Abstract

The reduction of the heterodisulfide (CoM-S-S-HTP) of coenzyme M (H-S-CoM) and N-7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (H-S-HTP) with H2 is an energy-conserving step in most methanogenic Archaea. In this study, we show that in Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (strain Marburg) this reaction is catalyzed by a stable H2-heterodisulfide oxidoreductase complex of F420-non-reducing hydrogenase and heterodisulfide reductase. This complex, which was loosely associated with the cytoplasmic membrane, was purified 17-fold with 80% yield to apparent homogeneity. The purified complex was composed of six different subunits of apparent molecular masses 80, 51, 41, 36, 21 and 17 kDa, and 1 mol complex, with apparent molecular mass 250 kDa, contained approximately 0.6 mol nickel, 0.9 mol FAD, 26 mol non-heme iron and 22 mol acid-labile sulfur. In 25 mM Chaps, the complex partially dissociated into two subcomplexes. The first subcomplex was was composed of the 51-, 41- and 17-kDa subunits; 1 mol trimer contained 0.7 mol nickel, 10 mol non-heme iron and 9 mol acid-labile sulfur and exhibited F420-non-reducing hydrogenase activity. The other subcomplex was composed of the 80-, 36- and 21-kDa subunits; 1 mol trimer contained 0.8 mol FAD, 22 mol non-heme iron and 15 mol acid-labile sulfur and exhibited heterodi-sulfide-reductase activity. The stimulatory effects of potassium phosphate, a membrane component, uracil derivatives and coenzyme F430 on the H2:heterodisulfide-oxidoreductase activity of the purified complex are described.

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