Arsenite oxidase from Alcaligenes faecalis, an unusual molybdoenzyme that does not exhibit a Mo(V) EPR signal during oxidative-reductive titrations, has been investigated by protein film voltammetry. A film of the enzyme on a pyrolytic graphite edge electrode produces a sharp two-electron signal associated with reversible reduction of the oxidized Mo(VI) molybdenum center to Mo(IV). That reduction or oxidation of the active site occurs without accumulation of Mo(V) is consistent with the failure to observe a Mo(V) EPR signal for the enzyme under a variety of conditions and is indicative of an obligate two-electron center. The reduction potential for the molybdenum center, 292 mV (vs SHE) at pH 5.9 and 0 degrees C, exhibits a linear pH dependence for pH 5-10, consistent with a two-electron reduction strongly coupled to the uptake of two protons without a pK in this range. This suggests that the oxidized enzyme is best characterized as having an L(2)MoO(2) rather than L(2)MoO(OH) center in the oxidized state and that arsenite oxidase uses a "spectator oxo" effect to facilitate the oxo transfer reaction. The onset of the catalytic wave observed in the presence of substrate correlates well with the Mo(VI/IV) potential, consistent with catalytic electron transport that is limited only by turnover at the active site. The one-electron peaks for the iron-sulfur centers are difficult to observe by protein film voltammetry, but spectrophotometric titrations have been carried out to measure their reduction potentials: at pH 6.0 and 20 degrees C, that of the [3Fe-4S] center is approximately 260 mV and that of the Rieske center is approximately 130 mV.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi0357154 | DOI Listing |
ISME Commun
January 2024
Institute of Environment and Sustainable Development in Agriculture, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Key Laboratory of Agricultural Environment, MARA, Beijing 100081, P.R. China.
Int J Radiat Biol
May 2024
Department of Biotechnology, Central University of South Bihar, Gaya, India.
Purpose: Present study deals with the role of gamma irradiation in modulating arsenic bioremediation of sp. AK1 and AK9 strains.
Materials And Methods: The bacterial strains AK1 and AK9 of sp.
Arch Microbiol
March 2024
Department of Microbiology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, 1000, Bangladesh.
The simultaneous development of antibiotic resistance in bacteria due to metal exposure poses a significant threat to the environment and human health. This study explored how exposure to both arsenic and antibiotics affects the ability of an arsenite oxidizer, Achromobacter xylosoxidans CAW4, to transform arsenite and its antibiotic resistance patterns. The bacterium was isolated from arsenic-contaminated groundwater in the Chandpur district of Bangladesh.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF3 Biotech
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Department of Botany, West Bengal State University, Barasat, Kolkata, West Bengal 700126 India.
Low-cost microbial remediation strategies serve as a viable and potent weapon for curbing the arsenic menace. In the present study, two arsenic-resistant bacteria were isolated from the contaminated lentil rhizosphere in Gangetic plain of eastern India. LAR-21 (, MW356875) and LAR-25 (, MW356894) could remove 87.
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Department of Microbiology and Environmental Toxicology, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California, USA.
A freshwater photosynthetic arsenite-oxidizing bacterium, Cereibacter azotoformans strain ORIO, was isolated from Owens River, CA, USA. The waters from Owens River are elevated in arsenic and serve as the headwaters to the Los Angeles Aqueduct. The complete genome sequence of strain ORIO is 4.
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