Jatindra N. Tripathy
Texas Tech University
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Featured researches published by Jatindra N. Tripathy.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Aimee M. Terauchi; Shu-Fen Lu; Mirko Zaffagnini; Shane Tappa; Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; David B. Knaff; Patrick J. Farmer; Stéphane D. Lemaire; Toshiharu Hase; Sabeeha S. Merchant
Ferredoxin (Fd) is the major iron-containing protein in photosynthetic organisms and is central to reductive metabolism in the chloroplast. The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genome encodes six plant type [Fe2S2] ferredoxins, products of PETF, FDX2–FDX6. We performed the functional analysis of these ferredoxins by localizing Fd, Fdx2, Fdx3, and Fdx6 to the chloroplast by using isoform-specific antibodies and monitoring the pattern of gene expression by iron and copper nutrition, nitrogen source, and hydrogen peroxide stress. In addition, we also measured the midpoint redox potentials of Fd and Fdx2 and determined the kinetic parameters of their reactions with several ferredoxin-interacting proteins, namely nitrite reductase, Fd:NADP+ oxidoreductase, and Fd:thioredoxin reductase. We found that each of the FDX genes is differently regulated in response to changes in nutrient supply. Moreover, we show that Fdx2 (Em = −321 mV), whose expression is regulated by nitrate, is a more efficient electron donor to nitrite reductase relative to Fd. Overall, the results suggest that each ferredoxin isoform has substrate specificity and that the presence of multiple ferredoxin isoforms allows for the allocation of reducing power to specific metabolic pathways in the chloroplast under various growth conditions.
Photosynthesis Research | 2010
Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; Frederik Sommer; Ramasamy Somasundaram; Jung Sung Chung; Matthew Nestander; Mahima Kruthiventi; Masoud Zabet-Moghaddam; Michael K. Johnson; Sabeeha S. Merchant; James P. Allen; David B. Knaff
The ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli as a His-tagged recombinant protein, and purified to homogeneity. The spectra, kinetic properties and substrate-binding parameters of the C. reinhardtii enzyme are quite similar to those of the ferredoxin-dependent spinach chloroplast nitrite reductase. Computer modeling, based on the published structure of spinach nitrite reductase, predicts that the structure of C. reinhardtii nitrite reductase will be similar to that of the spinach enzyme. Chemical modification studies and the ionic-strength dependence of the enzyme’s ability to interact with ferredoxin are consistent with the involvement of arginine and lysine residues on C. reinhardtii nitrite reductase in electrostatically-stabilized binding to ferredoxin. The C. reinhardtii enzyme has been used to demonstrate that hydroxylamine can serve as an electron-accepting substrate for the enzyme and that the product of hydroxylamine reduction is ammonia, providing the first experimental evidence for the hypothesis that hydroxylamine, bound to the enzyme, can serve as a late intermediate during the reduction of nitrite to ammonia catalyzed by the enzyme.
FEBS Letters | 2006
Xingfu Xu; Sung-Kun Kim; Peter Schürmann; Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; Jody Smith; David B. Knaff; Marcellus Ubbink
The reduction of ferredoxin–thioredoxin reductase (FTR) by plant‐type ferredoxin plays an important role in redox regulation in plants and cyanobacteria. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was used to map the binding sites on Synechocystis ferredoxin for FTR. A gallium‐substituted structural analog of this [2Fe–2S] ferredoxin was obtained by reconstituting the apoprotein in a refolding buffer containing gallium. For the first time, the complete interaction interface of a [2Fe–2S] ferredoxin with a target enzyme has been mapped by NMR chemical shift perturbation with this diamagnetic structural analog.
Molecular Plant | 2009
Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; Ramasamy Somasundaram; Michael K. Johnson; Megha Bhalla; James P. Allen; David B. Knaff
A series of site-directed mutants of the ferredoxin-dependent spinach nitrite reductase has been characterized and several amino acids have been identified that appear to be involved in the interaction of the enzyme with ferredoxin. In a complementary study, binding constants to nitrite reductase and steady-state kinetic parameters of site-directed mutants of ferredoxin were determined in an attempt to identify ferredoxin amino acids involved in the interaction with nitrite reductase. The results have been interpreted in terms of an in-silico docking model for the 1:1 complex of ferredoxin with nitrite reductase.
Biochemistry | 2009
Pierre Sétif; Masakazu Hirasawa; Nicolas Cassan; Bernard Lagoutte; Jatindra N. Tripathy; David B. Knaff
Nitrite reductase, which reduces nitrite to ammonium in a six-electron reaction, was characterized through kinetic analysis of an electron transfer cascade involving photoexcited Photosystem I and ferredoxin. This cascade was studied at physiological pH by flash-absorption spectroscopy. Two different forms of the enzyme were studied: one isolated from spinach leaf and one histidine-tagged recombinant form. When the enzyme is oxidized in the absence of nitrite, single-enzyme reduction leads mostly to siroheme reduction with the leaf enzyme, whereas the siroheme and the [4Fe-4S] cluster are both reduced in equivalent amounts in the recombinant enzyme. When combined with the results of deazaflavin/EDTA photoreduction experiments, these data support a 50 mV negative shift of the siroheme midpoint potential in the recombinant enzyme. Despite this difference, the two forms of the enzyme exhibit similar values for the rate constant of single reduction by reduced ferredoxin (1200 s(-1)) and for k(cat) (420-450 electrons per second and per nitrite reductase). When nitrite reductase is initially pre-reduced to the state ferrous siroheme-NO(*), the fast kinetics of reduction by ferredoxin and the thermodynamics of ferredoxin binding are equivalent to those observed with oxidized nitrite reductase without nitrite. Spectral and kinetic analyses of single reduction of the recombinant enzyme in the ferrous siroheme-NO(*) state by photoreduced ferredoxin reveal that this process leads to reduction of the [4Fe-4S] cluster with little, if any, NO(*) reduction. These data show that the enzyme must wait for the next reduction step before NO(*) undergoes substantial reduction.
Biochemistry | 2013
Anurag P. Srivastava; Masakazu Hirasawa; Megha Bhalla; Jung Sung Chung; James P. Allen; Michael K. Johnson; Jatindra N. Tripathy; Luis M. Rubio; Brian J. Vaccaro; Sowmya Subramanian; Enrique Flores; Masoud Zabet-Moghaddam; Kyle Stitle; David B. Knaff
The roles of four conserved basic amino acids in the reaction catalyzed by the ferredoxin-dependent nitrate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 have been investigated using site-directed mutagenesis in combination with measurements of steady-state kinetics, substrate-binding affinities, and spectroscopic properties of the enzymes two prosthetic groups. Replacement of either Lys58 or Arg70 by glutamine leads to a complete loss of activity, both with the physiological electron donor, reduced ferredoxin, and with a nonphysiological electron donor, reduced methyl viologen. More conservative, charge-maintaining K58R and R70K variants were also completely inactive. Replacement of Lys130 by glutamine produced a variant that retained 26% of the wild-type activity with methyl viologen as the electron donor and 22% of the wild-type activity with ferredoxin as the electron donor, while replacement by arginine produces a variant that retains a significantly higher percentage of the wild-type activity with both electron donors. In contrast, replacement of Arg146 by glutamine had minimal effect on the activity of the enzyme. These results, along with substrate-binding and spectroscopic measurements, are discussed in terms of an in silico structural model for the enzyme.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Xingfu Xu; Peter Schürmann; Jung-Sung Chung; Mathias A. S. Hass; Sung-Kun Kim; Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; David B. Knaff; Marcellus Ubbink
In oxygenic photosynthetic cells, carbon metabolism is regulated by a light-dependent redox signaling pathway through which the light signal is transmitted in the form of electrons via a redox chain comprising ferredoxin (Fd), ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (FTR), and thioredoxin (Trx). Trx affects the activity of a variety of enzymes via dithiol oxidation and reduction reactions. FTR reduces an intramolecular disulfide bridge of Trx, and Trx reduction involves a transient cross-link with FTR. NMR spectroscopy was used to investigate the interaction of Fd, FTR, and an m-type Trx. NMR titration experiments indicate that FTR uses distinct sites to bind Fd and Trx simultaneously to form a noncovalent ternary complex. The orientation of Trx-m relative to FTR was determined from the intermolecular paramagnetic broadening caused by the [4Fe-4S] cluster of FTR. Two models of the noncovalent binary complex of FTR/Trx-m based on the paramagnetic distance restraints were obtained. The models suggest that either a modest or major rotational movement of Trx must take place when the noncovalent binary complex proceeds to the covalent complex. This study demonstrates the complementarity of paramagnetic NMR and X-ray diffraction of crystals in the elucidation of dynamics in a transient protein complex.
Photosynthesis Research | 2007
Jatindra N. Tripathy; Masakazu Hirasawa; Sung Kun Kim; Aaron T. Setterdahl; James P. Allen; David B. Knaff
A system has been developed for expressing a His-tagged form of the ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase of spinach in Escherichia coli. The catalytic and spectral properties of the His-tagged, recombinant enzyme are similar, but not identical, to those previously observed for nitrite reductase isolated directly from spinach leaf. A detailed comparison of the spectral, catalytic and fluorescence properties of nitrite reductase variants, in which each of the enzyme’s eight tryptophan residues has been replaced using site-directed mutagenesis by either aromatic or non-aromatic amino acids, has been used to examine possible roles for tryptophan residues in the reduction of nitrite to ammonia catalyzed by the enzyme.
Photosynthesis Research | 2015
Jatindra N. Tripathy; Masakazu Hirasawa; R. Bryan Sutton; Afia Dasgupta; Nanditha Vaidyanathan; Masoud Zabet-Moghaddam; Francisco J. Florencio; Anurag P. Srivastava; David B. Knaff
It had been proposed that a loop, typically containing 26 or 27 amino acids, which is only present in monomeric, ferredoxin-dependent, “plant-type” glutamate synthases and is absent from the catalytic α-subunits of both NADPH-dependent, heterodimeric glutamate synthases found in non-photosynthetic bacteria and NADH-dependent heterodimeric cyanobacterial glutamate synthases, plays a key role in productive binding of ferredoxin to the plant-type enzymes. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to delete the entire 27 amino acid-long loop in the ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The specific activity of the resulting loopless variant of this glutamate synthase, when reduced ferredoxin serves as the electron donor, is actually higher than that of the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that this loop is not absolutely essential for efficient electron transfer from reduced ferredoxin to the enzyme. These results are consistent with the results of an in-silico study that suggests that the loop is unlikely to interact directly with ferredoxin in the energetically most favorable model of a 1:1 complex of ferredoxin with the wild-type enzyme.
Archive | 2008
Xingfu Xu; Marcellus Ubbink; Peter Schürmann; Sung-Kun Kim; Masakazu Hirasawa; Jatindra N. Tripathy; David B. Knaff
Ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (FTR), catalyzes the two-electron reduction of thioredoxins in chloroplasts and cyanobacteria, using reduced ferredoxin as the electron donor. Reduced thioredoxins then play important roles in redox regulation. FTR, a heterodimer with a unique [4Fe-4S] cluster as its sole prosthetic group, has a single binding site for ferredoxin and a separate single binding site for thioredoxin. NMR spectroscopy was used to map the binding site on ferredoxin for FTR in a 1:1 complex of the two proteins. A mono-gallium analog of this [2Fe- 2S] ferredoxin was obtained by reconstituting apo-ferredoxin in a gallium-containing refolding buffer. The use of this diamagnetic Ga structural analog eliminates the paramagnetic broadening of NMR resonances of amino acids in the vicinity of the [2Fe-2S] cluster in native ferredoxin. This has allowed the first complete mapping of the interaction interface of a [2Fe-2S] ferredoxin for a target enzyme. NMR spectroscopy was also used to map the interaction domain for FTR on thioredoxin m in a 1:1 complex of the two proteins. Both similarities and differences are seen in the thioredoxin m interaction domain for FTR in the non-covalent complex examined by NMR and in a disulfide-linked covalent complex of FTR and thioredoxin m for which an X-ray crystal structure has been obtained. NMR has also been used to characterize a ternary complex between ferredoxin, FTR and thioredoxin m in solution, confirming the presence of separate binding sites on FTR for its two substrates.