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Dive into the research topics where Paul A. Lindahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul A. Lindahl.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Ni-Zn-[Fe 4 -S 4 ] and Ni-Ni-[Fe 4 -S 4 ] clusters in closed and open α subunits of acetyl-CoA synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase

Claudine Darnault; Anne Volbeda; Eun Jin Kim; Pierre Legrand; Xavier Vernede; Paul A. Lindahl; Juan C. Fontecilla-Camps

The crystal structure of the tetrameric α2β2 acetyl-coenzyme A synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Moorella thermoacetica has been solved at 1.9 Å resolution. Surprisingly, the two α subunits display different (open and closed) conformations. Furthermore, X-ray data collected from crystals near the absorption edges of several metal ions indicate that the closed form contains one Zn and one Ni at its active site metal cluster (A-cluster) in the α subunit, whereas the open form has two Ni ions at the corresponding positions. Alternative metal contents at the active site have been observed in a recent structure of the same protein in which A-clusters contained one Cu and one Ni, and in reconstitution studies of a recombinant apo form of a related acetyl-CoA synthase. On the basis of our observations along with previously reported data, we postulate that only the A-clusters containing two Ni ions are catalytically active.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

LdpA: a component of the circadian clock senses redox state of the cell

Natalia B. Ivleva; Matthew R. Bramlett; Paul A. Lindahl; Susan S. Golden

The endogenous 24‐h (circadian) rhythms exhibited by the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942 and other organisms are entrained by a variety of environmental factors. In cyanobacteria, the mechanism that transduces environmental input signals to the central oscillator of the clock is not known. An earlier study identified ldpA as a gene involved in light‐dependent modulation of the circadian period, and a candidate member of a clock‐entraining input pathway. Here, we report that the LdpA protein is sensitive to the redox state of the cell and exhibits electron paramagnetic resonance spectra consistent with the presence of two Fe4S4 clusters. Moreover, LdpA copurifies with proteins previously shown to be integral parts of the circadian mechanism. We also demonstrate that LdpA affects both the absolute level and light‐dependent variation in abundance of CikA, a key input pathway component. The data suggest a novel input pathway to the circadian oscillator in which LdpA is a component of the clock protein complex that senses the redox state of a cell.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

2,4,6-trinitrotoluene reduction by carbon monoxide dehydrogenase from Clostridium thermoaceticum

Shouqin Huang; Paul A. Lindahl; Chuanyue Wang; George N. Bennett; Frederick B. Rudolph; Joseph B. Hughes

ABSTRACT Purified CO dehydrogenase (CODH) from Clostridium thermoaceticum catalyzed the transformation of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). The intermediates and reduced products of TNT transformation were separated and appear to be identical to the compounds formed by C. acetobutylicum, namely, 2-hydroxylamino-4,6-dinitrotoluene (2HA46DNT), 4-hydroxylamino-2,6-dinitrotoluene (4HA26DNT), 2,4-dihydroxylamino-6-nitrotoluene (24DHANT), and the Bamberger rearrangement product of 2,4-dihydroxylamino-6-nitrotoluene. In the presence of saturating CO, CODH catalyzed the conversion of TNT to two monohydroxylamino derivatives (2HA46DNT and 4HA26DNT), with 4HA26DNT as the dominant isomer. These derivatives were then converted to 24DHANT, which slowly converted to the Bamberger rearrangement product. ApparentKm and kcat values of TNT reduction were 165 ± 43 μM for TNT and 400 ± 94 s−1, respectively. Cyanide, an inhibitor for the CO/CO2 oxidation/reduction activity of CODH, inhibited the TNT degradation activity of CODH.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2004

Acetyl-coenzyme A synthase: the case for a Ni p 0 -based mechanism of catalysis

Paul A. Lindahl

Acetyl-CoA synthase (also known as carbon monoxide dehydrogenase) is a bifunctional Ni-Fe-S-containing enzyme that catalyzes the reversible reduction of CO2 to CO and the synthesis of acetyl-coenzyme A from CO, CoA, and a methyl group donated by a corrinoid iron-sulfur protein. The active site for the latter reaction, called the A-cluster, consists of an Fe4S4 cubane bridged to the proximal Ni site (Nip), which is bridged in turn to the so-called distal Ni site. In this review, evidence is presented that Nip achieves a zero-valent state at low potentials and during catalysis. Nip appears to be the metal to which CO and methyl groups bind and then react to form an acetyl-Nip intermediate. Methyl group binding requires reductive activation, where two electrons reduce some site on the A-cluster. The coordination environment of the distal Ni suggests that it could not be stabilized in redox states lower than 2+. The rate at which the [Fe4S4]2+ cubane is reduced is far slower than that at which reductive activation occurs, suggesting that the cubane is not the site of reduction. An intriguing possibility is that Nip2+ might be reduced to the zero-valent state. Reinforcing this idea are Ni-organometallic complexes in which the Ni exhibits analogous reactivity properties when reduced to the zero-valent state. A zero-valent Ni stabilized exclusively with biological ligands would be remarkable and unprecedented in biology.


Biochemistry | 2009

Biophysical Characterization of the Iron in Mitochondria from Atm1p-depleted Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Ren Miao; Hansoo Kim; Uma Mahendra Kumar Koppolu; E. Ann Ellis; Robert A. Scott; Paul A. Lindahl

Atm1p is an ABC transporter localized in the mitochondrial inner membrane; it functions to export an unknown species into the cytosol and is involved in cellular iron metabolism. Depletion or deletion of Atm1p causes Fe accumulation in mitochondria and a defect in cytosolic Fe/S cluster assembly but reportedly not a defect in mitochondrial Fe/S cluster assembly. In this study the nature of the accumulated Fe was examined using Mossbauer spectroscopy, EPR, electronic absorption spectroscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and electron microscopy. The Fe that accumulated in aerobically grown cells was in the form of iron(III) phosphate nanoparticles similar to that which accumulates in yeast frataxin Yfh1p-deleted or yeast ferredoxin Yah1p-depleted cells. Relative to WT mitochondria, Fe/S cluster and heme levels in Atm1p-depleted mitochondria from aerobic cells were significantly diminished. Atm1p depletion also caused a buildup of nonheme Fe(II) ions in the mitochondria and an increase in oxidative damage. Atm1p-depleted mitochondria isolated from anaerobically grown cells exhibited WT levels of Fe/S clusters and hemes, and they did not hyperaccumulate Fe. Atm1p-depleted cells lacked Leu1p activity, regardless of whether they were grown aerobically or anaerobically. These results indicate that Atm1p does not participate in mitochondrial Fe/S cluster assembly and that the species exported by Atm1p is required for cytosolic Fe/S cluster assembly. The Fe/S cluster defect and the Fe-accumulation phenotype, resulting from the depletion of Atm1p in aerobic cells (but not in anaerobic cells), may be secondary effects that are observed only when cells are exposed to oxygen during growth. Reactive oxygen species generated under these conditions might degrade iron-sulfur clusters and lower heme levels in the organelle.


Biochemistry | 2008

EPR and Mössbauer Spectroscopy of Intact Mitochondria Isolated from Yah1p-Depleted Saccharomyces cerevisiae†

Ren Miao; Marlène Martinho; Jessica Garber Morales; Hansoo Kim; E. Ann Ellis; Roland Lill; Michael P. Hendrich; Eckard Münck; Paul A. Lindahl

Yah1p, an [Fe 2S 2]-containing ferredoxin located in the matrix of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria, functions in the synthesis of Fe/S clusters and heme a prosthetic groups. EPR, Mossbauer spectroscopy, and electron microscopy were used to characterize the Fe that accumulates in Yah1p-depleted isolated intact mitochondria. Gal- YAH1 cells were grown in standard rich media (YPD and YPGal) under O 2 or argon atmospheres. Mitochondria were isolated anaerobically, then prepared in the as-isolated redox state, the dithionite-treated state, and the O 2-treated state. The absence of strong EPR signals from Fe/S clusters when Yah1p was depleted confirms that Yah1p is required in Fe/S cluster assembly. Yah1p-depleted mitochondria, grown with O 2 bubbling through the media, accumulated excess Fe (up to 10 mM) that was present as 2-4 nm diameter ferric nanoparticles, similar to those observed in mitochondria from yfh1Delta cells. These particles yielded a broad isotropic EPR signal centered around g = 2, characteristic of superparamagnetic relaxation. Treatment with dithionite caused Fe (3+) ions of the nanoparticles to become reduced and largely exported from the mitochondria. Fe did not accumulate in mitochondria isolated from cells grown under Ar; a significant portion of the Fe in these organelles was in the high-spin Fe (2+) state. This suggests that the O 2 used during growth of Gal- YAH1 cells is responsible, either directly or indirectly, for Fe accumulation and for oxidizing Fe (2+) --> Fe (3+) prior to aggregation. Models are proposed in which the accumulation of ferric nanoparticles is caused either by the absence of a ligand that prevents such precipitation in wild-type mitochondria or by a more oxidizing environment within the mitochondria of Yah1p-depleted cells exposed to O 2. The efficacy of reducing accumulated Fe along with chelating it should be considered as a strategy for its removal in diseases involving such accumulations.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Mixed-Valence Nickel–Iron Dithiolate Models of the [NiFe]-Hydrogenase Active Site

David Schilter; Mark J. Nilges; Mrinmoy Chakrabarti; Paul A. Lindahl; Thomas B. Rauchfuss; Matthias Stein

A series of mixed-valence nickel-iron dithiolates is described. Oxidation of (diphosphine)Ni(dithiolate)Fe(CO)(3) complexes 1, 2, and 3 with ferrocenium salts affords the corresponding tricarbonyl cations [(dppe)Ni(pdt)Fe(CO)(3)](+) ([1](+)), [(dppe)Ni(edt)Fe(CO)(3)](+) ([2](+)) and [(dcpe)Ni(pdt)Fe(CO)(3)](+) ([3](+)), respectively, where dppe = Ph(2)PCH(2)CH(2)PPh(2), dcpe = Cy(2)PCH(2)CH(2)PCy(2), (Cy = cyclohexyl), pdtH(2) = HSCH(2)CH(2)CH(2)SH, and edtH(2) = HSCH(2)CH(2)SH. The cation [2](+) proved unstable, but the propanedithiolates are robust. IR and EPR spectroscopic measurements indicate that these species exist as C(s)-symmetric species. Crystallographic characterization of [3]BF(4) shows that Ni is square planar. Interaction of [1]BF(4) with P-donor ligands (L) afforded a series of substituted derivatives of type [(dppe)Ni(pdt)Fe(CO)(2)L]BF(4) for L = P(OPh)(3) ([4a]BF(4)), P(p-C(6)H(4)Cl)(3) ([4b]BF(4)), PPh(2)(2-py) ([4c]BF(4)), PPh(2)(OEt) ([4d]BF(4)), PPh(3) ([4e]BF(4)), PPh(2)(o-C(6)H(4)OMe) ([4f]BF(4)), PPh(2)(o-C(6)H(4)OCH(2)OMe) ([4g]BF(4)), P(p-tol)(3) ([4h]BF(4)), P(p-C(6)H(4)OMe)(3) ([4i]BF(4)), and PMePh(2) ([4j]BF(4)). EPR analysis indicates that ethanedithiolate [2](+) exists as a single species at 110 K, whereas the propanedithiolate cations exist as a mixture of two conformers, which are proposed to be related through a flip of the chelate ring. Mössbauer spectra of 1 and oxidized S = 1/2 [4e]BF(4) are both consistent with a low-spin Fe(I) state. The hyperfine coupling tensor of [4e]BF(4) has a small isotropic component and significant anisotropy. DFT calculations using the BP86, B3LYP, and PBE0 exchange-correlation functionals agree with the structural and spectroscopic data, suggesting that the SOMOs in complexes of the present type are localized in an Fe(I)-centered d(z(2)) orbital. The DFT calculations allow an assignment of oxidation states of the metals and rationalization of the conformers detected by EPR spectroscopy. Treatment of [1](+) with CN(-) and compact basic phosphines results in complex reactions. With dppe, [1](+) undergoes quasi-disproportionation to give 1 and the diamagnetic complex [(dppe)Ni(pdt)Fe(CO)(2)(dppe)](2+) ([5](2+)), which features square-planar Ni linked to an octahedral Fe center.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2001

The Evolution of Acetyl-CoA Synthase

Paul A. Lindahl; Belinda S. W. Chang

Acetyl-coenzyme A synthases (ACS) are Ni–Fe–S containingenzymes found in archaea and bacteria. They are divisible into 4 classes. Class I ACSs catalyze the synthesis of acetyl-CoAfrom CO2 + 2e-, CoA, and a methyl group, and contain5 types of subunits (α, β, γ, δ, and ε). Class II enzymes catalyze essentially the reversereaction and have similar subunit composition. Class III ACSscatalyze the same reaction as Class I enzymes, but use pyruvateas a source of CO2 and 2e-, and are composed of 2 autonomous proteins, an α2β2 tetramerand a γδ heterodimer. Class IV enzymes catabolize CO to CO2 and are α-subunit monomers. Phylogeneticanalyses were performed on all five subunits. ACS α sequences divided into 2 major groups, including Class I/II sequences and Class III/IV-like sequences. Conserved residuesthat may function as ligands to the B- and C-clusters wereidentified. Other residues exclusively conserved in Class I/IIsequences may be ligands to additional metal centers in Class I and II enzymes. ACS β sequences also separated into twogroups, but they were less divergent than the αs, and the separation was not as distinct. Class III-like β sequences contained ∼300 residues at their N-termini absent in Class I/II sequences. Conserved residues identifiedin β sequences may function as ligands to active siteresidues used for acetyl-CoA synthesis. ACS γ-sequencesseparated into 3 groups (Classes I, II, and III), while δ-sequences separated into 2 groups (Class I/II and III). These groups are less divergent than those of α sequences. ACS ε-sequence topology showed greaterdivergence and less consistency vis-à-vis the other subunits, possibly reflecting reduced evolutionary constraintsdue to the absence of metal centers. The α subunit phylogeny may best reflect the functional diversity of ACS enzymes. Scenarios of how ACS and ACS-containing organisms mayhave evolved are discussed.


Biochemistry | 2010

Biophysical Characterization of Iron in Mitochondria Isolated from Respiring and Fermenting Yeast

Jessica Garber Morales; Gregory P. Holmes-Hampton; Ren Miao; Yisong Guo; Eckard Münck; Paul A. Lindahl

The distributions of Fe in mitochondria isolated from respiring, respiro-fermenting, and fermenting yeast cells were determined with an integrative biophysical approach involving Mossbauer and electronic absorption spectroscopies, electron paramagnetic resonance, and inductively coupled plasma emission mass spectrometry. Approximately 40% of the Fe in mitochondria from respiring cells was present in respiration-related proteins. The concentration and distribution of Fe in respiro-fermenting mitochondria, where both respiration and fermentation occur concurrently, were similar to those of respiring mitochondria. The concentration of Fe in fermenting mitochondria was also similar, but the distribution differed dramatically. Here, levels of respiration-related Fe-containing proteins were diminished approximately 3-fold, while non-heme HS Fe(II) species, non-heme mononuclear HS Fe(III), and Fe(III) nanoparticles dominated. These changes were rationalized by a model in which the pool of non-heme HS Fe(II) ions serves as feedstock for Fe-S cluster and heme biosynthesis. The integrative approach enabled us to estimate the concentration of respiration-related proteins.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2008

Kinetic Modeling of the Assembly, Dynamic Steady State, and Contraction of the FtsZ Ring in Prokaryotic Cytokinesis

Ivan V. Surovtsev; J. J. Morgan; Paul A. Lindahl

Cytokinesis in prokaryotes involves the assembly of a polymeric ring composed of FtsZ protein monomeric units. The Z ring forms at the division plane and is attached to the membrane. After assembly, it maintains a stable yet dynamic steady state. Once induced, the ring contracts and the membrane constricts. In this work, we present a computational deterministic biochemical model exhibiting this behavior. The model is based on biochemical features of FtsZ known from in vitro studies, and it quantitatively reproduces relevant in vitro data. An essential part of the model is a consideration of interfacial reactions involving the cytosol volume, where monomeric FtsZ is dispersed, and the membrane surface in the cells mid-zone where the ring is assembled. This approach allows the same chemical model to simulate either in vitro or in vivo conditions by adjusting only two geometrical parameters. The model includes minimal reactions, components, and assumptions, yet is able to reproduce sought-after in vivo behavior, including the rapid assembly of the ring via FtsZ-polymerization, the formation of a dynamic steady state in which GTP hydrolysis leads to the exchange of monomeric subunits between cytoplasm and the ring, and finally the induced contraction of the ring. The model gives a quantitative estimate for coupling between the rate of GTP hydrolysis and of FtsZ subunit turnover between the assembled ring and the cytoplasmic pool as observed. Membrane constriction is chemically driven by the strong tendency of GTP-bound FtsZ to self-assembly. The model suggests a possible mechanism of membrane contraction without a motor protein. The portion of the free energy of GTP hydrolysis released in cyclization is indirectly used in this energetically unfavorable process. The model provides a limit to the mechanistic complexity required to mimic ring behavior, and it highlights the importance of parallel in vitro and in vivo modeling.

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Eckard Münck

Carnegie Mellon University

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Jinqiang Xia

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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William H. Orme-Johnson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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