scholarly journals Nitrogenases from Klebsiella pneumoniae and Clostridium pasteurianum. Kinetic investigations of cross-reactions as a probe of the enzyme mechanism

1976 ◽  
Vol 157 (2) ◽  
pp. 439-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
B E Smith ◽  
R N Thorneley ◽  
R R Eady ◽  
L E Mortenson

In combination with the Mo-Fe protein of nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae, the Fe protein of nitrogenase from Clostridium pasteurianum forms an active enzyme with novel properties different from those of either of the homologous nitrogenases. The steady-state rates of reduction of acetylene and H+ are 12% of those of the homologous system from C.pasteurianim. Acetylene reductase activity exhibited an approx. 10min lag at 30 degrees C before the rate of reduction became linear, consistent with a once-only activation step being necessary for acetylene reduction to occur. No such lag was observed for H2 evolution. The activity with N2 as a reducible substrate was very low, implying that acetylene reductase activity is not necessarily an accurate indication of nitrogen-fixing ability. This is of particular relevance to studies on mutant and agronomically important organisms. Stopped-flow spectrophotometric studies showed unimolecular electron transfer from the Fe protein to the Mo-Fe protein to occur at the same rate (k2 = 2.5 × 10(2)s-1) and with the same dependence on ATP concentration (apparent KD = 400 muM) as with the homologous Klebsiella nitrogenase. However, an ATP/2e ratio of 50 was obtained for H2 evolution, indicating that ATP hydrolysis had been uncoupled from electron transfer to substrate. These data indicate that ATP has at least two roles in the mechanism of nitrogenase action. The combination of the Mo-Fe protein of nitrogenase of C.pasteurianim and the Fe protein of K.pneumoniae were inactive in all the above reactions, except for a weak adenosine triphosphatase activity, 0.5% of that of the homologous K.pneumoniae system.

1987 ◽  
Vol 247 (3) ◽  
pp. 547-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
G A Ashby ◽  
M J Dilworth ◽  
R N F Thorneley

Ethylene (C2H4) inhibited H2 evolution by the Mo-containing nitrogenase of Klebsiella pneumoniae. The extent of inhibition depended on the electron flux determined by the ratio of Fe protein (Kp2) to MoFe protein (Kp1) with KiC2H4 = 409 kPa ([Kp2]/[Kp1] = 22:1) and KC2H4i = 88 kPa ([Kp1]/[Kp2] = 21:1) at 23 degrees C at pH 7.4. At [Kp2]/[Kp1] = 1:1, inhibition was minimal with C2H4 (101 kPa). Extrapolation of data obtained when C2H4 was varied from 60 to 290 kPa indicates that at infinite pressure of C2H4 total inhibition of H2 evolution should occur. C2H4 inhibited concomitant S2O4(2-) oxidation to the same extent that it inhibited H2 evolution. Although other inhibitors of total electron flux such as CN- and CH3NC uncouple MgATP hydrolysis from electron transfer, C2H4 did not affect the ATP/2e ratio. Inhibition of H2 evolution by C2H4 was not relieved by CO. C2H4 was reduced to C2H6 at [Kp2]/[Kp1] ratios greater than or equal to 5:1 in a reaction that accounted for no more than 1% of the total electron flux. These data are discussed in terms of the chemistry of alkyne and alkene reduction on transition-metal centres.


1991 ◽  
Vol 279 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Fisher ◽  
D J Lowe ◽  
R N F Thorneley

The pre-steady-state kinetics of H2 evolution from Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase functioning at 23 degrees C, pH 7.4, under conditions of extremely low electron flux through the MoFe-protein exhibited a lag phase of several minutes duration. The approach to a steady-state rate of H2 evolution was accompanied by a 50% decrease in the amplitude of the MoFe-protein e.p.r. signal. These kinetics have been simulated using our published kinetic model for nitrogenase [Lowe & Thorneley (1984) Biochem. J. 224, 877-886], which was developed using data obtained with nitrogenase functioning at high electron fluxes. The e.p.r. data showed that the rate of complex-formation between reduced Fe-protein and the MoFe-protein (k+1 = 5 x 10(7) M-1.s-1) is the same for the resting (E0) and one-electron-reduced (E1H) states of the MoFe-protein. Stopped-flow spectrophotometry also showed that electron transfer from the Fe-protein to the MoFe-protein in states E0 and E1H occurs at the same rate (kobs. = 140 s-1). These data support our previous assumption that the rate constants that define the ‘Fe-protein cycle’ are independent of the level of reduction of the MoFe-protein.


1989 ◽  
Vol 264 (3) ◽  
pp. 657-661 ◽  
Author(s):  
R N F Thorneley ◽  
G Ashby ◽  
J V Howarth ◽  
N C Millar ◽  
H Gutfreund

The pre-steady-state kinetics of MgATP hydrolysis by nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae were studied by stopped-flow calorimetry at 6 degrees C and at pH 7.0. An endothermic reaction (delta Hobs. = +36 kJ.mol of ATP-1; kobs. = 9.4 s-1) in which 0.5 proton.mol of ATP-1 was released, has been assigned to the on-enzyme cleavage of MgATP to yield bound MgADP + Pi. The assignment is based on the similarity of these parameters to those of the corresponding reaction that occurs with rabbit muscle myosin subfragment-1 (delta Hobs. = +32 kJ.mol of ATP-1; kobs. = 7.1 s-1; 0.2 proton released.mol of ATP-1) [Millar, Howarth & Gutfreund (1987) Biochem. J. 248, 683-690]. MgATP-dependent electron transfer from the nitrogenase Fe-protein to the MoFe-protein was monitored by stopped-flow spectrophotometry at 430 nm and occurred with kobs. value of 3.0 s-1 at 6 degrees C. Thus, under these conditions, hydrolysis of MgATP precedes electron transfer within the protein complex. Evidence is presented that suggests that MgATP cleavage and subsequent electron transfer are reversible at 6 degrees C with an overall equilibrium constant close to unity, but that, at 23 degrees C, the reactions are essentially irreversible, with an overall equilibrium constant greater than or equal to 10.


1984 ◽  
Vol 217 (1) ◽  
pp. 317-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
T R Hawkes ◽  
P A McLean ◽  
B E Smith

When the iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) was extracted from the MoFe protein of nitrogenase from a nifV mutant of Klebsiella pneumoniae and combined with the FeMoco-deficient MoFe protein from a nifB mutant, the resultant MoFe protein exhibited the NifV phenotype, i.e. in combination with wild-type Fe protein it exhibited poor N2-fixation activity and its H2-evolution activity was inhibited by CO. These data provide strong evidence that FeMoco contains the active site of nitrogenase. The metal contents and e.p.r. properties of FeMoco from wild-type and nifV mutants of K. pneumoniae are very similar.


1984 ◽  
Vol 224 (3) ◽  
pp. 877-886 ◽  
Author(s):  
D J Lowe ◽  
R N Thorneley

A comprehensive model for the mechanism of nitrogenase action is used to simulate pre-steady-state kinetic data for H2 evolution in the presence and in the absence of N2, obtained by using a rapid-quench technique with nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae. These simulations use independently determined rate constants that define the model in terms of the following partial reactions: component protein association and dissociation, electron transfer from Fe protein to MoFe protein coupled to the hydrolysis of MgATP, reduction of oxidized Fe protein by Na2S2O4, reversible N2 binding by H2 displacement and H2 evolution. Two rate-limiting dissociations of oxidized Fe protein from reduced MoFe protein precede H2 evolution, which occurs from the free MoFe protein. Thus Fe protein suppresses H2 evolution by binding to the MoFe protein. This is a necessary condition for efficient N2 binding to reduced MoFe protein.


1991 ◽  
Vol 277 (3) ◽  
pp. 735-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
R N F Thorneley ◽  
G A Ashby ◽  
C Julius ◽  
J L Hunter ◽  
M R Webb

The steady-state kinetics of reductant-independent ATP hydrolysis by Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase at 23 degrees C at pH 7.4 were determined as a function of component protein ratio (optimal at an oxidized Fe protein/MoFe protein ratio of 3:1) and MgATP concentration (Km 400 microM). Competitive inhibition was observed for MgADP (Ki 145 microM), [beta gamma-methylene]ATP (Mgp[CH2]ppA) (Ki 115 microM), [beta gamma-monofluoromethylene]ATP (Mgp[CHF]ppA) (Ki 53 microM) and [beta gamma-difluoromethylene]ATP (Mgp[CF2]ppA) (Ki 160 microM). The tighter binding of MgADP to free oxidized Fe protein (KD less than 10 microM) than to the oxidized Fe protein-MoFe protein complex (Ki 145 microM) is proposed as the driving force that induces rate-limiting protein dissociation in the catalytic cycle of nitrogenase. The reversible nature of the reductant-independent MgATP-cleavage reaction was demonstrated by an MgADP-induced enhancement of the rate of the phosphate/water oxygen exchange reaction with 18O-labelled phosphate ion. This enhancement, like the reductant-independent ATPase reaction, only occurred with the complex formed by oxidized Fe protein and MoFe protein and not with the individual proteins. The results are discussed in terms of the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis by nitrogenase and other systems involving protein-protein interactions.


1977 ◽  
Vol 167 (2) ◽  
pp. 457-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
R N F Thorneley ◽  
R R Eady

Non-linear rates of acetylene reduction and concomitant H2 evolution were observed for the nitrogenase of Klebsiella pneumoniae at 10 degrees C. A lag phase of 1-4 min, dependent on the ratio of Mo-Fe protein to Fe protein present, occurred before linear rates of acetylene reduction were achieved. A complementary burst phase for concomitant H2 evolution in the presence of acetylene was also observed. When the proton was the only reducible substrate present, linear rates of H2 evolution were observed. N2 was a poor substrate under these conditions. Similar lag and burst phases occurred at 30 degrees C, but only when a large molar excess of Mo-Fe protein with respect to Fe protein was present. The results at 10 degrees C show that the binding of acetylene to the enzyme stimulates electron flow, but that these electrons, which initially reduce protons, can only reduce acetylene after a lag phase that cannot be accommodated in the turnover time calculated under steady-state conditions.


1977 ◽  
Vol 165 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
R N F Thorneley ◽  
A Cornish-Bowden

The effects of MgADP and MgATP on the kinetics of a pre-steady-state electron-transfer reaction and on the steady-state kinetics of H2 evulution for nitrogenase proteins of K. pneumoniae were studied. MgADP was a competitive inhibitor of MgATP in the MgATP-induced electron transfer from the Fe-protein to the Mo-Fe-protein. A dissociation constant K′i = 20 micron was determined for MgADP. The release of MgADP or a coupled conformation change in the Fe-protein of K.pneumoniae occurred with a rate comparable with that of electron transfer, k approximately 2 × 10(2)S-1. Neither homotropic nor heterotropic interactions involving MgATP and MgADP were observed for this reaction. Steady-state kinetic data for H2 evolution exhibited heterotropic effects between MgADP and MgATP. The data have been fitted to symmetry and sequential-type models involving conformation changes in two identical subunits. The data suggest that the enzyme can bind up to molecules of either MgATP or MgADP, but is unable to bind both nucleotides simultaneously. The control of H2 evolution by the MgATP/MgADP ratio is not at the level of electron transfer between the Fe- and Mo-Fe-proteins.


1983 ◽  
Vol 211 (3) ◽  
pp. 589-597 ◽  
Author(s):  
P A McLean ◽  
B E Smith ◽  
R A Dixon

The MoFe protein of nitrogenase from Klebsiella pneumoniae nifV mutants, NifV- Kp1 protein, in combination with the Fe protein from wild-type cells, catalysed CO-sensitive H2 evolution, in contrast with the CO-insensitive reaction catalysed by the wild-type enzyme. The decrease in H2 production was accompanied by a stoicheiometric decrease in dithionite (reductant) utilization, implying that CO was not reduced. However, CO did not affect the rate of phosphate release from ATP. Therefore the ATP/2e ratio increased, indicating futile cycling of electrons between the Fe protein and the MoFe protein. The inhibition of H2 evolution by CO was partial; it increased from 40% at pH6.3 to 82% at pH 8.6. Inhibition at pH7.4 (maximum 73%) was half-maximal at 3.1 Pa (0.031 matm) CO. The pH optimum of the mutant enzyme was lower in the presence of CO. Steady-state kinetic analysis of acetylene reduction indicated that CO was a linear, intersecting, non-competitive inhibitor of acetylene reduction with Kii = 2.5 Pa and Kis = 9.5 Pa. This may indicate that a single high-affinity CO-binding site in the NifV- Kp1 protein can cause both partial inhibition of H2 evolution and total elimination of acetylene reduction. Various models to explain the data are discussed.


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