Nitrogenase MoFe-protein at 1.16 A resolution: a central ligand in the FeMo-cofactor.

Science

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Mail Code 147-75CH, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA.

Published: September 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • A high-resolution study of the nitrogenase MoFe-protein discovered a new ligand that binds to six iron atoms in the FeMo-cofactor, which was previously unrecognized.
  • Lower resolution analyses (above 1.55 angstroms) failed to identify this ligand due to distortions from nearby iron and sulfur atoms.
  • This study suggests the ligand is likely nitrogen and could significantly affect how nitrogenase reduces dinitrogen.

Article Abstract

A high-resolution crystallographic analysis of the nitrogenase MoFe-protein reveals a previously unrecognized ligand coordinated to six iron atoms in the center of the catalytically essential FeMo-cofactor. The electron density for this ligand is masked in structures with resolutions lower than 1.55 angstroms, owing to Fourier series termination ripples from the surrounding iron and sulfur atoms in the cofactor. The central atom completes an approximate tetrahedral coordination for the six iron atoms, instead of the trigonal coordination proposed on the basis of lower resolution structures. The crystallographic refinement at 1.16 angstrom resolution is consistent with this newly detected component being a light element, most plausibly nitrogen. The presence of a nitrogen atom in the cofactor would have important implications for the mechanism of dinitrogen reduction by nitrogenase.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1073877DOI Listing

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