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A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation

BACKGROUND: Nitrogen (N(2)) fixation also yields hydrogen (H(2)) at 1∶1 stoichiometric amounts. In aerobic diazotrophic (able to grow on N(2) as sole N-source) bacteria, orthodox respiratory hupSL-encoded hydrogenase activity, associated with the cell membrane but facing the periplasm (exo-hydrogena...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ng, Gordon, Tom, Curtis G. S., Park, Angela S., Zenad, Lounis, Ludwig, Robert A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2650096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19277114
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004695
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author Ng, Gordon
Tom, Curtis G. S.
Park, Angela S.
Zenad, Lounis
Ludwig, Robert A.
author_facet Ng, Gordon
Tom, Curtis G. S.
Park, Angela S.
Zenad, Lounis
Ludwig, Robert A.
author_sort Ng, Gordon
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Nitrogen (N(2)) fixation also yields hydrogen (H(2)) at 1∶1 stoichiometric amounts. In aerobic diazotrophic (able to grow on N(2) as sole N-source) bacteria, orthodox respiratory hupSL-encoded hydrogenase activity, associated with the cell membrane but facing the periplasm (exo-hydrogenase), has nevertheless been presumed responsible for recycling such endogenous hydrogen. METHODS AND FINDINGS: As shown here, for Azorhizobium caulinodans diazotrophic cultures open to the atmosphere, exo-hydrogenase activity is of no consequence to hydrogen recycling. In a bioinformatic analysis, a novel seven-gene A. caulinodans hyq cluster encoding an integral-membrane, group-4, Ni,Fe-hydrogenase with homology to respiratory complex I (NADH : quinone dehydrogenase) was identified. By analogy, Hyq hydrogenase is also integral to the cell membrane, but its active site faces the cytoplasm (endo-hydrogenase). An A. caulinodans in-frame hyq operon deletion mutant, constructed by “crossover PCR”, showed markedly decreased growth rates in diazotrophic cultures; normal growth was restored with added ammonium—as expected of an H(2)-recycling mutant phenotype. Using A. caulinodans hyq merodiploid strains expressing β-glucuronidase as promoter-reporter, the hyq operon proved strongly and specifically induced in diazotrophic culture; as well, hyq operon induction required the NIFA transcriptional activator. Therefore, the hyq operon is constituent of the nif regulon. CONCLUSIONS: Representative of aerobic N(2)-fixing and H(2)-recycling α-proteobacteria, A. caulinodans possesses two respiratory Ni,Fe-hydrogenases: HupSL exo-hydrogenase activity drives exogenous H(2) respiration, and Hyq endo-hydrogenase activity recycles endogenous H(2), specifically that produced by N(2) fixation. To benefit human civilization, H(2) has generated considerable interest as potential renewable energy source as its makings are ubiquitous and its combustion yields no greenhouse gases. As such, the reversible, group-4 Ni,Fe-hydrogenases, such as the A. caulinodans Hyq endo-hydrogenase, offer promise as biocatalytic agents for H(2) production and/or consumption.
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spelling pubmed-26500962009-03-11 A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation Ng, Gordon Tom, Curtis G. S. Park, Angela S. Zenad, Lounis Ludwig, Robert A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Nitrogen (N(2)) fixation also yields hydrogen (H(2)) at 1∶1 stoichiometric amounts. In aerobic diazotrophic (able to grow on N(2) as sole N-source) bacteria, orthodox respiratory hupSL-encoded hydrogenase activity, associated with the cell membrane but facing the periplasm (exo-hydrogenase), has nevertheless been presumed responsible for recycling such endogenous hydrogen. METHODS AND FINDINGS: As shown here, for Azorhizobium caulinodans diazotrophic cultures open to the atmosphere, exo-hydrogenase activity is of no consequence to hydrogen recycling. In a bioinformatic analysis, a novel seven-gene A. caulinodans hyq cluster encoding an integral-membrane, group-4, Ni,Fe-hydrogenase with homology to respiratory complex I (NADH : quinone dehydrogenase) was identified. By analogy, Hyq hydrogenase is also integral to the cell membrane, but its active site faces the cytoplasm (endo-hydrogenase). An A. caulinodans in-frame hyq operon deletion mutant, constructed by “crossover PCR”, showed markedly decreased growth rates in diazotrophic cultures; normal growth was restored with added ammonium—as expected of an H(2)-recycling mutant phenotype. Using A. caulinodans hyq merodiploid strains expressing β-glucuronidase as promoter-reporter, the hyq operon proved strongly and specifically induced in diazotrophic culture; as well, hyq operon induction required the NIFA transcriptional activator. Therefore, the hyq operon is constituent of the nif regulon. CONCLUSIONS: Representative of aerobic N(2)-fixing and H(2)-recycling α-proteobacteria, A. caulinodans possesses two respiratory Ni,Fe-hydrogenases: HupSL exo-hydrogenase activity drives exogenous H(2) respiration, and Hyq endo-hydrogenase activity recycles endogenous H(2), specifically that produced by N(2) fixation. To benefit human civilization, H(2) has generated considerable interest as potential renewable energy source as its makings are ubiquitous and its combustion yields no greenhouse gases. As such, the reversible, group-4 Ni,Fe-hydrogenases, such as the A. caulinodans Hyq endo-hydrogenase, offer promise as biocatalytic agents for H(2) production and/or consumption. Public Library of Science 2009-03-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2650096/ /pubmed/19277114 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004695 Text en Ng et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ng, Gordon
Tom, Curtis G. S.
Park, Angela S.
Zenad, Lounis
Ludwig, Robert A.
A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title_full A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title_fullStr A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title_full_unstemmed A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title_short A Novel Endo-Hydrogenase Activity Recycles Hydrogen Produced by Nitrogen Fixation
title_sort novel endo-hydrogenase activity recycles hydrogen produced by nitrogen fixation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2650096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19277114
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004695
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