Methyl (Alkyl)-Coenzyme M Reductases: Nickel F-430-Containing Enzymes Involved in Anaerobic Methane Formation and in Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane or of Short Chain Alkanes

2019 
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the methane-forming step in methanogenic archaea. The active enzyme harbors the nickel(I) hydrocorphin coenzyme F-430 as a prosthetic group and catalyzes the reversible reduction of methyl-coenzyme M (CH3–S-CoM) with coenzyme B (HS-CoM) to methane and CoM-S–S-CoB. MCR is also involved in anaerobic methane oxidation in reverse of methanogenesis and most probably in the anaerobic oxidation of ethane, propane, and butane. The challenging question is how the unreactive CH3–S thioether bond in methyl-coenzyme M and the even more unreactive C–H bond in methane and the other hydrocarbons are anaerobically cleaved. A key to the answer is the negative redox potential (Eo′) of the Ni(II)F-430/Ni(I)F-430 couple below −600 mV and the radical nature of Ni(I)F-430. However, the negative one-electron redox potential is also the Achilles heel of MCR; it makes the nickel enzyme one of the most O2-sensitive enzymes known to date. Even under physiological conditions, the Ni(I) in ...
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