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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 sulphate-reducing bacteria have a complex electron transfer system which leads to the reduction of sulphate by oxidation of either organic substrates or molecular hydrogen. These bacteria can either produce or consume molecular hydrogen. The central part of this electron pathway for Desulovibrio gigas is constituted by
hydrogenase
(3 X (4Fe-4S)). cytochrome c3 (4 haems with different redox potentials) and a one (4Fe-4S) cluster
ferredoxin
. This
ferredoxin
is isolated in different oligomeric forms, which stabilize different oxidation states and have different physiological roles; the trimer FdI being involved in the production of H2 and the tetramer FdII being more efficient for the consumption of H2. The presence of intrinsic probes (the iron ions) in these proteins is particularly helpful for structural studies using NMR spectroscopy. These studies allowed a characterization of the oxidation states used by the different oligomers of the
ferredoxin
and obtaintion of structural information on multi-haem cytochromes (c3 and c7). NMR is also suitable to study protein-protein interaction. The study of the complex formed between FdII and cytochrome c3 has shown that there is an alteration of the kinetics of electron transfer upon complexation.
...
PMID:NMR studies of electron carrier proteins from sulphate reducing bacteria. 20 61
A
ferredoxin
was purified from Clostridium perfringens by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and Sephadex G-50 gel filtration. It had absorption maxima at 390 and 280 nm. The molecular weight was estimated to be 6,000 by Sephadex gel filtration and from the results of amino acid analysis. The isoelectric point was 3.0. It contained four atoms of iron, four atoms of labile sulfur, and six cysteine residues. This
ferredoxin
as well as
ferredoxin
from C. pasteurianum acted as an electron donor for nitrate reductase from C. perfringens. The
ferredoxin
could also act as an electron donor for the
hydrogenase
from C. pasteurianum in hydrogen evolution.
...
PMID:Studies on nitrate reductase of Clostridium perfringens. II. Purification and some properties of ferredoxin. 21 25
Methanobacterium ruminantium was shown to possess a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP)-linked factor 420 (F420)-dependent
hydrogenase
system. This system was also shown to be present in Methanobacterium strain MOH. The
hydrogenase
system of M. ruminantium also links directly to F420, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), flavin mononucleotide (FMN), methyl viologen, and Fe-3 plus. It has a pH optimum of about 8 and an apparent Km for F420 of about 5 x 10-6 M at pH 8 when NADP is the electron acceptor. The F420-NADP oxidoreductase activity is inactive toward nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (nad) and no NADPH:NAD or FADH2(FMNH2):NAD transhydrogenase system was detected. Neither crude
ferredoxin
nor boiled crude extract of Clostridium pasteuranum could replace F420 in the NADP-linked
hydrogenase
reaction of M. ruminantium. Also, neitther F420 nor a curde "ferredoxin" fraction from M. ruminantium extracts could substitute for
ferredoxin
in the pyruvate-
ferredoxin
oxidoreductase reaction of C. pasteurianum.
...
PMID:Factor 420-dependent pyridine nucleotide-linked hydrogenase system of Methanobacterium ruminantium. 23 34
The enzyme
hydrogenase
, from the photosynthetic bacterium Chromatium, was purified to homogeneity after solubilization of the particulate enzyme with deoxycholate. The purification procedure included ammonium sulfate fractionation, treatment with manganous phosphate gel, heating at 63 degrees, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and isoelectric focusing. The last step gave two active enzyme fractions with isoelectric points of 4.2 and 4.4. It was shown that the two fractions were different forms of the same protein. The enzyme was obtained in 23% yield and was purified 1700-fold. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 98,000, a sedimentation coefficient of 5.16 S and gave a single protein and activity band on disc gel electrophoresis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis gave a single band of mol wt 50,000, suggesting that the active enzyme was composed of two subunits of the same molecular weight. The pure
hydrogenase
contained four atoms of iron and four atoms of acid-labile sulfide, and had a visible absorption peak at 410 nm. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at 10--15 K showed a free-radical signal at g' = 2.003 in the oxidized enzyme and signals at g' = 2.2 and 2.06 in the reduced enzyme. These findings suggest that Chromatium
hydrogenase
is an iron-sulfur protein. The pure
hydrogenase
catalyzed the exchange reaction between H2 and HDO or HTO, the reduction of Benzyl Viologen and Methylene Blue, and the evolution of hydrogen from reduced Methyl Viologen. The mechanism of hydrogen activation was shown to be heterolytic cleavage to an enzyme hydride and a proton. Hydrogenase could not catalyze reduction of pyridine nucleotides or
ferredoxin
with H2. The effect of pH and various inhibitors on the enzymatic activity has been studied.
...
PMID:Structural and catalytic properties of hydrogenase from Chromatium. 23 60
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.
...
PMID:A rationale for stabilization of oxygen-labile enzymes: application to a clostridial hydrogenase. 27 79
The membrane-bound hydrogenase (EC class 1.12) of aerobically grown Escherichia coli cells was solubilized by treatment with deoxycholate and pancreatin. The enzyme was further purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by chromoatographic methods, including hydrophobic-interaction chromatography, with a yield of 10% as judged by activity and an overall purification of 2140-fold. The
hydrogenase
was a dimer of identical subunits with a mol.wt. of 113,000 and contained 12 iron and 12 acid-labile sulphur atoms per molecule. The epsilon 400 was 49,000M-1 . cm-1. The
hydrogenase
catalysed both H2 evolution and H2 uptake with a variety of artificial electron carriers, but would not interact with flavodoxin,
ferredoxin
or nicotinamide and flavin nucleotides. We were unable to identify any physiological electron carrier for the
hydrogenase
. With Methyl Viologen as the electron carrier, the pH optimum for H2 evolution and H2 uptake was 6.5 and 8.5 respectively. The enzyme was stable for long periods at neutral pH, low temperatures and under anaerobic conditions. The half-life of the
hydrogenase
under air at room temperature was about 12 h, but it could be stabilized by Methyl Viologen and Benzyl Viologen, both of which are electron carriers for the enzyme, and by bovine serum albumin. The
hydrogenase
was strongly inhibited by carbon monoxide (Ki = 1870Pa), heavy-metal salts and high concentrations of buffers, but was resistant to inhibition by thiol-blocking and metal-complexing reagents. These aerobically grown E. coli cells lacked formate hydrogenlyase activity and cytochrome c552.
...
PMID:Purification of the membrane-bound hydrogenase of Escherichia coli. 39 47
A
hydrogenase
has been purified to homogeneity from the soluble fraction of the rumen bacterium Megasphaera elsdenii, the overall purification is 200 times with a yield of 14%. The pure enzyme consists of a single polypeptide chain with Mr approximately 50 000 which contains 12 atoms of non-haem iron and 12 atoms of acid-labile sulphide. The enzyme is rapidly inactivated by O2 and it is therefore purified under nitrogen and in the presence of sodium dithionite. The optical spectrum of the enzyme, after removal of the dithionite with air, shows a peak at 275 nm (epsilon 275 nm = 143 mM-1 cm-1) and a shoulder between 350 nm and 400 nm (epsilon 400 nm = 46 mM-1 cm-1). The enzyme catalyses hydrogen production from sodium dithionite at a low rate. The rate is greatly enhanced by addition of the electron donors flavodoxin,
ferredoxin
and methyl viologen. The kinetic data with these three electron donors suggest co-operativity, but no indication of self-association of the enzyme was obtained. Sodium chloride enhances the rate of hydrogen production with methyl viologen semiquinone and changes the kinetic behaviour of the enzyme with this electron donor, but causes inhibition of the reactions mediated by
ferredoxin
and flavodoxin. Two kinetic models were developed which are consistent with the kinetic data of the three electron donors tested. The apparent co-operativity for the hydrogen production can be fitted with the mathematical form of those models. The identical kinetic behaviour of the
hydrogenase
with the one-electron donors flavodoxin and methyl viologen semiquinone monomer and the two-electron donor
ferredoxin
indicates that the
hydrogenase
accepts two electrons in two separate, independent steps and further indicates that the two (4Fe-4S) clusters of the donor
ferredoxin
are independent. The interpretation of the kinetic data with methyl viologen semiquinone is complicated by the fact that the semiquinone dimerises, and that the formation of the dimer is enhanced by salt. Taking into account the association of this donor, the activity of the enzyme with methyl viologen semiquinone can be described by the sum of the activities of the enzyme with methyl viologen monomer and methyl viologen dimer. The enzyme catalyses the oxidation of hydrogen gas with methyl and benzyl viologen as electron acceptors to their semiquinone forms; both electron acceptors show Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The hydrogen oxidation activity with both electron acceptors is stimulated by addition of sodium chloride. The kinetic data of the oxidation of hydrogen with the two-electron acceptors used are consistent with the porposed models, if it is assumed that the pathway followed is compulsory. At this moment no choice can be made between the models proposed.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of hydrogenase from Megasphaera elsdenii. 52 82
The soluble and chromatophore-bound hydrogenases from the purple sulphur bacterium Thiocapsa roseopersicina strain BBS were purified up to homogeneity and the properties studied. The amino acid composition of
hydrogenase
preparations from different fractions of T. roseopersicina is identical, glycine and alanine as N-terminal amino acid residues. In comparison with other hydrogenases, especially in the immobilized state, the preparations obtained are shown to be more stable to O2 during storage and they are characterized by high thermal stability. Inactivation is observed above 78--80 degrees C and the optimal temperature for enzyme action is 70 degrees C. The homogeneous enzyme preparations catalyse the exchange reaction between 2H2 and H2O and reversible redox reactions of methyl viologen and benzyl viologen as well as H2 formation from reduced
ferredoxin
. According to our data, the
hydrogenase
of T. roseopersicina bound with chromatophores is identical to the soluble one.
...
PMID:The properties of hydrogenase from Thiocapsa roseopersicina. 65 33
An in vitro system containing isolated chloroplasts,
ferredoxin
and bacterial
hydrogenase
on illumination evolves H2 and O2 from water. Maximum rate of hydrogen production so far achieved is two litres H2 per g. chlorophyll per h. The rate of H2 evolution per mg chlorophyll is dependent on concentrations of chlorophyll and
ferredoxin
in the reaction mixture. The rates as well as duration of H2 production are enhanced by the presence of oxygen scavengers and bovine serum albumin in the system. Hydrogenases and ferredoxins vary in their degree of cross reactivity in the chloroplast system; with some hydrogenases the H2 evolution rates were increased by the presence of additional biological electron carriers. Attempts to couple algal hydrogenases to the chloroplasts system have not succeeded so far.
...
PMID:Hydrogen evolution by chloroplast-hydrogenase systems: improvements and additional observations. 66 82
A purified preparation of
hydrogenase
from D. gigas was inactive toward
ferredoxin
, flavodoxin or rubredoxin in the absence of cytochrome c3 (M.W. 13,000), in an atmosphere of hydrogen, although direct reduction of benzyl viologen or FMN was possible. The hydrogen evolution reaction from dithionite was possible with methyl viologen. The same reaction also occured with cytochrome c3 (M.W. 13,000) or cytochrome c3 (M.W. 26,000). Addition of either
ferredoxin
or flavodoxin did not accelerate the reaction.
...
PMID:Reactivity of Desulfovibrio gigas hydrogenase toward artificial and natural electron donors or acceptors. 66 85
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