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J Bacteriol. 1992 January; 174(1): 137-143

research-article

Hydrogen-oxidizing electron transport components in the hyperthermophilic archaebacterium Pyrodictium brockii.

T D Pihl, L K Black, B A Schulman and R J Maier

Department of Biology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218.

ABSTRACT

The hyperthermophilic archaebacterium Pyrodictium brockii grows optimally at 105 degrees C by a form of metabolism known as hydrogen-sulfur autotrophy, which is characterized by the oxidation of H2 by S0 to produce ATP and H2S. UV-irradiated membranes were not able to carry out the hydrogen-dependent reduction of sulfur. However, the activity could be restored by the addition of ubiquinone Q10 or ubiquinone Q6 to the UV-damaged membranes. A quinone with thin-layer chromatography migration properties similar to those of Q6 was purified by thin-layer chromatography from membranes of P. brockii, but nuclear magnetic resonance analysis failed to confirm its identity as a ubiquinone. P. brockii quinone was capable of restoring hydrogen-dependent sulfur reduction to UV-irradiated membranes. Hydrogen-reduced-minus-air-oxidized absorption difference spectra on membranes revealed absorption peaks characteristic of c-type cytochromes. A c-type cytochrome with alpha, beta, and gamma peaks at 553, 522, and 421 nm, respectively, was solubilized from membranes with 0.5% Triton X-100. Pyridine ferrohemochrome spectra confirmed its identity as a c-type cytochrome, and heme staining of membranes loaded on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels revealed a single heme-containing component of 13 to 14 kDa. Studies with the ubiquinone analog 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide demonstrated that the P. brockii quinone is located on the substrate side of the electron transport chain with respect to the c-type cytochrome. These first characterizations of the strictly anaerobic, presumably primitive P. brockii electron transport chain suggest that the hydrogenase operates at a relatively high redox potential and that the H2-oxidizing chain more closely resembles those of aerobic eubacterial H2-oxidizing bacteria than those of the H2-metabolizing systems of anaerobes or the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus.


J Bacteriol. 1992 January; 174(1): 137-143




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