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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Spatzal is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Spatzal.


Science | 2011

Evidence for interstitial carbon in nitrogenase FeMo cofactor.

Thomas Spatzal; Müge Aksoyoglu; Limei Zhang; Susana L. A. Andrade; Erik Schleicher; Stefan Weber; Douglas C. Rees; Oliver Einsle

Structural data show that the light atom at the center of the nitrogenase active site cofactor is a carbon. The identity of the interstitial light atom in the center of the FeMo cofactor of nitrogenase has been enigmatic since its discovery. Atomic-resolution x-ray diffraction data and an electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) analysis now provide direct evidence that the ligand is a carbon species.


Science | 2014

Ligand binding to the FeMo-cofactor: structures of CO-bound and reactivated nitrogenase.

Thomas Spatzal; Kathryn A. Perez; Oliver Einsle; James B. Howard; Douglas C. Rees

Making nitrogen available for biosynthesis Nitrogen gas (N2) is abundant in Earths atmosphere; however, it must be converted into a bioavailable form before it can be incorporated into biomolecules. The enzyme nitrogenase, which is made up of two metalloproteins, converts N2 into bioavailable ammonia. One of these, the MoFe-protein, contains a complex metal center, the FeMo cofactor, where the triple N2 bond is reduced. Understanding how nitrogenase achieves the reduction of N2 has been a long-term goal. Spatzal et al. present the structure of MoFe-protein bound to carbon monoxide (see the Perspective by Hogbom). Although this is an inhibitor rather than the natural substrate, the structure gives insight into how the FeMo metallocluster rearranges to achieve substrate reduction. Science, this issue p. 1620 The structure of an inhibitor bound to nitrogenase reveals rearrangements in the active-site metallocluster. [Also see Perspective by Hognom] The mechanism of nitrogenase remains enigmatic, with a major unresolved issue concerning how inhibitors and substrates bind to the active site. We report a crystal structure of carbon monoxide (CO)–inhibited nitrogenase molybdenum-iron (MoFe)–protein at 1.50 angstrom resolution, which reveals a CO molecule bridging Fe2 and Fe6 of the FeMo-cofactor. The μ2 binding geometry is achieved by replacing a belt-sulfur atom (S2B) and highlights the generation of a reactive iron species uncovered by the displacement of sulfur. The CO inhibition is fully reversible as established by regain of enzyme activity and reappearance of S2B in the 1.43 angstrom resolution structure of the reactivated enzyme. The substantial and reversible reorganization of the FeMo-cofactor accompanying CO binding was unanticipated and provides insights into a catalytically competent state of nitrogenase.


Chemical Science | 2014

Identification of a spin-coupled Mo(III) in the nitrogenase iron–molybdenum cofactor

Ragnar Bjornsson; Frederico A. Lima; Thomas Spatzal; Thomas Weyhermüller; Pieter Glatzel; Eckhard Bill; Oliver Einsle; Frank Neese; Serena DeBeer

Nitrogenase is a complex enzyme that catalyzes the formation of ammonia utilizing a MoFe7S9C cluster. The presence of a central carbon atom was recently revealed, finally completing the atomic level description of the active site. However, important prerequisites for understanding the mechanism – the total charge, metal oxidation states and electronic structure are unknown. Herein we present high-energy resolution fluorescence detected Mo K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy of nitrogenase. Comparison to FeMo model complexes of known oxidation state indicates that the Mo in the FeMo cofactor of nitrogenase is best described as Mo(III), in contrast to the universally accepted Mo(IV) assignment. The oxidation state assignment is supported by theoretical calculations, which reveal the presence of an unusual spin-coupled Mo(III) site. Although so far Mo(III) was not reported to occur in biology the suggestion raises interesting parallels with the known homogenous Mo catalysts for N2 reduction, where a Mo(III) compound is the N2-binding species. It also requires a reassignment of the Fe oxidation states in the cofactor.


Nature Communications | 2016

Nitrogenase FeMoco investigated by spatially resolved anomalous dispersion refinement

Thomas Spatzal; Julia Schlesier; Eva Maria Burger; Daniel Sippel; Limei Zhang; Susana L. A. Andrade; Douglas C. Rees; Oliver Einsle

The [Mo:7Fe:9S:C] iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMoco) of nitrogenase is the largest known metal cluster and catalyses the 6-electron reduction of dinitrogen to ammonium in biological nitrogen fixation. Only recently its atomic structure was clarified, while its reactivity and electronic structure remain under debate. Here we show that for its resting S=3/2 state the common iron oxidation state assignments must be reconsidered. By a spatially resolved refinement of the anomalous scattering contributions of the 7 Fe atoms of FeMoco, we conclude that three irons (Fe1/3/7) are more reduced than the other four (Fe2/4/5/6). Our data are in agreement with the recently revised oxidation state assignment for the molybdenum ion, providing the first spatially resolved picture of the resting-state electron distribution within FeMoco. This might provide the long-sought experimental basis for a generally accepted theoretical description of the cluster that is in line with available spectroscopic and functional data.


eLife | 2015

Catalysis-dependent selenium incorporation and migration in the nitrogenase active site iron-molybdenum cofactor

Thomas Spatzal; Kathryn A. Perez; James B. Howard; Douglas C. Rees

Dinitrogen reduction in the biological nitrogen cycle is catalyzed by nitrogenase, a two-component metalloenzyme. Understanding of the transformation of the inert resting state of the active site FeMo-cofactor into an activated state capable of reducing dinitrogen remains elusive. Here we report the catalysis dependent, site-selective incorporation of selenium into the FeMo-cofactor from selenocyanate as a newly identified substrate and inhibitor. The 1.60 Å resolution structure reveals selenium occupying the S2B site of FeMo-cofactor in the Azotobacter vinelandii MoFe-protein, a position that was recently identified as the CO-binding site. The Se2B-labeled enzyme retains substrate reduction activity and marks the starting point for a crystallographic pulse-chase experiment of the active site during turnover. Through a series of crystal structures obtained at resolutions of 1.32–1.66 Å, including the CO-inhibited form of Av1-Se2B, the exchangeability of all three belt-sulfur sites is demonstrated, providing direct insights into unforeseen rearrangements of the metal center during catalysis. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11620.001


Biochemistry | 2012

MacA is a Second Cytochrome c Peroxidase of Geobacter sulfurreducens

Julian Seidel; Maren Hoffmann; Katie E. Ellis; Antonia Seidel; Thomas Spatzal; Stefan Gerhardt; Sean J. Elliott; Oliver Einsle

The metal-reducing δ-proteobacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens produces a large number of c-type cytochromes, many of which have been implicated in the transfer of electrons to insoluble metal oxides. Among these, the dihemic MacA was assigned a central role. Here we have produced G. sulfurreducens MacA by recombinant expression in Escherichia coli and have solved its three-dimensional structure in three different oxidation states. Sequence comparisons group MacA into the family of diheme cytochrome c peroxidases, and the protein indeed showed hydrogen peroxide reductase activity with ABTS(-2) as an electron donor. The observed K(M) was 38.5 ± 3.7 μM H(2)O(2) and v(max) was 0.78 ± 0.03 μmol of H(2)O(2)·min(-1)·mg(-1), resulting in a turnover number k(cat) = 0.46 · s(-1). In contrast, no Fe(III) reductase activity was observed. MacA was found to display electrochemical properties similar to other bacterial diheme peroxidases, in addition to the ability to electrochemically mediate electron transfer to the soluble cytochrome PpcA. Differences in activity between CcpA and MacA can be rationalized with structural variations in one of the three loop regions, loop 2, that undergoes conformational changes during reductive activation of the enzyme. This loop is adjacent to the active site heme and forms an open loop structure rather than a more rigid helix as in CcpA. For the activation of the protein, the loop has to displace the distal ligand to the active site heme, H93, in loop 1. A H93G variant showed an unexpected formation of a helix in loop 2 and disorder in loop 1, while a M297H variant that altered the properties of the electron transfer heme abolished reductive activation.


Biochemistry | 2014

Turnover-Dependent Inactivation of the Nitrogenase MoFe-Protein at High pH

Kun-Yun Yang; Chad A. Haynes; Thomas Spatzal; Douglas C. Rees; James B. Howard

Proton uptake accompanies the reduction of all known substrates by nitrogenase. As a consequence, a higher pH should limit the availability of protons as a substrate essential for turnover, thereby increasing the proportion of more highly reduced forms of the enzyme for further study. The utility of the high-pH approach would appear to be problematic in view of the observation reported by Pham and Burgess [(1993) Biochemistry 32, 13725–13731] that the MoFe-protein undergoes irreversible protein denaturation above pH 8.65. In contrast, we found by both enzyme activity and crystallographic analyses that the MoFe-protein is stable when incubated at pH 9.5. We did observe, however, that at higher pHs and under turnover conditions, the MoFe-protein is slowly inactivated. While a normal, albeit low, level of substrate reduction occurs under these conditions, the MoFe-protein undergoes a complex transformation; initially, the enzyme is reversibly inhibited for substrate reduction at pH 9.5, yet in a second, slower process, the MoFe-protein becomes irreversibly inactivated as measured by substrate reduction activity at the optimal pH of 7.8. The final inactivated MoFe-protein has an increased hydrodynamic radius compared to that of the native MoFe-protein, yet it has a full complement of iron and molybdenum. Significantly, the modified MoFe-protein retains the ability to specifically interact with its nitrogenase partner, the Fe-protein, as judged by the support of ATP hydrolysis and by formation of a tight complex with the Fe-protein in the presence of ATP and aluminum fluoride. The turnover-dependent inactivation coupled to conformational change suggests a mechanism-based transformation that may provide a new probe of nitrogenase catalysis.


Biochemical Journal | 2015

Cofactor specificity motifs and the induced fit mechanism in class I ketol-acid reductoisomerases

Jackson K. B. Cahn; Sabine Brinkmann-Chen; Thomas Spatzal; Jared A. Wiig; Andrew R. Buller; Oliver Einsle; Yilin Hu; Markus W. Ribbe; Frances H. Arnold

Although most sequenced members of the industrially important ketol-acid reductoisomerase (KARI) family are class I enzymes, structural studies to date have focused primarily on the class II KARIs, which arose through domain duplication. In the present study, we present five new crystal structures of class I KARIs. These include the first structure of a KARI with a six-residue β2αB (cofactor specificity determining) loop and an NADPH phosphate-binding geometry distinct from that of the seven- and 12-residue loops. We also present the first structures of naturally occurring KARIs that utilize NADH as cofactor. These results show insertions in the specificity loops that confounded previous attempts to classify them according to loop length. Lastly, we explore the conformational changes that occur in class I KARIs upon binding of cofactor and metal ions. The class I KARI structures indicate that the active sites close upon binding NAD(P)H, similar to what is observed in the class II KARIs of rice and spinach and different from the opening of the active site observed in the class II KARI of Escherichia coli. This conformational change involves a decrease in the bending of the helix that runs between the domains and a rearrangement of the nicotinamide-binding site.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

The Sixteenth Iron in the Nitrogenase MoFe Protein

Limei Zhang; Jens T. Kaiser; Gabriele Meloni; Kun–Yun Yang; Thomas Spatzal; Susana L. A. Andrade; Oliver Einsle; James B. Howard; Douglas C. Rees

Another iron in the fire: X-ray anomalous diffraction studies on the nitrogenase MoFe protein show the presence of a mononuclear iron site, designated as Fe16, which was previously identified as either Ca(2+) or Mg(2+). The position of the absorption edge indicates that this site is in the oxidation state +2. The high sequence conservation of the residues coordinated to Fe16 emphasizes the potential importance of the site in nitrogenase.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Spin labeling of the Escherichia coli NADH ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I)

Thomas Pohl; Thomas Spatzal; Müge Aksoyoglu; Erik Schleicher; Arpad M. Rostas; Helga Lay; Udo Glessner; Corinne Boudon; Petra Hellwig; Stefan Weber; Thorsten Friedrich

The proton-pumping NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase, the respiratory complex I, couples the transfer of electrons from NADH to ubiquinone with the translocation of protons across the membrane. Electron microscopy revealed the two-part structure of the complex with a peripheral arm involved in electron transfer and a membrane arm most likely involved in proton translocation. It was proposed that the quinone binding site is located at the joint of the two arms. Most likely, proton translocation in the membrane arm is enabled by the energy of the electron transfer reaction in the peripheral arm transmitted by conformational changes. For the detection of the conformational changes and the localization of the quinone binding site, we set up a combination of site-directed spin labeling and EPR spectroscopy. Cysteine residues were introduced to the surface of the Escherichia coli complex I. The spin label (1-oxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-Δ3-pyrroline-3-methyl)-methanethiosulfonate (MTSL) was exclusively bound to the engineered positions. Neither the mutation nor the labeling had an effect on the NADH:decyl-ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity. The characteristic signals of the spin label were detected by EPR spectroscopy, which did not change by reducing the preparation with NADH. A decyl-ubiquinone derivative with the spin label covalently attached to the alkyl chain was synthesized in order to localize the quinone binding site. The distance between a MTSL labeled complex I variant and the bound quinone was determined by continuous-wave (cw) EPR allowing an inference on the location of the quinone binding site. The distances between the labeled quinone and other complex I variants will be determined in future experiments to receive further geometry information by triangulation.

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Oliver Einsle

University of Göttingen

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Douglas C. Rees

California Institute of Technology

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Limei Zhang

California Institute of Technology

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