Michael W. W. Adams
University of Georgia
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Featured researches published by Michael W. W. Adams.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
John W. Peters; Gerrit J. Schut; Eric S. Boyd; David W. Mulder; Eric M. Shepard; Joan B. Broderick; Paul W. King; Michael W. W. Adams
The [FeFe]- and [NiFe]-hydrogenases catalyze the formal interconversion between hydrogen and protons and electrons, possess characteristic non-protein ligands at their catalytic sites and thus share common mechanistic features. Despite the similarities between these two types of hydrogenases, they clearly have distinct evolutionary origins and likely emerged from different selective pressures. [FeFe]-hydrogenases are widely distributed in fermentative anaerobic microorganisms and likely evolved under selective pressure to couple hydrogen production to the recycling of electron carriers that accumulate during anaerobic metabolism. In contrast, many [NiFe]-hydrogenases catalyze hydrogen oxidation as part of energy metabolism and were likely key enzymes in early life and arguably represent the predecessors of modern respiratory metabolism. Although the reversible combination of protons and electrons to generate hydrogen gas is the simplest of chemical reactions, the [FeFe]- and [NiFe]-hydrogenases have distinct mechanisms and differ in the fundamental chemistry associated with proton transfer and control of electron flow that also help to define catalytic bias. A unifying feature of these enzymes is that hydrogen activation itself has been restricted to one solution involving diatomic ligands (carbon monoxide and cyanide) bound to an Fe ion. On the other hand, and quite remarkably, the biosynthetic mechanisms to produce these ligands are exclusive to each type of enzyme. Furthermore, these mechanisms represent two independent solutions to the formation of complex bioinorganic active sites for catalyzing the simplest of chemical reactions, reversible hydrogen oxidation. As such, the [FeFe]- and [NiFe]-hydrogenases are arguably the most profound case of convergent evolution. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Fe/S proteins: Analysis, structure, function, biogenesis and diseases.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Joseph A. Rollin; Julia S. Martín del Campo; Suwan Myung; Fangfang Sun; Chun You; Allison Bakovic; Roberto Castro; Sanjeev K. Chandrayan; Chang-Hao Wu; Michael W. W. Adams; Ryan S. Senger; Y.-H. Percival Zhang
Significance Hydrogen (H2) has great potential to be used to power passenger vehicles. One solution to these problems is to distribute and store renewable carbohydrate instead, converting it to hydrogen as required. In this work more than 10 purified enzymes were combined into artificial enzymatic pathways and a high yield from both glucose and xylose to hydrogen was achieved. Also, gaseous hydrogen can be separated from aqueous substrates easily, greatly decreasing product separation costs, and avoid reconcentrating sugar solutions. This study describes high-yield enzymatic hydrogen production from biomass sugars and an engineered reaction rate increase achieved through the use of kinetic modeling. Distributed hydrogen production based on evenly distributed less-costly biomass could accelerate the implementation of the hydrogen economy. The use of hydrogen (H2) as a fuel offers enhanced energy conversion efficiency and tremendous potential to decrease greenhouse gas emissions, but producing it in a distributed, carbon-neutral, low-cost manner requires new technologies. Herein we demonstrate the complete conversion of glucose and xylose from plant biomass to H2 and CO2 based on an in vitro synthetic enzymatic pathway. Glucose and xylose were simultaneously converted to H2 with a yield of two H2 per carbon, the maximum possible yield. Parameters of a nonlinear kinetic model were fitted with experimental data using a genetic algorithm, and a global sensitivity analysis was used to identify the enzymes that have the greatest impact on reaction rate and yield. After optimizing enzyme loadings using this model, volumetric H2 productivity was increased 3-fold to 32 mmol H2⋅L−1⋅h−1. The productivity was further enhanced to 54 mmol H2⋅L−1⋅h−1 by increasing reaction temperature, substrate, and enzyme concentrations—an increase of 67-fold compared with the initial studies using this method. The production of hydrogen from locally produced biomass is a promising means to achieve global green energy production.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Mirko Basen; Gerrit J. Schut; Diep M. Nguyen; Gina L. Lipscomb; Robert A. Benn; Cameron J. Prybol; Brian J. Vaccaro; Farris L. Poole; Robert M. Kelly; Michael W. W. Adams
Significance The microbial production of ethanol (bioethanol) is a massive commercialized technology. Though alcohols with longer carbon chains are chemically much better suited for current transportation needs, their biotechnological production remains challenging. Here we have engineered the model hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus to produce various alcohols from their corresponding organic acids by constructing a synthetic route termed the AOR/AdhA pathway. Our study is also the first example, to our knowledge, of significant alcohol formation in an archaeon, emphasizing the biotechnological potential of novel microorganisms. Moreover, we show that carbon monoxide and hydrogen (syngas) can be used as the driving forces for alcohol production. The application of the AOR/AdhA pathway in syngas-fermenting microorganisms is potentially a game-changing platform technology for the production of longer bioalcohols. Bioethanol production is achieved by only two metabolic pathways and only at moderate temperatures. Herein a fundamentally different synthetic pathway for bioalcohol production at 70 °C was constructed by insertion of the gene for bacterial alcohol dehydrogenase (AdhA) into the archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. The engineered strain converted glucose to ethanol via acetate and acetaldehyde, catalyzed by the host-encoded aldehyde ferredoxin oxidoreductase (AOR) and heterologously expressed AdhA, in an energy-conserving, redox-balanced pathway. Furthermore, the AOR/AdhA pathway also converted exogenously added aliphatic and aromatic carboxylic acids to the corresponding alcohol using glucose, pyruvate, and/or hydrogen as the source of reductant. By heterologous coexpression of a membrane-bound carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, CO was used as a reductant for converting carboxylic acids to alcohols. Redirecting the fermentative metabolism of P. furiosus through strategic insertion of foreign genes creates unprecedented opportunities for thermophilic bioalcohol production. Moreover, the AOR/AdhA pathway is a potentially game-changing strategy for syngas fermentation, especially in combination with carbon chain elongation pathways.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015
Benjamin M. Zeldes; Matthew W. Keller; Andrew J. Loder; Christopher T. Straub; Michael W. W. Adams; Robert M. Kelly
Enzymes from extremely thermophilic microorganisms have been of technological interest for some time because of their ability to catalyze reactions of industrial significance at elevated temperatures. Thermophilic enzymes are now routinely produced in recombinant mesophilic hosts for use as discrete biocatalysts. Genome and metagenome sequence data for extreme thermophiles provide useful information for putative biocatalysts for a wide range of biotransformations, albeit involving at most a few enzymatic steps. However, in the past several years, unprecedented progress has been made in establishing molecular genetics tools for extreme thermophiles to the point that the use of these microorganisms as metabolic engineering platforms has become possible. While in its early days, complex metabolic pathways have been altered or engineered into recombinant extreme thermophiles, such that the production of fuels and chemicals at elevated temperatures has become possible. Not only does this expand the thermal range for industrial biotechnology, it also potentially provides biodiverse options for specific biotransformations unique to these microorganisms. The list of extreme thermophiles growing optimally between 70 and 100°C with genetic toolkits currently available includes archaea and bacteria, aerobes and anaerobes, coming from genera such as Caldicellulosiruptor, Sulfolobus, Thermotoga, Thermococcus, and Pyrococcus. These organisms exhibit unusual and potentially useful native metabolic capabilities, including cellulose degradation, metal solubilization, and RuBisCO-free carbon fixation. Those looking to design a thermal bioprocess now have a host of potential candidates to choose from, each with its own advantages and challenges that will influence its appropriateness for specific applications. Here, the issues and opportunities for extremely thermophilic metabolic engineering platforms are considered with an eye toward potential technological advantages for high temperature industrial biotechnology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Gina L. Lipscomb; Gerrit J. Schut; Michael P. Thorgersen; William J. Nixon; Robert M. Kelly; Michael W. W. Adams
Background: Biohydrogen production from formate may aid in efficient chemical and fuel production using H2 as the energy carrier. Results: The hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus was engineered to convert formate to H2. Conclusion: An 18-gene cluster can be inserted into the P. furiosus chromosome for active production of a membrane-bound system. Significance: This work demonstrates the versatility of this model organism for metabolic engineering purposes. Biohydrogen gas has enormous potential as a source of reductant for the microbial production of biofuels, but its low solubility and poor gas mass transfer rates are limiting factors. These limitations could be circumvented by engineering biofuel production in microorganisms that are also capable of generating H2 from highly soluble chemicals such as formate, which can function as an electron donor. Herein, the model hyperthermophile, Pyrococcus furiosus, which grows optimally near 100 °C by fermenting sugars to produce H2, has been engineered to also efficiently convert formate to H2. Using a bacterial artificial chromosome vector, the 16.9-kb 18-gene cluster encoding the membrane-bound, respiratory formate hydrogen lyase complex of Thermococcus onnurineus was inserted into the P. furiosus chromosome and expressed as a functional unit. This enabled P. furiosus to utilize formate as well as sugars as an H2 source and to do so at both 80° and 95 °C, near the optimum growth temperature of the donor (T. onnurineus) and engineered host (P. furiosus), respectively. This accomplishment also demonstrates the versatility of P. furiosus for metabolic engineering applications.
Metabolic Engineering | 2015
Matthew W. Keller; Gina L. Lipscomb; Andrew J. Loder; Gerrit J. Schut; Robert M. Kelly; Michael W. W. Adams
Biologically produced alcohols are of great current interest for renewable solvents and liquid transportation fuels. While bioethanol is now produced on a massive scale, butanol has superior fuel characteristics and an additional value as a solvent and chemical feedstock. Butanol production has been demonstrated at ambient temperatures in metabolically-engineered mesophilic organisms, but the ability to engineer a microbe for in vivo high-temperature production of commodity chemicals has several distinct advantages. These include reduced contamination risk, facilitated removal of volatile products, and a wide temperature range to modulate and balance both the engineered pathway and the host׳s metabolism. We describe a synthetic metabolic pathway assembled from genes obtained from three different sources for conversion of acetyl-CoA to 1-butanol, and 1-butanol generation from glucose was demonstrated near 70°C in a microorganism that grows optimally near 100°C. The module could also be used in thermophiles capable of degrading plant biomass.
Biochemistry | 2016
Brandon L. Greene; Chang-Hao Wu; Gregory E. Vansuch; Michael W. W. Adams; R. Brian Dyer
Hydrogenases (H2ases) represent one of the most striking examples of biological proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) chemistry, functioning in facile proton reduction and H2 oxidation involving long-range proton and electron transport. Spectroscopic and electrochemical studies of the [NiFe] H2ases have identified several catalytic intermediates, but the details of their interconversion are still a matter of debate. Here we use steady state and time-resolved infrared spectroscopy, sensitive to the CO ligand of the active site iron, as a probe of the proton inventory as well as electron and proton transfer dynamics in the soluble hydrogenase I from Pyrococcus furiosus. Subtle shifts in infrared signatures associated with the Nia-C and Nia-S states as a function of pH revealed an acid-base equilibrium associated with an ionizable amino acid near the active site. Protonation of this residue was found to correlate with the photoproduct distribution that results from hydride photolysis of the Nia-C state, in which one of the two photoproduct states becomes inaccessible at low pH. Additionally, the ability to generate Nia-S via PCET from Nia-C was weakened at low pH, suggesting prior protonation of the proton acceptor. Kinetic and thermodynamic analysis of electron and proton transfer with respect to the various proton inventories was utilized to develop a chemical model for reversible hydride oxidation involving two intermediates differing in their hydrogen bonding character.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2015
Sanjeev K. Chandrayan; Chang-Hao Wu; Patrick M. McTernan; Michael W. W. Adams
The cytoplasmic [NiFe]-hydrogenase I (SHI) of the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus evolves hydrogen gas (H2) from NADPH. It has been previously used for biohydrogen production from sugars using a mixture of enzymes in an in vitro cell-free synthetic pathway. The theoretical yield (12 H2/glucose) is three times greater than microbial fermentation (4 H2/glucose), making the in vitro approach very promising for large scale biohydrogen production. Further development of this process at an industrial scale is limited by the availability of the H2-producing SHI. To overcome the obstacles of the complex biosynthetic and maturation pathway for the [NiFe] site of SHI, the four gene operon encoding the enzyme was overexpressed in P. furiosus and included a polyhistidine affinity tag. The one-step purification resulted in a 50-fold increase in yield compared to the four-step purification procedure for the native enzyme. A trimeric form was also identified that lacked the [NiFe]-catalytic subunit but catalyzed NADPH oxidation with a specific activity similar to that of the tetrameric form. The presence of an active trimeric intermediate confirms the proposed maturation pathway where, in the terminal step, the NiFe-containing catalytic subunit assembles with NADPH-oxidizing trimeric form to give the active holoenzyme.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Saroj Poudel; Monika Tokmina-Lukaszewska; Daniel R. Colman; Mohammed Y. Refai; Gerrit J. Schut; Paul W. King; Pin-Ching Maness; Michael W. W. Adams; John W. Peters; Brian Bothner; Eric S. Boyd
BACKGROUND [FeFe]-hydrogenases (Hyd) are structurally diverse enzymes that catalyze the reversible oxidation of hydrogen (H2). Recent biochemical data demonstrate new functional roles for these enzymes, including those that function in electron bifurcation where an exergonic reaction is coupled with an endergonic reaction to drive the reversible oxidation/production of H2. METHODS To identify the structural determinants that underpin differences in enzyme functionality, a total of 714 homologous sequences of the catalytic subunit, HydA, were compiled. Bioinformatics approaches informed by biochemical data were then used to characterize differences in inferred quaternary structure, HydA active site protein environment, accessory iron-sulfur clusters in HydA, and regulatory proteins encoded in HydA gene neighborhoods. RESULTS HydA homologs were clustered into one of three classification groups, Group 1 (G1), Group 2 (G2), and Group 3 (G3). G1 enzymes were predicted to be monomeric while those in G2 and G3 were predicted to be multimeric and include HydB, HydC (G2/G3) and HydD (G3) subunits. Variation in the HydA active site and accessory iron-sulfur clusters did not vary by group type. Group-specific regulatory genes were identified in the gene neighborhoods of both G2 and G3 Hyd. Analyses of purified G2 and G3 enzymes by mass spectrometry strongly suggest that they are post-translationally modified by phosphorylation. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that bifurcation capability is dictated primarily by the presence of both HydB and HydC in Hyd complexes, rather than by variation in HydA. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE This classification scheme provides a framework for future biochemical and mutagenesis studies to elucidate the functional role of Hyd enzymes.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
Gerrit J. Schut; Oleg A. Zadvornyy; Chang-Hao Wu; John W. Peters; Eric S. Boyd; Michael W. W. Adams
Complex I or NADH quinone oxidoreductase (NUO) is an integral component of modern day respiratory chains and has a close evolutionary relationship with energy-conserving [NiFe]-hydrogenases of anaerobic microorganisms. Specifically, in all of biology, the quinone-binding subunit of Complex I, NuoD, is most closely related to the proton-reducing, H2-evolving [NiFe]-containing catalytic subunit, MbhL, of membrane-bound hydrogenase (MBH), to the methanophenzine-reducing subunit of a methanogenic respiratory complex (FPO) and to the catalytic subunit of an archaeal respiratory complex (MBX) involved in reducing elemental sulfur (S°). These complexes also pump ions and have at least 10 homologous subunits in common. As electron donors, MBH and MBX use ferredoxin (Fd), FPO uses either Fd or cofactor F420, and NUO uses either Fd or NADH. In this review, we examine the evolutionary trajectory of these oxidoreductases from a proton-reducing ancestral respiratory complex (ARC). We hypothesize that the diversification of ARC to MBH, MBX, FPO and eventually NUO was driven by the larger energy yields associated with coupling Fd oxidation to the reduction of oxidants with increasing electrochemical potential, including protons, S° and membrane soluble organic compounds such as phenazines and quinone derivatives. Importantly, throughout Earths history, the availability of these oxidants increased as the redox state of the atmosphere and oceans became progressively more oxidized as a result of the origin and ecological expansion of oxygenic photosynthesis. ARC-derived complexes are therefore remarkably stable respiratory systems with little diversity in core structure but whose general function appears to have co-evolved with the redox state of the biosphere. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Respiratory Complex I, edited by Volker Zickermann and Ulrich Brandt.