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1.
FEBS J ; 2024 May 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38696373

RESUMO

The nitrogenase reductase NifH catalyses ATP-dependent electron delivery to the Mo-nitrogenase, a reaction central to biological dinitrogen (N2) fixation. While NifHs have been extensively studied in bacteria, structural information about their archaeal counterparts is limited. Archaeal NifHs are considered more ancient, particularly those from Methanococcales, a group of marine hydrogenotrophic methanogens, which includes diazotrophs growing at temperatures near 92 °C. Here, we structurally and biochemically analyse NifHs from three Methanococcales, offering the X-ray crystal structures from meso-, thermo-, and hyperthermophilic methanogens. While NifH from Methanococcus maripaludis (37 °C) was obtained through heterologous recombinant expression, the proteins from Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus (65 °C) and Methanocaldococcus infernus (85 °C) were natively purified from the diazotrophic archaea. The structures from M. thermolithotrophicus crystallised as isolated exhibit high flexibility. In contrast, the complexes of NifH with MgADP obtained from the three methanogens are superposable, more rigid, and present remarkable structural conservation with their homologues. They retain key structural features of P-loop NTPases and share similar electrostatic profiles with the counterpart from the bacterial model organism Azotobacter vinelandii. In comparison to the NifH from the phylogenetically distant Methanosarcina acetivorans, these reductases do not cross-react significantly with Mo-nitrogenase from A. vinelandii. However, they associate with bacterial nitrogenase when ADP· AlF 4 - $$ {\mathrm{AlF}}_4^{-} $$ is added to mimic a transient reactive state. Accordingly, detailed surface analyses suggest that subtle substitutions would affect optimal binding during the catalytic cycle between the NifH from Methanococcales and the bacterial nitrogenase, implying differences in the N2-machinery from these ancient archaea.

2.
JACS Au ; 3(11): 2993-2999, 2023 Nov 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38034976

RESUMO

The biological N2-fixation process is catalyzed exclusively by metallocofactor-containing nitrogenases. Structural and spectroscopic studies highlighted the presence of an additional mononuclear metal-binding (MMB) site, which can coordinate Fe in addition to the two metallocofactors required for the reaction. This MMB site is located 15-Å from the active site, at the interface of two NifK subunits. The enigmatic function of the MMB site and its implications for metallocofactor installation, catalysis, electron transfer, or structural stability are investigated in this work. The axial ligands coordinating the additional Fe are almost universally conserved in Mo-nitrogenases, but a detailed observation of the available structures indicates a variation in occupancy or a metal substitution. A nitrogenase variant in which the MMB is disrupted was generated and characterized by X-ray crystallography, biochemistry, and enzymology. The crystal structure refined to 1.55-Å revealed an unambiguous loss of the metal site, also confirmed by an absence of anomalous signal for Fe. The position of the surrounding side chains and the overall architecture are superposable with the wild-type structure. Accordingly, the biochemical and enzymatic properties of the variant are similar to those of the wild-type nitrogenase, indicating that the MMB does not impact nitrogenase's activity and stability in vitro.

3.
JACS Au ; 3(5): 1521-1533, 2023 May 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37234119

RESUMO

The substrate-reducing proteins of all nitrogenases (MoFe, VFe, and FeFe) are organized as α2ß2(γ2) multimers with two functional halves. While their dimeric organization could afford improved structural stability of nitrogenases in vivo, previous research has proposed both negative and positive cooperativity contributions with respect to enzymatic activity. Here, a 1.4 kDa peptide was covalently introduced in the proximity of the P cluster, corresponding to the Fe protein docking position. The Strep-tag carried by the added peptide simultaneously sterically inhibits electron delivery to the MoFe protein and allows the isolation of partially inhibited MoFe proteins (where the half-inhibited MoFe protein was targeted). We confirm that the partially functional MoFe protein retains its ability to reduce N2 to NH3, with no significant difference in selectivity over obligatory/parasitic H2 formation. Our experiment concludes that wild-type nitrogenase exhibits negative cooperativity during the steady state regarding H2 and NH3 formation (under Ar or N2), with one-half of the MoFe protein inhibiting turnover in the second half. This emphasizes the presence and importance of long-range (>95 Å) protein-protein communication in biological N2 fixation in Azotobacter vinelandii.

4.
mBio ; 13(6): e0244322, 2022 12 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36409126

RESUMO

Some marine thermophilic methanogens are able to perform energy-consuming nitrogen fixation despite deriving only little energy from hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis. We studied this process in Methanothermococcus thermolithotrophicus DSM 2095, a methanogenic archaeon of the order Methanococcales that contributes to the nitrogen pool in some marine environments. We successfully grew this archaeon under diazotrophic conditions in both batch and fermenter cultures, reaching the highest cell density reported so far. Diazotrophic growth depended strictly on molybdenum and, in contrast to other diazotrophs, was not inhibited by tungstate or vanadium. This suggests an elaborate control of metal uptake and a specific metal recognition system for the insertion into the nitrogenase cofactor. Differential transcriptomics of M. thermolithotrophicus grown under diazotrophic conditions with ammonium-fed cultures as controls revealed upregulation of the nitrogenase machinery, including chaperones, regulators, and molybdate importers, as well as simultaneous upregulation of an ammonium transporter and a putative pathway for nitrate and nitrite utilization. The organism thus employs multiple synergistic strategies for uptake of nitrogen nutrients during the early exponential growth phase without altering transcription levels for genes involved in methanogenesis. As a counterpart, genes coding for transcription and translation processes were downregulated, highlighting the maintenance of an intricate metabolic balance to deal with energy constraints and nutrient limitations imposed by diazotrophy. This switch in the metabolic balance included unexpected processes, such as upregulation of the CRISPR-Cas system, probably caused by drastic changes in transcription levels of putative mobile and virus-like elements. IMPORTANCE The thermophilic anaerobic archaeon M. thermolithotrophicus is a particularly suitable model organism to study the coupling of methanogenesis to diazotrophy. Likewise, its capability of simultaneously reducing N2 and CO2 into NH3 and CH4 with H2 makes it a viable target for biofuel production. We optimized M. thermolithotrophicus cultivation, resulting in considerably higher cell yields and enabling the successful establishment of N2-fixing bioreactors. Improved understanding of the N2 fixation process would provide novel insights into metabolic adaptations that allow this energy-limited extremophile to thrive under diazotrophy, for instance, by investigating its physiology and uncharacterized nitrogenase. We demonstrated that diazotrophic growth of M. thermolithotrophicus is exclusively dependent on molybdenum, and complementary transcriptomics corroborated the expression of the molybdenum nitrogenase system. Further analyses of differentially expressed genes during diazotrophy across three cultivation time points revealed insights into the response to nitrogen limitation and the coordination of core metabolic processes.


Assuntos
Compostos de Amônio , Euryarchaeota , Fixação de Nitrogênio/genética , Molibdênio , Transcriptoma , Nitrogenase/metabolismo , Euryarchaeota/genética , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Methanococcaceae/genética , Methanococcaceae/metabolismo
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