TL;DR: Structural analysis showed that in reduced Pdx the Cys45-Ala46 peptide bond flip initiates readjustment of hydrogen bonding interactions between the [2Fe-2S] cluster, the Sgamma atoms of the cysteinyl ligands, and the backbone amide nitrogen atoms that results in tightening of the metal cluster binding loop around the prosthetic group.
TL;DR: Results confirm that conformational selection within the Fe2S2 cluster binding loop is the primary source of redox-dependent changes in protein dynamics in Pdx.
Abstract: Putidaredoxin (Pdx), a Cys4Fe2S2 ferredoxin from Pseudomonas putida, exhibits redox-dependent binding to its physiological redox partner, cytochrome P450(cam) (CYP101), with the reduced form of Pdx (Pdx(r)) binding with greater affinity to oxidized camphor-bound CYP101 than the oxidized form, Pdx(o). It has been previously shown that Pdx(o) is more dynamic than Pdx(r) on all accessible time scales, and it has been proposed that Pdx(r) samples only a fraction of the conformational substates populated by Pdx(o) on a time average. It is postulated that the ensemble subset populated by Pdx(r) is the same subset that binds CYP101, providing a mechanism for coupling the Pdx oxidation state to binding affinity for CYP101. Evidence from a variety of sources, including redox-dependent shifts of 15N and 13C resonances, indicates that the metal cluster binding loop of Pdx is the primary determinant of redox-dependent conformational selection. Patterns of paramagnetic effects suggest that the metal cluster binding loop contracts around the metal cluster upon reduction, possibly due to the strengthening of hydrogen bonds between the sulfur atoms of the metal cluster and the surrounding polypeptide NH and OH groups. Effects of this perturbation are then transmitted mechanically to other affected regions of the protein. A specific mutation has been introduced into the metal binding loop of Pdx, G40N, that slows conformational exchange sufficiently that the ensemble of conformational substates in Pdx(o) are directly observable as severe broadenings or splittings in affected NMR resonances. Many of the residues most affected by the mutation also show significant exchange contributions to 15N T(2) relaxation in wild-type Pdx(o). As predicted, G40N Pdx(r) shows a collapse of many of these multiplets and broadened lines to form much sharper resonances that are essentially identical to those observed in wild-type Pdx(r), indicating that Pdx(r) occupies fewer conformational substates than does Pdx(o). This is the first direct observation of such redox-dependent ensembles at slow exchange on the chemical shift time scale. These results confirm that conformational selection within the Fe2S2 cluster binding loop is the primary source of redox-dependent changes in protein dynamics in Pdx.
TL;DR: Comparison of chemical shift differences between oxidized and reduced H56Q and H56R Adx confirms that redox-dependent changes are smaller in these mutants than in the wild-type Adx, and indicates that oxidized Adx is more dynamic than reduced Adx on the kilosecond time scale in many regions of the protein, including the interaction domain.
Abstract: Adrenodoxin (Adx) belongs to the family of Cys(4)Fe(2)S(2) vertebrate-type ferredoxins that shuttle electrons from NAD(P)H-dependent reductases to cytochrome P450 enzymes. The vertebrate-type ferredoxins contain a conserved basic residue, usually a histidine, adjacent to the third cysteine ligand of the Cys(4)Fe(2)S(2) cluster. In bovine Adx the side chain of this residue, His 56, is involved in a hydrogen-bonding network within the domain of Adx that interacts with redox partners. It has been proposed that this network acts as a mechanical link between the metal cluster binding site and the interaction domain, transmitting redox-dependent conformational or dynamical changes from the cluster binding loop to the interaction domain. H/D exchange studies indicate that oxidized Adx (Adx(o)) is more dynamic than reduced Adx (Adx(r)) on the kilosecond time scale in many regions of the protein, including the interaction domain. Dynamical differences on picosecond to nanosecond time scales between the oxidized (Adx(o)) and reduced (Adx(r)) adrenodoxin were probed by measurement of (15)N relaxation parameters. Significant differences between (15)N R(2) rates were observed for all residues that could be measured, with those rates being faster in Adx(o) than in Adx(r). Two mutations of His 56, H56R and H56Q, were also characterized. No systematic redox-dependent differences between (15)N R(2) rates or H/D exchange rates were observed in either mutant, indicating that His 56 is required for the redox-dependent behavior observed in WT Adx. Comparison of chemical shift differences between oxidized and reduced H56Q and H56R Adx confirms that redox-dependent changes are smaller in these mutants than in the wild-type Adx.
TL;DR: It is shown that strains containing mutations in both nafY and nifX are severely affected in diazotrophic growth and extractable dinitrogenase activity when cultured under conditions that are likely to occur in natural environments, revealing the physiological importance of the apodinitrogen enzyme-stabilizing role of which both proteins are capable.