The high-yield expression and purification of Shewanella oneidensis cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNiR) and its characterization by a variety of methods, notably Laue crystallography, are reported. A key component of the expression system is an artificial ccNiR gene in which the N-terminal signal peptide from the highly expressed S. oneidensis protein "small tetraheme c" replaces the wild-type signal peptide. This gene, inserted into the plasmid pHSG298 and expressed in S. oneidensis TSP-1 strain, generated approximately 20 mg crude ccNiR per liter of culture, compared with 0.5-1 mg/L for untransformed cells. Purified ccNiR has nitrite and hydroxylamine reductase activities comparable to those previously reported for Escherichia coli ccNiR, and is stable for over 2 weeks in pH 7 solution at 4 °C. UV/vis spectropotentiometric titrations and protein film voltammetry identified five independent one-electron reduction processes. Global analysis of the spectropotentiometric data also allowed determination of the extinction coefficient spectra for the five reduced ccNiR species. The characteristics of the individual extinction coefficient spectra suggest that, within each reduced species, the electrons are distributed among the various hemes, rather than being localized on specific heme centers. The purified ccNiR yielded good-quality crystals, with which the 2.59-Å-resolution structure was solved at room temperature using the Laue diffraction method. The structure is similar to that of E. coli ccNiR, except in the region where the enzyme interacts with its physiological electron donor (CymA in the case of S. oneidensis ccNiR, NrfB in the case of the E. coli protein).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00775-012-0885-0 | DOI Listing |
IUCrJ
January 2025
Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, USA.
The upgrade of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble, France to an Extremely Brilliant Source (EBS) is expected to enable time-resolved synchrotron serial crystallography (SSX) experiments with sub-millisecond time resolution. ID29 is a new beamline dedicated to SSX experiments at ESRF-EBS. Here, we report experiments emerging from the initial phase of user operation at ID29.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosens Bioelectron
November 2021
Centro de Investigação Interdisciplinar Egas Moniz (CiiEM), Instituto Universitário Egas Moniz, Campus Universitário, Quinta da Granja, Caparica, 2829-511, Portugal. Electronic address:
Biochemistry
July 2021
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53211, United States.
The decaheme enzyme cytochrome nitrite reductase (ccNiR) catalyzes reduction of nitrite to ammonium in a six-electron, eight-proton process. With a strong reductant as the electron source, ammonium is the sole product. However, intermediates accumulate when weaker reductants are employed, facilitating study of the ccNiR mechanism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry
June 2021
Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, United States.
Cytochrome nitrite reductases (CNIR or NrfA) play important roles in the global nitrogen cycle by conserving the usable nitrogen in the soil. Here, the electron storage and distribution properties within the pentaheme scaffold of NrfA were investigated via electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy coupled with chemical titration experiments. Initially, a chemical reduction method was established to sequentially add electrons to the fully oxidized protein, 1 equiv at a time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Sci
June 2020
School of Chemical Sciences, Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science , 2A & 2B Raja SC Mullick Road , Kolkata , India - 700032 . Email:
Ferrous nitrosyl {FeNO} species is an intermediate common to the catalytic cycles of CdNiR and CcNiR, two heme-based nitrite reductases (NiR), and its reactivity varies dramatically in these enzymes. The former reduces NO to NO in the denitrification pathway while the latter reduces NO to NH in a dissimilatory nitrite reduction. With very similar electron transfer partners and heme based active sites, the origin of this difference in reactivity has remained unexplained.
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