Comparative Biochemical Characterization of the Iron‐Only Nitrogenase and the Molybdenum Nitrogenase from Rhodobacter Capsulatus
Open Access
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 244 (3) , 789-800
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.t01-1-00789.x
Abstract
The component proteins of the iron‐only nitrogenase were isolated from Rhodobacter capsulatus (ΔnifHDK, μModABCD strain) and purified in a one‐day procedure that included only one column‐chromatography step (DEAE‐Sephacel). This procedure yielded component 1 (FeFe protein, Rc1Fe), which was more than 95% pure, and an approximately 80 % pure component 2 (Fe protein, Rc2Fe). The highest specific activities, which were achieved at an Rc2Fe/Rc1Fe molar ratio of 40:1, were 260 (C2H4 from C2H2), 350 (NH3 formation), and 2400 (H2 evolution) nmol product formed min−1 mg protein−1. The purified FeFe protein contained 26 ± 4 Fe atoms; it did not contain Mo, V, or any other heterometal atom. The most significant catalytic property of the iron‐only nitrogenase is its high H2‐producing activity, which is much less inhibited by competitive substrates than the activity of the conventional molybdenum nitrogenase. Under optimal conditions for N2 reduction, the activity ratios (mol N2 reduced/mol H2 produced) obtained were 1:1 (molybdenum nitrogenase) and 1:7.5 (iron nitrogenase). The Rc1Fe protein has only a very low affinity for C2H2. The Km value determined (12.5 kPa), was about ninefold higher than the Km for Rc1Mo (1.4kPa). The proportion of ethane produced from acetylene (catalyzed by the iron nitrogenase), was strictly pH dependent. It corresponded to 5.5% of the amount of ethylene at pH 6.5 and was almost zero at pH values greater than 8.5. In complementation experiments, component 1 proteins coupled very poorly with the ‘wrong’ component 2. Rc1Fe, if complemented with Rc2Mo, showed only 10–15% of the maximally possible activity. Cross‐reaction experiments with isolated polyclonal antibodies revealed that Rc1Fe and Rc1Mo are immunologically not related. The most active Rc1Fe samples appeared to be EPR‐silent in the Na2S2O4‐reduced state. However, on partial oxidation with K3[Fe(CN)6] or thionine several signals occurred. The most significant signal appears to be the one at g= 2.27 and 2.06 which deviates from all signals so far described for P clusters. It is a transient signal that appears and disappears reversibly in a redox potential region between ‐100 mV and +150 mV. Another novel EPR signal (g= 1.96, 1.92, 1.77) occurred on further reduction of Rc1Fe by using turnover conditions in the presence of a substrate (N2, C2H2, H+).Keywords
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