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Featured researches published by Karamatullah Danyal.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Uncoupling Nitrogenase: Catalytic Reduction of Hydrazine to Ammonia by a MoFe Protein in the Absence of Fe Protein-ATP

Karamatullah Danyal; Boyd S. Inglet; Kylie A. Vincent; Brett M. Barney; Brian M. Hoffman; Fraser A. Armstrong; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt

The catalytic reduction of hydrazine (N(2)H(4)) to ammonia by a β-98(Tyr→His) MoFe protein in the absence of the Fe protein or ATP is reported. The reduction of N(2) or other substrates (e.g., hydrazine, protons, acetylene) by nitrogenase normally requires the transient association of the two nitrogenase component proteins, the Fe protein and the MoFe protein. The Fe protein, with two bound MgATP molecules, transfers one electron to the MoFe protein during each association, coupled to the hydrolysis of two MgATP. All substrate reduction reactions catalyzed by nitrogenase require delivery of electrons by the Fe protein coupled to the hydrolysis of MgATP. We report that when a single amino acid within the MoFe protein (β-98(Tyr)) is substituted by His, the resulting MoFe protein supports catalytic reduction of the nitrogenous substrate hydrazine (N(2)H(4)) to two ammonia molecules when provided with a low potential reductant, polyaminocarboxylate ligated Eu(II) (E(m) -1.1 V vs NHE). The wild-type and a number of other MoFe proteins with amino acid substitutions do not show significant rates of hydrazine reduction under these conditions, whereas the β-98(His) MoFe protein catalyzes hydrazine reduction at rates up to 170 nmol NH(3)/min/mg MoFe protein. This rate of hydrazine reduction is 94% of the rate catalyzed by the β-98(His) or wild-type MoFe protein when combined with the Fe protein, ATP, and reductant under comparable conditions. The β-98(His) MoFe protein reduction of hydrazine in the absence of the Fe protein showed saturation kinetics for the concentration of reductant and substrate. The implications of these results in understanding the nitrogenase mechanism are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Electron transfer precedes ATP hydrolysis during nitrogenase catalysis

Simon Duval; Karamatullah Danyal; Sudipta Shaw; Anna K. Lytle; Dennis R. Dean; Brian M. Hoffman; Edwin Antony; Lance C. Seefeldt

Significance Biological reduction of dinitrogen (N2) to ammonia (NH3) occurs in a select group of bacteria that contain the metalloenzyme nitrogenase. To catalyze this difficult reaction, nitrogenase requires electrons, protons, and ATP. From the earliest studies of nitrogenase, it was realized that ATP hydrolysis is coupled to delivery of electrons and reduction of N2, yet the order of ATP hydrolysis and electron transfer, which determines the nature of the coupling, was never established. In this work, we establish the order of all the key events during one catalytic cycle of electron delivery in nitrogenase, showing that ATP hydrolysis follows electron transfer. These findings guide future studies aimed at understanding what roles ATP binding and hydrolysis play in the nitrogenase mechanism. The biological reduction of N2 to NH3 catalyzed by Mo-dependent nitrogenase requires at least eight rounds of a complex cycle of events associated with ATP-driven electron transfer (ET) from the Fe protein to the catalytic MoFe protein, with each ET coupled to the hydrolysis of two ATP molecules. Although steps within this cycle have been studied for decades, the nature of the coupling between ATP hydrolysis and ET, in particular the order of ET and ATP hydrolysis, has been elusive. Here, we have measured first-order rate constants for each key step in the reaction sequence, including direct measurement of the ATP hydrolysis rate constant: kATP = 70 s−1, 25 °C. Comparison of the rate constants establishes that the reaction sequence involves four sequential steps: (i) conformationally gated ET (kET = 140 s−1, 25 °C), (ii) ATP hydrolysis (kATP = 70 s−1, 25 °C), (iii) Phosphate release (kPi = 16 s−1, 25 °C), and (iv) Fe protein dissociation from the MoFe protein (kdiss = 6 s−1, 25 °C). These findings allow completion of the thermodynamic cycle undergone by the Fe protein, showing that the energy of ATP binding and protein–protein association drive ET, with subsequent ATP hydrolysis and Pi release causing dissociation of the complex between the Feox(ADP)2 protein and the reduced MoFe protein.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2011

Mechanism of Mo-dependent nitrogenase.

Zhi Yong Yang; Karamatullah Danyal; Lance C. Seefeldt

Nitrogenase is the enzyme responsible for biological reduction of dinitrogen (N(2)) to ammonia, a form usable for life. Playing a central role in the global biogeochemical nitrogen cycle, this enzyme has been the focus of intensive research for over 60 years. This chapter provides an overview of the features of nitrogenase as a background to the subsequent chapters of this volume that detail the many methods that have been applied in an attempt to gain a deeper understanding of this complex enzyme.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

A confirmation of the quench-cryoannealing relaxation protocol for identifying reduction states of freeze-trapped nitrogenase intermediates.

Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Zhi Yong Yang; Simon Duval; Karamatullah Danyal; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt; Brian M. Hoffman

We have advanced a mechanism for nitrogenase catalysis that rests on the identification of a low-spin EPR signal (S = 1/2) trapped during turnover of a MoFe protein as the E4 state, which has accumulated four reducing equivalents as two [Fe–H–Fe] bridging hydrides. Because electrons are delivered to the MoFe protein one at a time, with the rate-limiting step being the off-rate of oxidized Fe protein, it is difficult to directly control, or know, the degree of reduction, n, of a trapped intermediate, denoted En, n = 1–8. To overcome this previously intractable problem, we introduced a quench-cryoannealing relaxation protocol for determining n of an EPR-active trapped En turnover state. The trapped “hydride” state was allowed to relax to the resting E0 state in frozen medium, which prevents additional accumulation of reducing equivalents; binding of reduced Fe protein and release of oxidized protein from the MoFe protein both are abolished in a frozen solid. Relaxation of En was monitored by periodic EPR analysis at cryogenic temperature. The protocol rests on the hypothesis that an intermediate trapped in the frozen solid can relax toward the resting state only by the release of a stable reduction product from FeMo-co. In turnover under Ar, the only product that can be released is H2, which carries two reducing equivalents. This hypothesis implicitly predicts that states that have accumulated an odd number of electrons/protons (n = 1, 3) during turnover under Ar cannot relax to E0: E3 can relax to E1, but E1 cannot relax to E0 in the frozen state. The present experiments confirm this prediction and, thus, the quench-cryoannealing protocol and our assignment of E4, the foundation of the proposed mechanism for nitrogenase catalysis. This study further gives insights into the identity of the En intermediates with high-spin EPR signals, 1b and 1c, trapped under high electron flux.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Nitrite and Hydroxylamine as Nitrogenase Substrates: Mechanistic Implications for the Pathway of N2 Reduction

Sudipta Shaw; Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Karamatullah Danyal; Dennis R. Dean; Brian M. Hoffman; Lance C. Seefeldt

Investigations of reduction of nitrite (NO2–) to ammonia (NH3) by nitrogenase indicate a limiting stoichiometry, NO2– + 6e– + 12ATP + 7H+ → NH3 + 2H2O + 12ADP + 12Pi. Two intermediates freeze-trapped during NO2– turnover by nitrogenase variants and investigated by Q-band ENDOR/ESEEM are identical to states, denoted H and I, formed on the pathway of N2 reduction. The proposed NO2– reduction intermediate hydroxylamine (NH2OH) is a nitrogenase substrate for which the H and I reduction intermediates also can be trapped. Viewing N2 and NO2– reductions in light of their common reduction intermediates and of NO2– reduction by multiheme cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNIR) leads us to propose that NO2– reduction by nitrogenase begins with the generation of NO2H bound to a state in which the active-site FeMo-co (M) has accumulated two [e–/H+] (E2), stored as a (bridging) hydride and proton. Proton transfer to NO2H and H2O loss leaves M–[NO+]; transfer of the E2 hydride to the [NO+] directly to form HNO bound to FeMo-co is one of two alternative means for avoiding formation of a terminal M–[NO] thermodynamic “sink”. The N2 and NO2– reduction pathways converge upon reduction of NH2NH2 and NH2OH bound states to form state H with [−NH2] bound to M. Final reduction converts H to I, with NH3 bound to M. The results presented here, combined with the parallels with ccNIR, support a N2 fixation mechanism in which liberation of the first NH3 occurs upon delivery of five [e–/H+] to N2, but a total of seven [e–/H+] to FeMo-co when obligate H2 evolution is considered, and not earlier in the reduction process.


Biochemistry | 2015

Fe Protein-Independent Substrate Reduction by Nitrogenase MoFe Protein Variants

Karamatullah Danyal; Andrew J. Rasmussen; Stephen Keable; Boyd S. Inglet; Studipta Shaw; Oleg A. Zadvornyy; Simon Duval; Dennis R. Dean; Simone Raugei; John W. Peters; Lance C. Seefeldt

The reduction of substrates catalyzed by nitrogenase normally requires nucleotide-dependent Fe protein delivery of electrons to the MoFe protein, which contains the active site FeMo cofactor. Here, it is reported that independent substitution of three amino acids (β-98(Tyr→His), α-64(Tyr→His), and β-99(Phe→His)) located between the P cluster and FeMo cofactor within the MoFe protein endows it with the ability to reduce protons to H2, azide to ammonia, and hydrazine to ammonia without the need for Fe protein or ATP. Instead, electrons can be provided by the low-potential reductant polyaminocarboxylate-ligated Eu(II) (Em values of -1.1 to -0.84 V vs the normal hydrogen electrode). The crystal structure of the β-98(Tyr→His) variant MoFe protein was determined, revealing only small changes near the amino acid substitution that affect the solvent structure and the immediate vicinity between the P cluster and the FeMo cofactor, with no global conformational changes observed. Computational normal-mode analysis of the nitrogenase complex reveals coupling in the motions of the Fe protein and the region of the MoFe protein with these three amino acids, which suggests a possible mechanism for how Fe protein might communicate subtle changes deep within the MoFe protein that profoundly affect intramolecular electron transfer and substrate reduction.


Biochemistry | 2012

Temperature Invariance of the Nitrogenase Electron Transfer Mechanism

Diana Mayweather; Karamatullah Danyal; Dennis R. Dean; Lance C. Seefeldt; Brian M. Hoffman

Earlier studies of electron transfer (ET) from the nitrogenase Fe protein to the MoFe protein concluded that the mechanism for ET changed during cooling from 25 to 5 °C, based on the observation that the rate constant for Fe protein to MoFe protein ET decreases strongly, with a nonlinear Arrhenius plot. They further indicated that the ET was reversible, with complete ET at ambient temperature but with an equilibrium constant near unity at 5 °C. These studies were conducted with buffers having a strong temperature coefficient. We have examined the temperature variation in the kinetics of oxidation of the Fe protein by the MoFe protein at a constant pH of 7.4 fixed by the buffer 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid (MOPS), which has a very small temperature coefficient. Using MOPS, we also observe temperature-dependent ET rate constants, with nonlinear Arrhenius plots, but we find that ET is gated across the temperature range by a conformational change that involves the binding of numerous water molecules, consistent with an unchanging ET mechanism. Furthermore, there is no solvent kinetic isotope effect throughout the temperature range studied, again consistent with an unchanging mechanism. In addition, the nonlinear Arrhenius plots are explained by the change in heat capacity caused by the binding of waters in an invariant gating ET mechanism. Together, these observations contradict the idea of a change in ET mechanism with cooling. Finally, the extent of ET at constant pH does not change significantly with temperature, in contrast to the previously proposed change in ET equilibrium.


Biochemistry | 2014

Substrate channel in nitrogenase revealed by a molecular dynamics approach.

Dayle M. A. Smith; Karamatullah Danyal; Simone Raugei; Lance C. Seefeldt

Mo-dependent nitrogenase catalyzes the biological reduction of N2 to two NH3 molecules at FeMo-cofactor buried deep inside the MoFe protein. Access of substrates, such as N2, to the active site is likely restricted by the surrounding protein, requiring substrate channels that lead from the surface to the active site. Earlier studies on crystallographic structures of the MoFe protein have suggested three putative substrate channels. Here, we have utilized submicrosecond atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to allow the nitrogenase MoFe protein to explore its conformational space in an aqueous solution at physiological ionic strength, revealing a putative substrate channel. The viability of this observed channel was tested by examining the free energy of passage of N2 from the surface through the channel to FeMo-cofactor, resulting in the discovery of a very low energy barrier. These studies point to a viable substrate channel in nitrogenase that appears during thermal motions of the protein in an aqueous environment and that approaches a face of FeMo-cofactor earlier implicated in substrate binding.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2013

The Nitrogenase Regulatory Enzyme Dinitrogenase Reductase ADP-Ribosyltransferase (DraT) Is Activated by Direct Interaction with the Signal Transduction Protein GlnB

Vivian R. Moure; Karamatullah Danyal; Zhi-Yong Yang; Shannon Wendroth; Marcelo Müller-Santos; Fábio O. Pedrosa; Marcelo Scarduelli; Edileusa C. M. Gerhardt; Luciano F. Huergo; Emanuel Maltempi de Souza; Lance C. Seefeldt

Fe protein (dinitrogenase reductase) activity is reversibly inactivated by dinitrogenase reductase ADP-ribosyltransferase (DraT) in response to an increase in the ammonium concentration or a decrease in cellular energy in Azospirillum brasilense, Rhodospirillum rubrum, and Rhodobacter capsulatus. The ADP-ribosyl is removed by the dinitrogenase reductase-activating glycohydrolase (DraG), promoting Fe protein reactivation. The signaling pathway leading to DraT activation by ammonium is still not completely understood, but the available evidence shows the involvement of direct interaction between the enzyme and the nitrogen-signaling P(II) proteins. In A. brasilense, two P(II) proteins, GlnB and GlnZ, were identified. We used Fe protein from Azotobacter vinelandii as the substrate to assess the activity of A. brasilense DraT in vitro complexed or not with P(II) proteins. Under our conditions, GlnB was necessary for DraT activity in the presence of Mg-ADP. The P(II) effector 2-oxoglutarate, in the presence of Mg-ATP, inhibited DraT-GlnB activity, possibly by inducing complex dissociation. DraT was also activated by GlnZ and by both uridylylated P(II) proteins, but not by a GlnB variant carrying a partial deletion of the T loop. Kinetics studies revealed that the A. brasilense DraT-GlnB complex was at least 18-fold more efficient than DraT purified from R. rubrum, but with a similar K(m) value for NAD(+). Our results showed that ADP-ribosylation of the Fe protein does not affect the electronic state of its metal cluster and prevents association between the Fe and MoFe proteins, thus inhibiting electron transfer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Negative cooperativity in the nitrogenase Fe protein electron delivery cycle

Karamatullah Danyal; Sudipta Shaw; Taylor R. Page; Simon Duval; Masaki Horitani; Amy R. Marts; Dmitriy Lukoyanov; Dennis R. Dean; Simone Raugei; Brian M. Hoffman; Lance C. Seefeldt; Edwin Antony

Significance Nitrogenase catalyzes N2 reduction to ammonia, the largest N input into the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle. This difficult reaction involves delivery of electrons from the Fe protein component to the catalytic MoFe protein component in a process that involves hydrolysis of two ATP per electron delivered. MoFe contains two catalytic halves, each of which binds an Fe protein. The prevailing picture has been that the two halves function independently. Here, it is demonstrated that electron transfer (ET) in the two halves exhibits negative cooperativity: Fe→MoFe ET in one-half partially suppresses ET in the other. These findings thus show that conformational coupling in nitrogenase not only gates ET within each half, as shown previously, but introduces negative cooperativity between the two halves. Nitrogenase catalyzes the ATP-dependent reduction of dinitrogen (N2) to two ammonia (NH3) molecules through the participation of its two protein components, the MoFe and Fe proteins. Electron transfer (ET) from the Fe protein to the catalytic MoFe protein involves a series of synchronized events requiring the transient association of one Fe protein with each αβ half of the α2β2 MoFe protein. This process is referred to as the Fe protein cycle and includes binding of two ATP to an Fe protein, association of an Fe protein with the MoFe protein, ET from the Fe protein to the MoFe protein, hydrolysis of the two ATP to two ADP and two Pi for each ET, Pi release, and dissociation of oxidized Fe protein-(ADP)2 from the MoFe protein. Because the MoFe protein tetramer has two separate αβ active units, it participates in two distinct Fe protein cycles. Quantitative kinetic measurements of ET, ATP hydrolysis, and Pi release during the presteady-state phase of electron delivery demonstrate that the two halves of the ternary complex between the MoFe protein and two reduced Fe protein-(ATP)2 do not undergo the Fe protein cycle independently. Instead, the data are globally fit with a two-branch negative-cooperativity kinetic model in which ET in one-half of the complex partially suppresses this process in the other. A possible mechanism for communication between the two halves of the nitrogenase complex is suggested by normal-mode calculations showing correlated and anticorrelated motions between the two halves.

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Simone Raugei

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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John W. Peters

Washington State University

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