scholarly journals Formation of pH and potential gradients by the reconstituted Azotobacter vinelandii cytochrome bd respiratory protection oxidase.

1997 ◽  
Vol 179 (11) ◽  
pp. 3813-3817 ◽  
Author(s):  
J F Kolonay ◽  
R J Maier
1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert K. Poole ◽  
Susan Hill

Nitrogen fixation by aerobic prokaryotes appears paradoxical: the nitrogen-fixing enzymes—nitrogenases—are notoriously oxygen-labile, yet many bacteria fix nitrogen aerobically. This review summarises the evidence that cytochrome bd, a terminal oxidase unrelated to the mitochondrial and many other bacterial oxidases, plays a crucial role in aerotolerant nitrogen fixation in Azotobacter vinelandii and other bacteria by rapidly consuming oxygen during uncoupled respiration. We review the pertinent properties of this oxidase, particularly its complement of redox centres, the catalytic cycle of oxygen reduction, the affinity of the oxidase for oxygen, and the regulation of cytochrome bd gene expression. The roles of other oxidases and other mechanisms for limiting damage to nitrogenase are assessed.


1995 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 157S-157S ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Jünemann ◽  
Peter R. Rich ◽  
John M. Wrigglesworth

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander B Alleman ◽  
Florence Mus ◽  
John W Peters

There is considerable interest in promoting biological nitrogen fixation as a mechanism to reduce the inputs of nitrogenous fertilizers in agriculture, a problem of agronomic, economic, and environmental importance. For the potential impact of biological nitrogen fixation in agriculture to be realized, there are considerable fundamental knowledge gaps that need to be addressed. Biological nitrogen fixation or the reduction of N2 to NH3 is catalyzed by nitrogenase which requires a large amount of energy in the form of ATP and low potential electrons. Nitrogen-fixing organisms that respire aerobically have an advantage in meeting the energy demands of biological nitrogen fixation but face challenges of protecting nitrogenase from inactivation in the presence of oxygen. Here, we have constructed a genome-scale metabolic model of the aerobic metabolism of nitrogen-fixing bacteria Azotobacter vinelandii, which uses a complex electron transport system, termed respiratory protection, to consume oxygen at a high rate keeping intracellular conditions microaerobic. Our model accurately determines growth rate under high oxygen and high substrate concentration conditions, demonstrating the large flux of energy directed to respiratory protection. While respiratory protection mechanisms compensate the energy balance in high oxygen conditions, it does not account for all substrate intake, leading to increased maintenance rates. We have also shown how A. vinelandii can adapt under different oxygen concentrations and metal availability by rearranging flux through the electron transport system. Accurately determining the energy balance in a genome-scale metabolic model is required for future engineering approaches.


2020 ◽  
Vol 86 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jace Natzke ◽  
José M. Bruno-Bárcena

ABSTRACT Azotobacter vinelandii is an obligate aerobic diazotroph with a verified transient ability to reduce carbon monoxide to ethylene by its vanadium nitrogenase. In this study, we implemented an industrially relevant continuous two-stage stirred-tank system for in vivo biotransformation of a controlled supply of air enriched with 5% carbon monoxide to 302 μg ethylene g−1 glucose consumed. To attain this value, the process required overcoming critical oxygen limitations during cell proliferation while simultaneously avoiding the A. vinelandii respiratory protection mechanism that negatively impacts in vivo nitrogenase activity. Additionally, process conditions allowed the demonstration of carbon monoxide’s solubility as a reaction-limiting factor and a competitor with dinitrogen for the vanadium nitrogenase active site, implying that excess intracellular carbon monoxide could lead to a cessation of cell proliferation and ethylene formation as shown genetically using a new strain of A. vinelandii deficient in carbon monoxide dehydrogenase. IMPORTANCE Ethylene is an essential commodity feedstock used for the generation of a variety of consumer products, but its generation demands energy-intensive processes and is dependent on nonrenewable substrates. This work describes a continuous biological method for investigating the nitrogenase-mediated carbon monoxide reductive coupling involved in ethylene production using whole cells of Azotobacter vinelandii. If eventually adopted by industry, this technology has the potential to significantly reduce the total energy input required and the ethylene recovery costs, as well as decreasing greenhouse gas emissions associated with current production strategies.


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