RESUMO
Three different types of electron-transferring metallo-ATPases are able to couple ATP hydrolysis to the reduction of low-potential metal sites, thereby energizing an electron. Besides the Fe-protein known from nitrogenase and homologous enzymes, two other kinds of ATPase with different scaffolds and cofactors are used to achieve a unidirectional, energetic, uphill electron transfer to either reduce inactive Co-corrinoid-containing proteins (RACE-type activators) or a second iron-sulfur cluster-containing enzyme of a unique radical enzymes family (archerases). We have found a new cofactor in the latter enzyme family, that is, a double-cubane cluster with two [4Fe4S] subclusters bridged by a sulfido ligand. An enzyme containing this cofactor catalyzes the ATP-dependent reduction of small molecules, including acetylene. Thus, enzymes containing the double-cubane cofactor are analogous in function and share some structural features with nitrogenases.