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1.
Chem Sci ; 14(32): 8531-8551, 2023 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37592998

ABSTRACT

The active site of [NiFe]-hydrogenases contains a strictly-conserved pendant arginine, the guanidine head group of which is suspended immediately above the Ni and Fe atoms. Replacement of this arginine (R479) in hydrogenase-2 from E. coli results in an enzyme that is isolated with a very tightly-bound diatomic ligand attached end-on to the Ni and stabilised by hydrogen bonding to the Nζ atom of the pendant lysine and one of the three additional water molecules located in the active site of the variant. The diatomic ligand is bound under oxidising conditions and is removed only after a prolonged period of reduction with H2 and reduced methyl viologen. Once freed of the diatomic ligand, the R479K variant catalyses both H2 oxidation and evolution but with greatly decreased rates compared to the native enzyme. Key kinetic characteristics are revealed by protein film electrochemistry: most importantly, a very low activation energy for H2 oxidation that is not linked to an increased H/D isotope effect. Native electrocatalytic reversibility is retained. The results show that the sluggish kinetics observed for the lysine variant arise most obviously because the advantage of a more favourable low-energy pathway is massively offset by an extremely unfavourable activation entropy. Extensive efforts to establish the identity of the diatomic ligand, the tight binding of which is an unexpected further consequence of replacing the pendant arginine, prove inconclusive.

2.
EMBO J ; 39(10): e102922, 2020 05 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32337752

ABSTRACT

Although multiprotein membrane complexes play crucial roles in bacterial physiology and virulence, the mechanisms governing their quality control remain incompletely understood. In particular, it is not known how unincorporated, orphan components of protein complexes are recognised and eliminated from membranes. Rhomboids, the most widespread and largest superfamily of intramembrane proteases, are known to play key roles in eukaryotes. In contrast, the function of prokaryotic rhomboids has remained enigmatic. Here, we show that the Shigella sonnei rhomboid proteases GlpG and the newly identified Rhom7 are involved in membrane protein quality control by specifically targeting components of respiratory complexes, with the metastable transmembrane domains (TMDs) of rhomboid substrates protected when they are incorporated into a functional complex. Initial cleavage by GlpG or Rhom7 allows subsequent degradation of the orphan substrate. Given the occurrence of this strategy in an evolutionary ancient organism and the presence of rhomboids in all domains of life, it is likely that this form of quality control also mediates critical events in eukaryotes and protects cells from the damaging effects of orphan proteins.


Subject(s)
Endopeptidases/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Shigella sonnei/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Electron Transport , Endopeptidases/chemistry , Protein Domains , Proteolysis , Shigella sonnei/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
3.
Methods Enzymol ; 613: 91-116, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30509475

ABSTRACT

The recent novel overproduction system for the membrane-bound oxygen-sensitive [NiFe]-hydrogenase-2 (Hyd-2) from Escherichia coli is detailed. Hyd-2 is an efficient and reversible catalyst for the interconversion of H2 and 2H+. Produced at low levels during anaerobic respiration, Hyd-2 is instrumental in the generation of proton-motive force (PMF), and likewise uses PMF to generate H2. The structure of the Hyd-2 complex could yield immense information on the mechanism of proton pumping in this group of enzymes, which are of energetic and pathogenic importance. The overproduction of the soluble "catalytic core" where H2 oxidation/H+ reduction takes place, relies on gene deletions and use of a synthetic operon in the overproduction strain to ensure metal processing and redox center formation and incorporation are not limiting. Based on previous evidence of a cytoplasmic excess of the active site-containing subunit (HybC), the Hyd-2 production bottleneck is relaxed by overproduction of the FeS cluster-containing subunit (HybO). The hybO gene is altered to prevent translocation of the HybOC catalytic core to the membrane. Protein yield is increased by an order of magnitude, allowing protein-intensive techniques such as X-ray crystallography to flourish. The structure of the entire Hyd-2 complex is inferred from the catalytic core and homology modeling of the ferredoxin and membrane integral partners, leading to the proposal that Hyd-2 is a dimer of tetramers.


Subject(s)
Hydrogenase/metabolism , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Protons
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(32): 10208-10220, 2018 08 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30070475

ABSTRACT

Catalytic long-range proton transfer in [NiFe]-hydrogenases has long been associated with a highly conserved glutamate (E) situated within 4 Å of the active site. Substituting for glutamine (Q) in the O2-tolerant [NiFe]-hydrogenase-1 from Escherichia coli produces a variant (E28Q) with unique properties that have been investigated using protein film electrochemistry, protein film infrared electrochemistry, and X-ray crystallography. At pH 7 and moderate potential, E28Q displays approximately 1% of the activity of the native enzyme, high enough to allow detailed infrared measurements under steady-state conditions. Atomic-level crystal structures reveal partial displacement of the amide side chain by a hydroxide ion, the occupancy of which increases with pH or under oxidizing conditions supporting formation of the superoxidized state of the unusual proximal [4Fe-3S] cluster located nearby. Under these special conditions, the essential exit pathway for at least one of the H+ ions produced by H2 oxidation, and assumed to be blocked in the E28Q variant, is partially repaired. During steady-state H2 oxidation at neutral pH (i.e., when the barrier to H+ exit via Q28 is almost totally closed), the catalytic cycle is dominated by the reduced states "Nia-R" and "Nia-C", even under highly oxidizing conditions. Hence, E28 is not involved in the initial activation/deprotonation of H2, but facilitates H+ exit later in the catalytic cycle to regenerate the initial oxidized active state, assumed to be Nia-SI. Accordingly, the oxidized inactive resting state, "Ni-B", is not produced by E28Q in the presence of H2 at high potential because Nia-SI (the precursor for Ni-B) cannot accumulate. The results have important implications for understanding the catalytic mechanism of [NiFe]-hydrogenases and the control of long-range proton-coupled electron transfer in hydrogenases and other enzymes.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/enzymology , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Oxygen/chemistry , Protons , Binding Sites , Electrochemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Isoenzymes , Models, Molecular , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Conformation
5.
Biochem J ; 475(7): 1353-1370, 2018 04 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29555844

ABSTRACT

Under anaerobic conditions, Escherichia coli is able to metabolize molecular hydrogen via the action of several [NiFe]-hydrogenase enzymes. Hydrogenase-2, which is typically present in cells at low levels during anaerobic respiration, is a periplasmic-facing membrane-bound complex that functions as a proton pump to convert energy from hydrogen (H2) oxidation into a proton gradient; consequently, its structure is of great interest. Empirically, the complex consists of a tightly bound core catalytic module, comprising large (HybC) and small (HybO) subunits, which is attached to an Fe-S protein (HybA) and an integral membrane protein (HybB). To date, efforts to gain a more detailed picture have been thwarted by low native expression levels of Hydrogenase-2 and the labile interaction between HybOC and HybA/HybB subunits. In the present paper, we describe a new overexpression system that has facilitated the determination of high-resolution crystal structures of HybOC and, hence, a prediction of the quaternary structure of the HybOCAB complex.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/enzymology , Hydrogen , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Proton Pumps/physiology , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Protein Conformation , Protein Subunits
6.
Biotechnol Bioeng ; 114(2): 291-297, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27531314

ABSTRACT

The photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus normally photoproduces H2 as a by-product of its nitrogenase-catalyzed nitrogen-fixing activity. Such H2 production, however, is expensive from a metabolic perspective, requiring nearly four times as many photons as the equivalent algal hydrogenase-based system (Ghirardi et al., 2009 Photobiological hydrogen-producing systems. Chem Soc Rev 38(1):52-61). Here, we report the insertion of a Clostridium acetobutylicum [FeFe]-hydrogenase and its three attendant hydrogenase assembly proteins into an R. capsulatus strain lacking its native uptake hydrogenase. Further, this strain is modified to fluoresce upon sensing H2 . The resulting strain photoproduces H2 and self-reports its own H2 production through fluorescence. This model system represents a unique method of developing hydrogenase-based H2 production in R. capsulatus, may serve as a powerful system for in vivo directed evolution of hydrogenases and hydrogenase-associated genes, and provides a means of screening for increased metabolic production of H2 . Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2017;114: 291-297. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Hydrogen/metabolism , Rhodobacter capsulatus/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Clostridium acetobutylicum/enzymology , Clostridium acetobutylicum/genetics , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Hydrogen/analysis , Hydrogenase/genetics , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Light , Metabolic Engineering , Photobioreactors/microbiology , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Rhodobacter capsulatus/genetics
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