Unexpected complexity of the ammonia monooxygenase in archaea

Author:

Hodgskiss Logan H1ORCID,Melcher Michael1,Kerou Melina1ORCID,Chen Weiqiang2,Ponce-Toledo Rafael I1,Savvides Savvas N3ORCID,Wienkoop Stefanie4,Hartl Markus25,Schleper Christa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Archaea Biology and Ecogenomics Unit, Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology, University of Vienna , Vienna, Austria

2. Mass Spectrometry Facility, Max Perutz Labs, Vienna BioCenter (VBC) , Vienna, Austria

3. VIB Center for Inflammation Center and Department of Biochemistry & Microbiology, Ghent University , Ghent, Belgium

4. Molecular Systems Biology Unit, Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology, University of Vienna , Vienna, Austria

5. Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Max Perutz Labs, University of Vienna , Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Abstract Ammonia oxidation, as the first step of nitrification, constitutes a critical process in the global nitrogen cycle. However, fundamental knowledge of its key enzyme, the copper-dependent ammonia monooxygenase, is lacking, in particular for the environmentally abundant ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA). Here the structure of the enzyme is investigated by blue-native gel electrophoresis and proteomics from native membrane complexes of two AOA. Besides the known AmoABC subunits and the earlier predicted AmoX, two new protein subunits, AmoY and AmoZ, were identified. They are unique to AOA, highly conserved and co-regulated, and their genes are linked to other AMO subunit genes in streamlined AOA genomes. Modeling and in-gel cross-link approaches support an overall protomer structure similar to the distantly related bacterial particulate methane monooxygenase but also reveals clear differences in extracellular domains of the enzyme. These data open avenues for further structure-function studies of this ecologically important nitrification complex.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

Reference92 articles.

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