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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(25): 16971-16976, 2024 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38747098

ABSTRACT

Hydrogenases catalyze hydrogen/proton interconversion that is normally electrochemically reversible (having minimal overpotential requirement), a special property otherwise almost exclusive to platinum metals. The mechanism of [NiFe]-hydrogenases includes a long-range proton-coupled electron-transfer process involving a specific Ni-coordinated cysteine and the carboxylate of a nearby glutamate. A variant in which this cysteine has been exchanged for selenocysteine displays two distinct changes in electrocatalytic properties, as determined by protein film voltammetry. First, proton reduction, even in the presence of H2 (a strong product inhibitor), is greatly enhanced relative to H2 oxidation: this result parallels a characteristic of natural [NiFeSe]-hydrogenases which are superior H2 production catalysts. Second, an inflection (an S-shaped "twist" in the trace) appears around the formal potential, the small overpotentials introduced in each direction (oxidation and reduction) signaling a departure from electrocatalytic reversibility. Concerted proton-electron transfer offers a lower energy pathway compared to stepwise transfers. Given the much lower proton affinity of Se compared to that of S, the inflection provides compelling evidence that concerted proton-electron transfer is important in determining why [NiFe]-hydrogenases are reversible electrocatalysts.


Subject(s)
Cysteine , Hydrogen , Hydrogenase , Protons , Selenocysteine , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogen/metabolism , Electron Transport , Cysteine/chemistry , Cysteine/metabolism , Ligands , Selenocysteine/chemistry , Selenocysteine/metabolism , Catalysis , Electrochemical Techniques , Oxidation-Reduction
2.
Chem Sci ; 14(40): 11105-11120, 2023 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37860641

ABSTRACT

The membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenase of Cupriavidus necator is a rare example of a truly O2-tolerant hydrogenase. It catalyzes the oxidation of H2 into 2e- and 2H+ in the presence of high O2 concentrations. This characteristic trait is intimately linked to the unique Cys6[4Fe-3S] cluster located in the proximal position to the catalytic center and coordinated by six cysteine residues. Two of these cysteines play an essential role in redox-dependent cluster plasticity, which bestows the cofactor with the capacity to mediate two redox transitions at physiological potentials. Here, we investigated the individual roles of the two additional cysteines by replacing them individually as well as simultaneously with glycine. The crystal structures of the corresponding MBH variants revealed the presence of Cys5[4Fe-4S] or Cys4[4Fe-4S] clusters of different architecture. The protein X-ray crystallography results were correlated with accompanying biochemical, spectroscopic and electrochemical data. The exchanges resulted in a diminished O2 tolerance of all MBH variants, which was attributed to the fact that the modified proximal clusters mediated only one redox transition. The previously proposed O2 protection mechanism that detoxifies O2 to H2O using four protons and four electrons supplied by the cofactor infrastructure, is extended by our results, which suggest efficient shutdown of enzyme function by formation of a hydroxy ligand in the active site that protects the enzyme from O2 binding under electron-deficient conditions.

3.
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.

4.
Chem Sci ; 12(39): 12959-12970, 2021 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34745526

ABSTRACT

Controlled formation of catalytically-relevant states within crystals of complex metalloenzymes represents a significant challenge to structure-function studies. Here we show how electrochemical control over single crystals of [NiFe] hydrogenase 1 (Hyd1) from Escherichia coli makes it possible to navigate through the full array of active site states previously observed in solution. Electrochemical control is combined with synchrotron infrared microspectroscopy, which enables us to measure high signal-to-noise IR spectra in situ from a small area of crystal. The output reports on active site speciation via the vibrational stretching band positions of the endogenous CO and CN- ligands at the hydrogenase active site. Variation of pH further demonstrates how equilibria between catalytically-relevant protonation states can be deliberately perturbed in the crystals, generating a map of electrochemical potential and pH conditions which lead to enrichment of specific states. Comparison of in crystallo redox titrations with measurements in solution or of electrode-immobilised Hyd1 confirms the integrity of the proton transfer and redox environment around the active site of the enzyme in crystals. Slowed proton-transfer equilibria in the hydrogenase in crystallo reveals transitions which are only usually observable by ultrafast methods in solution. This study therefore demonstrates the possibilities of electrochemical control over single metalloenzyme crystals in stabilising specific states for further study, and extends mechanistic understanding of proton transfer during the [NiFe] hydrogenase catalytic cycle.

5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(13)2021 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33753519

ABSTRACT

In [NiFe]-hydrogenases, the active-site Ni is coordinated by four cysteine-S ligands (Cys; C), two of which are bridging to the Fe(CO)(CN)2 fragment. Substitution of a single Cys residue by selenocysteine (Sec; U) occurs occasionally in nature. Using a recent method for site-specific Sec incorporation into proteins, each of the four Ni-coordinating cysteine residues in the oxygen-tolerant Escherichia coli [NiFe]-hydrogenase-1 (Hyd-1) has been replaced by U to identify its importance for enzyme function. Steady-state solution activity of each Sec-substituted enzyme (on a per-milligram basis) is lowered, although this may reflect the unquantified presence of recalcitrant inactive/immature/misfolded forms. Protein film electrochemistry, however, reveals detailed kinetic data that are independent of absolute activities. Like native Hyd-1, the variants have low apparent KMH2 values, do not produce H2 at pH 6, and display the same onset overpotential for H2 oxidation. Mechanistically important differences were identified for the C576U variant bearing the equivalent replacement found in native [NiFeSe]-hydrogenases, its extreme O2 tolerance (apparent KMH2 and Vmax [solution] values relative to native Hyd-1 of 0.13 and 0.04, respectively) implying the importance of a selenium atom in the position cis to the site where exogenous ligands (H-, H2, O2) bind. Observation of the same unusual electrocatalytic signature seen earlier for the proton transfer-defective E28Q variant highlights the direct role of the chalcogen atom (S/Se) at position 576 close to E28, with the caveat that Se is less effective than S in facilitating proton transfer away from the Ni during H2 oxidation by this enzyme.


Subject(s)
Cysteine/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Selenocysteine/chemistry , Amino Acid Substitution , Biocatalysis , Cysteine/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Hydrogenase/genetics , Selenocysteine/genetics
6.
Anal Chem ; 91(7): 4317-4322, 2019 04 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30811935

ABSTRACT

Bacterial infections present one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide, resulting in an urgent need for sensitive, selective, cost-efficient, and easy-to-handle technologies to rapidly detect contaminations and infections with pathogens. The presented research reports a fully functional chemical-detection principle, addressing all of the above-mentioned requirements for a successful biosensing device. With the examples of Escherichia coli and Neisseria gonorrheae, we present an electrochemical biosensor based on the bacterial expression of cytochrome c oxidase for the selective detection of clinically relevant concentrations within seconds after pathogen immobilization. The generality of the biochemical reaction, as well as the easy substitution of target-specific antibodies make this concept applicable to a large number of different pathogenic bacteria. The successful transfer of this semidirect detection principle onto inexpensive, screen-printed electrodes for portable devices represents a potential major advance in the field of biosensor development.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/methods , Cell Count/methods , Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Escherichia coli/isolation & purification , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/isolation & purification , Antibodies, Immobilized , Avidin/chemistry , Cells, Immobilized , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Electrodes , Electron Transport Complex IV/chemistry , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/immunology , Gold/chemistry , Limit of Detection , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/enzymology , Neisseria gonorrhoeae/immunology , Oxidation-Reduction , Tetramethylphenylenediamine/chemistry
7.
Chem Soc Rev ; 48(7): 2039-2052, 2019 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30426997

ABSTRACT

The reasons for using enzymes as tools for solar fuels research are discussed. Many oxidoreductases, including components of membrane-bound electron-transfer chains in living organisms, are extremely active when directly attached to an electrode, at which they display their inherent catalytic activity as electrical current. Electrocatalytic voltammograms, which show the rate of electron flow at steady-state, provide direct information on enzyme efficiency with regard to optimising use of available energy, a factor that would have driven early evolution. Oxidoreductases have evolved to minimise energy wastage ('overpotential requirement') across electron-transport chains where rate and power must be maximised for a given change in Gibbs energy, in order to perform work such as proton pumping. At the elementary level (uncoupled from work output), redox catalysis by many enzymes operates close to the thermodynamically reversible limit. Examples include efficient and selective electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO or formate - reactions that are very challenging at the chemistry level, yet appear almost reversible when catalysed by enzymes. Experiments also reveal the fleeting existence of reversible four-electron O2 reduction and water oxidation by 'blue' Cu oxidases, another reaction of great importance in realising a future based on renewable energy. Being aware that such enzymes have evolved to approach perfection, chemists are interested to know the minimal active site structure they would need to synthesise in order to mimic their performance.

8.
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
9.
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
10.
Methods Enzymol ; 599: 387-407, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29746247

ABSTRACT

A suite of dynamic electrochemical techniques known as protein film electrochemistry (PFE) offers important insight into the roles of active sites in enzymes, including properties of electron-transfer centers (individually or collectively), rates and dependences of catalytic electron transport, and binding and dissociation of inhibitors. In this chapter, we explain how PFE is used to investigate the properties of FeS clusters-centers lacking distinctive or convenient spectroscopic signatures that are often very sensitive to O2. We see that PFE allows simultaneous detection and control of the reactions of individual FeS clusters, and measurement of their relaying efficiency in long-range electron transfer.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/enzymology , Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemistry , Bacteria/chemistry , Catalytic Domain , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Electron Transport , Equipment Design , Hydrogenation , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Protons
11.
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
12.
Biochemistry ; 56(1): 132-142, 2017 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28001048

ABSTRACT

The active site of Hyd-1, an oxygen-tolerant membrane-bound [NiFe]-hydrogenase from Escherichia coli, contains four highly conserved residues that form a "canopy" above the bimetallic center, closest to the site at which exogenous agents CO and O2 interact, substrate H2 binds, and a hydrido intermediate is stabilized. Genetic modification of the Hyd-1 canopy has allowed the first systematic and detailed kinetic and structural investigation of the influence of the immediate outer coordination shell on H2 activation. The central canopy residue, arginine 509, suspends a guanidine/guanidinium side chain at close range above the open coordination site lying between the Ni and Fe atoms (N-metal distance of 4.4 Å): its replacement with lysine lowers the H2 oxidation rate by nearly 2 orders of magnitude and markedly decreases the H2/D2 kinetic isotope effect. Importantly, this collapse in rate constant can now be ascribed to a very unfavorable activation entropy (easily overriding the more favorable activation enthalpy of the R509K variant). The second most important canopy residue for H2 oxidation is aspartate 118, which forms a salt bridge to the arginine 509 headgroup: its mutation to alanine greatly decreases the H2 oxidation efficiency, observed as a 10-fold increase in the potential-dependent Michaelis constant. Mutations of aspartate 574 (also salt-bridged to R509) to asparagine and proline 508 to alanine have much smaller effects on kinetic properties. None of the mutations significantly increase sensitivity to CO, but neutralizing the expected negative charges from D118 and D574 decreases O2 tolerance by stabilizing the oxidized resting NiIII-OH state ("Ni-B"). An extensive model of the catalytic importance of residues close to the active site now emerges, whereby a conserved gas channel culminates in the arginine headgroup suspended above the Ni and Fe.


Subject(s)
Catalytic Domain , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Arginine/chemistry , Arginine/genetics , Arginine/metabolism , Aspartic Acid/chemistry , Aspartic Acid/genetics , Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Binding Sites/genetics , Carbon Dioxide/pharmacology , Crystallography, X-Ray , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogen/metabolism , Hydrogenase/genetics , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Kinetics , Lysine/chemistry , Lysine/genetics , Lysine/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Mutation, Missense , Oxidation-Reduction/drug effects , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Proline/chemistry , Proline/genetics , Proline/metabolism , Protein Domains , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Thermodynamics
13.
Biochem Soc Trans ; 44(3): 863-8, 2016 06 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27284053

ABSTRACT

Hydrogenase-1 (Hyd-1) from Escherichia coli is a membrane-bound enzyme that catalyses the reversible oxidation of molecular H2 The active site contains one Fe and one Ni atom and several conserved amino acids including an arginine (Arg(509)), which interacts with two conserved aspartate residues (Asp(118) and Asp(574)) forming an outer shell canopy over the metals. There is also a highly conserved glutamate (Glu(28)) positioned on the opposite side of the active site to the canopy. The mechanism of hydrogen activation has been dissected by site-directed mutagenesis to identify the catalytic base responsible for splitting molecular hydrogen and possible proton transfer pathways to/from the active site. Previous reported attempts to mutate residues in the canopy were unsuccessful, leading to an assumption of a purely structural role. Recent discoveries, however, suggest a catalytic requirement, for example replacing the arginine with lysine (R509K) leaves the structure virtually unchanged, but catalytic activity falls by more than 100-fold. Variants containing amino acid substitutions at either or both, aspartates retain significant activity. We now propose a new mechanism: heterolytic H2 cleavage is via a mechanism akin to that of a frustrated Lewis pair (FLP), where H2 is polarized by simultaneous binding to the metal(s) (the acid) and a nitrogen from Arg(509) (the base).


Subject(s)
Catalytic Domain , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Hydrogen/metabolism , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction
14.
Acc Chem Res ; 49(5): 884-92, 2016 05 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27104487

ABSTRACT

Protein film electrochemistry (PFE) is providing cutting-edge insight into the chemical principles underpinning biological hydrogen. Attached to an electrode, many enzymes exhibit "reversible" electrocatalytic behavior, meaning that a catalyzed redox reaction appears reversible or quasi-reversible when viewed by cyclic voltammetry. This efficiency is most relevant for enzymes that are inspiring advances in renewable energy, such as hydrogen-activating and CO2-reducing enzymes. Exploiting the rich repertoire of available instrumental methods, PFE experiments yield both a general snapshot and fine detail, all from tiny samples of enzyme. The dynamic electrochemical investigations blaze new trails and add exquisite detail to the information gained from structural and spectroscopic studies. This Account describes recent investigations of hydrogenases carried out in Oxford, including ideas initiated with PFE and followed through with complementary techniques, all contributing to an eventual complete picture of fast and efficient H2 activation without Pt. By immobilization of an enzyme on an electrode, catalytic electron flow and the chemistry controlling it can be addressed at the touch of a button. The buried nature of the active site means that structures that have been determined by crystallography or spectroscopy are likely to be protected, retained, and fully relevant in a PFE experiment. An electrocatalysis model formulated for the PFE of immobilized enzymes predicts interesting behavior and gives insight into why some hydrogenases are H2 producers and others are H2 oxidizers. Immobilization also allows for easy addition and removal of inhibitors along with precise potential control, one interesting outcome being that formaldehyde forms a reversible complex with reduced [FeFe]-hydrogenases, thereby providing insight into the order of electron and proton transfers. Experiments on O2-tolerant [NiFe]-hydrogenases show that O2 behaves like a reversible inhibitor: it is also a substrate, and implicit in the description of some hydrogenases as "H2/O2 oxidoreductases" is the hypothesis that fast and efficient multielectron transfer is a key to O2 tolerance because it promotes complete reduction of O2 to harmless water. Not only is a novel [4Fe-3S] cluster (able to transfer two electrons consecutively) an important component, but connections to additional electron sources (other Fe-S clusters, an electrode, another quaternary structure unit, or the physiological membrane itself) ensure that H2 oxidation can be sustained in the presence of O2, as demonstrated with enzyme fuel cells able to operate on a H2/air mixture. Manipulating the H-H bond in the active site is the simplest proton-coupled electron-transfer reaction to be catalyzed by an enzyme. Unlike small molecular catalysts or the surfaces of materials, metalloenzymes are far better suited to engineering the all-important outer-coordination shell. Hence, recent successful site-directed mutagenesis of the conserved outer-shell "canopy" residues in a [NiFe]-hydrogenase opens up new opportunities for understanding the mechanism of H2 activation beyond the role of the inner coordination shell.


Subject(s)
Hydrogenase/chemistry , Carbon Monoxide/chemistry , Catalysis , Catalytic Domain , Electrochemical Techniques , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Hydrogenase/antagonists & inhibitors , Models, Chemical , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry
15.
Nat Chem Biol ; 12(1): 46-50, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26619250

ABSTRACT

The active site of [NiFe] hydrogenases contains a strictly conserved arginine that suspends a guanidine nitrogen atom <4.5 Å above the nickel and iron atoms. The guanidine headgroup interacts with the side chains of two conserved aspartic acid residues to complete an outer-shell canopy that has thus far proved intractable to investigation by site-directed mutagenesis. Using hydrogenase-1 from Escherichia coli, the strictly conserved residues R509 and D574 have been replaced by lysine (R509K) and asparagine (D574N) and the highly conserved D118 has been replaced by alanine (D118A) or asparagine (D118N/D574N). Each enzyme variant is stable, and their [(RS)2Niµ(SR)2Fe(CO)(CN)2] inner coordination shells are virtually unchanged. The R509K variant had >100-fold lower activity than native enzyme. Conversely, the variants D574N, D118A and D118N/D574N, in which the position of the guanidine headgroup is retained, showed 83%, 26% and 20% activity, respectively. The special kinetic requirement for R509 implicates the suspended guanidine group as the general base in H2 activation by [NiFe] hydrogenases.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Alanine/chemistry , Alanine/genetics , Amino Acid Substitution , Asparagine/chemistry , Asparagine/genetics , Crystallography, X-Ray , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Guanidine/chemistry , Hydrogen/metabolism , Hydrogenase/genetics , Iron/chemistry , Lysine/chemistry , Lysine/genetics , Mutation , Nickel/chemistry , Protein Conformation
16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(26): 8484-9, 2015 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26103582

ABSTRACT

Despite extensive studies on [NiFe]-hydrogenases, the mechanism by which these enzymes produce and activate H2 so efficiently remains unclear. A well-known EPR-active state produced under H2 and known as Ni-C is assigned as a Ni(III)-Fe(II) species with a hydrido ligand in the bridging position between the two metals. It has long been known that low-temperature photolysis of Ni-C yields distinctive EPR-active states, collectively termed Ni-L, that are attributed to migration of the bridging-H species as a proton; however, Ni-L has mainly been regarded as an artifact with no mechanistic relevance. It is now demonstrated, based on EPR and infrared spectroscopic studies, that the Ni-C to Ni-L interconversion in Hydrogenase-1 (Hyd-1) from Escherichia coli is a pH-dependent process that proceeds readily in the dark-proton migration from Ni-C being favored as the pH is increased. The persistence of Ni-L in Hyd-1 must relate to unassigned differences in proton affinities of metal and adjacent amino acid sites, although the unusually high reduction potentials of the adjacent Fe-S centers in this O2-tolerant hydrogenase might also be a contributory factor, impeding elementary electron transfer off the [NiFe] site after proton departure. The results provide compelling evidence that Ni-L is a true, albeit elusive, catalytic intermediate of [NiFe]-hydrogenases.


Subject(s)
Carbon/chemistry , Escherichia coli Proteins/chemistry , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Catalytic Domain , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Electrons , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Ligands , Metals/chemistry , Nickel/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry , Photolysis , Protons , Temperature
17.
Biochemistry ; 53(29): 4769-74, 2014 Jul 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25014120

ABSTRACT

Dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) is often used as a model system to study the relation between protein dynamics and catalysis. We have studied a number of variants of the cold-adapted DHFR from Moritella profunda (MpDHFR), in which the catalytically important M20 and FG loops have been altered, and present a comparison with the corresponding variants of the well-studied DHFR from Escherichia coli (EcDHFR). Mutations in the M20 loop do not affect the actual chemical step of transfer of hydride from reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate to the substrate 7,8-dihydrofolate in the catalytic cycle in either enzyme; they affect the steady state turnover rate in EcDHFR but not in MpDHFR. Mutations in the FG loop also have different effects on catalysis by the two DHFRs. Despite the two enzymes most likely sharing a common catalytic cycle at pH 7, motions of these loops, known to be important for progression through the catalytic cycle in EcDHFR, appear not to play a significant role in MpDHFR.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Moritella/enzymology , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biocatalysis , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Folic Acid/analogs & derivatives , Folic Acid/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , NADP/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Conformation , Species Specificity , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/genetics
18.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1122: 73-94, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24639254

ABSTRACT

Protein film electrochemistry is a technique which allows the direct control of redox-active enzymes, providing particularly detailed information on their catalytic properties. The enzyme is deposited onto a working electrode tip, and through control of the applied potential the enzyme activity is monitored as electrical current, allowing for direct study of inherent activity as electrons are transferred to and from the enzyme redox center(s). No mediators are used. Because the only enzyme present in the experiment is bound at the electrode surface, gaseous and liquid phase inhibitors can be introduced and removed whilst the enzyme remains in situ. Potential control means that kinetics and thermodynamics are explored simultaneously; the kinetics of a reaction can be studied as a function of potential. Steady-state catalytic rates are observed directly as current (for a given potential) and non-steady-state rates (such as interconversions between different forms of the enzyme) are observed from the change in current with time. The more active the enzyme, the higher the current and the better the signal-to-noise. In this chapter we outline the practical aspects of PFE for studying electroactive enzymes, using the Escherichia coli [NiFe]-hydrogenase 1 (Hyd-1) as an example.


Subject(s)
Electrochemistry/methods , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Metalloproteins/metabolism , Electrochemical Techniques , Electrodes , Graphite/chemistry , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Kinetics , Oxidation-Reduction
19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(7): 2694-707, 2013 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23398301

ABSTRACT

"Hyd-1", produced by Escherichia coli , exemplifies a special class of [NiFe]-hydrogenase that can sustain high catalytic H(2) oxidation activity in the presence of O(2)-an intruder that normally incapacitates the sulfur- and electron-rich active site. The mechanism of "O(2) tolerance" involves a critical role for the Fe-S clusters of the electron relay, which is to ensure the availability-for immediate transfer back to the active site-of all of the electrons required to reduce an attacking O(2) molecule completely to harmless H(2)O. The unique [4Fe-3S] cluster proximal to the active site is crucial because it can rapidly transfer two of the electrons needed. Here we investigate and establish the equally crucial role of the high potential medial [3Fe-4S] cluster, located >20 Å from the active site. A variant, P242C, in which the medial [3Fe-4S] cluster is replaced by a [4Fe-4S] cluster, is unable to sustain steady-state H(2) oxidation activity in 1% O(2). The [3Fe-4S] cluster is essential only for the first stage of complete O(2) reduction, ensuring the supply of all three electrons needed to form the oxidized inactive state "Ni-B" or "Ready" (Ni(III)-OH). Potentiometric titrations show that Ni-B is easily reduced (E(m) ≈ +0.1 V at pH 6.0); this final stage of the O(2)-tolerance mechanism regenerates active enzyme, effectively completing a competitive four-electron oxidase cycle and is fast regardless of alterations at the proximal or medial clusters. As a consequence of all these factors, the enzyme's response to O(2), viewed by its electrocatalytic activity in protein film electrochemistry (PFE) experiments, is merely to exhibit attenuated steady-state H(2) oxidation activity; thus, O(2) behaves like a reversible inhibitor rather than an agent that effectively causes irreversible inactivation. The data consolidate a rich picture of the versatile role of Fe-S clusters in electron relays and suggest that Hyd-1 can function as a proficient hydrogen oxidase.


Subject(s)
Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogenase/chemistry , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Crystallography, X-Ray , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Escherichia coli/genetics , Genetic Variation , Hydrogenase/genetics , Hydrogenase/metabolism , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/metabolism , Models, Biological , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , Sequence Alignment
20.
Biomol NMR Assign ; 7(1): 61-4, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22415546

ABSTRACT

Dihydrofolate reductase from the deep-sea bacterium Moritella profunda (MpDHFR) has been (13)C/(15)N isotopically labelled and purified. Here, we report the aliphatic (1)H, (13)C and (15)N resonance assignments of MpDHFR in complex with NADP(+) and folate. The spectra of MpDHFR suggest considerably greater conformational heterogeneity than is seen in the closely related DHFR from Escherichia coli.


Subject(s)
Folic Acid/metabolism , Moritella/enzymology , NADP/metabolism , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/chemistry , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/metabolism
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