Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Different species of methanogenic bacteria growing on CO(2) and H(2) were shown to remove CO added to the gas phase. Rates up to 0.2 mumol of CO depleted/min per 10 ml of culture containing approximately 7 mg of cells (wet weight) were observed. Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum was selected for further study based on its ability to grow rapidly on a completely mineral medium. This species used CO as the sole energy source by disproportionating CO to CO(2) and CH(4) according to the following equation: 4CO + 2H(2)O --> 1CH(4) + 3CO(2). However, growth was slight, and the growth rate on CO was only 1% of that observed on H(2)/CO(2). Growth only occurred with CO concentrations in the gas phase of lower than 50%. Growth on CO agrees with the finding that cell-free extracts of M. thermoautotrophicum contained both an active factor 420 (F(420))-dependent hydrogenase (7.7 mumol/min per mg of protein at 35 degrees C) and a CO-dehydrogenating enzyme (0.2 mumol/min per mg of protein at 35 degrees C) that catalyzed the reduction of F(420) with CO. The properties of the CO-dehydrogenating enzyme are described. In addition to F(420), viologen dyes were effective electron acceptors for the enzyme. The apparent K(m) for CO was higher than 1 mM. The reaction rate increased with increasing pH and displayed an inflection point at pH 6.7. The temperature dependence of the reaction rate followed the Arrhenius equation with an activation energy (DeltaHdouble dagger) of 14.1 kcal/mol (59.0 kJ/mol). The CO dehydrogenase activity was reversibly inactivated by low concentrations of cyanide (2 muM) and was very sensitive to inactivation by oxygen. Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase of M. thermoautotrophicum exhibited several characteristic properties found for the enzyme of Clostridium pasteurianum but differed mainly in that the clostridial enzyme did not utilize F(420) as the electron acceptor.
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PMID:Carbon monoxide oxidation by methanogenic bacteria. 2 Nov 59

Illumination of NADH and NADPH by UV-light in the absence of oxygen resulted in the reduction of ferredoxin or methyl-viologen to cation-radical and under prolonged illumination to dihydrodipyridyl. The reaction may by accompanied by triplet and singlet exitation of NADH. It was shown that hematoporphyrin in aqueous solution photosensitized the reaction of NADH oxidation by ferredoxin and methylviologen to the visible region of the spectrum. Under light excitation the redox potentials of NADH and NADPH were increased up to the level exceeding the potential of hydrogen electrode. Illumination of NADH and NADPH by UV-light in the presence of bacterial hydrogenase resulted in hydrogen evolution. The reaction of hydrogen evolution could be sensitised towards the visible region of the spectrum by chlorophyll or chloroplasts.
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PMID:[Light activation of NADH and NADPH]. 2 26

Mechanical disruption of cells of Methanobacterium strain G2R resulted in a 78-fold increase in the specific activity of the hydrogenase as measured by the benzyl viologen reduction assay. Approximately 50% of the activity in disrupted cells was associated with the particulate fraction. Between 69 and 85% of the particulate hydrogenase was released by treatment with the detergents Triton X-100, deoxycholate, and octyl-beta-d-glucopyranoside. The relative electrophoretic mobilities of the soluble hydrogenases were identical, indicating that G2R possessed a single electrophoretically distinct hydrogenase. The particulate enzyme was inactivated by oxygen and could be reactivated with dithionite or glucose plus glucose oxidase. The enzyme had a pH optimum of 8.5 and resisted heating at 52 but not 77 degrees C. A number of nonspecific dyes, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and riboflavin 5'-phosphate were effective electron acceptors; oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, and factor 420 were apparently not reduced. Hydrogenase activity was inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, cyanide, chloroform, and chloramphenicol. The molecular weight of the solubilized enzyme was 900,000, with subunits of molecular weights 38,500, 50,700, and approximately 80,000. It is suggested that, in intact cells of G2R, the large hydrogenase complex is loosely bound to the cell wall or membrane.
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PMID:Solubilization and properties of a particulate hydrogenase from Methanobacterium strain G2R. 3 36

This manuscript reviews the literature on hydrogen metabolism in blue-green algae and reports some new data from this laboratory. H2-formation by intact cells is found to be catalyzed exclusively by nitrogenase. Its rate appears to be variable from strain to strain used byt is--in our hands--very small. Therefore, blue-green algae are presumably of limited value in projects of solar energy conversion to form molecular hydrogen. These organisms are also able to consume the gas in a reaction catalysed by hydrogenase. Hydrogen is mainly consumed in an oxygen dependent reaction, as in aerobic nitrogen fixing bacteria. It can also serve as an electron donor for nitrogen fixation under certain physiological conditions. In experiments with a cell-free preparation, hydrogenase is found to be membrane-bound. The enzyme is characterized with respect to its specifity towards electron donors and acceptors.
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PMID:Hydrogen metabolism in blue-green algae. 9 76

The thylakoids of vegetative cells of the filamentous cyanobacterium, Anabaena cylindrica, are capable of oxygen-evolving photosynthesis and contain both Photosystems I and II (PSI and PSII). The heterocysts, cells specialized for nitrogen fixation, do not produce oxygen and lack Photosystem II activity, the major accessory pigments, and perhaps the chlorophyll a associated with PSII. Freeze-fracture replicas of vegetative cells and of heterocysts reveal differences in the structure of the thylakoids. A histogram of particle sizes on the exoplasmic fracture face (E-face, EF) of vegetative cell thylakoids has two major peaks, at 75 and 100 A. The corresponding histogram for heterocyst thylakoids lacks the 100 A size class, but has a very large peak at about 55 A with a shoulder at 75 A. Histograms of protoplasmic fracture face (P-face, PF) particle diameters show single broad peaks, the mean diameter being 71 A for vegetative cells and 64 A for heterocysts. The thylakoids of both cell types have about 5600 particles/micrometers2 on the P-face. On the E-face, the density drops from 939 particles/micrometers2 on vegetative cell thylakoids to 715 particles/micrometers2 on heterocyst thylakoids. The data suggest that the 100 A E-face particle of vegetative cell thylakoids is a PSII complex. The 55 A EF particle of heterocysts may be part of the nitrogenase complex or a remnant of the PSII complex. The role of the 75 A EF particle is unknown. Other functions localized on cyanobacterial thylakoids, such as respiration and hydrogenase activity, must be considered when interpreting the structure of these complex thylakoids.
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PMID:Changes in thylakoid structure associated with the differentiation of heterocysts in the cyanobacterium, Anabaena cylindrica. 11 Mar 42

The effect of chelation on rate or air inactivation of hydrogenase from Clostridium pasteurianum has been investigated. All chelating agents used, whether water-soluble or water-insoluble, afforded protection against oxygen inactivation. EDTA appeared to be the most effective. Thus, in the absence of EDTA, hydrogenase in aqueous solution was nearly totally inactivated after 1 hour incubation in air, whereas 0.5 M EDTA (which did not affect significantly catalytic activity) allowed 41% retention of the initial activity even after 3 days incubation.
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PMID:Chelating agents protect hydrogenase against oxygen inactivation. 11 12

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.
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PMID:Purification and properties of soluble hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus H 16. 18 26

A general procedure for stabilization of O2-labile enzymes exploiting "salting out" of oxygen from the microenvironment in the molecular layers immediately adjacent to charged surfaces of polyionic solid adsorbents has been developed. Empirical verification of this rationale is provided. The half-life of air inactivation of the O2-labile hydrogenase (EC 1.12.7.1) from Clostridium pasteurianum is increased 20- to 25-fold simply by adsorption (noncovalent binding) in dilute Tris.HCl buffer on common anion exchange supports such as DEAE-cellulose or Dowex 1-X2. Predicted increases in degree of stabilization by using more densely charged adsorbents (such as polyethyleneimine-cellulose), as well as bulkier solvent counter-anions, are found; half-lives for air inactivation for the bound hydrogenase can be increased to 3000-fold longer than that of the free enzyme. Most of the total catalytic activity, assayed as H2 evolution from dithionite mediated by methyl viologen or ferredoxin, is retained, whereas the expected suppression of H2 uptake in the reverse reaction is observed.
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PMID:A rationale for stabilization of oxygen-labile enzymes: application to a clostridial hydrogenase. 27 79

Isolation from Salmonella typhimurium of mutants unable to reduce benzyl viologen under anaerobic conditions has allowed the study of the factors involved in the multienzymic formate hydrogenylase system. 1. Depending on the affected activities, different classes of mutants were found: FHL-A mutants have lost formate dehydrogenase 1 and formate dehydrogenase 2 activities; mutations in fdhA (117 min) or fdhB (33 min) lead to such a phenotype. FHL-B and FHL-C mutants have lost formate dehydrogenase 2 activity and part or all of hydrogenase activity, respectively; both types correspond to mutations in the hyd gene (approximately 90 min). FHL-D mutants have lost only formate dehydrogenase 2 activity; fhlD gene maps at 120 min. 2. In some cases, mixtures of extracts from two mutants display formate dehydrogenase 2 and formate hydrogenylase activities. Restoration studies suggest the existence of one factor sensitive to growth conditions and inactivated by oxygen or heating. This factor which is present and active in FHL-C mutants, is probably the one missing in FHL-D mutants. 3. A new scheme for the formate hydrogenylase system is proposed, in which hydrogenase transfers electrons directly to benzyl viologen.
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PMID:Formate hydrogenlyase system in Salmonella typhimurium LT2. 31 97

Factors that regulate the expression of an H2 uptake system in free-living cultures of Rhizobium japonicum have been investigated. Rapid rates of H2 uptake by R. japonicum were obtained by incubation of cell suspensions in a Mg-phosphate buffer under a gas phase of 86.7% N2, 8.3% H2, 4.2% CO2, and 0.8% O2. Cultures incubated under conditions comparable with those above, with the exception that Ar replaced H2, showed no hydrogenase activity. When H2 was removed after initiation of hydrogenase derepression, further increase in hydrogenase activity ceased. Nitrogenase activity was not essential for expression of hydrogenase activity. All usable carbon substrates tested repressed hydrogenase formation, but none of them inhibited hydrogenase activity. No effect on hydrogenase formation was observed from the addition of KNO3 or NH4Cl at 10 mM. Oxygen repressed hydrogenase formation, but did not inhibit activity of the enzyme in whole cells. The addition of rifampin or chloramphenicol to derepressed cultures resulted in inhibition of enzyme formation similar to that observed by O2 repression. The removal of CO2 during derepression caused a decrease in the rate of hydrogenase formation. No direct effect of CO2 on hydrogenase activity was observed.
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PMID:Regulation of hydrogenase in Rhizobium japonicum. 42 13


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