Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University , Tempe, Arizona 85287, United States.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Georgia , Athens, Georgia 30602, United States.
J Am Chem Soc. 2015 Oct 28;137(42):13556-65. doi: 10.1021/jacs.5b07680. Epub 2015 Oct 16.
We report the first direct electrochemical characterization of the impact of oxygen on the hydrogen oxidation activity of an oxygen-tolerant, group 3, soluble [NiFe]-hydrogenase: hydrogenase I from Pyrococcus furiosus (PfSHI), which grows optimally near 100 °C. Chronoamperometric experiments were used to probe the sensitivity of PfSHI hydrogen oxidation activity to both brief and prolonged exposure to oxygen. For experiments between 15 and 80 °C, following short (<200 s) exposure to 14 μM O2 under oxidizing conditions, PfSHI always maintains some fraction of its initial hydrogen oxidation activity; i.e., it is oxygen-tolerant. Reactivation experiments show that two inactive states are formed by interaction with oxygen and both can be quickly (<150 s) reactivated. Analogous experiments, in which the interval of oxygen exposure is extended to 900 s, reveal that the response is highly temperature-dependent. At 25 °C, under sustained 1% O2/ 99% H2 exposure, the H2oxidation activity drops nearly to zero. However, at 80 °C, up to 32% of the enzyme's oxidation activity is retained. Reactivation of PfSHI following sustained exposure to oxygen occurs on a much longer time scale (tens of minutes), suggesting that a third inactive species predominates under these conditions. These results stand in contrast to the properties of oxygen-tolerant, group 1 [NiFe]-hydrogenases, which form a single state upon reaction with oxygen, and we propose that this new type of hydrogenase should be referred to as oxygen-resilient. Furthermore, PfSHI, like other group 3 [NiFe]-hydrogenases, does not possess the proximal [4Fe3S] cluster associated with the oxygen tolerance of some group 1 enzymes. Thus, a new mechanism is necessary to explain the observed oxygen tolerance in soluble, group 3 [NiFe]-hydrogenases, and we present a model integrating both electrochemical and spectroscopic results to define the relationships of these inactive states.
我们报告了首例直接电化学研究氧气对耐氧性、可溶性第 3 族 [NiFe]-氢化酶——来自 Pyrococcus furiosus 的氢化酶 I(PfSHI)的氢氧化活性的影响。PfSHI 在接近 100°C 的温度下生长得最佳。恒电流安培实验用于探测 PfSHI 氢氧化活性对短暂和长时间暴露于氧气的敏感性。在 15 到 80°C 之间的实验中,在氧化条件下短暂(<200 秒)暴露于 14μM O2 后,PfSHI 始终保持其初始氢氧化活性的一部分;即,它是耐氧的。再激活实验表明,与氧气相互作用形成了两种失活状态,并且这两种状态都可以快速(<150 秒)再激活。类似的实验中,氧气暴露的间隔延长到 900 秒,揭示了该反应对温度高度依赖。在 25°C 下,在持续的 1% O2/99% H2 暴露下,氢氧化活性几乎降至零。然而,在 80°C 下,高达 32%的酶氧化活性得以保留。在持续暴露于氧气后,PfSHI 的再激活发生在更长的时间尺度(数十分钟)上,这表明在这些条件下,第三种失活状态占主导地位。这些结果与耐氧性第 1 族 [NiFe]-氢化酶的性质形成鲜明对比,后者与氧气反应后形成单一状态,我们提出这种新型氢化酶应被称为耐氧性。此外,PfSHI 与其他第 3 族 [NiFe]-氢化酶一样,不具有与一些第 1 族酶的耐氧性相关的近位 [4Fe3S]簇。因此,需要新的机制来解释可溶性第 3 族 [NiFe]-氢化酶中观察到的耐氧性,我们提出了一个整合电化学和光谱学结果的模型来定义这些失活状态之间的关系。