Abstract

Symbiotic and free-living Frankia were investigated for correlation between hydrogenase activities (in vivo/in vitro assays) and for occurrence and localization of hydrogenase protein by Western blots and immuno-gold localization, respectively. Freshly prepared nodule homogenates from the symbiosis between Alnus incana and a local source of Frankia did not show any detectable in vivo or in vitro hydrogenase uptake activity, as also has been shown earlier. However, a free-living Frankia strain originally isolated from these nodules clearly showed both in vivo and in vitro hydrogenase activity, with the latter being approximately four times higher. Frankia strain Cpl1 showed hydrogen uptake activity both in symbiosis with Alnus incana and in a free-living state. Western blots on the different combinations of host plants and Frankia strains used in the present study revealed that all the Frankia sources contained a hydrogenase protein, even the local source where no in vivo or in vitro activity could be measured. The 72 kilodalton protein found in the symbiotic Frankia as well as in the free-living Frankia strains were immunologically related to the large subunit of a dimeric hydrogenase purified from Alcaligenes latus. Recognitions to polypeptides with molecular masses of about 41 and 19.5 kilodaltons were also observed in Frankia strain UGL011101 and in the local source of Frankia, respectively. Immunogold localization of the protein demonstrated that in both the symbiotic state and the free-living nitrogen-fixing Frankia, the protein is located in vesicles and in hyphae. The inability to measure any uptake hydrogenase activity is therefore not due to the absence of hydrogenase enzyme. However, the possibility of an inactive hydrogenase enzyme cannot be ruled out.

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