AI Article Synopsis

  • The hyperthermophilic archaeon NA1 has three FDH genes, with one previously shown to be vital for growth and H production, while the functions of the other two remain unclear.
  • Researchers isolated and analyzed Fdh3, a cytoplasmic enzyme that oxidizes formate with high activity, favoring NADP over NAD as a cofactor.
  • Findings indicate that Fdh3 may play a crucial role in electron transfer, helping to manage reducing power in the cell through its interactions with formate, NAD(P)H, and ferredoxin.

Article Abstract

The genome of the hyperthermophilic archaeon NA1 contains three copies of the formate dehydrogenase (FDH) gene, , , and . Previously, we reported that , clustered with genes encoding the multimeric membrane-bound hydrogenase and cation/proton antiporter, was essential for formate-dependent growth with H production. However, the functionality of the other two FDH-coding genes has not yet been elucidated. Herein, we purified and characterized cytoplasmic Fdh3 to understand its functionality. The purified Fdh3 was identified to be composed of a tungsten-containing catalytic subunit (Fdh3A), an NAD(P)-binding protein (Fdh3B), and two Fe-S proteins (Fdh3G1 and Fdh3G2). Fdh3 oxidized formate with specific activities of 241.7 U/mg and 77.4 U/mg using methyl viologen and NADP as electron acceptors, respectively. While most FDHs exhibited NAD-dependent formate oxidation activity, the Fdh3 of NA1 showed a strong preference for NADP over NAD as a cofactor. The catalytic efficiency ( ) of Fdh3 for NADP was measured to be 5,281 mM s, which is the highest among NADP-dependent FDHs known to date. Structural modeling suggested that Arg and Arg of Fdh3B may contribute to the stabilization of the 2'-phosphate of NADP(H). Fdh3 could also use ferredoxin as an electron acceptor to oxidize formate with a specific activity of 0.83 U/mg. Furthermore, Fdh3 showed CO reduction activity using reduced ferredoxin or NADPH as an electron donor with a specific activity of 0.73 U/mg and 1.0 U/mg, respectively. These results suggest a functional role of Fdh3 in disposing of reducing equivalents by mediating electron transfer between formate and NAD(P)H or ferredoxin.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8965080PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.844735DOI Listing

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