1. Nitrogenase from the facultative anaerobe Klebsiella pneumoniae was resolved into two protein components resembling those obtained from other nitrogen-fixing bacteria. 2. Both proteins were purified to homogeneity as shown by the criteria of disc electrophoresis and ultracentrifugal analysis. 3. The larger component had a mol.wt. of 218000 and contained one Mo atom, 17Fe atoms and 17 acid-labile sulphide groups/mol; it contained two types of subunit, present in equal amounts, of mol.wts. 50000 and 60000. All the common amino acids were present, with a predominance of acidic residues. The apparent partial specific volume was 0.73; ultracentrifugal analysis gave s(0) (20,w)=11.0S and D(0) (20,w)=4.94x10(-7)cm(2)/s. The specific activities (nmol of product formed/min per mg of protein) when assayed with the second nitrogenase component were 1500 for H(2) evolution, 380 for N(2) reduction, 1200 for acetylene reduction and 5400 for ATP hydrolysis. The reduced protein showed electron-paramagnetic-resonance signals at g=4.3, 3.7 and 2.015; the Mössbauer spectrum of the reduced protein consisted of at least three doublets. The u.v. spectra of the oxidized and reduced proteins were identical. On oxidation the absorbance increased generally throughout the visible region and a shoulder at 430nm appeared. The circular-dichroism spectra of both the oxidized and reduced proteins were the same, consisting mainly of a negative trough at 220nm. 4. The smaller component had mol.wt. 66800 and contained four Fe atoms and four acid-labile sulphide groups in a molecule comprising two subunits each of mol.wt. 34600. All common amino acids except tryptophan were present, with a predominance of acidic residues. The apparent partial specific volume calculated from the amino acid analysis was 0.732, which was significantly higher than that obtained from density measurements (0.69); ultracentrifugal analysis gave s(0) (20,w)=4.8S and D(0) (20,w)=5.55x10(-7)cm(2)/s. The specific activities (nmol of product formed/min per mg of protein) were 1050 for H(2) evolution, 275 for N(2) reduction, 980 for acetylene reduction and 4350 for ATP hydrolysis. The protein was not cold-labile. The reduced protein showed electron-paramagnetic-resonance signals in the g=1.94 region. The Mössbauer spectrum of the reduced protein consisted of a doublet at 77 degrees K. The u.v. spectra of reduced and O(2)-inactivated proteins were identical, and inactivation by O(2) generally increased the absorbance in the visible region and resulted in a shoulder at 460nm. The circular-dichroism spectra exhibited a negative trough at 220nm and inactivation by O(2) decreased the depth of the trough. 5. The reduction of N(2) and acetylene, and H(2) evolution, were maximal at a 1:1 molar ratio of the Fe-containing protein to the Mo-Fe-containing protein; excess of the Mo-Fe-containing protein was inhibitory. All reductions were accompanied by H(2) evolution. The combined proteins had no ATP-independent hydrogenase activity.
The properties and catalytic reactions of the enzyme nitrogenase purified from Klebsiella pneumoniae were studied by electron-paramagnetic-resonance (e.p.r.) spectroscopy at temperatures down to 8 degrees K. The two protein fractions, Kp1 (the iron-molybdenum protein) and Kp2 (the iron protein), were examined alone and in steady-state mixtures and also in pre-steady-state experiments, by using the rapid-freezing method. Kp1 protein in dithionite solution shows a rhombic type of spectrum with g(1) 4.32, g(2) 3.63, g(3) 2.009 at pH6.8 (0 degrees C). Small changes in the spectrum produced by protons (pK=8.7 at 0 degrees C) or by acetylene indicate binding of these oxidizing substrates to this protein fraction. Kp2 protein shows a rhombic spectrum with g(1) 2.053, g(2) 1.942, g(3) 1.865, which integrates to about 0.45 electron/molecule. Binding of ATP, with a dissociation constant of 4x10(-4)m, changes the spectrum to an axial form with g( parallel) 2.036, g( perpendicular) 1.929, thus indicating a conformation change of Kp2 protein. The Kp2 protein spectrum disappears reversibly on cautious oxidation. The signals of both proteins are diminished in their steady-state mixtures, obtained in the presence of ATP and dithionite (with an ATP-generating system and Mg(2+) ions) and with protons, N(2) or acetylene as oxidizing substrate. At the same time as dithionite is consumed in such reactions, the Kp1 protein signal is gradually restored and the Kp2 protein signal diminishes to zero. In rapid-freezing experiments the signals from the two proteins decreased at indistinguishable rates (t((1/2)) about 10ms), then they remained constant. Results are interpreted in terms of a scheme in which reducing equivalents pass from dithionite to Kp2 protein, then, in an ATP-dependent reaction to Kp1 protein, this being finally reoxidized by N(2) or another oxidizing substrate. In this scheme Kp1 protein cycles between its signal-giving state and a very highly reduced signal-free state.
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