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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)
When grown in batch cultures in fermentors with 23.4 mM cellobiose, Clostridium cellulolyticum displayed biphasic growth kinetics not associated with sequential substrate consumption and which led to a twofold higher production of biomass than previously reported. In the first growth phase, acetate was the major product of cellobiose metabolism, since lactate and ethanol productions remained low. Furthermore, an accumulation of intracellular
NADH
was observed. The transition towards the second growth phase was accompanied by an induction of lactate production, in such a way that lactate became the major product of C. cellulolyticum metabolism. In addition, a decrease in
NADH
concentration was measured, concomitant with this induction of lactate production and with the growth resumption. During both growth phases, the NADH-ferredoxin reductase-
hydrogenase
system played a major function in
NADH
regeneration, since H2 production was 1.4- to 1.5-fold higher than that of CO2. Thus, we found that lactate production serves as an additional catabolic pathway enabling C. cellulolyticum to cope with excesses of carbon and
NADH
produced. Growth experiments on C. cellulolyticum under an atmosphere of carbon monoxide mimicked this phenomenon and confirmed that a high intracellular level of
NADH
can provide a barrier to bacterial growth.
...
PMID:Induction of lactate production associated with a decrease in NADH cell content enables growth resumption of Clostridium cellulolyticum in batch cultures on cellobiose. 1054 Sep 10
Continuous cultures, under cellobiose sufficient concentrations (14. 62 mM) using a chemically defined medium, were examined to determine the carbon regulation selected by Clostridium cellulolyticum. Using a synthetic medium, a q(cellobiose) of 2.57 mmol g cells(-1) h(-1) was attained whereas the highest value obtained on complex media was 0.68 mmol g cells(-1) h(-1) (Payot et al. 1998. Microbiology 144:375-384). On a synthetic medium at D = 0.035 h(-1) under cellobiose excess, lactate and ethanol biosynthesis were able to use the reducing equivalents supplied by acetic acid formation and the H(2)/CO(2) ratio was found equal to 1. At a higher dilution rate (D = 0.115 h(-1)), there was no lactate production and the pathways toward ethanol and
NADH
-ferredoxin-
hydrogenase
contributed to balance the reducing equivalents; in this case a H(2)/CO(2) ratio of 1.54 was found. With increasing D, there was a progressive increase (i) in the steady-state concentration of
NADH
and NAD(+) pools from 11.8 to 22.1 micromol (g cells) (-1), (ii) in the intracellular
NADH
/NAD(+) ratios from 0.43 to 1.51. On synthetic media, under cellobiose excess the carbon flow was also equilibrated by three overflows: exopolysaccharide, extracellular protein, and amino acid excretions. At D = 0.115 h(-1), 34% of the cellobiose consumed was converted into exopolysaccharides; this deviation of the carbon flow and the increase of the phosphoroclastic activity decreased dramatically the pyruvate excretion and explained the break in lactate production. Whatever the dilution rate, C. cellulolyticum, using ammonium and cellobiose excess, always spilled usual amino acids accompanied by other amino compounds. In vitro, GAPDH, phosphoroclastic reaction, alcohol dehydrogenase, and acetate kinase activities were high under conditions giving high in vivo specific production rates. There were also correlations between the in vitro lactate dehydrogenase activity and in vivo lactate production, but in contrast with the preceding activities, these two parameters decreased with D. All the results demonstrate that C. cellulolyticum was able to optimize carbon catabolism from cellulosic substrates in a synthetic medium.
...
PMID:Relationships between cellobiose catabolism, enzyme levels, and metabolic intermediates in Clostridium cellulolyticum grown in a synthetic medium. 1062 Feb 63
The fermentative hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus contains an NADPH-utilizing, heterotetrameric (alphabetagammadelta), cytoplasmic
hydrogenase
(
hydrogenase I
) that catalyzes both H(2) production and the reduction of elemental sulfur to H(2)S. Herein is described the purification of a second enzyme of this type,
hydrogenase II
, from the same organism. Hydrogenase II has an M(r) of 320,000 +/- 20,000 and contains four different subunits with M(r)s of 52,000 (alpha), 39,000 (beta), 30,000 (gamma), and 24,000 (delta). The heterotetramer contained Ni (0.9 +/- 0.1 atom/mol), Fe (21 +/- 1.6 atoms/mol), and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) (0.83 +/- 0.1 mol/mol). NADPH and
NADH
were equally efficient as electron donors for H(2) production with K(m) values near 70 microM and k(cat)/K(m) values near 350 min(-1) mM(-1). In contrast to
hydrogenase I
,
hydrogenase II
catalyzed the H(2)-dependent reduction of NAD (K(m), 128 microM; k(cat)/K(m), 770 min(-1) mM(-1)). Ferredoxin from P. furiosus was not an efficient electron carrier for either enzyme. Both H(2) and NADPH served as electron donors for the reduction of elemental sulfur (S(0)) and polysulfide by
hydrogenase I
and
hydrogenase II
, and both enzymes preferentially reduce polysulfide to sulfide rather than protons to H(2) using NADPH as the electron donor. At least two [4Fe-4S] and one [2Fe-2S] cluster were detected in
hydrogenase II
by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, but amino acid sequence analyses indicated a total of five [4Fe-4S] clusters (two in the beta subunit and three in the delta subunit) and one [2Fe-2S] cluster (in the gamma subunit), as well as two putative nucleotide-binding sites in the gamma subunit which are thought to bind FAD and NAD(P)(H). The amino acid sequences of the four subunits of
hydrogenase II
showed between 55 and 63% similarity to those of
hydrogenase I
. The two enzymes are present in the cytoplasm at approximately the same concentration. Hydrogenase II may become physiologically relevant at low S(0) concentrations since it has a higher affinity than
hydrogenase I
for both S(0) and polysulfide.
...
PMID:Characterization of hydrogenase II from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus and assessment of its role in sulfur reduction. 1071 90
Anaerobically grown glucose-fermenting E. coli cells produce molecular hydrogen, acidify the medium and uptake potassium ions. It was shown that the H2 release and the proton-potassium exchange with the fixed (2H+/K+) stoichiometry of the initial DCC-sensitive fluxes were lost in mutants with the deleted fdhF gene or the hycA-H operon responsible for the biosynthesis of formate dehydrogenase H (FDH,H) or
hydrogenase
3 (H3), respectively, which are the main components of the formate hydrogen lyase FHL(H). However, both processes occurred in mutants with the deleted hycE, hycF or hycG genes encoding the major and minor components of H3, respectively. The K+ uptake was sensitive to the osmotic shock resulting from glucose addition to the medium and decreased significantly in the presence of valinomycin. The H2 release and the 2H+/K+ exchange were absent in the mutant with the deleted hycB gene encoding the corresponding minor component of H3. This mutant acidified the medium and uptook K+ with Km typical for TrkA, but the stoichiometry of the DCC-inhibited fluxes was variable, and the K+ gradient between the cytoplasm and the medium in this mutant was lower than in the mutants lacking other minor components of H3. The results obtained suggest that the hycB gene product, FdhF and HycE, form probably the FHL(H) complex that directly interacts with the H+-ATPase complex F0F1 and the TrkA(H) system of K+ uptake. Such a multienzyme association is responsible for the H2 production and 2H+/K+ exchange. The major and other minor components of H3 have probably no direct role in the H2 production and 2H+/K+ exchange. H2 production by precursor's or hycE mutant's protoplasts treated with toluene was shown to occur upon addition of the thiol reagent dithiothreitol to the medium containing ATP, potassium ions, NAD+, and
NADH
. H2 production was inhibited by DCC. The quantity of available thiol groups in membrane vesicles of the precursor or the hycE, hycF or hycG mutants, in which the H2 production and 2H+/K+ exchange were observed, was larger than in other mutants. The number of SH groups decreased in the presence of DCC. These results indicate a significance of the thiol groups for the function of the proposed association.
...
PMID:Relationship between formate hydrogen lyase and proton-potassium pump under heterolactic fermentation in Escherichia coli: functional multienzyme associations in the cell membrane. 1092 69
Hydrogenases have clear evolutionary links to the much more complex
NADH
-ubiquinone oxidoreductases (Complex I). Certain membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenases presumably pump protons. From a detailed comparison of hydrogenases and Complex I, it is concluded here that the TYKY subunit in these enzymes is a special 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxin, which functions as the electrical driving unit for a proton pump. The comparison further revealed that the flavodoxin fold from [NiFe]-hydrogenases is presumably conserved in the PSST subunit of Complex I. It is proposed that bovine Complex I and the soluble NAD(+)-reducing
hydrogenase
from Ralstonia eutropha each contain a second FMN group.
...
PMID:Learning from hydrogenases: location of a proton pump and of a second FMN in bovine NADH--ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex I). 1108 55
Methanosphaera stadtmanae (DSM 3091) is a methanogen that requires H2 and CH3OH for methanogenesis. The organism does not possess an F420-dependent
hydrogenase
and only low levels of F420. It does however possess NADP+:F420 oxidoreductase activity. The NADP+:F420 oxidoreductase, the enzyme which catalyses the electron transfer between NADP+ and F420 in this organism, was purified and characterized. NAD+,
NADH
, FMN, and FAD could not be used as electron acceptors. Optimal pH for F420 reduction was 6.0, and 8.5 for NADP+ reduction. During the purification process, it was noted that precipitation with (NH4)2SO4 increased total activity 16-fold but reduced the stability of the enzyme. However, recombination of cell-free extracts with resuspended 65-90% (NH4)2SO4 pellet returned activity to near cell-free extract levels. Neither high salt or protease inhibitors were effective in stabilizing the activity of the partially purified enzyme. The purified enzyme from M. stadtmanae possessed a molecular weight of 148 kDa as determined by gel filtration chromatography and native-PAGE, consisting of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits of 60, 50, and 45 kDa, respectively, using SDS-PAGE. The Km values were 370 microM for NADP+, 142 microM for NADPH, 62.5 microM for F420, and 7.7 microM for F420H2. These values were different from the Km values observed in the cell-free extract.
...
PMID:Purification of the NADP+:F420 oxidoreductase of Methanosphaera stadtmanae. 1110 87
The metabolism of Clostridium butyricum was manipulated at pH 6.5 and in phosphate-limited chemostat culture by changing the overall degree of reduction of the substrate using mixtures of glucose and glycerol. Cultures grown on glucose alone produced only acids (acetate, butyrate, and lactate) and a high level of hydrogen. In contrast, when glycerol was metabolized, 1,3-propanediol became the major product, the specific rate of acid formation decreased, and a low level of hydrogen was observed. Glycerol consumption was associated with the induction of (i) a glycerol dehydrogenase and a dihydroxyacetone kinase feeding glycerol into the central metabolism and (ii) an oxygen-sensitive glycerol dehydratase and an NAD-dependent 1,3-propanediol dehydrogenase involved in propanediol formation. The redirection of the electron flow from hydrogen to
NADH
formation was associated with a sharp decrease in the in vitro
hydrogenase
activity and the acetyl coenzyme A (CoA)/free CoA ratio that allows the NADH-ferredoxin oxidoreductase bidirectional enzyme to operate so as to reduce NAD in this culture. The decrease in acetate and butyrate formation was not explained by changes in the concentration of phosphotransacylases and acetate and butyrate kinases but by changes in in vivo substrate concentrations, as reflected by the sharp decrease in the acetyl-CoA/free CoA and butyryl-CoA/free CoA ratios and the sharp increase in the ATP/ADP ratio in the culture grown with glucose and glycerol compared with that in the culture grown with glucose alone. As previously reported for Clostridium acetobutylicum (L. Girbal, I. Vasconcelos, and P. Soucaille, J. Bacteriol. 176:6146-6147, 1994), the transmembrane pH of C. butyricum is inverted (more acidic inside) when the in vivo activity of
hydrogenase
is decreased (cultures grown on glucose-glycerol mixture). For both cultures, the stoichiometry of the H(+) ATPase was shown to remain constant and equal to 3 protons exported per molecule of ATP consumed.
...
PMID:Regulation of carbon and electron flow in Clostridium butyricum VPI 3266 grown on glucose-glycerol mixtures. 1116 Jan 7
Cadmium and lead metals deposited on CdS particles are shown to act as substrates--electron donors for enzymes,
hydrogenase
from Thiocapsa roseopersicina (HG), NAD-dependent
hydrogenase
from Alcaligenes eutrophus (NLH), and ferredoxin:NADP oxidoreductase (FNR) from Chlorella in the formation of hydrogen,
NADH
and NADPH, respectively. Adsorption of the enzyme on the surface of the metallized CdS particle is required for enzymatic oxidation of metal. The maximum rates for the formation of hydrogen and
NADH
catalyzed by
hydrogenase
and NAD-dependent
hydrogenase
with metals as electron donors are comparable with the rates obtained for these enzymes using soluble substrates. Kinetic analysis of the enzymatic oxidation of cadmium metal has revealed that the rate decreases mainly due to the formation of a solid product, which is supposed to be Cd(OH)2. The deceleration of lead oxidation catalyzed by
hydrogenase
proceeds at the expense of the inhibitory effect of the formed Pb2+. The enzymatic oxidation of electrochemically prepared cadmium metal is also shown. Based on these results, a new mechanism of action of the enzymes involved in anaerobic biocorrosion is proposed. By this mechanism, the enzyme accelerates the process of metal dissolution through a mediatorless catalysis of the reduction of the enzyme substrate.
...
PMID:Enzymatic oxidation of cadmium and lead metals photodeposited on cadmium sulfide. 1120 26
The actinomycete Rhodococcus opacus MR11 harbors a bidirectional NAD-reducing [NiFe]
hydrogenase
(SH). This cytoplasmic enzyme is composed of two heterodimeric modules which catalyze distinct enzymatic activities. The
hydrogenase
moiety mediates H(2):benzyl viologen oxidoreductase activity and the FMN-containing diaphorase module displays
NADH
:benzyl viologen oxidoreductase activity. The SH of Rh. opacus resembles [NiFe] hydrogenases present in strains of the proteobacterium Ralstonia eutropha and in species of cyanobacteria. Heterologous expression of active [NiFe] hydrogenases failed in most cases due to protein-assisted maturation processes implicated in the assembly of the NiFe bimetallic site. This study reports on the construction of a recombinant plasmid harboring the four SH subunit genes hoxFUYH and the associated endopeptidase gene hoxW from Rh. opacus under the regime of the SH promoter from R. eutropha H16. The resulting recombinant plasmid restored lithoautotrophic growth in a R. eutropha mutant impaired in H(2)-oxidizing ability. The SH of Rh. opacus was functionally active in R. eutropha and displayed the typical features described for its natural host. It readily dissociated in vitro into two active subforms. Dissociation was accompanied by the loss of the H(2)-dependent NAD-reducing activity, which was partially reconstituted by addition of 5 mM MgSO(4) and 0.5 mM NiCl(2). Activity and stability of the SH from Rh. opacus were enhanced almost three-fold by co-overexpression of the SH-associated metal insertion genes hypA2B2F2 of R. eutropha. Under optimal conditions the heterologously expressed Rh. opacus SH catalyzed NAD-reduction at a specific activity of 1.7 units per mg protein, which is approximately 30% of the yield obtained for the R. eutropha SH. The results indicate that, despite an enormous phylogenetic distance of the two bacterial species, their SH proteins are highly related.
...
PMID:Expression of a functional NAD-reducing [NiFe] hydrogenase from the gram-positive Rhodococcus opacus in the gram-negative Ralstonia eutropha. 1180 65
Ech
hydrogenase
(Ech) from the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina barkeri catalyzes the reversible reduction of ferredoxin by H(2) and is a member of a distinct group of membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenases with sequence similarity to energy-conserving
NADH
:quinone oxidoreductase (complex I). To elucidate the physiological role(s) of Ech a mutant lacking this enzyme was constructed. The mutant was unable to grow on methanol/H(2)/CO(2), H(2)/CO(2), or acetate as carbon and energy sources but showed wild-type growth rates with methanol as sole substrate. Addition of pyruvate to the growth medium restored growth on methanol/H(2)/CO(2) but not on H(2)/CO(2) or acetate. Results obtained from growth experiments, cell suspension experiments, and enzyme activity measurements in cell extracts provide compelling evidence for essential functions of Ech and a 2[4Fe-4S] ferredoxin in the metabolism of M. barkeri. The following conclusions were made. (i) In acetoclastic methanogenesis, Ech catalyzes H(2) formation from reduced ferredoxin, generated by the oxidation of the carbonyl group of acetate to CO(2). (ii) Under autotrophic growth conditions, the enzyme catalyzes the energetically unfavorable reduction of ferredoxin by H(2), most probably driven by reversed electron transport, and the reduced ferredoxin thus generated functions as low potential electron donor for the synthesis of pyruvate in an anabolic pathway. (iii) Reduced ferredoxin in addition provides the reducing equivalents for the first step of methanogenesis from H(2)/CO(2), the reduction of CO(2) to formylmethanofuran. Thus, in vivo genetic analysis has led to the identification of the electron donor of this key initial step of methanogenesis.
...
PMID:Genetic analysis of the archaeon Methanosarcina barkeri Fusaro reveals a central role for Ech hydrogenase and ferredoxin in methanogenesis and carbon fixation. 1192 75
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