes a subunit of heterodisulfide reductase. These data allow the conclusion that the only function of Mvh is to provide reducing equivalents for heterodisulfide reductase and that the MvhD subunit is an electron transfer protein that forms the contact site to heterodisulfide reductase.
Arch Microbiol 2003 Sep
PMID:Physiological role of the F420-non-reducing hydrogenase (Mvh) from Methanothermobacter marburgensis. 1285 8

The self-transmissible megaplasmid pHG1 carries essential genetic information for the facultatively lithoautotrophic and facultatively anaerobic lifestyles of its host, the Gram-negative soil bacterium Ralstonia eutropha H16. We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of pHG1. This megaplasmid is 452,156 bp in size and carries 429 potential genes. Groups of functionally related genes form loose clusters flanked by mobile elements. The largest functional group consists of lithoautotrophy-related genes. These include a set of 41 genes for the biosynthesis of the three previously identified hydrogenases and of a fourth, novel hydrogenase. Another large cluster carries the genetic information for denitrification. In addition to a dissimilatory nitrate reductase, both specific and global regulators were identified. Also located in the denitrification region is a set of genes for cytochrome c biosynthesis. Determinants for several enzymes involved in the mineralization of aromatic compounds were found. The genes for conjugative plasmid transfer predict that R.eutropha forms two types of pili. One of them is related to the type IV pili of pathogenic enterobacteria. pHG1 also carries an extensive "junkyard" region encompassing 17 remnants of mobile elements and 22 partial or intact genes for phage-type integrase. Among the mobile elements is a novel member of the IS5 family, in which the transposase gene is interrupted by a group II intron.
J Mol Biol 2003 Sep 12
PMID:Complete nucleotide sequence of pHG1: a Ralstonia eutropha H16 megaplasmid encoding key enzymes of H(2)-based ithoautotrophy and anaerobiosis. 1294 88

A sulfur reductase (SR) and a hydrogenase were purified from solubilized membrane fractions of anaerobically grown cells of the sulfur-dependent archaeon Acidianus ambivalens and the corresponding genes were sequenced. The SR reduced elemental sulfur with hydrogen as electron donor [45 U (mg protein)(-1)] in the presence of hydrogenase and either 2,3-dimethylnaphthoquinone (DMN) or cytochrome c in the enzyme assay. The SR could not be separated from the hydrogenase during purification without loss of activity, whereas the hydrogenase could be separated from the SR. The specific activity of the hydrogenase was 170 U (mg protein)(-1) with methyl viologen and 833 U (mg protein)(-1) with DMN as electron acceptors. Both holoenzymes showed molecular masses of 250 kDa. In SDS gels of active fractions, protein bands with apparent masses of 110 (SreA), 66 (HynL), 41 (HynS) and 29 kDa were present. Enriched hydrogenase fractions contained 14 micro mol Fe and 2 micromol Ni (g protein)(-1); in addition, 2.5 micromol Mo (g protein)(-1) was found in the membrane fraction. Two overlapping genomic cosmid clones were sequenced, encoding a five-gene SR cluster (sre) including the 110 kDa subunit gene (sreA), and a 12-gene hydrogenase cluster (hyn) including the large and small subunit genes and genes encoding proteins required for the maturation of NiFe hydrogenases. A phylogenetic analysis of the SR amino acid sequence revealed that the protein belonged to the DMSO reductase family of molybdoenzymes and that the family showed a novel clustering. A model of sulfur respiration in Acidianus developed from the biochemical results and the data of the amino acid sequence comparisons is discussed.
Microbiology (Reading) 2003 Sep
PMID:Membrane-bound hydrogenase and sulfur reductase of the hyperthermophilic and acidophilic archaeon Acidianus ambivalens. 1294 62

For the first time, the nickel site of the hydrogen sensor of Ralstonia eutropha, the regulatory [NiFe] hydrogenase (RH), was investigated by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the nickel K-edge. The oxidation state and the atomic structure of the Ni site were investigated in the RH in the absence (air-oxidized, RH(ox)) and presence of hydrogen (RH(+H2)). Incubation with hydrogen is found to cause remarkable changes in the spectroscopic properties. The Ni-C EPR signal, indicative of Ni(III), is detectable only in the RH(+H2) state. XANES and EXAFS spectra indicate a coordination of the Ni in the RH(ox) and RH(+H2) that pronouncedly differs from the one in standard [NiFe] hydrogenases. Also, the changes induced by exposure to H(2) are unique. A drastic modification in the XANES spectra and an upshift of the K-edge energy from 8339.8 (RH(ox)) to 8341.1 eV (RH(+H2)) is observed. The EXAFS spectra indicate a change in the Ni coordination in the RH upon exposure to H(2). One likely interpretation of the data is the detachment of one sulfur ligand in RH(+H2) and the binding of additional (O,N) or H ligands. The following Ni oxidation states and coordinations are proposed: five-coordinated Ni(II)(O,N)(2)S(3) for RH(ox) and six-coordinated Ni((III))(O,N)(3)X(1)S(2) [X being either an (O,N) or H ligand] for RH(+H2). Implications of the structural features of the Ni site of the RH in relation to its function, hydrogen sensing, are discussed.
Biochemistry 2003 Sep 23
PMID:Hydrogen-induced structural changes at the nickel site of the regulatory [NiFe] hydrogenase from Ralstonia eutropha detected by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. 1297 36

Amino acid residues His and Cys of the NAD-dependent hydrogenase from the hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium Ralstonia eutropha H16 were chemically modified with specific reagents. The modification of His residues of the nonactivated hydrogenase resulted in decrease in both hydrogenase and diaphorase activities of the enzyme. Activation of NADH hydrogenase under anaerobic conditions led to the modification of additional His residue (or residues) significant only for the hydrogenase activity. The rate of decrease in the diaphorase activity was unchanged. The modification of thiol groups of the nonactivated enzyme did not affect the activity of the hydrogenase. The effect of thiol-modifying agents on the activated hydrogenase was accompanied by inactivation of both diaphorase and hydrogenase activities. The modification degree and changes in the corresponding catalytic activities depended on conditions of the enzyme activation. Data on the modification of cysteine and histidine residues of the hydrogenase suggested that the enzyme activation should be associated with significant conformational changes in the protein globule.
Biochemistry (Mosc) 2003 Sep
PMID:Chemical modification of catalytically essential functional groups of NAD-dependent hydrogenase from Ralstonia eutropha H16. 1460 42


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