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1995
Characterization of the interaction between PQQ and heme c in the quinohemoprotein ethanol dehydrogenase from Comamonas testosteroni, de Jong, G. A., Caldeira J., Sun J., Jongejan J. A., de Vries S., Loehr T. M., Moura I., Moura J. J., and Duine J. A. , Biochemistry, Jul 25, Volume 34, Number 29, p.9451-8, (1995) AbstractWebsite

Quinohemoprotein ethanol dehydrogenase from Comamonas testosteroni (QH-EDH) contains two cofactors, 2,7,9-tricarboxy-1H-pyrrolo[2,3-f]quinoline-4,5-dione (PQQ) and heme c. Since previous studies on the kinetics of this enzyme suggested that both participate in electron transfer, spectroscopic investigations were performed of the oxidized and reduced holo- and apoenzyme (without PQQ but with heme c) to reveal the nature of the interaction between the two redox centers. From this it appears that the properties of the heme in the enzyme are affected by the presence of PQQ, as judged from the shift of the maxima in the ultraviolet/visible absorption spectra of the heme moiety in both reduced and oxidized QH-EDH and the 60-mV increase of the heme midpoint redox potential caused by PQQ addition. Also 1H-NMR spectroscopy was indicative for interaction since binding of PQQ induced shifts in the resonances of the methyl groups of the porphyrin ring in the oxidized form of the apoenzyme and a shift in the methionine heme ligand resonance of the reduced form of the apoenzyme. On the other hand, resonance Raman spectra of the heme in the different enzyme forms were nearly similar. These results suggest that a major effect of PQQ binding to apo-QH-EDH is a rotation of the methionine ligand of heme c. Since no intermediate 1H-NMR spectra were observed upon titration of apoenzyme with PQQ, apparently no exchange occurs of PQQ between (oxidized) holo- and apoenzyme at the NMR time scale and at that of the experiment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

A cytochrome cd1-type nitrite reductase isolated from the marine denitrifier Pseudomonas nautica 617: purification and characterization, Besson, S., Carneiro C., Moura J. J., Moura I., and Fauque G. , Anaerobe, Aug, Volume 1, Number 4, p.219-26, (1995) AbstractWebsite

Nitrite reductase (cytochrome cd1) was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from the soluble extract of the marine denitrifying bacterium Pseudomonas nautica strain 617. Cells were anaerobically grown with 10 mM nitrate as final electron acceptor. The soluble fraction was purified by four successive chromatographic steps and the purest cytochrome cd1 exhibited an A280 nm(oxidized)/A410nm(oxidized) coefficient of 0.90. In the course of purification, cytochrome cd1 specific activity presented a maximum value of 0.048 units/mg of protein. This periplasmic enzyme is a homodimer and each 60 kDa subunit contains one heme c and one heme d1 as prosthetic moieties, both in a low spin state. Redox potentials of hemes c and d1 were determined at three different pH values (6.6, 7.6 and 8.6) and did not show any pH dependence. The first 20 amino acids of the NH2-terminal region of the protein were identified and the sequence showed 45% identity with the corresponding region of Pseudomonas aeruginosa nitrite reductase but no homology to Pseudomonas stutzeri and Paracoccus denitrificans enzymes. Spectroscopic properties of Pseudomonas nautica 617 cytochrome cd1 in the ultraviolet-visible range and in electron paramagnetic resonance are described. The formation of a heme d1 -nitric-oxide complex as an intermediate of nitrite reduction was demonstrated by electron paramagnetic resonance experiments.

Electrochemical studies on nitrite reductase towards a biosensor, Scharf, M., Moreno C., Costa C., Van Dijk C., Payne W. J., Legall J., Moura I., and Moura J. J. , Biochem Biophys Res Commun, Apr 26, Volume 209, Number 3, p.1018-25, (1995) AbstractWebsite

A c-type hexaheme nitrite reductase (NiR) isolated from nitrate-grown cells of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (Dd) ATCC 27774 catalyses the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. Previous electrochemical studies demonstrated that a simple electrocatalytic mechanism can be applied to this system (Moreno, C., Costa, C., Moura, I., LeGall, J., Liu, M. Y., Payne, W. J., Van Dijk, C. and Moura, J. J. G. (1992) Eur.J.Biochem. 212, 79-86). Its substrate specificity, availability and stability under ambient conditions makes this enzymatic system a promising candidate for use in a biosensor device. An electrochemical study of gel-immobilized Dd NiR on a glassy carbon electrode revealed both enzymatic activity and amperometric response to nitrite. In this study it was observed that the catalytic current density is a function of the nitrite concentration in solution and follows a characteristic Michaelis-Menten-type substrate dependence. Such a biosensor device (NiR-electrode) bears the option to be used for analytical determination of nitrite in complex media.

Spectroscopic properties of the cytochrome CD1 from the marine denitrifier Pseudomonas nautica, Besson, S., Carneiro C., Moura J. J. G., Moura I., and Fauque G. , Spectroscopy of Biological Molecules, p.263-264, (1995) AbstractWebsite
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1994
Cloning, sequencing and overexpression of the Desulfovibrio gigas ferredoxin gene in E. coli, Chen, B., Menon N. K., Dervertarnian L., Moura J. J., and Przybyla A. E. , FEBS Lett, Sep 12, Volume 351, Number 3, p.401-4, (1994) AbstractWebsite

We have cloned the gene encoding Desulfovibrio gigas ferredoxin using a photodigoxigenin-labelled probe synthesized with the polymerase chain reaction. The DNA sequence of the gene predicts a polypeptide of 58 residues after removal of the initial formyl methionine (polypeptide M(r) = 6,276). The ferredoxin gene was expressed in aerobically grown E. coli behind the lac promoter of pUC18 resulting in a high level of ferredoxin expression which comprises about 10% of the total cell protein. EPR analysis of recombinant ferredoxin revealed the presence of a [3Fe-4S] cluster which is characteristic of native D. gigas ferredoxin II.

Primary sequence, oxidation-reduction potentials and tertiary-structure prediction of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 flavodoxin, Caldeira, J., Palma P. N., Regalla M., Lampreia J., Calvete J., Schafer W., Legall J., Moura I., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Mar 15, Volume 220, Number 3, p.987-95, (1994) AbstractWebsite

Flavodoxin was isolated and purified from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, a sulfate-reducing organism that can also utilize nitrate as an alternative electron acceptor. Mid-point oxidation-reduction potentials of this flavodoxin were determined by ultraviolet/visible and EPR methods coupled to potentiometric measurements and their pH dependence studied in detail. The redox potential E2, for the couple oxidized/semiquinone forms at pH 6.7 and 25 degrees C is -40 mV, while the value for the semiquinone/hydroquinone forms (E1), at the same pH, -387 mV. E2 varies linearly with pH, while E1 is independent of pH at high values. However, at low pH (< 7.0), this value is less negative, compatible with a redox-linked protonation of the flavodoxin hydroquinone. A comparative study is presented for Desulfovibrio salexigens NCIB 8403 flavodoxin [Moura, I., Moura, J.J.G., Bruschi, M. & LeGall, J. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 591, 1-8]. The complete primary amino acid sequence was obtained by automated Edman degradation from peptides obtained by chemical and enzymic procedures. The amino acid sequence was confirmed by FAB/MS. Using the previously determined tridimensional structure of Desulfovibrio vulgaris flavodoxin as a model [similarity, 48.6%; Watenpaugh, K.D., Sieker, L.C., Jensen, L.H., LeGall, J. & Dubourdieu M. (1972) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 69, 3185-3188], the tridimensional structure of D. desulfuricans ATCC 27774 flavodoxin was predicted using AMBER force-field calculations.

Spectroscopic properties of desulfoferrodoxin from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), Tavares, P., Ravi N., Moura J. J., Legall J., Huang Y. H., Crouse B. R., Johnson M. K., Huynh B. H., and Moura I. , J Biol Chem, Apr 8, Volume 269, Number 14, p.10504-10, (1994) AbstractWebsite

Desulfoferrodoxin, a non-heme iron protein, was purified previously from extracts of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) (Moura, I., Tavares, P., Moura, J. J. G., Ravi, N., Huynh, B. H., Liu, M.-Y., and LeGall, J. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 21596-21602). The as-isolated protein displays a pink color (pink form) and contains two mononuclear iron sites in different oxidation states: a ferric site (center I) with a distorted tetrahedral sulfur coordination similar to that found in desulforedoxin from Desulfovibrio gigas and a ferrous site (center II) octahedrally coordinated with predominantly nitrogen/oxygen-containing ligands. A new form of desulfoferrodoxin which displays a gray color (gray form) has now been purified. Optical, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and Mossbauer data of the gray desulfoferrodoxin indicate that both iron centers are in the high-spin ferric states. In addition to the EPR signals originating from center I at g = 7.7, 5.7, 4.1, and 1.8, the gray form of desulfoferrodoxin exhibits a signal at g = 4.3 and a shoulder at g = 9.6, indicating a high-spin ferric state with E/D approximately 1/3 for the oxidized center II. Redox titrations of the gray form of the protein monitored by optical spectroscopy indicate midpoint potentials of +4 +/- 10 and +240 +/- 10 mV for centers I and II, respectively. Mossbauer spectra of the gray form of the protein are consistent with the EPR finding that both centers are high-spin ferric and can be analyzed in terms of the EPR-determined spin Hamiltonian parameters. The Mossbauer parameters for both the ferric and ferrous forms of center II are indicative of a mononuclear high spin iron site with octahedral coordination and predominantly nitrogen/oxygen-containing ligands. Resonance Raman studies confirm the structural similarity of center I and the distorted tetrahedral FeS4 center in desulforedoxin and provide evidence for one or two cysteinyl-S ligands for center II. On the basis of the resonance Raman results, the 635 nm absorption band that is responsible for the gray color of the oxidized protein is assigned to a cysteinyl-S-->Fe(III) charge transfer transition localized on center II. The novel properties and possible function of center II are discussed in relation to those of mononuclear iron centers in other enzymes.

[21] Hexaheme nitrite reductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), Liu, Ming-Cheh, Costa Cristina, and Moura Isabel , Methods in Enzymology, Volume Volume 243, p.303-319, (1994) Abstract
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1993
Electrochemical studies of the hexaheme nitrite reductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, Moreno, C., Costa C., Moura I., Legall J., Liu M. Y., Payne W. J., Van Dijk C., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Feb 15, Volume 212, Number 1, p.79-86, (1993) AbstractWebsite

The electron-transfer kinetics between three different mediators and the hexahemic enzyme nitrite reductase isolated from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) were investigated by cyclic voltammetry and by chronoamperometry. The mediators, methyl viologen, Desulfovibrio vulgaris (Hildenborough) cytochrome c3 and D. desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) cytochrome c3 differ in structure, redox potential and charge. The reduced form of each mediator exchanged electrons with nitrite reductase. Second-order rate constants, k, were calculated on the basis of the theory for a simple catalytic mechanism and the results, obtained by cyclic voltammetry, were compared with those obtained by chronoamperometry. Values for k are in the range 10(6)-10(8) M-1 s-1 and increase in the direction D. desulfuricans cytochrome c3-->D. vulgaris cytochrome c3-->methyl viologen. An explanation is advanced on the basis of electrostatic interactions and relative orientation between the partners involved. Chronoamperometry (computer controlled) offers advantages over cyclic voltammetry in the determination of homogeneous rate constants (faster, more accurate and better reproducibility). Direct, unmediated electrochemical responses of the hexaheme nitrite reductase were also reported.

Subunit composition, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic studies of the Desulfovibrio gigas aldehyde oxidoreductase containing molybdenum and [2Fe-2S] centers, Romao, M. J., Barata B. A., Archer M., Lobeck K., Moura I., Carrondo M. A., Legall J., Lottspeich F., Huber R., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Aug 1, Volume 215, Number 3, p.729-32, (1993) AbstractWebsite

The Desulfovibrio gigas aldehyde oxidoreductase contains molybdenum bound to a pterin cofactor and [2Fe-2S] centers. The enzyme was characterized by SDS/PAGE, gel-filtration and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments. It was crystallized at 4 degrees C, pH 7.2, using isopropanol and MgCl2 as precipitants. The crystals diffract beyond 0.3-nm (3.0-A) resolution and belong to space group P6(1)22 or its enantiomorph, with cell dimensions a = b = 14.45 nm and c = 16.32 nm. There is one subunit/asymmetric unit which gives a packing density of 2.5 x 10(-3) nm3/Da (2.5 A3/Da), consistent with the experimental crystal density, rho = 1.14 g/cm3. One dimer (approximately 2 x 100 kDa) is located on a crystallographic twofold axis.

1992
The photochemical reaction between uranyl-nitrate and azulene, Burrows, H. D., Cardoso A. C., Formosinho S. J., Gil Ampc, Miguel M. D., Barata B., and Moura J. J. G. , Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology a-Chemistry, Sep 30, Volume 68, Number 3, p.279-287, (1992) AbstractWebsite

On photolysis of solutions of azulene and uranyl nitrate in alcohols, a dark, amorphous precipitate is formed. Various analytical techniques show that this is a mixture of a uranium salt and an organic component, suggested to be polyazulene. The effects of various parameters on the yield of the product have been studied and it is found that oxygen facilitates the reaction. Electron spin resonance studies show that the product is paramagnetic, in agreement with the established ease of oxidation of polyazulene, and suggest that it is formed via electron transfer from azulene to excited uranyl ion, followed by successive dimerizations and deprotonations of radical cation intermediates.

Partial purification and characterization of the first hydrogenase isolated from a thermophilic sulfate-reducing bacterium, Fauque, G., Czechowski M., Berlier Y. M., Lespinat P. A., Legall J., and Moura J. J. , Biochem Biophys Res Commun, May 15, Volume 184, Number 3, p.1256-60, (1992) AbstractWebsite

A soluble [NiFe] hydrogenase has been partially purified from the obligate thermophilic sulfate-reducing bacterium Thermodesulfobacterium mobile. A 17% purification yield was obtained after four chromatographic steps and the hydrogenase presents a purity index (A398 nm/A277 nm) equal to 0.21. This protein appears to be 75% pure on SDS-gel electrophoresis showing two major bands of molecular mass around 55 and 15 kDa. This hydrogenase contains 0.6-0.7 nickel atom and 7-8 iron atoms per mole of enzyme and has a specific activity of 783 in the hydrogen uptake reaction, of 231 in the hydrogen production assay and of 84 in the deuterium-proton exchange reaction. The H2/HD ratio is lower than one in the D2-H+ exchange reaction. The enzyme is very sensitive to NO, relatively little inhibited by CO but unaffected by NO2-. The EPR spectrum of the native hydrogenase shows the presence of a [3Fe-4S] oxidized cluster and of a Ni(III) species.

Mossbauer characterization of the tetraheme cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743). Spectral deconvolution of the heme components, Ravi, N., Moura I., Costa C., Teixeira M., Legall J., Moura J. J., and Huynh B. H. , Eur J Biochem, Mar 1, Volume 204, Number 2, p.779-82, (1992) AbstractWebsite

Mossbauer spectroscopy was used to study the tetraheme cytochrome c3 from Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743). Samples with different degrees of reduction were prepared using a redoxtitration technique. In the reduced cytochrome c3, all four hemes are reduced and exhibit diamagnetic Mossbauer spectra typical for low-spin ferrous hemes (S = 0). In the oxidized protein, the hemes are low-spin ferric (S = 1/2) and exhibit overlapping magnetic Mossbauer spectra. A method of differential spectroscopy was applied to deconvolute the four overlapping heme spectra and a crystal-field model was used for data analysis. Characteristic Mossbauer spectral components for each heme group are obtained. Hyperfine and crystal-field parameters for all four hemes are determined from these deconvoluted spectra.

The photochemical reaction between uranyl nitrate and azulene, Burrows, Hugh D., Cardoso Augusto C., Formosinho Sebastião J., Gil Ana M. P. C., da Miguel Maria Graça M., Barata Belamino, and J.G. Moura José , Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A: Chemistry, Volume 68, Number 3, p.279-287, (1992) AbstractWebsite
n/a
1991
Structural and functional approach toward a classification of the complex cytochrome c system found in sulfate-reducing bacteria, Moura, J. J., Costa C., Liu M. Y., Moura I., and Legall J. , Biochim Biophys Acta, May 23, Volume 1058, Number 1, p.61-6, (1991) AbstractWebsite

Following the discovery of the tetraheme cytochrome c3 in the strict anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacteria (Postgate, J.R. (1954) Biochem. J. 59, xi; Ishimoto et al. (1954) Bull. Chem. Soc. Japan 27, 564-565), a variety of c-type cytochromes (and others) have been reported, indicating that the array of heme proteins in these bacteria is complex. We are proposing here a tentative classification of sulfate- (and sulfur-) reducing bacteria cytochromes c based on: number of hemes per monomer, heme axial ligation, heme spin state and primary structures (whole or fragmentary). Different and complementary spectroscopic tools have been used to reveal the structural features of the heme sites.

Simulation of the electrochemical behavior of multi-redox systems. Current potential studies on multiheme cytochromes, Moreno, C., Campos A., Teixeira M., Legall J., Montenegro M. I., Moura I., Van Dijk C., and Moura J. G. , Eur J Biochem, Dec 5, Volume 202, Number 2, p.385-93, (1991) AbstractWebsite

The direct unmediated electrochemical response of the tetrahemic cytochrome c3 isolated from sulfate reducers Desulfovibrio baculatus (DSM 1743) and D. vulgaris (strain Hildenborough), was evaluated using different electrode systems [graphite (edge cut), gold, semiconductor (InO2) and mercury)] and different electrochemical methods (cyclic voltammetry and differential pulse voltammetry). A computer program was developed for the theoretical simulation of a complete cyclic voltammetry curve, based on the method proposed by Nicholson and Shain [Nicholson, R.S. & Shain, I. (1964) Anal. Chem. 36, 706-723], using the Gauss-Legendre method for calculation of the integral equations. The experimental data obtained for this multi-redox center protein was deconvoluted in to the four redox components using theoretically generated cyclic voltammetry curves and the four mid-point reduction potentials determined. The pH dependence of the four reduction potentials was evaluated using the deconvolution method described.

1990
Regulation of the hexaheme nitrite/nitric oxide reductase of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans, Wolinella succinogenes and Escherichia coli. A mass spectrometric study, Costa, C., Macedo A., Moura I., Moura J. J., Legall J., Berlier Y., Liu M. Y., and Payne W. J. , FEBS Lett, Dec 10, Volume 276, Number 1-2, p.67-70, (1990) AbstractWebsite

Dissimilatory nitrite reduction, carried out by hexaheme proteins, gives ammonia as the final product. Representatives of this enzyme group from 3 bacterial species can also reduce NO to either ammonia or N2O. The redox regulation of the nitrite/nitric oxide activities is discussed in the context of the denitrifying pathway.

Hexaheme nitrite reductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans. Mossbauer and EPR characterization of the heme groups, Costa, C., Moura J. J., Moura I., Liu M. Y., Peck, H. D. Jr., Legall J., Wang Y. N., and Huynh B. H. , J Biol Chem, Aug 25, Volume 265, Number 24, p.14382-8, (1990) AbstractWebsite

Mossbauer and EPR spectroscopy were used to characterize the heme prosthetic groups of the nitrite reductase isolated from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774), which is a membrane-bound multiheme cytochrome capable of catalyzing the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. At pH 7.6, the as-isolated enzyme exhibited a complex EPR spectrum consisting of a low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 2.96, 2.28, and 1.50 plus several broad resonances indicative of spin-spin interactions among the heme groups. EPR redox titration studies revealed yet another low-spin ferric heme signal at g = 3.2 and 2.14 (the third g value was undetected) and the presence of a high-spin ferric heme. Mossbauer measurements demonstrated further that this enzyme contained six distinct heme groups: one high-spin (S = 5/2) and five low-spin (S = 1/2) ferric hemes. Characteristic hyperfine parameters for all six hemes were obtained through a detailed analysis of the Mossbauer spectra. D. desulfuricans nitrite reductase can be reduced by chemical reductants, such as dithionite or reduced methyl viologen, or by hydrogenase under hydrogen atmosphere. Addition of nitrite to the fully reduced enzyme reoxidized all five low-spin hemes to their ferric states. The high-spin heme, however, was found to complex NO, suggesting that the high-spin heme could be the substrate binding site and that NO could be an intermediate present in an enzyme-bound form.

Purification and characterization of bisulfite reductase (desulfofuscidin) from Desulfovibrio thermophilus and its complexes with exogenous ligands, Fauque, G., Lino A. R., Czechowski M., Kang L., Dervartanian D. V., Moura J. J., Legall J., and Moura I. , Biochim Biophys Acta, Aug 1, Volume 1040, Number 1, p.112-8, (1990) AbstractWebsite

A dissimilatory bisulfite reductase has been purified from a thermophilic sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio thermophilus (DSM 1276) and studied by EPR and optical spectroscopic techniques. The visible spectrum of the purified bisulfite reductase exhibits absorption maxima at 578.5, 392.5 and 281 nm with a weak band around 700 nm. Photoreduction of the native enzyme causes a decrease in absorption at 578.5 nm and a concomitant increase in absorption at 607 nm. When reduced, the enzyme reacts with cyanide, sulfite, sulfide and carbon monoxide to give stable complexes. The EPR spectrum of the native D. thermophilus bisulfite reductase shows the presence of a high-spin ferric signal with g values at 7.26, 4.78 and 1.92. Upon photoreduction the high-spin ferric heme signal disappeared and a typical 'g = 1.94' signal of [4Fe-4S] type cluster appeared. Chemical analyses show that the enzyme contains four sirohemes and eight [4Fe-4S] centers per mol of protein. The molecular mass determined by gel filtration was found to be 175 kDa. On SDS-gel electrophoresis the enzyme presents a main band of 44 to 48 kDa. These results suggest that the bisulfite reductase contains probably one siroheme and two [4Fe-4S] centers per monomer. The dissimilatory bisulfite reductase from D. thermophilus presents some homologous properties with desulfofuscidin, the bisulfite reductase isolated from Thermodesulfobacterium commune (Hatchikian, E.C. and Zeikus, J.G. (1983) J. Bacteriol. 153, 1211-1220).

1988
Spectroscopic characterization of a high-potential monohaem cytochrome from Wolinella succinogenes, a nitrate-respiring organism. Redox and spin equilibria studies, Moura, I., Liu M. Y., Costa C., Liu M. C., Pai G., Xavier A. V., Legall J., Payne W. J., and Moura J. J. , Eur J Biochem, Nov 15, Volume 177, Number 3, p.673-82, (1988) AbstractWebsite

When purified, a high-potential c-type monohaem cytochrome from the nitrate-respiring organism, Wollinella succinogenes (VPI 10659), displayed a minimum molecular mass of 8.2 kDa and 0.9 mol iron and 0.95 mol haem groups/mol protein. Visible light spectroscopy suggested the presence of an equilibrium between two ligand arrangements around the haem, i.e. an absorption band at 695 nm characteristic of haem-methionine coordination (low-spin form) coexisting with a high-spin form revealed by a band at 619 nm and a shoulder at 498 nm. The mid-point redox potential measured by visible redox titration of the low-spin form was approximately +100 mV. Binding cyanide (Ka = 5 x 10(5) M-1) resulted in the displacement of the methionyl axial residue, and full conversion to a low-spin, cyanide-bound form. Structural features were studied by 300-MHz 1H-NMR spectroscopy. In the oxidized state, the pH dependence of the haem methyl resonances (pH range 5-10) and the magnetic susceptibility measurements (using an NMR method) were consistent with the visible light spectroscopic data for the presence of a high-spin/low-spin equilibrium with a transition pKa of 7.3. The spin equilibrium was fast on the NMR time scale. The haem methyl resonances presented large downfield chemical shifts. An unusually broad methyl resonance at around 35 ppm (pH = 7.5, 25 degrees C) was extremely temperature-dependent [delta(323 K) - delta(273 K) = 7.2 ppm] and was assigned to the S-CH3 group of the axial methionine. In the ferrous state only a low-spin form is present. The haem meso protons, the methyl group and the methylene protons from the axial methionine were identified in the reduced form. The resonances from the aromatic residues (three tyrosines and one phenylalanine) were also assigned. Detailed monitoring of the NMR-redox pattern of the monohaem cytochrome from the fully reduced up to the fully oxidized state revealed that the rate of the intermolecular electronic exchange process was approximately 6 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 at 303 K and pH = 6.31. A dihaem cytochrome also present in the crude cell extract and purified to a homogeneous state, exhibited a molecular mass of 11 kDa and contained 2.43 mol iron and 1.89 mol haem c moieties/mol cytochrome. The absorption spectrum in the visible region exhibited no band at 695 nm, suggesting that methione is not a ligand for either of the two haems. Recovery of only small amounts of this protein prevented more detailed structural analyzes.

Cytochrome components of nitrate- and sulfate-respiring Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774, Liu, M. C., Costa C., Coutinho I. B., Moura J. J., Moura I., Xavier A. V., and Legall J. , J Bacteriol, Dec, Volume 170, Number 12, p.5545-51, (1988) AbstractWebsite

Three multiheme c-type cytochromes--the tetraheme cytochrome c3 (molecular weight [MW] 13,500), a dodecaheme cytochrome c (MW 40,800), and a "split-Soret" cytochrome c (MW 51,540), which is a dimer with 2 hemes per subunit (MW 26,300)--were isolated from the soluble fraction of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) grown under nitrate- or sulfate-respiring conditions. Two of them, the dodecaheme and the split-Soret cytochromes, showed no similarities to any of the c-type cytochromes isolated from other sulfate-reducing bacteria, while the tetraheme cytochrome c3 appeared to be analogous to the cytochrome c3 found in other sulfate-reducing bacteria. For all three multiheme c-type cytochromes isolated, the homologous proteins from nitrate- and sulfate-grown cells were indistinguishable in amino acid composition, physical properties, and spectroscopic characteristics. It therefore appears that the same c-type cytochrome components are present when D. desulfuricans ATCC 27774 cells are grown under either condition. This is in contrast to the considerable difference found in Pseudomonas perfectomarina (Liu et al., J. Bacteriol. 154:278-286, 1983), a marine denitrifier, when the cells are grown on nitrate or oxygen as the terminal electron acceptor. In addition, two spectroscopy methods capable of revealing minute structural variations in proteins provided identical information about the tetraheme cytochrome c3 from nitrate-grown and sulfate-grown cells.

1987
On the active sites of the [NiFe] hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas. Mossbauer and redox-titration studies, Huynh, B. H., Patil D. S., Moura I., Teixeira M., Moura J. J., Dervartanian D. V., Czechowski M. H., Prickril B. C., Peck, H. D. Jr., and Legall J. , J Biol Chem, Jan 15, Volume 262, Number 2, p.795-800, (1987) AbstractWebsite

The [NiFe] hydrogenase isolated from Desulfovibrio gigas was poised at different redox potentials and studied by Mossbauer spectroscopy. The data firmly establish that this hydrogenase contains four prosthetic groups: one nickel center, one [3Fe-xS], and two [4Fe-4S] clusters. In the native enzyme, both the nickel and the [3Fe-xS] cluster are EPR-active. At low temperature (4.2 K), the [3Fe-xS] cluster exhibits a paramagnetic Mossbauer spectrum typical for oxidized [3Fe-xS] clusters. At higher temperatures (greater than 20 K), the paramagnetic spectrum collapses into a quadrupole doublet with parameters magnitude of delta EQ magnitude of = 0.7 +/- 0.06 mm/s and delta = 0.36 +/- 0.06 mm/s, typical of high-spin Fe(III). The observed isomer shift is slightly larger than those observed for the three-iron clusters in D. gigas ferredoxin II (Huynh, B. H., Moura, J. J. G., Moura, I., Kent, T. A., LeGall, J., Xavier, A. V., and Munck, E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 3242-3244) and in Azotobacter vinelandii ferredoxin I (Emptage, M. H., Kent, T. A., Huynh, B. H., Rawlings, J., Orme-Johnson, W. H., and Munck, E. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 1793-1796) and may indicate a different iron coordination environment. When D. gigas hydrogenase is poised at potentials lower than -80 mV (versus normal hydrogen electrode), the [3Fe-xS] cluster is reduced and becomes EPR-silent. The Mossbauer data indicate that the reduced [3Fe-xS] cluster remains intact, i.e. it does not interconvert into a [4Fe-4S] cluster. Also, the electronic properties of the reduced [3Fe-xS] cluster suggest that it is magnetically isolated from the other paramagnetic centers.

Identification of three classes of hydrogenase in the genus, Desulfovibrio, Prickril, Benet C., He Shao-Hua, Li Ching, Menon Nanda, Choi Eui-Sung, Przybyla Alan E., DerVartanian Daniel V., Peck Jr Harry D., Fauque Guy, Legall Jean, Teixeira Miguel, Moura Isabel, Moura Jose J. G., Patil Daulat, and Huynh Boi H. , Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Volume 149, Number 2, p.369-377, (1987) AbstractWebsite
n/a
1986
Redox properties and activity studies on a nickel-containing hydrogenase isolated from a halophilic sulfate reducer Desulfovibrio salexigens, Teixeira, M., Moura I., Fauque G., Czechowski M., Berlier Y., Lespinat P. A., Legall J., Xavier A. V., and Moura J. J. , Biochimie, Jan, Volume 68, Number 1, p.75-84, (1986) AbstractWebsite

A soluble hydrogenase from the halophilic sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio salexigens, strain British Guiana (NCIB 8403) has been purified to apparent homogeneity with a final specific activity of 760 mumoles H2 evolved/min/mg (an overall 180-fold purification with 20% recovery yield). The enzyme is composed of two non-identical subunits of molecular masses 62 and 36 kDa, respectively, and contains approximately 1 Ni, 12-15 Fe and 1 Se atoms/mole. The hydrogenase shows a visible absorption spectrum typical of an iron-sulfur containing protein (A400/A280 = 0.275) and a molar absorbance of 54 mM-1cm-1 at 400 nm. In the native state (as isolated, under aerobic conditions), the enzyme is almost EPR silent at 100 K and below. However, upon reduction under H2 atmosphere a rhombic EPR signal develops at g-values 2.22, 2.16 and around 2.0, which is optimally detected at 40 K. This EPR signal is reminiscent of the nickel signal C (g-values 2.19, 2.16 and 2.02) observed in intermediate redox states of the well characterized D. gigas nickel containing hydrogenase and assigned to nickel by 61 Ni isotopic substitution (J.J.G. Moura, M. Teixeira, I. Moura, A.V. Xavier and J. Le Gall (1984), J. Mol. Cat., 23, 305-314). Upon longer incubation with H2 the "2.22" EPR signal decreases. During the course of a redox titration under H2, this EPR signal attains a maximal intensity around--380 mV. At redox states where this "2.22" signal develops (or at lower redox potentials), low temperature studies (below 10 K) reveals the presence of other EPR species with g-values at 2.23, 2.21, 2.14 with broad components at higher fields. This new signal (fast relaxing) exhibits a different microwave power dependence from that of the "2.22" signal, which readily saturates with microwave power (slow relaxing). Also at low temperature (8 K) typical reduced iron-sulfur EPR signals are concomitantly observed with gmed approximately 1.94. The catalytic properties of the enzyme were also followed by substrate isotopic exchange D2/H+ and H2 production measurements.

Resonance Raman spectra of rubredoxin: new assignments and vibrational coupling mechanism from iron-54/iron-56 isotope shifts and variable-wavelength excitation, Czernuszewicz, Roman S., Legall Jean, Moura Isabel, and Spiro Thomas G. , Inorganic Chemistry, 1986/02/01, Volume 25, Number 5, p.696-700, (1986) AbstractWebsite
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