Abstract

The seven-iron-containing ferredoxins from Azotobacter vinelandii and Thermus thermophilus have been investigated by low-temperature magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopies and room temperature ultraviolet-visible absorption spectroscopy. The results confirm the presence of one trinuclear and one tetranuclear iron-sulfur cluster in both ferredoxins and facilitate comparison of the electronic and magnetic properties of the oxidized and reduced [3e- xS] clusters. MCD magnetization data are consistent with an S = 2 ground state for both reduced [3Fe- xS] clusters, but indicate differences in the rhombicity of the zero-field splittings. The data permit rationalization of the absence of a ΔM = 4 EPR transition for the reduced [3Fe- xS] cluster in A. vinelandii ferredoxin I. Spectroscopic studies of anaerobically isolated A. vinelandii ferredoxin I do not support the hypothesis that the [3Fe- xS] cluster arises as a result of aerial oxidative damage to a [4Fe-4S] cluster during isolation. The possibility that two distinct forms of [3Fe- xS] clusters can exist in A. vinelandii ferredoxin I was investigated by spectroscopic studies as a function of pH. The results reveal two distinct and interconvertible forms of the reduced [3Fe- xS] cluster, but do not permit rationalization of the inconsistencies in the structural data that have been reported for the oxidized clusters.

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