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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)
Rhodobacter capsulatus synthesizes two homologous protein complexes capable of activating molecular H(2), a membrane-bound [NiFe]
hydrogenase
(HupSL) linked to the respiratory chain, and an H(2) sensor encoded by the hupUV genes. The activities of hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange catalyzed by the hupSL-encoded and the hupUV-encoded enzymes in the presence of D(2) and H(2)O were studied comparatively. Whereas HupSL is in the membranes, HupUV activity was localized in the soluble cytoplasmic fraction. Since the
hydrogenase
gene cluster of R. capsulatus contains a gene homologous to hoxH, which encodes the large subunit of
NAD
-linked tetrameric soluble hydrogenases, the chromosomal hoxH gene was inactivated and hoxH mutants were used to demonstrate the H-D exchange activity of the cytoplasmic HupUV protein complex. The H-D exchange reaction catalyzed by HupSL
hydrogenase
was maximal at pH 4. 5 and inhibited by acetylene and oxygen, whereas the H-D exchange catalyzed by the HupUV protein complex was insensitive to acetylene and oxygen and did not vary significantly between pH 4 and pH 11. Based on these properties, the product of the accessory hypD gene was shown to be necessary for the synthesis of active HupUV enzyme. The kinetics of HD and H(2) formed in exchange with D(2) by HupUV point to a restricted access of protons and gasses to the active site. Measurement of concentration changes in D(2), HD, and H(2) by mass spectrometry showed that, besides the H-D exchange reaction, HupUV oxidized H(2) with benzyl viologen, produced H(2) with reduced methyl viologen, and demonstrated true
hydrogenase
activity. Therefore, not only with respect to its H(2) signaling function in the cell, but also to its catalytic properties, the HupUV enzyme represents a distinct class of hydrogenases.
...
PMID:Characterization of the hydrogen-deuterium exchange activities of the energy-transducing HupSL hydrogenase and H(2)-signaling HupUV hydrogenase in Rhodobacter capsulatus. 1102 18
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
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
Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) was shown to contain two distinct hydrogenases, a soluble
hydrogenase
and a membrane-bound hydrogenase. This is the first report of a membrane-bound hydrogenase in methanotrophs. Both enzymes were expressed apparently constitutively under normal growth conditions. The soluble
hydrogenase
was capable of reducing
NAD
(+) with molecular hydrogen. The activities of both soluble and particulate methane monooxygenases could be driven by molecular hydrogen. This confirmed that molecular hydrogen could be used as a source of reducing power for methane oxidation. Hydrogen-driven methane monooxygenase activities tolerated elevated temperatures and moderate oxygen concentrations. The significance of these findings for biotechnological applications of methanotrophs is discussed.
...
PMID:Detection and localization of two hydrogenases in Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) and their potential role in methane metabolism. 1180 66
The direct electron transfer between 316 L stainless steel and the
NAD
-dependent
hydrogenase
from Ralstonia eutropha was studied by spectroelectrochemistry. The presence of
hydrogenase
and NAD+ clearly increased the quantity of electricity, which was consumed during the electrolysis performed at potential lower than -0.70 V/SCE. The involvement of
hydrogenase
in the cathodic depolarisation theory was discussed in the light of these results.
...
PMID:The role of hydrogenases in the anaerobic microbiologically influenced corrosion of steels. 1200 48
Development of resistance against metronidazole and mechanisms responsible for this process were studied in a sexually transmitted pathogen of humans, Trichomonas vaginalis. Monitoring of changes in metabolism and protein expression that accompanied increasing resistance of strains derived from a common drug-susceptible parent (TV 10-02) showed the multistep character of the process. The aerobic type of resistance known to occur in isolates from patients non-responsive to treatment appeared at the earliest stage, followed by development of the anaerobic type of resistance which was accompanied by gradual loss of hydrogenosomal proteins associated with drug-activating pathways [pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR),
hydrogenase
, ferredoxin]. Unexpectedly, the loss of PFOR did not result in acquisition of full anaerobic resistance, thus indicating an alternative source of electrons required for the drug activation. These data suggest involvement of the oxidative decarboxylation of malate in hydrogenosomes, catalysed by
NAD
(+)-dependent malic enzyme and subsequent transfer of reduced equivalents to the drug via NADH:ferredoxin oxidoreductase and ferredoxin. Accordingly, all components of this pathway were eliminated before the resistance was fully developed. Resistant Trichomonas vaginalis compensated the impaired function of hydrogenosomes by enhanced conversion of pyruvate to lactate in the cytosol. Further analysis of the two key enzymes involved in metronidazole activation by Northern blotting and assay for nascent mRNA showed that the insufficient expression of the PFOR protein results from decreased gene transcription, while down-regulation of malic enzyme is controlled at the mRNA level.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of in vitro development of resistance to metronidazole in Trichomonas vaginalis. 1217 40
The tetrameric cytoplasmic [NiFe]
hydrogenase
(SH) of Ralstonia eutropha couples the oxidation of hydrogen to the reduction of
NAD
(+) under aerobic conditions. In the catalytic subunit HoxH, all six conserved motifs surrounding the [NiFe] site are present. Five of these motifs were altered by site-directed mutagenesis in order to dissect the molecular mechanism of hydrogen activation. Based on phenotypic characterizations, 27 mutants were grouped into four different classes. Mutants of the major class, class I, failed to grow on hydrogen and were devoid of H(2)-oxidizing activity. In one of these isolates (HoxH I64A), H(2) binding was impaired. Class II mutants revealed a high D(2)/H(+) exchange rate relative to a low H(2)-oxidizing activity. A representative (HoxH H16L) displayed D(2)/H(+) exchange but had lost electron acceptor-reducing activity. Both activities were equally affected in class III mutants. Mutants forming class IV showed a particularly interesting phenotype. They displayed O(2)-sensitive growth on hydrogen due to an O(2)-sensitive SH protein.
...
PMID:Functional analysis by site-directed mutagenesis of the NAD(+)-reducing hydrogenase from Ralstonia eutropha. 1239 98
Bovine-heart NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.5.3; Complex I) is the first and most complicated enzyme in the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Biochemistry textbooks and virtually all literature on this enzyme state that it contains one FMN and at least four iron-sulfur clusters. We show here that this statement is incorrect as it is based on erroneous protein determinations. Quantitative amino acid analysis of the bovine Complex I, to our knowledge the first reported thus far, shows that the routine protein-determination methods used for the bovine Complex I overestimate its protein content by up to twofold. The FMN content of the preparations was determined to be at least 1.3-1.4 mol FMN/mol Complex I. The spin concentration of the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal ascribed to iron-sulfur cluster N2 was determined and accounted for 1.3-1.6 clusters per molecule of Complex I. These results experimentally confirm the hypothesis [FEBS Lett. 485 (2000) 1] that the bovine Complex I contains two FMN groups and two clusters N2. Also the protein content of preparations of the soluble
NAD
(+)-reducing [NiFe]-
hydrogenase
(EC 1.12.1.2) from Ralstonia eutropha, which shows clear evolutionary relationships with Complex I, scores too high by the colorimetric protein-determination methods. Determination of the FMN content and the spin concentration of the EPR signal of the [2Fe-2S] cluster shows that this
hydrogenase
also contains two FMN groups. A third enzyme (Ech), the membrane-bound [NiFe]-
hydrogenase
from Methanosarcina barkeri which shows an even stronger evolutionary relationship with Complex I, behaves rather normal in protein determinations and contains no detectable acid-extractable FMN in purified preparations.
...
PMID:Quantitative amino acid analysis of bovine NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex I) and related enzymes. Consequences for the number of prosthetic groups. 1261 47
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