Hydrogen evolution and consumption by cell and chromatophore suspensions of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas capsulata was measured with a sensitive and specific mass spectrometric technique which directly monitors dissolved gases. H2 production by nitrogenase was inhibited by acetylene and restored by carbon monoxide. An H2 evolution activity coupled with HD formation and D2 uptake (H-D exchange) was unaffected by C2H2 and CO. Cultures lacking nitrogenase activity also exhibited H-D exchange activity, which was catalyzed by a membrane-bound hydrogenase present in the chromatophores of R. capsulata. A net hydrogen uptake, mediated by hydrogenase, was observed when electron acceptors such as C02, 02, or ferricyanide were present in the medium.
Hydrogenase activity was found in cells of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain B10 cultured under a variety of growth conditions either anaerobically in the light or aerobically in the dark. The highest activities were found routinely in cells grown in the presence of H2. The hydrogenase of R. capsulata was localized in the particulate fraction of the cells. High hydrogenase activities were usually observed in cells possessing an active nitrogenase. The hydrogen produced by the nitrogenase stimulated the activity of hydrogenase in growing cells. However, the synthesis of hydrogenase was not closely linked to the synthesis of nitrogenase. Hydrogenase was present in dark-grown cultures, whereas nitrogenase synthesis was not significant in the absence of light. Unlike nitrogenase, hydrogenase was present in cultures grown on NH4+. Conditions were established which allowed the synthesis of either nitrogenase or hydrogenase by resting cells. We concluded that hydrogenase can be synthesized independently of nitrogenase.
The metabolic versatility of the purple nonsulfur photosynthetic bacteria permits the expression of either a phototrophic or a dark aerobic mode of growth. These organisms also possess nitrogenase activity which may function under semiaerobic conditions. On the basis of these important properties, the light dependence of nitrogenase function and synthesis in Rhodopseudomonas capsulata was investigated. Nitrogenase activity was strictly dependent on light; no activity was observed in the dark, even when energy (ATP) was supplied by oxidative phosphorylation. It was concluded that the low-potential reducing agent required by the nitrogenase-catalyzed reaction could only be generated by a photochemical reaction. Nitrogenase biosynthesis was also largely dependent on light; however, a small amount of synthesis was observed in resting cells incubated in the dark. Resting cells prepared from dark-grown cultures synthesized nitrogenase at high rates upon illumination. The highest stability of nitrogenase in these resting cells was observed when suspensions were exposed to a diurnal pattern of illumination rather than continous light. Although nitrogenase function and synthesis are closely coupled to photosynthetic activity, the biosyntheses of bacteriochorophyll and nitrogenase are independent of each other and are most probably subject to different regulatory mechanisms by light. B10 was a generous gift from the Photosynthetic Bacteria Group,
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