nitrogenase has been researched along with methylisonitrile* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for nitrogenase and methylisonitrile
Article | Year |
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Cyanide and methylisocyanide binding to the isolated iron-molybdenum cofactor of nitrogenase.
19F NMR and x-ray absorption experiments have been performed with both the isolated FeMo cofactor and the MoFe protein of nitrogenase in search of direct evidence for substrate or inhibitor binding. Using 19F NMR as a probe and p-CF3C6H4S- as the receptor ligand, the data show that the nitrogenase inhibitors CN- and CH3NC bind to the isolated FeMo cofactor-RFS- complex in N-methylformamide with a finite formation constant. Their binding increases the electronic relaxation time of the complex and increases the life-time of the FeMo cofactor-p-CF3C6H4S- bond, Parallel molybdenum K edge and extended x-ray absorption fine structure experiments show that CH3NC does not bind to molybdenum. Although CO and N3- both relieve CN- and CH3NC inhibition of electron flow through nitrogenase, unlike the latter, they do not appear to bind to isolated FeMo cofactor. In experiments with the dithionite-reduced MoFe protein, we did not detect any changes in the molybdenum K edge or extended x-ray absorption fine structure spectra upon addition of CO, N2, C2H2, NaCN, CH3NC, or azide demonstrating that either these substrates and inhibitors do not bind to molybdenum or that the FeMo cofactor site of nitrogenase is inaccessible to substrate binding except under turnover conditions. Topics: Azotobacter; Cyanides; Ferredoxins; Fluorine; Kinetics; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Molybdoferredoxin; Nitriles; Nitrogenase; Protein Binding; Sodium Cyanide; Spectrum Analysis | 1989 |
Nitrogenase reactivity: methyl isocyanide as substrate and inhibitor.
We have examined the interaction of methyl isocyanide with the purified component proteins of Azotobacter vinelandii nitrogenase (Av1 and Av2). CH3NC was shown to be a potent reversible inhibitor (Ki = 158 microM) of total electron flow, apparently uncoupling magnesium adenosine 5'-triphosphate hydrolysis from electron transfer to substrate. CH3NC is a substrate (Km = 0.688 mM at Av2/Av1 = 8), and extrapolation of the data indicates that at high enough CH3NC concentration, H2 evolution can be eliminated. The products are methane plus methylamine (six electrons) and dimethylamine (four electrons). There is an excess (relative to methane) of methylamine formed, which may arise by hydrolysis of a two-electron intermediate. A rapid high-performance liquid chromatography/fluorescence method was developed for methylamine determination. The products C2H4 and C2H6 appear to be formed via a reduction followed by an insertion mechanism. CH3NC appears to be reduced at an enzyme state more oxidized than the one responsible for H2 evolution or N2 reduction. Other substrates (C2H2 greater than N2 congruent to azide greater than N2O) all both relieve CH3NC inhibition and inhibit CH3NC reduction. Both effects occur in the same relative order, implying productive (substrate) and nonproductive (inhibitor) modes of binding of CH3NC to the same site. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Azotobacter; Electron Transport; Hydrolysis; Models, Chemical; Nitriles; Nitrogenase; Oxidation-Reduction; Substrate Specificity | 1983 |