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AnfO controls fidelity of nitrogenase FeFe protein maturation by preventing misincorporation of FeV-cofactor.

Ana Pérez-GonzálezEmilio Jimenez-VicenteAlvaro Salinero-LanzaroteDerek F HarrisLance C SeefeldtDennis R Dean
Published in: Molecular microbiology (2022)
Azotobacter vinelandii produces three genetically distinct, but structurally and mechanistically similar nitrogenase isozymes designated as Mo-dependent, V-dependent, or Fe-only based on the heterometal contained within their associated active site cofactors. These catalytic cofactors, which provide the site for N 2 binding and reduction, are, respectively, designated as FeMo-cofactor, FeV-cofactor, and FeFe-cofactor. Fe-only nitrogenase is a poor catalyst for N 2 fixation, when compared to the Mo-dependent and V-dependent nitrogenases and is only produced when neither Mo nor V is available. Under conditions favoring the production of Fe-only nitrogenase a gene product designated AnfO preserves the fidelity of Fe-only nitrogenase by preventing the misincorporation of FeV-cofactor, which results in the accumulation of a hybrid enzyme that cannot reduce N 2 . These results are interpreted to indicate that AnfO controls the fidelity of Fe-only nitrogenase maturation during the physiological transition from conditions that favor V-dependent nitrogenase utilization to Fe-only nitrogenase utilization to support diazotrophic growth.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • visible light
  • aqueous solution
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • ionic liquid
  • binding protein
  • copy number
  • genome wide identification