Structural Characterization of the P1 Intermediate State of the P-Cluster Of Nitrogenase
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Date
5-2-2018
Publisher
Elsevier Inc.
Volume
293
Issue
25
First Page
9629
Last Page
9635
Abstract
Nitrogenase is the enzyme that reduces atmospheric dinitrogen (N2) to ammonia (NH3) in biological systems. It catalyzes a series of single-electron transfers from the donor iron protein (Fe protein) to the molybdenum–iron protein (MoFe protein) that contains the iron–molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) sites where N2 is reduced to NH3. The P-cluster in the MoFe protein functions in nitrogenase catalysis as an intermediate electron carrier between the external electron donor, the Fe protein, and the FeMo-co sites of the MoFe protein. Previous work has revealed that the P-cluster undergoes redox-dependent structural changes and that the transition from the all-ferrous resting (PN) state to the two-electron oxidized P2 state is accompanied by protein serine hydroxyl and backbone amide ligation to iron. In this work, the MoFe protein was poised at defined potentials with redox mediators in an electrochemical cell, and the three distinct structural states of the P-cluster (P2, P1, and PN) were characterized by X-ray crystallography and confirmed by computational analysis. These analyses revealed that the three oxidation states differ in coordination, implicating that the P1 state retains the serine hydroxyl coordination but lacks the backbone amide coordination observed in the P2 states. These results provide a complete picture of the redox-dependent ligand rearrangements of the three P-cluster redox states.
Recommended Citation
Keable, S. M., Vertemara, J., Zadvornyy, O. A., Eilers, B. J., Danyal, K., Rasmussen, A. J., De Gioia, L., Zampella, G., Seefeldt, L. C., and Peters, J. W. (2018) Structural characterization of the nitrogenase molybdenum-iron protein with the substrate acetylene trapped near the active site. Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry 180, 129–134.