Nitrogenase resurrection and the evolution of a singular enzymatic mechanism

Author:

Garcia Amanda K1ORCID,Harris Derek F2,Rivier Alex J1,Carruthers Brooke M1,Pinochet-Barros Azul1,Seefeldt Lance C2ORCID,Kaçar Betül1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin–Madison

2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Utah State University

Abstract

The planetary biosphere is powered by a suite of key metabolic innovations that emerged early in the history of life. However, it is unknown whether life has always followed the same set of strategies for performing these critical tasks. Today, microbes access atmospheric sources of bioessential nitrogen through the activities of just one family of enzymes, nitrogenases. Here, we show that the only dinitrogen reduction mechanism known to date is an ancient feature conserved from nitrogenase ancestors. We designed a paleomolecular engineering approach wherein ancestral nitrogenase genes were phylogenetically reconstructed and inserted into the genome of the diazotrophic bacterial model, Azotobacter vinelandii, enabling an integrated assessment of both in vivo functionality and purified nitrogenase biochemistry. Nitrogenase ancestors are active and robust to variable incorporation of one or more ancestral protein subunits. Further, we find that all ancestors exhibit the reversible enzymatic mechanism for dinitrogen reduction, specifically evidenced by hydrogen inhibition, which is also exhibited by extant A. vinelandii nitrogenase isozymes. Our results suggest that life may have been constrained in its sampling of protein sequence space to catalyze one of the most energetically challenging biochemical reactions in nature. The experimental framework established here is essential for probing how nitrogenase functionality has been shaped within a dynamic, cellular context to sustain a globally consequential metabolism.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

John Templeton Foundation

National Science Foundation

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Arizona Space Grant Consortium

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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