Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In our efforts to identify the components participating in electron transport to nitrogenase in
Rhodospirillum rubrum
, we used mini-Tn
5
mutagenesis followed by metronidazole selection. One of the mutants isolated, SNT-1, exhibited a decreased growth rate and about 25% of the in vivo nitrogenase activity compared to the wild-type values. The in vitro nitrogenase activity was essentially wild type, indicating that the mutation affects electron transport to nitrogenase. Sequencing showed that the Tn
5
insertion is located in a region with a high level of similarity to
fixC
, and extended sequencing revealed additional putative
fix
genes, in the order
fixABCX
. Complementation of SNT-1 with the whole
fix
gene cluster in
trans
restored wild-type nitrogenase activity and growth. Using Western blotting, we demonstrated that expression of
fixA
and
fixB
occurs only under conditions under which nitrogenase also is expressed. SNT-1 was further shown to produce larger amounts of both ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxgenase and polyhydroxy alkanoates than the wild type, indicating that the redox status is affected in this mutant. Using Western blotting, we found that FixA and FixB are soluble proteins, whereas FixC most likely is a transmembrane protein. We propose that the
fixABCX
genes encode a membrane protein complex that plays a central role in electron transfer to nitrogenase in
R. rubrum
. Furthermore, we suggest that FixC is the link between nitrogen fixation and the proton motive force generated in the photosynthetic reactions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
94 articles.
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