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  • Title: Evidence for multiple substrate-reduction sites and distinct inhibitor-binding sites from an altered Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase MoFe protein.
    Author: Shen J, Dean DR, Newton WE.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1997 Apr 22; 36(16):4884-94. PubMed ID: 9125509.
    Abstract:
    The arginine-277 residue of the alpha-subunit of the nitrogenase MoFe protein was targeted for substitution because it is (i) a close neighbor of alpha-cysteine-275, which is one of only two residues anchoring the FeMo cofactor to the polypeptide, and (ii) a component of a potential channel for entry/exit of substrates/products and for accepting FeMo cofactor during MoFe-protein maturation. Several of the eight mutant strains constructed were capable of good diazotrophic growth and also contained FeMo cofactor as indicated by its biologically unique S = 3/2 EPR spectrum. These observations indicate that the positively charged alpha-arginine-277 residue is not required for acceptance of the negatively charged FeMo cofactor by the separately synthesized, cofactor-deficient, apo-MoFe protein. The wide range of nitrogen-fixation phenotypes shown by these mutant strains generally correlated well with their C2H2- and proton-reduction activities, which range from 5 to 65% of wild-type activity. One notable exception is the histidine-substituted strain, DJ788 (alpha-277His). This strain, although unable to fix N2 and grow diazotrophically, elaborates an altered alpha-277His MoFe protein that catalyzes the reduction of the alternative substrates, C2H2, HCN, HN3, and protons. These observations are best explained if multiple redox levels are available to the MoFe protein but the alpha-277His MoFe protein is incapable of reaching the more-reduced redox levels required for nitrogen fixation. Under nonsaturating CO concentrations, the alpha-277His MoFe-protein-catalyzed reduction of C2H2 showed sigmoidal kinetics, which is consistent with inhibitor-induced cooperativity among two C2H4-evolving sites and indicates the presence of three sites, which can be simultaneously occupied, on the MoFe protein. Similar kinetics were not observed for alpha-277His MoFe-protein-catalyzed reduction of either HCN or HN3 with nonsaturating CO levels, indicating that these substrates are unlikely to share common binding sites with C2H2. Further, CN- did not induce cooperativity in C2H2 reduction and, therefore, CO and CN- are unlikely to share a common binding site. These changed substrate specificities, reinforced by changes in the FeMo-cofactor-derived S = 3/2 EPR spectrum, clearly indicate the importance of the alpha-277 residue in catalysis and the delicate control exerted on the properties of bound FeMo cofactor by its polypeptide environment.
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