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Nitrogenase

Nitrogenases are enzymes (EC 1.18.6.1EC 1.19.6.1) that are produced by certain bacteria, such as cyanobacteria (blue-green bacteria) and rhizobacteria. These enzymes are responsible for the reduction of nitrogen (N2) to ammonia (NH3). Nitrogenases are the only family of enzymes known to catalyze this reaction, which is a step in the process of nitrogen fixation. Nitrogen fixation is required for all forms of life, with nitrogen being essential for the biosynthesis of molecules (nucleotides, amino acids) that create plants, animals and other organisms. They are encoded by the Nif genes or homologs. They are related to protochlorophyllide reductase.

Nitrogenase
Identifiers
EC no.1.18.6.1
CAS no.9013-04-1
Databases
IntEnzIntEnz view
BRENDABRENDA entry
ExPASyNiceZyme view
KEGGKEGG entry
MetaCycmetabolic pathway
PRIAMprofile
PDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Search
PMCarticles
PubMedarticles
NCBIproteins
Nitrogenase-type Oxidoreductase (component 1 subunit alpha/beta)
Identifiers
SymbolOxidored_nitro
PfamPF00148
InterProIPR000510
SCOP21mio / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
Nitrogenase iron protein NifH (component 2)
Identifiers
SymbolNifH
InterProIPR005977
CATH1fp6
SCOP2d1fp6a_ / SCOPe / SUPFAM
CDDcd02040
Alternative nitrogenase (component 1) delta subunit
Identifiers
SymbolAnfG_VnfG
PfamPF03139
InterProIPR004349
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary

Classification and structure edit

Although the equilibrium formation of ammonia from molecular hydrogen and nitrogen has an overall negative enthalpy of reaction ( ), the activation energy is very high ( ).[1] Nitrogenase acts as a catalyst, reducing this energy barrier such that the reaction can take place at ambient temperatures.

A usual assembly consists of two components:

  1. The heterotetrameric MoFe protein, a nitrogenase which uses the electrons provided to reduce N2 to NH3. In some assemblies it is replaced by a homologous alternative.
  2. The homodimeric Fe-only protein, the reductase which has a high reducing power and is responsible for the supply of electrons.
 
Structure of the FeMo cofactor showing the sites of binding to nitrogenase (the amino acids cys and his).

Reductase edit

The Fe protein, the dinitrogenase reductase or NifH, is a dimer of identical subunits which contains one [Fe4S4] cluster and has a mass of approximately 60-64kDa.[2] The function of the Fe protein is to transfer electrons from a reducing agent, such as ferredoxin or flavodoxin to the nitrogenase protein. The transfer of electrons requires an input of chemical energy which comes from the binding and hydrolysis of ATP. The hydrolysis of ATP also causes a conformational change within the nitrogenase complex, bringing the Fe protein and MoFe protein closer together for easier electron transfer.[3]

Nitrogenase edit

The MoFe protein is a heterotetramer consisting of two α subunits and two β subunits, with a mass of approximately 240-250kDa.[2] The MoFe protein also contains two iron–sulfur clusters, known as P-clusters, located at the interface between the α and β subunits and two FeMo cofactors, within the α subunits. The oxidation state of Mo in these nitrogenases was formerly thought Mo(V), but more recent evidence is for Mo(III).[4] (Molybdenum in other enzymes is generally bound to molybdopterin as fully oxidized Mo(VI)).

  • The core (Fe8S7) of the P-cluster takes the form of two [Fe4S3] cubes linked by a central sulfur atom. Each P-cluster is linked to the MoFe protein by six cysteine residues.
  • Each FeMo cofactor (Fe7MoS9C) consists of two non-identical clusters: [Fe4S3] and [MoFe3S3], which are linked by three sulfide ions. Each FeMo cofactor is covalently linked to the α subunit of the protein by one cysteine residue and one histidine residue.

Electrons from the Fe protein enter the MoFe protein at the P-clusters, which then transfer the electrons to the FeMo cofactors. Each FeMo cofactor then acts as a site for nitrogen fixation, with N2 binding in the central cavity of the cofactor.

Variations edit

The MoFe protein can be replaced by alternative nitrogenases in environments low in the Mo cofactor. Two types of such nitrogenases are known: the vanadium–iron (VFe; Vnf) type and the iron–iron (FeFe; Anf) type. Both form an assembly of two α subunits, two β subunits, and two δ (sometimes γ) subunits. The delta subunits are homologous to each other, and the alpha and beta subunits themselves are homologous to the ones found in MoFe nitrogenase. The gene clusters are also homologous, and these subunits are interchangeable to some degree. All nitrogenases use a similar Fe-S core cluster, and the variations come in the cofactor metal.[5][6]

The Anf nitrogenase in Azotobacter vinelandii is organized in an anfHDGKOR operon. This operon still requires some of the Nif genes to function. An engineered minimal 10-gene operon that incorporates these additional essential genes has been constructed.[7]

Mechanism edit

 
Nitrogenase with catalytic sites highlighted. There are two sets of catalytic sites within each nitrogenase enzyme.
 
Nitrogenase with one set of metal clusters magnified. Electrons travel from the Fe-S cluster (yellow) to the P cluster (red), and end at the FeMo-co (orange).

General mechanism edit

 
Catalytic sites within nitrogenase. Atoms are colored by element. Top: Fe-S Cluster Middle: P Cluster Bottom: FeMo-co

Nitrogenase is an enzyme responsible for catalyzing nitrogen fixation, which is the reduction of nitrogen (N2) to ammonia (NH3) and a process vital to sustaining life on Earth.[8] There are three types of nitrogenase found in various nitrogen-fixing bacteria: molybdenum (Mo) nitrogenase, vanadium (V) nitrogenase, and iron-only (Fe) nitrogenase.[9] Molybdenum nitrogenase, which can be found in diazotrophs such as legume-associated rhizobia,[10][11] is the nitrogenase that has been studied the most extensively and thus is the most well characterized.[9] Vanadium nitrogenase and iron-only nitrogenase can both be found in select species of Azotobacter as an alternative nitrogenase.[10][12] Equations 1 and 2 show the balanced reactions of nitrogen fixation in molybdenum nitrogenase and vanadium nitrogenase respectively.

N2 + 8 H+ + 8 e + 16 MgATP → 2 NH3 + H2 + 16 MgADP + 16 Pi[8]

 

 

 

 

(1)

N2 + 14 H+ + 12 e + 40 MgATP → 2 NH4+ + 3 H2 + 40 MgADP + 40 Pi [13]

 

 

 

 

(2)

All nitrogenases are two-component systems made up of Component I (also known as dinitrogenase) and Component II (also known as dinitrogenase reductase). Component I is a MoFe protein in molybdenum nitrogenase, a VFe protein in vanadium nitrogenase, and an Fe protein in iron-only nitrogenase.[8] Component II is a Fe protein that contains the Fe-S cluster., which transfers electrons to Component I.[12] Component I contains 2 metal clusters: the P-cluster, and the FeMo-cofactor (FeMo-co). Mo is replaced by V or Fe in vanadium nitrogenase and iron-only nitrogenase respectively.[8][14] During catalysis, electrons flow from a pair of ATP molecules within Component II to the Fe-S cluster, to the P-cluster, and finally to the FeMo-co, where reduction of N2 to NH3 takes place.

Lowe-Thorneley kinetic model edit

The reduction of nitrogen to two molecules of ammonia is carried out at the FeMo-co of Component I after the sequential addition of proton and electron equivalents from Component II.[8] Steady state, freeze quench, and stopped-flow kinetics measurements carried out in the 70's and 80's by Lowe, Thorneley, and others provided a kinetic basis for this process.[15][16] The Lowe-Thorneley (LT) kinetic model was developed from these experiments and documents the eight correlated proton and electron transfers required throughout the reaction.[8][15][16] Each intermediate stage is depicted as En where n = 0–8, corresponding to the number of equivalents transferred. The transfer of four equivalents are required before the productive addition of N2, although reaction of E3 with N2 is also possible.[15] Notably, nitrogen reduction has been shown to require 8 equivalents of protons and electrons as opposed to the 6 equivalents predicted by the balanced chemical reaction.[17]

Intermediates E0 through E4 edit

Spectroscopic characterization of these intermediates has allowed for greater understanding of nitrogen reduction by nitrogenase, however, the mechanism remains an active area of research and debate. Briefly listed below are spectroscopic experiments for the intermediates before the addition of nitrogen:

E0 – This is the resting state of the enzyme before catalysis begins. EPR characterization shows that this species has a spin of 3/2.[18]

E1 – The one electron reduced intermediate has been trapped during turnover under N2. Mӧssbauer spectroscopy of the trapped intermediate indicates that the FeMo-co is integer spin greater than 1.[19]

 
Lowe-Thorneley kinetic model for reduction of nitrogen to ammonia by nitrogenase.

E2 – This intermediate is proposed to contain the metal cluster in its resting oxidation state with the two added electrons stored in a bridging hydride and the additional proton bonded to a sulfur atom. Isolation of this intermediate in mutated enzymes shows that the FeMo-co is high spin and has a spin of 3/2.[20]

E3 – This intermediate is proposed to be the singly reduced FeMo-co with one bridging hydride and one proton.[8]

E4 – Termed the Janus intermediate after the Roman god of transitions, this intermediate is positioned after exactly half of the electron proton transfers and can either decay back to E0 or proceed with nitrogen binding and finish the catalytic cycle. This intermediate is proposed to contain the FeMo-co in its resting oxidation state with two bridging hydrides and two sulfur bonded protons.[8] This intermediate was first observed using freeze quench techniques with a mutated protein in which residue 70, a valine amino acid, is replaced with isoleucine.[21] This modification prevents substrate access to the FeMo-co. EPR characterization of this isolated intermediate shows a new species with a spin of ½. ENDOR experiments have provided insight into the structure of this intermediate, revealing the presence of two bridging hydrides.[21] 95Mo and 57Fe ENDOR show that the hydrides bridge between two iron centers.[22] Cryoannealing of the trapped intermediate at -20 °C results in the successive loss of two hydrogen equivalents upon relaxation, proving that the isolated intermediate is consistent with the E4 state.[8] The decay of E4 to E2 + H2 and finally to E0 and 2H2 has confirmed the EPR signal associated with the E2 intermediate.[8]

The above intermediates suggest that the metal cluster is cycled between its original oxidation state and a singly reduced state with additional electrons being stored in hydrides. It has alternatively been proposed that each step involves the formation of a hydride and that the metal cluster actually cycles between the original oxidation state and a singly oxidized state.[8]

Distal and alternating pathways for N2 fixation edit

 
Distal vs. alternating mechanistic pathways for nitrogen fixation in nitrogenase.

While the mechanism for nitrogen fixation prior to the Janus E4 complex is generally agreed upon, there are currently two hypotheses for the exact pathway in the second half of the mechanism: the "distal" and the "alternating" pathway.[8][23][24] In the distal pathway, the terminal nitrogen is hydrogenated first, releases ammonia, then the nitrogen directly bound to the metal is hydrogenated. In the alternating pathway, one hydrogen is added to the terminal nitrogen, then one hydrogen is added to the nitrogen directly bound to the metal. This alternating pattern continues until ammonia is released.[8][23][24] Because each pathway favors a unique set of intermediates, attempts to determine which path is correct have generally focused on the isolation of said intermediates, such as the nitrido in the distal pathway,[25] and the diazene and hydrazine in the alternating pathway.[8] Attempts to isolate the intermediates in nitrogenase itself have so far been unsuccessful, but the use of model complexes has allowed for the isolation of intermediates that support both sides depending on the metal center used.[8] Studies with Mo generally point towards a distal pathway, while studies with Fe generally point towards an alternating pathway.[8][23][24][26][27]

Specific support for the distal pathway has mainly stemmed from the work of Schrock and Chatt, who successfully isolated the nitrido complex using Mo as the metal center in a model complex.[25][28] Specific support for the alternating pathway stems from a few studies. Iron only model clusters have been shown to catalytically reduce N2.[26][27] Small tungsten clusters have also been shown to follow an alternating pathway for nitrogen fixation.[29] The vanadium nitrogenase releases hydrazine, an intermediate specific to the alternating mechanism.[8][30] However, the lack of characterized intermediates in the native enzyme itself means that neither pathway has been definitively proven. Furthermore, computational studies have been found to support both sides, depending on whether the reaction site is assumed to be at Mo (distal) or at Fe (alternating) in the MoFe cofactor.[8][23][24]

Mechanism of MgATP binding edit

 

Binding of MgATP is one of the central events to occur in the mechanism employed by nitrogenase. Hydrolysis of the terminal phosphate group of MgATP provides the energy needed to transfer electrons from the Fe protein to the MoFe protein.[31] The binding interactions between the MgATP phosphate groups and the amino acid residues of the Fe protein are well understood by comparing to similar enzymes, while the interactions with the rest of the molecule are more elusive due to the lack of a Fe protein crystal structure with MgATP bound (as of 1996).[32] Three protein residues have been shown to have significant interactions with the phosphates.[15] In the absence of MgATP, a salt bridge exists between residue 15, lysine, and residue 125, aspartic acid.[32] Upon binding, this salt bridge is interrupted. Site-specific mutagenesis has demonstrated that when the lysine is substituted for a glutamine, the protein's affinity for MgATP is greatly reduced[33] and when the lysine is substituted for an arginine, MgATP cannot bind due to the salt bridge being too strong.[34] The necessity of specifically aspartic acid at site 125 has been shown through noting altered reactivity upon mutation of this residue to glutamic acid.[35] Residue 16, serine, has been shown to bind MgATP. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to demonstrate this fact.[35] This has led to a model in which the serine remains coordinated to the Mg2+ ion after phosphate hydrolysis in order to facilitate its association with a different phosphate of the now ADP molecule.[36] MgATP binding also induces significant conformational changes within the Fe protein.[15] Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to create mutants in which MgATP binds but does not induce a conformational change.[37] Comparing X-ray scattering data in the mutants versus in the wild-type protein led to the conclusion that the entire protein contracts upon MgATP binding, with a decrease in radius of approximately 2.0 Å.[37]

Other mechanistic details edit

Many mechanistic aspects of catalysis remain unknown. No crystallographic analysis has been reported on substrate bound to nitrogenase.

Nitrogenase is able to reduce acetylene, but is inhibited by carbon monoxide, which binds to the enzyme and thereby prevents binding of dinitrogen. Dinitrogen prevent acetylene binding, but acetylene does not inhibit binding of dinitrogen and requires only one electron for reduction to ethylene.[38] Due to the oxidative properties of oxygen, most nitrogenases are irreversibly inhibited by dioxygen, which degradatively oxidizes the Fe-S cofactors.[citation needed] This requires mechanisms for nitrogen fixers to protect nitrogenase from oxygen in vivo. Despite this problem, many use oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor for respiration.[citation needed] Although the ability of some nitrogen fixers such as Azotobacteraceae to employ an oxygen-labile nitrogenase under aerobic conditions has been attributed to a high metabolic rate, allowing oxygen reduction at the cell membrane, the effectiveness of such a mechanism has been questioned at oxygen concentrations above 70 μM (ambient concentration is 230 μM O2), as well as during additional nutrient limitations.[39]

Nonspecific reactions edit

In addition to dinitrogen reduction, nitrogenases also reduce protons to dihydrogen, meaning nitrogenase is also a dehydrogenase. A list of other reactions carried out by nitrogenases is shown below:[40][41]

HC≡CHH2C=CH2
N=N+=O → N2 + H2O
N=N=N → N2 + NH3
C≡N
CH4, NH3, H3C–CH3, H2C=CH2 (CH3NH2)
N≡C–R → RCH3 + NH3
C≡N–R → CH4, H3C–CH3, H2C=CH2, C3H8, C3H6, RNH2
O=C=SCO + H2S[42][43]
O=C=O → CO + H2O [42]
S=C=N → H2S + HCN [43]
O=C=N → H2O + HCN, CO + NH3 [43]

Furthermore, dihydrogen functions as a competitive inhibitor,[44] carbon monoxide functions as a non-competitive inhibitor,[40][41] and carbon disulfide functions as a rapid-equilibrium inhibitor[42] of nitrogenase.

Vanadium nitrogenases have also been shown to catalyze the conversion of CO into alkanes through a reaction comparable to Fischer-Tropsch synthesis.

Organisms that synthesize nitrogenase edit

There are two types of bacteria that synthesize nitrogenase and are required for nitrogen fixation. These are:

Similarity to other proteins edit

The three subunits of nitrogenase exhibit significant sequence similarity to three subunits of the light-independent version of protochlorophyllide reductase that performs the conversion of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyll. This protein is present in gymnosperms, algae, and photosynthetic bacteria but has been lost by angiosperms during evolution.[45]

Separately, two of the nitrogenase subunits (NifD and NifH) have homologues in methanogens that do not fix nitrogen e.g. Methanocaldococcus jannaschii.[46] Little is understood about the function of these "class IV" nif genes,[47] though they occur in many methanogens. In M. jannaschii they are known to interact with each other and are constitutively expressed.[46]

Measurement of nitrogenase activity edit

As with many assays for enzyme activity, it is possible to estimate nitrogenase activity by measuring the rate of conversion of the substrate (N2) to the product (NH3). Since NH3 is involved in other reactions in the cell, it is often desirable to label the substrate with 15N to provide accounting or "mass balance" of the added substrate. A more common assay, the acetylene reduction assay or ARA, estimates the activity of nitrogenase by taking advantage of the ability of the enzyme to reduce acetylene gas to ethylene gas. These gases are easily quantified using gas chromatography.[48] Though first used in a laboratory setting to measure nitrogenase activity in extracts of Clostridium pasteurianum cells, ARA has been applied to a wide range of test systems, including field studies where other techniques are difficult to deploy. For example, ARA was used successfully to demonstrate that bacteria associated with rice roots undergo seasonal and diurnal rhythms in nitrogenase activity, which were apparently controlled by the plant.[49]

Unfortunately, the conversion of data from nitrogenase assays to actual moles of N2 reduced (particularly in the case of ARA), is not always straightforward and may either underestimate or overestimate the true rate for a variety of reasons. For example, H2 competes with N2 but not acetylene for nitrogenase (leading to overestimates of nitrogenase by ARA). Bottle or chamber-based assays may produce negative impacts on microbial systems as a result of containment or disruption of the microenvironment through handling, leading to underestimation of nitrogenase. Despite these weaknesses, such assays are very useful in assessing relative rates or temporal patterns in nitrogenase activity.

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Zumft WG, Mortenson LE (March 1975). "The nitrogen-fixing complex of bacteria". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Bioenergetics. 416 (1): 1–52. doi:10.1016/0304-4173(75)90012-9. PMID 164247.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Nitrogenase at Wikimedia Commons

nitrogenase, enzymes, that, produced, certain, bacteria, such, cyanobacteria, blue, green, bacteria, rhizobacteria, these, enzymes, responsible, reduction, nitrogen, ammonia, only, family, enzymes, known, catalyze, this, reaction, which, step, process, nitroge. Nitrogenases are enzymes EC 1 18 6 1EC 1 19 6 1 that are produced by certain bacteria such as cyanobacteria blue green bacteria and rhizobacteria These enzymes are responsible for the reduction of nitrogen N2 to ammonia NH3 Nitrogenases are the only family of enzymes known to catalyze this reaction which is a step in the process of nitrogen fixation Nitrogen fixation is required for all forms of life with nitrogen being essential for the biosynthesis of molecules nucleotides amino acids that create plants animals and other organisms They are encoded by the Nif genes or homologs They are related to protochlorophyllide reductase NitrogenaseIdentifiersEC no 1 18 6 1CAS no 9013 04 1DatabasesIntEnzIntEnz viewBRENDABRENDA entryExPASyNiceZyme viewKEGGKEGG entryMetaCycmetabolic pathwayPRIAMprofilePDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsumSearchPMCarticlesPubMedarticlesNCBIproteinsNitrogenase type Oxidoreductase component 1 subunit alpha beta IdentifiersSymbolOxidored nitroPfamPF00148InterProIPR000510SCOP21mio SCOPe SUPFAMAvailable protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summaryNitrogenase iron protein NifH component 2 IdentifiersSymbolNifHInterProIPR005977CATH1fp6SCOP2d1fp6a SCOPe SUPFAMCDDcd02040Alternative nitrogenase component 1 delta subunitIdentifiersSymbolAnfG VnfGPfamPF03139InterProIPR004349Available protein structures Pfam structures ECOD PDBRCSB PDB PDBe PDBjPDBsumstructure summary Contents 1 Classification and structure 1 1 Reductase 1 2 Nitrogenase 1 2 1 Variations 2 Mechanism 2 1 General mechanism 2 2 Lowe Thorneley kinetic model 2 3 Intermediates E0 through E4 2 4 Distal and alternating pathways for N2 fixation 2 5 Mechanism of MgATP binding 2 6 Other mechanistic details 3 Nonspecific reactions 4 Organisms that synthesize nitrogenase 5 Similarity to other proteins 6 Measurement of nitrogenase activity 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksClassification and structure editAlthough the equilibrium formation of ammonia from molecular hydrogen and nitrogen has an overall negative enthalpy of reaction D H 0 45 2 k J m o l 1 N H 3 displaystyle Delta H 0 45 2 mathrm kJ mathrm mol 1 mathrm NH 3 nbsp the activation energy is very high E A 230 420 k J m o l 1 displaystyle E mathrm A 230 420 mathrm kJ mathrm mol 1 nbsp 1 Nitrogenase acts as a catalyst reducing this energy barrier such that the reaction can take place at ambient temperatures A usual assembly consists of two components The heterotetrameric MoFe protein a nitrogenase which uses the electrons provided to reduce N2 to NH3 In some assemblies it is replaced by a homologous alternative The homodimeric Fe only protein the reductase which has a high reducing power and is responsible for the supply of electrons nbsp Structure of the FeMo cofactor showing the sites of binding to nitrogenase the amino acids cys and his Reductase edit The Fe protein the dinitrogenase reductase or NifH is a dimer of identical subunits which contains one Fe4S4 cluster and has a mass of approximately 60 64kDa 2 The function of the Fe protein is to transfer electrons from a reducing agent such as ferredoxin or flavodoxin to the nitrogenase protein The transfer of electrons requires an input of chemical energy which comes from the binding and hydrolysis of ATP The hydrolysis of ATP also causes a conformational change within the nitrogenase complex bringing the Fe protein and MoFe protein closer together for easier electron transfer 3 Nitrogenase edit The MoFe protein is a heterotetramer consisting of two a subunits and two b subunits with a mass of approximately 240 250kDa 2 The MoFe protein also contains two iron sulfur clusters known as P clusters located at the interface between the a and b subunits and two FeMo cofactors within the a subunits The oxidation state of Mo in these nitrogenases was formerly thought Mo V but more recent evidence is for Mo III 4 Molybdenum in other enzymes is generally bound to molybdopterin as fully oxidized Mo VI The core Fe8S7 of the P cluster takes the form of two Fe4S3 cubes linked by a central sulfur atom Each P cluster is linked to the MoFe protein by six cysteine residues Each FeMo cofactor Fe7MoS9C consists of two non identical clusters Fe4S3 and MoFe3S3 which are linked by three sulfide ions Each FeMo cofactor is covalently linked to the a subunit of the protein by one cysteine residue and one histidine residue Electrons from the Fe protein enter the MoFe protein at the P clusters which then transfer the electrons to the FeMo cofactors Each FeMo cofactor then acts as a site for nitrogen fixation with N2 binding in the central cavity of the cofactor Variations edit The MoFe protein can be replaced by alternative nitrogenases in environments low in the Mo cofactor Two types of such nitrogenases are known the vanadium iron VFe Vnf type and the iron iron FeFe Anf type Both form an assembly of two a subunits two b subunits and two d sometimes g subunits The delta subunits are homologous to each other and the alpha and beta subunits themselves are homologous to the ones found in MoFe nitrogenase The gene clusters are also homologous and these subunits are interchangeable to some degree All nitrogenases use a similar Fe S core cluster and the variations come in the cofactor metal 5 6 The Anf nitrogenase in Azotobacter vinelandii is organized in an anfHDGKOR operon This operon still requires some of the Nif genes to function An engineered minimal 10 gene operon that incorporates these additional essential genes has been constructed 7 Mechanism edit nbsp Nitrogenase with catalytic sites highlighted There are two sets of catalytic sites within each nitrogenase enzyme nbsp Nitrogenase with one set of metal clusters magnified Electrons travel from the Fe S cluster yellow to the P cluster red and end at the FeMo co orange General mechanism edit nbsp Catalytic sites within nitrogenase Atoms are colored by element Top Fe S Cluster Middle P Cluster Bottom FeMo coNitrogenase is an enzyme responsible for catalyzing nitrogen fixation which is the reduction of nitrogen N2 to ammonia NH3 and a process vital to sustaining life on Earth 8 There are three types of nitrogenase found in various nitrogen fixing bacteria molybdenum Mo nitrogenase vanadium V nitrogenase and iron only Fe nitrogenase 9 Molybdenum nitrogenase which can be found in diazotrophs such as legume associated rhizobia 10 11 is the nitrogenase that has been studied the most extensively and thus is the most well characterized 9 Vanadium nitrogenase and iron only nitrogenase can both be found in select species of Azotobacter as an alternative nitrogenase 10 12 Equations 1 and 2 show the balanced reactions of nitrogen fixation in molybdenum nitrogenase and vanadium nitrogenase respectively N2 8 H 8 e 16 MgATP 2 NH3 H2 16 MgADP 16 Pi 8 1 N2 14 H 12 e 40 MgATP 2 NH4 3 H2 40 MgADP 40 Pi 13 2 All nitrogenases are two component systems made up of Component I also known as dinitrogenase and Component II also known as dinitrogenase reductase Component I is a MoFe protein in molybdenum nitrogenase a VFe protein in vanadium nitrogenase and an Fe protein in iron only nitrogenase 8 Component II is a Fe protein that contains the Fe S cluster which transfers electrons to Component I 12 Component I contains 2 metal clusters the P cluster and the FeMo cofactor FeMo co Mo is replaced by V or Fe in vanadium nitrogenase and iron only nitrogenase respectively 8 14 During catalysis electrons flow from a pair of ATP molecules within Component II to the Fe S cluster to the P cluster and finally to the FeMo co where reduction of N2 to NH3 takes place Lowe Thorneley kinetic model edit The reduction of nitrogen to two molecules of ammonia is carried out at the FeMo co of Component I after the sequential addition of proton and electron equivalents from Component II 8 Steady state freeze quench and stopped flow kinetics measurements carried out in the 70 s and 80 s by Lowe Thorneley and others provided a kinetic basis for this process 15 16 The Lowe Thorneley LT kinetic model was developed from these experiments and documents the eight correlated proton and electron transfers required throughout the reaction 8 15 16 Each intermediate stage is depicted as En where n 0 8 corresponding to the number of equivalents transferred The transfer of four equivalents are required before the productive addition of N2 although reaction of E3 with N2 is also possible 15 Notably nitrogen reduction has been shown to require 8 equivalents of protons and electrons as opposed to the 6 equivalents predicted by the balanced chemical reaction 17 Intermediates E0 through E4 edit Spectroscopic characterization of these intermediates has allowed for greater understanding of nitrogen reduction by nitrogenase however the mechanism remains an active area of research and debate Briefly listed below are spectroscopic experiments for the intermediates before the addition of nitrogen E0 This is the resting state of the enzyme before catalysis begins EPR characterization shows that this species has a spin of 3 2 18 E1 The one electron reduced intermediate has been trapped during turnover under N2 Mӧssbauer spectroscopy of the trapped intermediate indicates that the FeMo co is integer spin greater than 1 19 nbsp Lowe Thorneley kinetic model for reduction of nitrogen to ammonia by nitrogenase E2 This intermediate is proposed to contain the metal cluster in its resting oxidation state with the two added electrons stored in a bridging hydride and the additional proton bonded to a sulfur atom Isolation of this intermediate in mutated enzymes shows that the FeMo co is high spin and has a spin of 3 2 20 E3 This intermediate is proposed to be the singly reduced FeMo co with one bridging hydride and one proton 8 E4 Termed the Janus intermediate after the Roman god of transitions this intermediate is positioned after exactly half of the electron proton transfers and can either decay back to E0 or proceed with nitrogen binding and finish the catalytic cycle This intermediate is proposed to contain the FeMo co in its resting oxidation state with two bridging hydrides and two sulfur bonded protons 8 This intermediate was first observed using freeze quench techniques with a mutated protein in which residue 70 a valine amino acid is replaced with isoleucine 21 This modification prevents substrate access to the FeMo co EPR characterization of this isolated intermediate shows a new species with a spin of ENDOR experiments have provided insight into the structure of this intermediate revealing the presence of two bridging hydrides 21 95Mo and 57Fe ENDOR show that the hydrides bridge between two iron centers 22 Cryoannealing of the trapped intermediate at 20 C results in the successive loss of two hydrogen equivalents upon relaxation proving that the isolated intermediate is consistent with the E4 state 8 The decay of E4 to E2 H2 and finally to E0 and 2H2 has confirmed the EPR signal associated with the E2 intermediate 8 The above intermediates suggest that the metal cluster is cycled between its original oxidation state and a singly reduced state with additional electrons being stored in hydrides It has alternatively been proposed that each step involves the formation of a hydride and that the metal cluster actually cycles between the original oxidation state and a singly oxidized state 8 Distal and alternating pathways for N2 fixation edit nbsp Distal vs alternating mechanistic pathways for nitrogen fixation in nitrogenase While the mechanism for nitrogen fixation prior to the Janus E4 complex is generally agreed upon there are currently two hypotheses for the exact pathway in the second half of the mechanism the distal and the alternating pathway 8 23 24 In the distal pathway the terminal nitrogen is hydrogenated first releases ammonia then the nitrogen directly bound to the metal is hydrogenated In the alternating pathway one hydrogen is added to the terminal nitrogen then one hydrogen is added to the nitrogen directly bound to the metal This alternating pattern continues until ammonia is released 8 23 24 Because each pathway favors a unique set of intermediates attempts to determine which path is correct have generally focused on the isolation of said intermediates such as the nitrido in the distal pathway 25 and the diazene and hydrazine in the alternating pathway 8 Attempts to isolate the intermediates in nitrogenase itself have so far been unsuccessful but the use of model complexes has allowed for the isolation of intermediates that support both sides depending on the metal center used 8 Studies with Mo generally point towards a distal pathway while studies with Fe generally point towards an alternating pathway 8 23 24 26 27 Specific support for the distal pathway has mainly stemmed from the work of Schrock and Chatt who successfully isolated the nitrido complex using Mo as the metal center in a model complex 25 28 Specific support for the alternating pathway stems from a few studies Iron only model clusters have been shown to catalytically reduce N2 26 27 Small tungsten clusters have also been shown to follow an alternating pathway for nitrogen fixation 29 The vanadium nitrogenase releases hydrazine an intermediate specific to the alternating mechanism 8 30 However the lack of characterized intermediates in the native enzyme itself means that neither pathway has been definitively proven Furthermore computational studies have been found to support both sides depending on whether the reaction site is assumed to be at Mo distal or at Fe alternating in the MoFe cofactor 8 23 24 Mechanism of MgATP binding edit nbsp Binding of MgATP is one of the central events to occur in the mechanism employed by nitrogenase Hydrolysis of the terminal phosphate group of MgATP provides the energy needed to transfer electrons from the Fe protein to the MoFe protein 31 The binding interactions between the MgATP phosphate groups and the amino acid residues of the Fe protein are well understood by comparing to similar enzymes while the interactions with the rest of the molecule are more elusive due to the lack of a Fe protein crystal structure with MgATP bound as of 1996 32 Three protein residues have been shown to have significant interactions with the phosphates 15 In the absence of MgATP a salt bridge exists between residue 15 lysine and residue 125 aspartic acid 32 Upon binding this salt bridge is interrupted Site specific mutagenesis has demonstrated that when the lysine is substituted for a glutamine the protein s affinity for MgATP is greatly reduced 33 and when the lysine is substituted for an arginine MgATP cannot bind due to the salt bridge being too strong 34 The necessity of specifically aspartic acid at site 125 has been shown through noting altered reactivity upon mutation of this residue to glutamic acid 35 Residue 16 serine has been shown to bind MgATP Site specific mutagenesis was used to demonstrate this fact 35 This has led to a model in which the serine remains coordinated to the Mg2 ion after phosphate hydrolysis in order to facilitate its association with a different phosphate of the now ADP molecule 36 MgATP binding also induces significant conformational changes within the Fe protein 15 Site directed mutagenesis was employed to create mutants in which MgATP binds but does not induce a conformational change 37 Comparing X ray scattering data in the mutants versus in the wild type protein led to the conclusion that the entire protein contracts upon MgATP binding with a decrease in radius of approximately 2 0 A 37 Other mechanistic details edit Many mechanistic aspects of catalysis remain unknown No crystallographic analysis has been reported on substrate bound to nitrogenase Nitrogenase is able to reduce acetylene but is inhibited by carbon monoxide which binds to the enzyme and thereby prevents binding of dinitrogen Dinitrogen prevent acetylene binding but acetylene does not inhibit binding of dinitrogen and requires only one electron for reduction to ethylene 38 Due to the oxidative properties of oxygen most nitrogenases are irreversibly inhibited by dioxygen which degradatively oxidizes the Fe S cofactors citation needed This requires mechanisms for nitrogen fixers to protect nitrogenase from oxygen in vivo Despite this problem many use oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor for respiration citation needed Although the ability of some nitrogen fixers such as Azotobacteraceae to employ an oxygen labile nitrogenase under aerobic conditions has been attributed to a high metabolic rate allowing oxygen reduction at the cell membrane the effectiveness of such a mechanism has been questioned at oxygen concentrations above 70 mM ambient concentration is 230 mM O2 as well as during additional nutrient limitations 39 Nonspecific reactions editIn addition to dinitrogen reduction nitrogenases also reduce protons to dihydrogen meaning nitrogenase is also a dehydrogenase A list of other reactions carried out by nitrogenases is shown below 40 41 HC CH H2C CH2 N N O N2 H2O N N N N2 NH3 C N CH4 NH3 H3C CH3 H2C CH2 CH3NH2 N C R RCH3 NH3 C N R CH4 H3C CH3 H2C CH2 C3H8 C3H6 RNH2 O C S CO H2S 42 43 O C O CO H2O 42 S C N H2S HCN 43 O C N H2O HCN CO NH3 43 Furthermore dihydrogen functions as a competitive inhibitor 44 carbon monoxide functions as a non competitive inhibitor 40 41 and carbon disulfide functions as a rapid equilibrium inhibitor 42 of nitrogenase Vanadium nitrogenases have also been shown to catalyze the conversion of CO into alkanes through a reaction comparable to Fischer Tropsch synthesis Organisms that synthesize nitrogenase editThere are two types of bacteria that synthesize nitrogenase and are required for nitrogen fixation These are Free living bacteria non symbiotic examples include Cyanobacteria blue green algae Green sulfur bacteria Azotobacter Mutualistic bacteria symbiotic examples include Rhizobium associated with leguminous plants Spirillum associated with cereal grasses FrankiaSimilarity to other proteins editThe three subunits of nitrogenase exhibit significant sequence similarity to three subunits of the light independent version of protochlorophyllide reductase that performs the conversion of protochlorophyllide to chlorophyll This protein is present in gymnosperms algae and photosynthetic bacteria but has been lost by angiosperms during evolution 45 Separately two of the nitrogenase subunits NifD and NifH have homologues in methanogens that do not fix nitrogen e g Methanocaldococcus jannaschii 46 Little is understood about the function of these class IV nif genes 47 though they occur in many methanogens In M jannaschii they are known to interact with each other and are constitutively expressed 46 Measurement of nitrogenase activity editAs with many assays for enzyme activity it is possible to estimate nitrogenase activity by measuring the rate of conversion of the substrate N2 to the product NH3 Since NH3 is involved in other reactions in the cell it is often desirable to label the substrate with 15N to provide accounting or mass balance of the added substrate A more common assay the acetylene reduction assay or ARA estimates the activity of nitrogenase by taking advantage of the ability of the enzyme to reduce acetylene gas to ethylene gas These gases are easily quantified using gas chromatography 48 Though first used in a laboratory setting to measure nitrogenase activity in extracts of Clostridium pasteurianum cells ARA has been applied to a wide range of test systems including field studies where other techniques are difficult to deploy For example ARA was used successfully to demonstrate that bacteria associated with rice roots undergo seasonal and diurnal rhythms in nitrogenase activity which were apparently controlled by the plant 49 Unfortunately the conversion of data from nitrogenase assays to actual moles of N2 reduced particularly in the case of ARA is not always straightforward and may either underestimate or overestimate the true rate for a variety of reasons For example H2 competes with N2 but not acetylene for nitrogenase leading to overestimates of nitrogenase by ARA Bottle or chamber based assays may produce negative impacts on microbial systems as a result of containment or disruption of the microenvironment through handling leading to underestimation of nitrogenase Despite these weaknesses such assays are very useful in assessing relative rates or temporal patterns in nitrogenase activity See also editNitrogen fixation Abiological nitrogen fixationReferences edit Modak JM 2002 Haber Process for Ammonia Synthesis Resonance 7 9 69 77 doi 10 1007 bf02836187 S2CID 195305228 a b Burges BK Lowe DJ 1996 Mechanism of Molybdenum Nitrogenase Chemical Reviews 96 7 2983 3011 doi 10 1021 cr950055x PMID 11848849 Lawson DM Smith BE 2002 Molybdenum nitrogenases a crystallographic and mechanistic view Metal Ions in 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PMC 235759 PMID 1150625 a b Schrauzer GN August 1975 Nonenzymatic simulation of nitrogenase reactions and the mechanism of biological nitrogen fixation Angewandte Chemie 14 8 514 22 doi 10 1002 anie 197505141 PMID 810048 a b c Seefeldt LC Rasche ME Ensign SA April 1995 Carbonyl sulfide and carbon dioxide as new substrates and carbon disulfide as a new inhibitor of nitrogenase Biochemistry 34 16 5382 9 doi 10 1021 bi00016a009 PMID 7727396 a b c Rasche ME Seefeldt LC July 1997 Reduction of thiocyanate cyanate and carbon disulfide by nitrogenase kinetic characterization and EPR spectroscopic analysis Biochemistry 36 28 8574 85 doi 10 1021 bi970217e PMID 9214303 Guth JH Burris RH October 1983 Inhibition of nitrogenase catalyzed NH3 formation by H2 Biochemistry 22 22 5111 22 doi 10 1021 bi00291a010 PMID 6360203 Li J Goldschmidt Clermont M Timko MP December 1993 Chloroplast encoded chlB is required for light independent protochlorophyllide reductase activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii The Plant Cell 5 12 1817 29 doi 10 1105 tpc 5 12 1817 PMC 160407 PMID 8305874 a b Staples CR Lahiri S Raymond J Von Herbulis L Mukhophadhyay B Blankenship RE October 2007 Expression and association of group IV nitrogenase NifD and NifH homologs in the non nitrogen fixing archaeon Methanocaldococcus jannaschii Journal of Bacteriology 189 20 7392 8 doi 10 1128 JB 00876 07 PMC 2168459 PMID 17660283 Raymond J Siefert JL Staples CR Blankenship RE March 2004 The natural history of nitrogen fixation Molecular Biology and Evolution 21 3 541 54 doi 10 1093 molbev msh047 PMID 14694078 Dilworth MJ October 1966 Acetylene reduction by nitrogen fixing preparations from Clostridium pasteurianum Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA General Subjects 127 2 285 94 doi 10 1016 0304 4165 66 90383 7 PMID 5964974 Sims GK Dunigan EP 1984 Diurnal and seasonal variations in nitrogenase activity C2H2 reduction of rice roots Soil Biology and Biochemistry 16 15 18 doi 10 1016 0038 0717 84 90118 4 Further reading editZumft WG Mortenson LE March 1975 The nitrogen fixing complex of bacteria Biochimica et Biophysica Acta BBA Reviews on Bioenergetics 416 1 1 52 doi 10 1016 0304 4173 75 90012 9 PMID 164247 External links edit nbsp Media related to Nitrogenase at Wikimedia Commons Portal nbsp Biology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nitrogenase amp oldid 1206293113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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