Published December 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Nitrogenase beyond the Resting State: A Structural Perspective

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Nitrogenases have the remarkable ability to catalyze the reduction of dinitrogen to ammonia under physiological conditions. How does this happen? The current view of the nitrogenase mechanism focuses on the role of hydrides, the binding of dinitrogen in a reductive elimination process coupled to loss of dihydrogen, and the binding of substrates to a binuclear site on the active site cofactor. This review focuses on recent experimental characterizations of turnover relevant forms of the enzyme determined by cryo-electron microscopy and other approaches, and comparison of these forms to the resting state enzyme and the broader family of iron sulfur clusters. Emerging themes include the following: (i) The obligatory coupling of protein and electron transfers does not occur in synthetic and small-molecule iron–sulfur clusters. The coupling of these processes in nitrogenase suggests that they may involve unique features of the cofactor, such as hydride formation on the trigonal prismatic arrangement of irons, protonation of belt sulfurs, and/or protonation of the interstitial carbon. (ii) Both the active site cofactor and protein are dynamic under turnover conditions; the changes are such that more highly reduced forms may differ in key ways from the resting-state structure. Homocitrate appears to play a key role in coupling cofactor and protein dynamics. (iii) Structural asymmetries are observed in nitrogenase under turnover-relevant conditions by cryo-electron microscopy, although the mechanistic relevance of these states (such as half-of-sites reactivity) remains to be established.

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Acknowledgement

We thank Ailiena Maggiolo, Stephanie Threatt, Trixia Buscagan, Belinda Wenke, Thomas Spatzal, Jens Kaiser, and Songye Chen for the invaluable discussions. The generous support of the Beckman Institute for the Caltech CryoEM Resource Center and Molecular Observatory was essential for the performance of the structural work at Caltech discussed in this review.

Funding

This research was funded by support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (D.C.R.) and NIH GM143836 (R.A.W.).

Contributions

Conceptualization, R.A.W. and D.C.R.; writing—original draft preparation, R.A.W. and D.C.R.; writing—review and editing, R.A.W. and D.C.R.; visualization, R.A.W. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Data Availability

Data are available in original cited literature and corresponding supporting information. Additionally, all structures discussed in this review are publicly available through the Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Additional details

Created:
January 9, 2024
Modified:
January 9, 2024