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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)
In the absence of PSII, non-photochemical reduction of plastoquinones (PQs) occurs following NADH or
NADPH
addition in thylakoid membranes of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The nature of the enzyme involved in this reaction has been investigated in vitro by measuring chlorophyll fluorescence increase in anoxia and light-dependent O(2) uptake in the presence of methyl viologen. Based on the insensitivity of these reactions to rotenone, a type-I NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-1) inhibitor, and their sensitivity to flavoenzyme inhibitors and thiol blocking agents, we conclude to the involvement of a type-II NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) in PQ reduction. Intact Chlamydomonas cells placed in anoxia have the property to produce H(2) in the light by a Fe-
hydrogenase
which uses reduced ferredoxin as an electron donor. H(2) production also occurs in the absence of PSII thanks to the existence of a non-photochemical pathway of PQ reduction. From inhibitors effects, we suggest the involvement of a plastidial NDH-2 in PSII-independent H(2) production in Chlamydomonas. These results are discussed in relation to the absence of ndh genes in Chlamydomonas plastid genome and to the existence of 7 ORFs homologous to type-II NDHs in its nuclear genome.
...
PMID:Inhibitor studies on non-photochemical plastoquinone reduction and H(2) photoproduction in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 1595 Sep 24
Aquifex aeolicus is a hyperthermophilic, chemolithoautotrophic, hydrogen-oxidizing, and microaerophilic bacterium growing at 85 degrees C. We have shown that it can grow on an H2/S degrees medium and produce H2S from sulfur in the later exponential phase. The complex carrying the sulfur reducing activity (electron transport from H2 to S degrees ) has been purified and characterized. It is a membrane-bound multiprotein complex containing a [NiFe]
hydrogenase
and a sulfur reductase connected via quinones. The sulfur reductase is encoded by an operon annotated dms (dimethyl sulfoxide reductase) that we have renamed sre and is composed of three subunits. Sequence analysis showed that it belongs to the Me2SO reductase molybdoenzyme family and is similar to the sulfur/polysulfide/thiosulfate/tetrathionate reductases. The study of catalytic properties clearly demonstrated that it can reduce tetrathionate, sulfur, and polysulfide, but cannot reduce Me2SO and thiosulfate, and that
NADPH
increases the sulfur reducing activity. To date, this is the first characterization of a supercomplex from a bacterium that couples hydrogen oxidation and sulfur reduction. The distinctive feature in A. aeolicus is the cytoplasmic localization of the sulfur reduction, which is in accordance with the presence of sulfur globules in the cytoplasm. Association of this sulfur-reducing complex with a hydrogen-oxygen pathway complex (
hydrogenase I
, bc1 complex) in the membrane suggests that subcomplexes involved in respiratory chains in this bacterium are part of supramolecular organization.
...
PMID:A membrane-bound multienzyme, hydrogen-oxidizing, and sulfur-reducing complex from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Aquifex aeolicus. 1623 14
Conversion of undesirable, taste-active compounds is crucial for using barley as a suitable raw material for beer production. Here, ALH1, a barley alkenal
hydrogenase
enzyme that reduced the alpha,beta-unsaturated double bond of aldehydes and ketones, was found to convert trans-2-nonenal (T2N), a major contributor to the cardboard-like flavor of aged beer. Although the physiological function of ALH1 in barley development remains elusive, it exhibited high specificity with
NADPH
as a cofactor in the conversion of several oxylipins-including T2N, trans-2-hexenal, traumatin, and 1-octen-3-one. ALH1 action represents a previously unknown mechanism for T2N conversion in barley. Additional experimental results resolved the genomic sequence for barley ALH1, as well as the identification of a paralog gene encoding ALH2. Interestingly, T2N was not converted by purified, recombinant ALH2. The possibility to enhance ALH1 activity in planta is discussed--not only with respect to the physiological consequences thereof--but also in relation to improved beer quality.
...
PMID:Enzymatic hydrogenation of trans-2-nonenal in barley. 1624 76
The growth of the hyperthermophilic, anaerobic bacterium Thermotoga neapolitana is stimulated by elemental sulfur by an unknown mechanism. We detected hydrogen-dependent sulfur reductase (sulfhydrogenase) and polysulfide dehydrogenase activities in cell extracts of this organism, demonstrating that it has at least two pathways for sulfidogenesis. Hydrogen-dependent sulfur reductase and
hydrogenase
activities are catalyzed by the purified
hydrogenase
of Thermotoga maritima, and this enzyme was called the sulfhydrogenase (K. Ma, R. N. Schicho, R. M. Kelly, and M. W. W. Adams, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:5341-5344, 1993). Cells grown without elemental sulfur or cystine had 1.3 to 3.3 times higher sulfhydrogenase activities than those grown with either of these sources of sulfane sulfur. Hydrogenase activity was 2 to 5 times higher. Polysulfide dehydrogenase was up to 48-fold more active in cell extracts than the sulfhydrogenase. The activity of polysulfide dehydrogenase was approximately twofold higher when cells were grown in the presence of elemental sulfur. Its activity was oxygen labile in crude extracts, and it appears to be a cytoplasmic enzyme. Polysulfide was preferred over elemental sulfur as an electron acceptor (K(m) = 0.15 mM) and was more active with NADH (K(m) = 0.03 mM) than
NADPH
(K(m) = 0.41 mM). Growth in the presence of elemental sulfur appeared to slightly increase the activity of polysulfide dehydrogenase and slightly decrease both activities of sulfhydrogenase (
hydrogenase
and polysulfide reductase), while growth without elemental sulfur had the opposite effects. The greater activity of polysulfide dehydrogenase and its apparent regulation indicate that it is the more physiologically important means of polysulfide reduction.
...
PMID:Characterization and Regulation of Sulfur Reductase Activity in Thermotoga neapolitana. 1634 38
Infrared (IR) spectra in combination with chemical analyses have recently shown that the active Ni-Fe site of the soluble NAD(+)-reducing [NiFe]-
hydrogenase
from Ralstonia eutropha contains four cyanide groups and one carbon monoxide as ligands. Experiments presented here confirm this result, but show that a variable percentage of enzyme molecules loses one or two of the cyanide ligands from the active site during routine purification. For this reason the redox conditions during the purification have been optimized yielding hexameric enzyme preparations (HoxFUYHI(2)) with aerobic specific H(2)-NAD(+) activities of 150-185 mumol/min/mg of protein (up to 200% of the highest activity previously reported in the literature). The preparations were highly homogeneous in terms of the active site composition and showed superior IR spectra. IR spectro-electrochemical studies were consistent with the hypothesis that only reoxidation of the reduced enzyme with dioxygen leads to the inactive state, where it is believed that a peroxide group is bound to nickel. Electron paramagnetic resonance experiments showed that the radical signal from the NADH-reduced enzyme derives from the semiquinone form of the flavin (FMN-a) in the
hydrogenase
module (HoxYH dimer), but not of the flavin (FMN-b) in the NADH-dehydrogenase module (HoxFU dimer). It is further demonstrated that the hexameric enzyme remains active in the presence of
NADPH
and air, whereas NADH and air lead to rapid destruction of enzyme activity. It is proposed that the presence of
NADPH
in cells keeps the enzyme in the active state.
...
PMID:An improved purification procedure for the soluble [NiFe]-hydrogenase of Ralstonia eutropha: new insights into its (in)stability and spectroscopic properties. 1641 56
A comparative study of H(2) photoproduction by chloroplasts and solubilized chlorophyll was performed in the presence of
hydrogenase
preparations of Clostridium butyricum. The photoproduction of H(2) by chloroplasts in the absence of exogenous electron donors, and with irreversibly oxidized dithiothreitol and cysteine, is thought to be limited by a cyclic transport of electrons wherein methylviologen short-circuits the electron transport in photosystem I. The efficiency of H(2) photoproduction by chloroplasts with ascorbate and
NADPH
is limited by a back reaction between light-reduced methylviologen and the oxidized electron donors. The use of a combination of electron donors (dithiothreitol and ascorbate), providing anaerobiosis without damage to chloroplasts, makes it possible to avoid consumption of reduced methylviologen for the reduction of oxidized electron donors and to exclude the short-circuiting of electron transfer. Under these conditions, photoproduction of H(2) was observed to occur with a rate of 350 to 400 micromoles H(2) per milligram chlorophyll per hour. In this case, the full electron-transferring capability of photosystem I (measured by irreversible photoreduction of methyl red or O(2)) is used to produce H(2).
...
PMID:Efficiency of hydrogen photoproduction by chloroplast-bacterial hydrogenase systems. 1666 54
A spinach (Spinacia oleracia var. America) chloroplast particle fortified with ferredoxin, fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, or ribose-5-phosphate and NADP has been shown to generate
NADPH
by the oxidation of glyceraldehyde-3 phosphate to glycerate-3-phosphate (PGA) and to reduce ferredoxin with the
NADPH
. The resulting reduced ferredoxin can reduce O(2) to H(2)O(2), nitrite to ammonia, or protons to H(2). Hydrogen production was the result of adding
hydrogenase
from Chlamydomonas reinhardii to the chloroplast preparation. The predicted stoichiometry of 1 PGA:1 O(2) in the absence of and 2 PGA:1 O(2) in the presence of catalase was observed indicating H(2)O(2) as the end product of O(2) reduction. The predicted stoichiometry of 3 PGA:1 nitrite:1 ammonia was also observed. A scheme is presented to account for a sustained generation of NADP and ATP necessary for the dissimilation of starch in the darkened chloroplast. The unifying term chloroplast respiration is introduced to account for those reactions in which reduced ferredoxin interacts with physiological acceptors other than NADP or nitrite, hydrogen, or O(2) respiration when nitrite, protons, or O(2) is the ultimate electron acceptor.
...
PMID:Chloroplast Respiration : A MEANS OF SUPPLYING OXIDIZED PYRIDINE NUCLEOTIDE FOR DARK CHLOROPLASTIC METABOLISM. 1666 26
Mitochondria isolated from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tuber were investigated for the presence of a nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase activity. Submitochondrial particles derived from these mitochondria by sonication catalyzed a reduction of NAD(+) or 3-acetylpyridine-NAD(+) by
NADPH
, which showed a maximum of about 50 to 150 nanomoles/minute.milligram protein at pH 5 to 6. The K(m) values for 3-acetylpyridine-NAD(+) and
NADPH
were about 24 and 55 micromolar, respectively. Intact mitochondria showed a negligible activity in the absence of detergents. However, in the presence of detergents the specific activity approached about 30% of that seen with submitochondrial particles. The potato mitochondria transhydrogenase activity was sensitive to trypsin and phenylarsine oxide, both agents that are known to inhibit the mammalian transhydrogenase. Antibodies raised against rat liver transhydrogenase crossreacted with two peptides in potato tuber mitochondrial membranes with a molecular mass of 100 to 115 kilodaltons. The observed transhydrogenase activities may be due to an unspecific activity of dehydrogenases and/or to a genuine transhydrogenase. The activity contributions by NADH dehydrogenases and transhydrogenase to the total transhydrogenase activity were investigated by determining their relative sensitivities to trypsin. It is concluded that, at high or neutral pH, the observed transhydrogenase activity in potato tuber submitochondrial particles is due to the presence of a genuine and specific high molecular weight transhydrogenase. At low pH an unspecific reaction of an NADH dehydrogenase with
NADPH
contributes to the total trans-
hydrogenase
activity.
...
PMID:On the presence of a nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase in mitochondria from potato tuber. 1666 99
The photosynthetic reaction center is an efficient molecular device for the conversion of light energy to chemical energy. In a previous study, we synthesized the
hydrogenase
/photosystem I (PSI) complex, in which Ralstonia
hydrogenase
was linked to the cytoplasmic side of Synechocystis PSI, to modify PSI so that it photoproduced molecular hydrogen (H2). In that study,
hydrogenase
was fused with a PSI subunit, PsaE, and the resulting
hydrogenase
-PsaE fusion protein was self-assembled with PsaE-free PSI to give the
hydrogenase
/PSI complex. Although the
hydrogenase
/PSI complex served as a direct light-to-H2 conversion system in vitro, the activity was totally suppressed by adding physiological PSI partners, ferredoxin (Fd) and ferredoxin-NADP+-reductase (FNR). In the present study, to establish an H2 photoproduction system in which the activity is not interrupted by Fd and FNR, position 40 of PsaE from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803, corresponding to the Fd-binding site on PSI, was selected and targeted for the cross-linking with cytochrome c3 (cytc3) from Desulfovibrio vulgaris. The covalent adduct of cytc3 and PsaE was stoichiometrically assembled with PsaE-free PSI to form the cytc3/PSI complex. The
NADPH
production by the cytc3/PSI complex coupled with Fd and FNR decreased to approximately 20% of the original activity, whereas the H2 production by the cytc3/PSI complex coupled with
hydrogenase
from Desulfovibrio vulgaris was enhanced 7-fold. Consequently, in the simultaneous presence of
hydrogenase
, Fd, and FNR, the light-driven H2 production by the
hydrogenase
/cytc3/PSI complex was observed (0.30 pmol Hz/mg chlorophyll/h). These results suggest that the cytc3/PSI complex may produce H2 in vivo.
...
PMID:Photoinduced hydrogen production by direct electron transfer from photosystem I cross-linked with cytochrome c3 to [NiFe]-hydrogenase. 1683 69
The main catalytic properties of the Hox type
hydrogenase
isolated from the Gloeocapsa alpicola cells have been studied. The enzyme effectively catalyzes reactions of oxidation and evolution of H2 in the presence of methyl viologen (MV) and benzyl viologen (BV). The rates of these reactions in the interaction with the physiological electron donor/acceptor NADH/NAD+ are only 3-8% of the MV(BV)-dependent values. The enzyme interacts with NADP+ and
NADPH
, but is more specific to NAD+ and NADH. Purification of the
hydrogenase
was accompanied by destruction of its multimeric structure and the loss of ability to interact with pyridine nucleotides with retained activity of the
hydrogenase
component (HoxYH). To show the catalytic activity, the enzyme requires reductive activation, which occurs in the presence of H2, and NADH accelerates this process. The final
hydrogenase
activity depends on the redox potential of the activation medium (E(h)). At pH 7.0, the enzyme activity in the MV-dependent oxidation of H2 increased with a decrease in E(h) from -350 mV and reached the maximum at E(h) of about -390 mV. However, the rate of H2 oxidation in the presence of NAD+ in the E(h) range under study was virtually constant and equal to 7-8% of the maximal rate of H2 oxidation in the presence of MV.
...
PMID:Characterization of catalytic properties of hydrogenase isolated from the unicellular cyanobacterium Gloeocapsa alpicola CALU 743. 1722 91
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