Abstract

Nitrate is an abundant nutrient and electron acceptor throughout Earth’s biosphere. Virtually all nitrate in nature is produced by the oxidation of nitrite by the nitrite oxidoreductase (NXR) multiprotein complex. NXR is a crucial enzyme in the global biological nitrogen cycle, and is found in nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (including comammox organisms), which generate the bulk of the nitrate in the environment, and in anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria which produce half of the dinitrogen gas in our atmosphere. However, despite its central role in biology and decades of intense study, no structural information on NXR is available. Here, we present a structural and biochemical analysis of the NXR from the anammox bacterium Kuenenia stuttgartiensis, integrating X-ray crystallography, cryo-electron tomography, helical reconstruction cryo-electron microscopy, interaction and reconstitution studies and enzyme kinetics. We find that NXR catalyses both nitrite oxidation and nitrate reduction, and show that in the cell, NXR is arranged in tubules several hundred nanometres long. We reveal the tubule architecture and show that tubule formation is induced by a previously unidentified, haem-containing subunit, NXR-T. The results also reveal unexpected features in the active site of the enzyme, an unusual cofactor coordination in the protein’s electron transport chain, and elucidate the electron transfer pathways within the complex.

Highlights

  • Nitrate is an abundant nutrient and electron acceptor throughout Earth’s biosphere

  • nitrite oxidoreductase (NXR) are associated with tubule structures of hitherto unknown architecture and function inside the ‘anammoxosome’[9], the bacterial organelle in which the anammox substrates nitrite and ammonium are converted to N2 and nitrate[10]

  • In contrast to the membrane-bound respiratory nitrate reductase (NAR), which lacks nitrite-oxidizing activity, physiological studies have shown that NXRs can catalyse both nitrite oxidation and nitrate reduction[1,2,14,15,16]

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrate is an abundant nutrient and electron acceptor throughout Earth’s biosphere. Virtually all nitrate in nature is produced by the oxidation of nitrite by the nitrite oxidoreductase (NXR) multiprotein complex. How anammox NXRs transfer the electrons harvested from nitrite oxidation to their redox partners, and why and how these enzymes form tubule structures in anammox bacteria is not understood.

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