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The electronic structure of FeV-cofactor in vanadium-dependent nitrogenase.

Authors :
Yang ZY
Jimenez-Vicente E
Kallas H
Lukoyanov DA
Yang H
Martin Del Campo JS
Dean DR
Hoffman BM
Seefeldt LC
Source :
Chemical science [Chem Sci] 2021 Mar 29; Vol. 12 (20), pp. 6913-6922. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Mar 29.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The electronic structure of the active-site metal cofactor (FeV-cofactor) of resting-state V-dependent nitrogenase has been an open question, with earlier studies indicating that it exhibits a broad S = 3/2 EPR signal (Kramers state) having g values of ∼4.3 and 3.8, along with suggestions that it contains metal-ions with valencies [1V <superscript>3+</superscript> , 3Fe <superscript>3+</superscript> , 4Fe <superscript>2+</superscript> ]. In the present work, genetic, biochemical, and spectroscopic approaches were combined to reveal that the EPR signals previously assigned to FeV-cofactor do not correlate with active VFe-protein, and thus cannot arise from the resting-state of catalytically relevant FeV-cofactor. It, instead, appears resting-state FeV-cofactor is either diamagnetic, S = 0, or non-Kramers, integer-spin ( S = 1, 2 etc. ). When VFe-protein is freeze-trapped during high-flux turnover with its natural electron-donating partner Fe protein, conditions which populate reduced states of the FeV-cofactor, a new rhombic S = 1/2 EPR signal from such a reduced state is observed, with g = [2.18, 2.12, 2.09] and showing well-defined <superscript>51</superscript> V ( I = 7/2) hyperfine splitting, a <subscript>iso</subscript> = 110 MHz. These findings indicate a different assignment for the electronic structure of the resting state of FeV-cofactor: S = 0 (or integer-spin non-Kramers state) with metal-ion valencies, [1V <superscript>3+</superscript> , 4Fe <superscript>3+</superscript> , 3Fe <superscript>2+</superscript> ]. Our findings suggest that the V <superscript>3+</superscript> does not change valency throughout the catalytic cycle.<br />Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare.<br /> (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-6520
Volume :
12
Issue :
20
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Chemical science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34123320
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sc06561g