Nitrogenase-3 of Azotobacter vinelandii is synthesized under conditions of molybdenum and vanadium deficiency. The minimal metal requirement for its synthesis, and its metal content, indicated that the only transition metal in nitrogenase-3 was iron [Chisnell, Premakumar and Bishop (1988) J. Bacteriol. 170, 27-33; Pau, Mitchenall and Robson (1989) J. Bacteriol. 171, 124-129]. A new species of nitrogenase-3 has been purified from a strain of A. vinelandii (RP306) lacking structural genes for the Mo- and V-nitrogenases and containing a mutation which enables nitrogenase-3 to be synthesized in the presence of molybdenum. SDS/PAGE showed that component 1 contained a 15 kDa polypeptide which N-terminal amino acid sequence determination showed to be encoded by anfG. This confirms that nitrogenase-3, like V-nitrogenase, comprises three subunits. Preparations of the nitrogenase-3 from strain RP306 contained 24 Fe atoms and 1 Mo atom per molecule. Characterization of the cofactor centre of the enzyme by e.p.r. spectroscopy and an enzymic cofactor assay, together with stimulation of the growth of strain RP306 by Mo, showed that nitrogenase-3 can incorporate the Mo-nitrogenase cofactor (FeMoco) to form a functional enzyme. The specific activities (nmol of product produced/min per mg of protein) determined from activity titration curves were: under N2, NH3 formation 110, with concomitant H2 evolution of 220; under argon, H2 evolution 350; under 10% acetylene (C2H2) in argon, ethylene (C2H4) 58, ethane (C2H6) 26, and concomitant H2 evolution 226. The rate of formation of C2H6 was non-linear, and the C2H6/C2H4 ratio strongly dependent on the ratio of nitrogenase components.
A model for the domain structure of sigma 54-dependent transcriptional activators, based on sequence data, has been tested by examining the function of truncated and chimaeric proteins. Removal of the N-terminal domain of NtrC abolishes transcriptional activation, indicating that this domain is positively required for activator function. Over-expression of this domain as a separate peptide appears to titrate out the phosphorylating activity of NtrB. Removal of the N-terminal domain of NifA reduces activation 3-4-fold. The residual activity is particularly sensitive to inhibition by NifL, suggesting that the role of the N-terminal domain is to block the action of NifL in derepressing conditions. The C-terminal domain of NtrC showed repressor activity when expressed as a separate peptide. This domain is necessary for activator function even when NtrC binding sites are deleted from promoters. A point mutation in the ATP-binding motif of the NtrC central domain, Ser169 to Ala, also abolished activator function. Exchanging the N-terminal domains of Klebsiella pneumoniae NtrC, NifA and Escherichia coli OmpR, did not produce any hybrid activity, suggesting that N-terminal domains in the native proteins specifically recognize the rest of the molecule.
Abstract In the cell, DNA is arranged into highly-organised and topologically-constrained (supercoiled) structures. It remains unclear how this supercoiling affects the detailed double-helical structure of DNA, largely because of limitations in spatial resolution of the available biophysical tools. Here, we overcome these limitations, by a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, to resolve structures of negatively-supercoiled DNA minicircles at base-pair resolution. We observe that negative superhelical stress induces local variation in the canonical B-form DNA structure by introducing kinks and defects that affect global minicircle structure and flexibility. We probe how these local and global conformational changes affect DNA interactions through the binding of triplex-forming oligonucleotides to DNA minicircles. We show that the energetics of triplex formation is governed by a delicate balance between electrostatics and bonding interactions. Our results provide mechanistic insight into how DNA supercoiling can affect molecular recognition, that may have broader implications for DNA interactions with other molecular species.
Crystals of a complex formed between the 59 kDa N-terminal fragment of the Escherichia coli DNA gyrase A subunit (also known as the breakage–reunion domain) and the antibiotic simocyclinone D8 were grown by vapour diffusion. The complex crystallized with I-centred orthorhombic symmetry and X-ray data were recorded to a resolution of 2.75 Å from a single crystal at the synchrotron. DNA gyrase is an essential bacterial enzyme and thus represents an attractive target for drug development.
Crystals of the molbindin ModG (subunit M r = 14359 Da), a cytoplasmic molybdate-binding protein from Azotobacter vinelandii , were grown by vapour diffusion. Both apo and tungstate-bound forms were crystallized and X-ray data were collected at 100 K. Apo-ModG crystallizes in space group P 6 3 22, with unit-cell dimensions a = b = 90.62, c = 79.46 Å. Native data to a resolution of 2.5 Å were collected from a single crystal, which showed a marked improvement in diffraction quality after annealing. Data from a single-site gold derivative were also collected at 2.7 Å resolution. Crystals of the ligand-bound form of ModG belong to space group P 321, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 50.57, c = 79.29 Å. X-ray data to a resolution of 2.0 Å were collected.
Electrostatic interactions are important in the binding of anions to proteins. In Gram negative bacteria, molybdate binds specifically to a periplasmic binding protein and a number of cytoplasmic binding proteins. The molybdate-binding site in an Azotobacter vinelandii periplasmic binding protein has been determined at the atomic level from the crystal structure of the protein with bound tungstate at 1.2 Å resolution. The periplasmic molybdate-binding protein is very similar to the sulfate-binding protein of Salmonella typhimurium. In both, the anions are completely buried and bound by seven hydrogen bonds donated by main-chain and neutral residues at the ends of α-helices. The specificity of the two proteins for binding their respective anions may be related to small differences in the sizes of the anions and the lengths of the bonds formed. In the cytoplasm three distinct proteins have similar 7 kDa molybdate-binding domains. Secondary structure analysis indicates that the domains are all-β structures with anti-parallel β-strands. Analysis of molybdate binding by the cytoplasmic binding proteins suggests that, unlike the α/β periplasmic binding proteins, molybdate binding in these proteins involves electrostatic interactions with positively charged residues. These findings are important in understanding anion-binding in proteins of different structural classes.