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  • Title: Selenocyanate derived Se-incorporation into the nitrogenase Fe protein cluster.
    Author: Buscagan TM, Kaiser JT, Rees DC.
    Journal: Elife; 2022 Jul 29; 11():. PubMed ID: 35904245.
    Abstract:
    The nitrogenase Fe protein mediates ATP-dependent electron transfer to the nitrogenase MoFe protein during nitrogen fixation, in addition to catalyzing MoFe protein-independent substrate (CO2) reduction and facilitating MoFe protein metallocluster biosynthesis. The precise role(s) of the Fe protein Fe4S4 cluster in some of these processes remains ill-defined. Herein, we report crystallographic data demonstrating ATP-dependent chalcogenide exchange at the Fe4S4 cluster of the nitrogenase Fe protein when potassium selenocyanate is used as the selenium source, an unexpected result as the Fe protein cluster is not traditionally perceived as a site of substrate binding within nitrogenase. The observed chalcogenide exchange illustrates that this Fe4S4 cluster is capable of core substitution reactions under certain conditions, adding to the Fe protein's repertoire of unique properties. Many of the molecules that form the building blocks of life contain nitrogen. This element makes up most of the gas in the atmosphere, but in this form, it does not easily react, and most organisms cannot incorporate atmospheric nitrogen into biological molecules. To get around this problem, some species of bacteria produce an enzyme complex called nitrogenase that can transform nitrogen from the air into ammonia. This process is called nitrogen fixation, and it converts nitrogen into a form that can be used to sustain life. The nitrogenase complex is made up of two proteins: the MoFe protein, which contains the active site that binds nitrogen, turning it into ammonia; and the Fe protein, which drives the reaction. Besides the nitrogen fixation reaction, the Fe protein is involved in other biological processes, but it was not thought to bind directly to nitrogen, or to any of the other small molecules that the nitrogenase complex acts on. The Fe protein contains a cluster of iron and sulfur ions that is required to drive the nitrogen fixation reaction, but the role of this cluster in the other reactions performed by the Fe protein remains unclear. To better understand the role of this iron sulfur cluster, Buscagan, Kaiser and Rees used X-ray crystallography, a technique that can determine the structure of molecules. This approach revealed for the first time that when nitrogenase reacts with a small molecule called selenocyanate, the selenium in this molecule can replace the sulfur ions of the iron sulfur cluster in the Fe protein. Buscagan, Kaiser and Rees also demonstrated that the Fe protein could still incorporate selenium ions in the absence of the MoFe protein, which has traditionally been thought to provide the site essential for transforming small molecules. These results indicate that the iron sulfur cluster in the Fe protein may bind directly to small molecules that react with nitrogenase. In the future, these findings could lead to the development of new molecules that artificially produce ammonia from nitrogen, an important process for fertilizer manufacturing. In addition, the iron sulfur cluster found in the Fe protein is also present in many other proteins, so Buscagan, Kaiser and Rees’ experiments may shed light on the factors that control other biological reactions.
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