| Literature DB >> 21124800 |
Jon M Kuchenreuther1, Celestine S Grady-Smith, Alyssa S Bingham, Simon J George, Stephen P Cramer, James R Swartz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The realization of hydrogenase-based technologies for renewable H(2) production is presently limited by the need for scalable and high-yielding methods to supply active hydrogenases and their required maturases. PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21124800 PMCID: PMC2991362 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015491
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1E. coli growth and anaerobic expression of heterologous active [FeFe] hydrogenases.
All data are for cultures of E. coli strain BL21(DE3) ΔiscR, and both iron and cysteine were included in the growth medium. (Fig. 1A) Optical density at 600 nm (shown on a logarithmic scale) of cultures during aerobic (orange circles) and anaerobic (blue circles) growth phases for cells containing the pACYCDuet-1–hydGX–hydEF and pET-21(b) shydA1*–Strep-tag II plasmids. The pH of culture media (×) was also measured. Data for cultures with cells containing the pET-21(b) shydA–Strep-tag II plasmid instead of pET-21(b) shydA1*–Strep-tag II were similar and are not shown. (Fig. 1B) Cell lysate-based hydrogenase activities (µmol MV reduced·min−1·mg−1 total protein) for active CpI (red squares) and HydA1 hydrogenase (green triangles) were determined using the methyl viologen reduction assay. Data are the average for n = 3 cultures examined ± standard deviations. (Fig. 1C) SDS-PAGE analysis for the soluble fractions of final cell lysates after the anoxic co-expression of HydA1 or CpI and the HydE, HydF, and HydG maturases: (Lane 1) the molecular weight markers are from the Mark12TM protein ladder (Invitrogen); (Lane 2) soluble cell lysate protein content for E. coli strain BL21(DE3) ΔiscR following expression of no heterologous proteins from recombinant DNA plasmids; (Lane 3) co-expression of only the HydE, HydF, and HydG maturases; (Lane 4) co-expression of HydE, HydF, HydG, and HydA1–Strep-tag II; and (Lane 5) co-expression of HydE, HydF, HydG, and CpI–Strep-tag II.
Figure 2Effects of iron and cysteine supplementation as well as the iscR deletion on active hydrogenase expression.
Iron (2 mM ferric ammonium citrate) and cysteine (2 mM) were added to cultures as indicated. Methyl viologen reducing activities (µmol MV reduced·min−1·mg−1 total protein) of active [FeFe] hydrogenase in cell lysates from E. coli strains BL21(DE3) (gray bars) and BL21(DE3) ΔiscR (black bars). Hydrogenase activities were measured after 16–18 hrs of anaerobic HydA1 expression (A) and CpI expression (B). Hydrogenase activities for the ΔiscR-derived samples are indicated above the respective columns, and all activities are the average for n = 2 cultures ± standard deviations.
Biophysical characterization of purified [FeFe] hydrogenases produced in Escherichia coli.
| HydA1 | CpI | |
|
| 251±49 | 476±39 |
| µmol H2·min−1·mg−1 | ||
|
| 641±88 | 1087±146 |
| µmol H2·min−1·mg−1 | ||
|
| 41±4 | 90±10 |
| µmol H2·min−1·mg−1 | ||
|
| 4.5±0.2 | 13.2±1.3 |
| Fe atoms·peptide−1 | ||
|
| 30±11 | 7.9±0.8 |
| mg·L−1 of culture |
Data are the average from n = 3–6 cultures examined ± standard deviations.
Specific activities of purified hydrogenases were determined using methyl viologen (MV) or PetF ferredoxin as the electron donating or accepting substrates.
Figure 3Fourier transform infrared spectra of heterologous [FeFe] hydrogenases produced in E. coli.
Infrared spectra are for 100–200 µM of the (A) HydA1 and (B) CpI hydrogenases. Both enzymes were examined [ in their as-isolated state as well as [ following treatment with exogenous CO. Vibrational energies (in cm−1) for the H-cluster CO and CN− ligands are indicated in each spectrum. The wavenumber ranges for terminal CN− (ν(CN−)), terminal CO (ν(CO)), and bridging CO (ν(µ-CO)) vibrational modes are shown above the spectra. Scale bars shown at 1870 cm−1 represent a difference of 0.5 milliabsorbance units.
Comparing this work to previous reports for the production of the C. reinhardtii HydA1 hydrogenase.
| Microbial host |
| Specific Activity | Purification Yield | Iron Content | Ref. |
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| HydA1 | 730±146 | 0.04 | NR |
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| HydA1 | 935 | 0.001 | 3.9±0.3 |
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| 740±56 | 0.5 | 6.1±0.1 |
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| HydA1– | 625 | 1.0 | NR |
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| HydA1– | 760 | 0.1 | NR |
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| HydA1– | 150 | 1.0 | NR |
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Specific activities for H2 production rates are expressed in units of µmol H2·min−1·mg−1 of HydA1.
Purification yields are mg of HydA1 isolated per liter of cell culture.
Iron content is expressed in units of Fe atoms per HydA1 peptide; NR, not reported.