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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 279, Issue 19, 19739-19746, May 7, 2004
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Subunit) from Azotobacter vinelandii*

From the Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, College of Natural Resources, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720
Received for publication, January 28, 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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protein) has been proposed to be a FeMo-co insertase because of its ability to bind FeMo-co and apodinitrogenase. Here we report the purification and biochemical characterization of NafY and reach the following conclusions. First, NafY is a 26-kDa monomeric protein that binds one molecule of FeMo-co with very high affinity (Kd
60 nM); second, the NafY-FeMo-co complex exhibits a S = 3/2 EPR signal with features similar to the signals for extracted FeMo-co and the M center of dinitrogenase; third, site-directed mutagenesis of nafY indicates that the His121 residue of NafY is involved in cofactor binding; and fourth, NafY binding to apodinitrogenase or to FeMo-co does not require the presence of any additional protein. In addition, we have obtained evidence that suggests the ability of NafY to bind NifB-co, an FeS cluster of unknown structure that is a biosynthetic precursor to FeMo-co. | INTRODUCTION |
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2
2 tetramer of the nifD and nifK gene products (3, 4). Each 
nitrogenase dimer contains an iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co)1 and a P cluster (4, 5). Dinitrogenase reductase (also termed component II or iron protein) is a 60-kDa
2 dimer of the nifH gene product that contains a single 4Fe-4S center coordinated between the two subunits (6). In contrast to the
2
2 subunit composition of the mature dinitrogenase, apodinitrogenase (FeMo-co-deficient) from Klebsiella pneumoniae or Azotobacter vinelandii strains with mutations in nifB, nifN, or nifE have a hexameric composition (
2
2
2). The hexameric apodinitrogenase can be activated in vitro by the simple addition of purified FeMo-co (7, 8). In K. pneumoniae, the
subunit has been identified as the product of the nifY gene (7, 9), whereas in A. vinelandii it is the product of the non-nif gene termed nafY (nitrogenase accessory factor Y) (10). On the other hand, apodinitrogenase from a
nifH mutant strain has a tetrameric composition (
2
2) and is not readily activated by purified FeMo-co (11, 12).
There are three forms of NafY present in extracts of A. vinelandii: an apodinitrogenase-associated form, an unassociated form proposed to exist as a homodimer, and a FeMo-co-associated form (13). NafY serves as a "molecular prop" whose function is to maintain the conformation of the FeMo-co-deficient apodinitrogenase competent for FeMo-co insertion (7, 9, 13, 14). FeMo-co is found buried, and thus inaccessible, within the protein in the mature
2
2 dinitrogenase. It is believed that the maturation of apodinitrogenase occurs in several steps. The
2
2 form of apodinitrogenase is synthesized having an inaccessible FeMo-co site. The FeMo-co site in the
2
2 form is then made accessible through a reaction that requires dinitrogenase reductase and MgATP (11). The dinitrogenase reductase-dependent maturation of apodinitrogenase promotes the binding of
(NafY) and its conversion to the stabilized
2
2
2 form. Finally, FeMo-co is inserted, and NafY disassociates from the mature dinitrogenase. Consistent with this notion, it has been recently shown that a deletion in nafY halves the competency of apodinitrogenase for FeMo-co insertion in Azotobacter extracts (10). The ability of NafY to bind separately to free FeMo-co or to apodinitrogenase led Roberts and co-workers (13) to propose that NafY was also a FeMo-co insertase. This proposal remains controversial because it has been shown that NafY is dispensable for the insertion of FeMo-co into apodinitrogenase (10, 15).
We overexpressed NafY in Escherichia coli cells and found that the purified protein has an N-terminal domain and a C-terminal domain. The C-terminal domain of NafY is conserved among the NifX, NifY, VnfX, and NifB family of proteins and has been referred to as the "core domain" of NafY. The core domain is able to bind to FeMo-co but unable to bind to apodinitrogenase (16). The crystal structure of the core domain has been determined and shown to consist of a five-stranded
-sheet flanked by five
-helices (16). Here we report on the biochemical properties of the purified NafY protein and the NafY-FeMo-co complex. We also present data suggesting that the His121 amino acid residue of NafY is involved in FeMo-co binding.
| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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and BL21 (pREP-4) strains were grown in Luria-Bertani medium at 37 °C with shaking (250 rpm). For growth of E. coli on plates, medium solidified with 1.5% agar was used. Antibiotics were used at standard concentrations (18). Expression and Purification of NafYOverproduction of NafY in E. coli was accomplished by fusing a nafY gene cartridge to the glutathione S-transferase (GST) gene, whose expression is controlled by a tac promoter. Plasmid pRHB62 contains the nafY gene cartridge ligated into the pGEX-4T-3 plasmid (Amersham Biosciences), which incorporates a thrombin cleavage site to remove GST from the fusion partner. The overproduction of GST-NafY, purification of the NafY fusion protein, and separation of the GST moiety from NafY using thrombin were performed as described previously (16). A typical purification procedure yielded 15 mg of NafY from 500 ml of cell culture. The preparations of purified NafY were supplemented with glycerol to 10% (v/v), made anaerobic through degassing with alternate cycles of vacuum and flushing with argon gas, and frozen as droplets into liquid nitrogen until used.
When pure preparations of the GST-NafY fusion protein were required, the purification protocol was identical to that of NafY, but the incubation with thrombin protease was omitted, and GST-NafY was eluted from the glutathione-Sepharose column with 5 column volumes of 10 mM reduced glutathione in PBS (10 mM Na2HPO4, 1.8 mM KH2PO4, 140 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, pH 7.4). The eluted GST-NafY protein had some minor protein contaminants at this point, and the preparation was loaded into a 1 cm x 10 cm Mono-Q column (Amersham Biosciences) equilibrated in PBS for further purification. The column was washed with 1 column volume of PBS, and proteins were eluted from the column using a linear 150500 mM NaCl gradient in PBS. GST-NafY eluted at about 350 mM NaCl and was estimated to be >95% pure based on SDS-PAGE analysis.
Site-directed Mutagenesis of nafYGeneration of site-directed mutations in nafY was carried out using plasmid pRHB62 as template and the QuikChange kit (Stratagene) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The presence of the introduced mutations was confirmed by sequencing. Plasmids pRHB68 (C166S), pRHB69 (C166A), pRHB70 (H121L), pRHB71 (C125A), and pRHB72 (C125A,H188L) were generated. Plasmids encoding NafY variants were transferred to E. coli strain BL21 (pREP-4) by transformation. The overexpression and purification of NafY variants was carried out as described above for the wild-type NafY.
Purification of Other ComponentsApodinitrogenase was purified in its NafY-deficient
2
2 form by affinity chromatography utilizing the GST-NafY fusion protein bound to glutathione-Sepharose 4B resin (>95% purity).2 The resultant protein was stored anaerobically in liquid nitrogen until used. Methods for the purification of FeMo-co (19) and NifB-co (20) have been described previously.
Determination of the Native Molecular Mass of NafYThe native molecular mass of NafY was determined by equilibrium sedimentation of pure NafY in 0.2 M sodium phosphate buffer, 0.1 M NaCl, pH 7.5. Equilibrium sedimentation experiments were performed in a Beckman XL-A analytical ultracentrifuge using 12-mm double sector charcoal-filled Epon centerpieces. Three 100-µl samples were prepared by dilution of a dialyzed stock solution with its dialysate to give concentrations of 0.25, 0.5, and 0.75 mg of NafY/ml. 105 µl of dialysate were in the reference sector of each cell. Concentration gradients were recorded at 280 nm every 34 h until the gradients were superimposible. Equilibrium data were attained at 10,000 rpm and 17,300 rpm at 20 °C.
Gel filtration chromatography experiments were performed by applying 100 µl of sample (containing 80 µg of NafY) onto a Superose 6, Superdex 200, or a Sephacryl S-200 column connected to an FPLC apparatus (Amersham Biosciences). Columns were 1 cm diameter x 30 cm long. PBS buffer and a 0.5 ml/min flow rate were used. When FeMo-co was included in the analysis, PBS was made anaerobic by sparging with nitrogen for 2 h and then adding 0.1 mM sodium dithionite.
Quantitation of the Affinity of NafY for FeMo-co and Interaction between NafY and NifB-coThe Kd of the NafY-FeMo-co complex was estimated using the equation developed by Lundblad et al. (21), after measuring the changes in the intrinsic fluorescence of NafY upon FeMo-co binding. Fluorescence changes in NafY were recorded at room temperature with a PerkinElmer Life Sciences LS 50 B spectrofluorometer using pure NafY protein in PBS supplemented with 10% glycerol. The instrument settings were:
ex = 295 nm; excitation slit, 2.5 nm;
em = 354 nm; and emission slit, 7.5 nm. The values were corrected for dilution and for inner filter effects. The interaction between NafY and NifB-co was studied measuring the changes in the intrinsic fluorescence of NafY because of the presence of increasing concentrations of NifB-co. Fluorescence changes in NafY were recorded as above. The values were corrected for dilution and for inner filter effects.
Determination of the Number of FeMo-co-binding Sites in NafY Purified NafY and isolated FeMo-co were used to determine the stoichiometry of the binding. All glassware was rinsed with 4 N HCl overnight to remove traces of contaminating molybdenum and iron and then rinsed thoroughly with deionized water. An amount of FeMo-co equivalent to 10 nmol of molybdenum was added to 3 nmol of NafY in 1.35 ml of anaerobic 25 mM Tris-HCl buffer, 1 mM sodium dithionite, pH 7.5. The mixture was incubated for 5 min at room temperature and then applied to a 1 cm x 30 cm Superdex 200 column equilibrated in the same buffer to separate unbound FeMo-co from the NafY-FeMo-co complex. The protein sample was eluted in the same buffer and then subjected to protein and metal analyses. The iron and molybdenum contents of the protein samples were determined at the University of Georgia by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.
SDS-PAGE and Immunoblot AnalysisThe procedure for SDS-PAGE has been described (22). Immunoblot analysis was performed as described by Brandner et al. (23). Purified preparations of NafY described in this work were used to raise anti-NafY antibodies at the Polyclonal Antibody Service of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Anoxic Native Gel Electrophoresis and Iron StainingThe proteins were separated on anoxic native gels with a 716% acrylamide and a 020% sucrose gradient as described (11). When needed, native gels were stained for iron as described previously (24).
Protein AssaysThe protein concentrations were determined by the bicinchoninic acid method using bovine serum albumin as standard (25).
EPR AnalysisWe performed EPR analysis of the NafY-FeMo-co complex. The complex was generated by mixing an excess of NafY (3.5 mg, 130 nmol) and 50 nmol of FeMo-co in a total volume of 36.5 ml of anaerobic 25 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM sodium dithionite, pH 7.5 buffer. The complex was then anaerobically concentrated in an Amicon cell, diluted, and reconcentrated with the same buffer until the concentration of N-methylformamide was under 1% (v/v). EPR was performed at a microwave frequency of 9.44 Ghz and a modulation amplitude of 10 millitesla using a Bruker ESP 300E EPR spectrometer equipped with a Bruker ER0815 frequency converter, a Bruker ER041 XG microwave bridge, and a Oxford ITC temperature controller.
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
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-D-thiogalactopyranoside (Fig. 1, lane 2). (Incubation of BL21 cells at 37 °C and 1 mM isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside resulted in the accumulation of insoluble GST-NafY.) The protocol for purification of NafY involved three steps: glutathione-Sepharose affinity chromatography, in situ digestion with thrombin to separate NafY from the GST moiety, and benzamidine-Sepharose affinity chromatography to remove the thrombin (see "Experimental Procedures" for details). The purity of NafY at the end of the process was determined to be >99% based on SDS-PAGE analysis (Fig. 1, lane 3). The UV-visible absorption spectrum of the as-isolated NafY protein has a single peak with a maximum at 281 nm and is featureless in the 310900 nm range (data not shown). The as-isolated NafY protein does not contain significant levels of iron or molybdenum.
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Unassociated and FeMo-co-Bound Forms of NafY Are MonomericWe began characterizing the purified NafY by determining its molecular mass and quaternary structure. Homer et al. (13) had reported that, in cell-free extracts of A. vinelandii, NafY is a dimer of 46 kDa that monomerizes into 23-kDa subunits upon FeMo-co binding. The result was based on gel filtration chromatography using a Sephacryl resin. In the process of determining the molecular masses of the unassociated and the FeMo-co-bound forms of purified NafY, we found that both forms are monomeric under the conditions employed here.
Equilibrium centrifugation experiments were performed because they are less sensitive to protein shape-induced errors than gel filtration. The native molecular mass of NafY was determined in three different samples containing 0.25, 0.5, and 0.75 mg of NafY/ml. Analysis of the equilibrium centrifugation data yielded an average mass of 28,012 ± 134 Da for the unassociated NafY (Fig. 2A). This number is in good agreement with the predicted molecular mass of a NafY monomer as deduced from the nafY gene sequence (26,141 Da) and also with the 26,152 ± 3 Da number obtained by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry on several preparations of purified NafY (data not shown). Importantly, the analysis of the equilibrium centrifugation experiments showed no significant levels of NafY dimer formation in any of the three different concentrations of NafY tested (Keq for the dimer/monomer pair = 0.042 ± 0.008). These results clearly indicate that the unassociated form of NafY is a monomer.
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The gel filtration results presented here differ from those reported previously. One explanation would be that the form of NafY present in crude extracts of A. vinelandii (studied in Ref. 13) behaves differently from the NafY purified from E. coli cells (studied here). However, this is unlikely because both proteins have identical migration patterns on anoxic native gel electrophoresis (data not shown). Our gel filtration and equilibrium centrifugation results also differ from each other. Although NafY behaves almost as a dimer in gel filtration, it clearly behaves as a monomer during equilibrium centrifugation. Equilibrium centrifugation is far less sensitive than gel filtration to errors because of anomalies in protein shape, and the simplest explanation is that the size of NafY is overestimated when analyzed by gel filtration chromatography because the shape of NafY would be very different from spherical. In any event, the results presented here suggest that: 1) NafY is a monomeric 26-kDa protein and 2) FeMo-co binding to NafY does not alter this monomeric state.
Purified NafY Is Able to Bind FeMo-coThe capability of purified NafY to bind FeMo-co was assayed by means of anoxic native gel electrophoresis. It has previously been shown that the FeMo-co-bound form of NafY migrates faster than the unassociated NafY in native gel electrophoresis of crude extracts of A. vinelandii (13). Here we show that purified NafY also shifts to a more quickly migrating species in native gels upon FeMo-co binding (compare lanes 1 and 2 in Fig. 3A). The presence of FeMo-co in the more quickly migrating species is supported by iron staining of the gel, where only the more quickly migrating species gives a positive iron stain (Fig. 3B, lane 2). Because the oligomerization state of NafY does not change upon FeMo-co binding, the migration shift of NafY in native gels suggests that the protein is either more compact in the presence of FeMo-co or that the net charge on the protein has changed. In addition, NafY mobility shift does not require the presence of any additional protein; therefore NafY alone is sufficient for FeMo-co binding. The GST-NafY fusion protein is also capable of binding FeMo-co and shifting to a more quickly migrating species in anoxic native gel electrophoresis (compare lanes 1 and 2 in Fig. 3B). It seems that the GST moiety of the GST-NafY fusion protein does not obstruct the FeMo-co-binding site present in NafY.
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The His121 Residue of NafY Is Involved in FeMo-co Binding The
subunit of dinitrogenase binds FeMo-co covalently through the side chains of residues Cys275 (to the distal iron atom) and His442 (to the molybdenum atom). Although NafY and dinitrogenase have different foldings for FeMo-co binding, Cys and His residues on NafY are still good candidates to coordinate the cofactor. NafY has three cysteine residues (Cys125, Cys166, and Cys196) and three histidine residues (His35, His121, and His188). We have substituted for those Cys or His residues in NafY that are conserved (or lie in a conserved region) among NafY homologs (Fig. 6). H121L, C125A, C166A, C166S, and a double C125A,H188L variant of NafY have been generated. It is interesting to note that all the selected residues lie within the core domain of NafY, which has been shown to be sufficient for FeMo-co binding (16). The NafY variants have been overexpressed and purified from E. coli cells following the same protocol used for the wild type. The purity of all NafYvariant preparations was >95% as estimated by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 7).
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2
2 Apodinitrogenase from the Mutant Strain UW146 (nifB-nafY)It is well known that in cell extracts of A. vinelandii NafY (
) not only binds to FeMo-co but also binds to apodinitrogenase. In fact, cell extracts of the FeMo-co-deficient strain UW45 (nifB) present a stable hexameric apodinitrogenase with an
2
2
2 composition (8). We wanted to know whether our preparations of purified NafY retain this capability. Purified NafY was added to the cell-free extract of the FeMo-co-deficient, NafY-deficient A. vinelandii UW146 strain (nifBnafY) and incubated for 5 min on ice. The mix was electrophoresed on an anoxic native gel, and proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane where an immunoblot was developed with antibodies to NafY (Fig. 9A). As expected, there was no reacting material in extracts of mutant UW146 (data not shown). When purified NafY was added to the extract of UW146, NafY shifted from its original nonassociated position to the apodinitrogenase-associated migrating position in the anoxic native gel. This is interpreted as a stable binding between NafY and apodinitrogenase. Interestingly, the GST-NafY fusion protein was also capable of binding apodinitrogenase when added to the extract of UW146, and this property has been used to purify
2
2 apodinitrogenase from UW146 cells.2 This demonstrates that both NafY and the GST-NafY fusion protein can be expressed and purified from E. coli cells and retain the capability to bind apodinitrogenase. Moreover, the interaction of NafY with
2
2 apodinitrogenase does not require the presence of any additional protein, as illustrated by the comigration of both proteins when a sample containing only pure
2
2 apodinitrogenase and NafY is subjected to anoxic native gel electrophoresis (Fig. 9B). Interaction of NafY with NifB-coNifB-co, the product of NifB, is an iron-sulfur cluster of unidentified structure that serves as the specific precursor for the biosynthesis of FeMo-co of Mo-nitrogenase, FeV-co of V-nitrogenase, and FeFe-co of Fe-only-nitrogenase (20, 28, 29). It has been previously shown that NifB-co binds to proteins involved in the biosynthesis of FeMo-co, such as NifX (30) and NifNE (31), or the biosynthesis of FeV-co, such as VnfX (32). Because NafY, NifX, and VnfX are homologs (10) and are proposed to have similar structures, the prediction is that NafY would also be able to bind NifB-co. However, no iron or sulfur has been found associated to NafY in the form of NifB-co or other intermediates when studied by anoxic native gel electrophoresis. Labeled iron and sulfur from NifB-co or labeled molybdenum from a FeMo-co precursor have been found associated to NafY only if all the components necessary for FeMo-co biosynthesis are present in the assay mixture (33, 34). These results have been taken as evidence of FeMo-co being synthesized and accumulated on NafY.
We have followed the changes in NafY fluorescence in the presence of NifB-co to detect a possible interaction between them. The addition of increasing amounts of NifB-co to a solution containing 1.5 µM of purified NafY partially quenched the fluorescence emission of NafY in a sigmoidal-like pattern (Fig. 10). An identical control reaction in which ovalbumin was substituting for NafY showed a small fluorescence quenching that correlated linearly to the amount of NifB-co added. This quenching is due to interfering substances present in our preparations of NifB-co. O2-denatured NifB-co failed to quench NafY fluorescence beyond the numbers of the control reaction (data not shown), indicating that the quenching effect on NafY is specifically due to the presence of intact NifB-co in the reaction mix.
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ConclusionsThe properties of NafY (
) in extracts of A. vinelandii have been well documented (13). The association of NafY with FeMo-co has been used to follow the in vitro biosynthesis of FeMo-co (36, 37) and the interaction of NafY with the FeMo-co-deficient apodinitrogenase used to follow the maturation process of apodinitrogenase (11). However, little was known about the biochemical properties of NafY or the NafY-FeMo-co complex.
This study shows that, as purified, NafY is a 26-kDa monomeric protein that retains the capability of binding FeMo-co and apodinitrogenase. NafY has high affinity for FeMo-co (Kd = 62 nM) and does not require any additional factor(s) to bind either to FeMo-co or to apodinitrogenase. The EPR spectrum of the NafY-bound FeMo-co retains the characteristic resting state S = 3/2 signal of the cofactor, but its broadness resembles that of free FeMo-co. Site-directed mutagenesis experiments suggest that of all conserved His or Cys residues in NafY, only His121 is directly involved in cofactor binding. Finally, we have obtained preliminary data showing that NafY also possess the ability to interact with NifB-co.
| FOOTNOTES |
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This paper is dedicated to the memory of Luisa Alvarez. ![]()
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Plant and Microbial Biology, 111 Koshland Hall, College of Natural Resources, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720. Tel.: 510-643-3940; Fax: 510-642-4995; E-mail: pludden{at}nature.berkeley.edu.
1 The abbreviations used are: FeMo-co, iron-molybdenum cofactor; NifB-co, NifB cofactor; GST, glutathione S-transferase; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; FPLC, fast protein liquid chromatography. ![]()
2 L. M. Rubio, and P. W. Ludden, unpublished results. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| REFERENCES |
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