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TheroleoftheFe-Sclusterinthesensorydomain of
nitrogenase transcriptionalactivatorVnfA from
Azotobacter vinelandii
Hiroshi Nakajima
1
, Nobuyuki Takatani
2
, Kyohei Yoshimitsu
1
, Mitsuko Itoh
1
, Shigetoshi Aono
3
,
Yasuhiro Takahashi
4
and Yoshihito Watanabe
2
1 Department of Chemistry, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University, Japan
2 Research Center of Materials Science, Nagoya University, Japan
3 Okazaki Institute for Integrative Biosciences, Japan
4 Division of Life Science, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saitama University, Japan
Keywords
Azotobactor vinelandii; iron-sulfur cluster;
nitrogen fixation; nitrogenase; transcriptional
regulator
Correspondence
H. Nakajima, Department of Chemistry,
Graduate School of Science, Nagoya
University, Furo-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya
464-8602, Japan
Fax: +81 52 789 2953
Tel: +81 52 789 3557
E-mail: hnakajima@mbox.chem.
nagoya-u.ac.jp
Database
VnfA has been submitted to the Swiss-Prot
database under the accession number
C1DI41
(Received 12 October 2009, revised 28
November 2009, accepted 3 December
2009)
doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07530.x
Transcriptional activatorVnfA is required for the expression of a second
nitrogenase system encoded inthe vnfH and vnfDGK operons in Azotobac-
ter vinelandii. Inthe present study, we have purified full-length VnfA pro-
duced in E. coli as recombinant proteins (Strep-tag attached and tag-less
proteins), enabling detailed characterization ofVnfA for the first time. The
EPR spectra of whole cells producing tag-less VnfA (VnfA) show distinc-
tive signals assignable to a 3Fe-4S clusterinthe oxidized form ([Fe
3
S
4
]
+
).
Although aerobically purified VnfA shows no vestiges of any Fe-S clusters,
enzymatic reconstitution under anaerobic conditions reproduced [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
dominantly inthe protein. Additional spectroscopic evidence of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in vitro is provided by anaerobically purified Strep-tag attached VnfA.
Thus, spectroscopic studies both in vivo and in vitro indicate the involve-
ment of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
as a prosthetic group in VnfA. Molecular mass analyses
reveal that VnfA is a tetramer both inthe presence and absence of the
Fe-S cluster. Quantitative data of iron and acid-labile sulfur in reconsti-
tuted VnfA are fitted with four 3Fe-4S clusters per a tetramer, suggesting
that one subunit bears one cluster. In vivo b-gal assays reveal that the Fe-S
cluster which is presumably anchored inthe GAF domain by the N-termi-
nal cysteine residues is essential for VnfA to exert its transcription activity
on the target nitrogenase genes. Unlike the NifAL system of A. vinelandii,
O
2
shows no effect on thetranscriptional activity ofVnfA but reactive oxy-
gen species is reactive to cause disassembly oftheFe-Scluster and turns
active VnfA inactive.
Structured digital abstract
l
MINT-7311946: VnfA (uniprotkb:C1DI41) and VnfA (uniprotkb:C1DI41) bind (MI:0407)by
molecular sieving (
MI:0071)
l
MINT-7311931: VnfA (uniprotkb:C1DI41) and VnfA (uniprotkb:C1DI41) bind (MI:0407)by
blue native page (
MI:0276)
Abbreviations
AAA+, ATPases associated with various cellular activities; AMP-PNP, 5¢-adenylyl-b,c-imidodiphosphate; BCA, bicinchoninic acid; b-gal,
b-galactosidase; GPC, gel permeation chromatography; IscS, cysteine desulfurase; IPTG, isopropyl thio-b-
D-galactoside; o-phen,
o-phenanthroline; PMS, phenazine methosulfate; ROS, reactive oxygen species; UAS, upstream activator sequence.
FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 817
Introduction
The diazotroph Azotobactervinelandii contains three
distinct nitrogenases. Nitrogenase-1 is a conventional
molybdenum nitrogenase that bears a metal-sulfur
cluster with molybdenum and iron as the reactive site.
By contrast, the active center of nitrogenase-2 consists
of vanadium and iron, and that of nitrogenase-3 con-
tains only iron [1,2]. The expression of each set of
structural genes is regulated by specific transcriptional
activator proteins, namely, NifA, VnfA and AnfA,
which regulate nifHDK (nitrogenase-1), vnfDGK (nitro-
genase-2) and anfHDGK (nitrogenase-3), respectively
[3]. Gene analyses suggest that these activators belong
to r
N
-dependent regulatory proteins generally consist-
ing of three major domains [4], and the N-terminal
domain termed GAF (i.e. cGMP-specific and -stimu-
lated phosphodiesterases, Anabaena adenylate cyclases
and Escherichia coli FhlA) is considered to be a sen-
sory domain [5]. The primary structure ofthe GAF
domain is highly conserved inVnfA and AnfA,
whereas NifA shares little homology with them, sug-
gesting that the sensor structure of NifA is distinct
from that ofVnfA and AnfA [3]. Indeed, the GAF
domain of NifA forms a complex with another sensory
protein, NifL, which contains a flavin moiety that
serves as an oxygen sensor inthe cytosol [6–8],
whereas VnfA and AnfA work independently and do
not have proteins corresponding to NifL [3,9–11].
Instead, there are characteristic Cys-rich motifs, Cys-
X-Cys-XXXX-Cys and Ser-X-Cys-XXXX-Cys, preced-
ing the GAF domains ofVnfA and AnfA, respectively
[3]. These motifs have been suggested to form active
centers inthesensory domains containing metal atoms
or clusters as prosthetic groups. A previous study of
AnfA variants in vivo revealed that AnfA requires Cys
residues inthe N-terminus and iron ions for transcrip-
tional function [12]. Similar inferences have been pro-
posed for nitrogenase regulatory proteins isolated from
other diazotrophs, such as Herbaspirillum seropedicae
[13,14] and Bradyrhizobium japonicum [15,16]. These
regulatory proteins also have Cys-rich motifs in their
central domains and have a specific requirement for
iron ions to allow activatation ofthe transcription of
nitrogenase genes in their host cells, whereas it is still
obscure whether the Cys-rich motifs are associated
with the requirement for iron.
By contrast to a number of studies conducted in vivo
[9,12,17–21], there have been essentially no structural
and functional analyses ofVnfA and AnfA conducted
in vitro because ofthe insolubility ofthe proteins as
well as difficulty in overexpressing their genes using
recombinant systems. This has hampered their isola-
tion by conventional purification methods such as col-
umn chromatography. An exceptional success is the
purification of an AnfA variant reported by Austin
et al. [22]. In their study, the N-terminal domain of
AnfA was truncated to prevent the intrinsic aggrega-
tion ofthe intact form during purification. The
obtained variant retained transcriptional activator
activity and provided fundamental information about
the function of AnfA, including the binding sequence
in the anfH promoter region and prerequisites for ren-
dering AnfA transcriptionally active. However, the
sensing mechanism that may reside inthe GAF
domain and the environmental factors affecting AnfA
activity remain unknown because ofthe absence of the
N-terminal domainin this variant. Because sensing is a
principal function of regulatory proteins, the isolation
of VnfA and AnfA with their sensor (GAF) domains
is highly desirable.
In the present study, we have succeeded inthe pro-
duction and purification of recombinant full-length
VnfA in both Strep-tag attached and tag-less forms in
E. coli. Spectroscopic and biochemical characterization
of the recombinant VnfA both in vitro and in vivo
show that VnfA function requires iron-sulfur (Fe-S)
clusters as a prosthetic group. We describe a functional
form ofVnfA including the number of subunits in the
native form and the type and presumable locus of the
Fe-S cluster, as well as the stoichiometry ofthe cluster.
Activity assays conducted in vivo allow discussion of a
role for theFe-Sclusterinthetranscriptional function
of VnfA as well as putative environmental factors reac-
tive to the cluster.
Results
Cell growth conditions and whole cell EPR
spectra
The production of tag-less VnfA (VnfA) in E. coli is
sensitive to the cultivation temperature. When induc-
tion by isopropyl thio-b-d-galactoside (IPTG) was per-
formed above 25 °C, most ofthe produced protein
was found inthe insoluble fraction, whereas, below
25 °C, soluble VnfA can be obtained after cell lysis by
sonication and subsequent centrifugation ofthe cellu-
lar debris (data not shown). Therefore, we cultivated
the cells for 16 h at 20 °C to allow efficient induction
of soluble VnfA. The amount of oxygen inthe culture
had little effect on the production: VnfA was produced
similarly under both aerobic and micro-aerobic growth
conditions. As described below, VnfA produced under
VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster H. Nakajima et al.
818 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS
these conditions could be purified through a combina-
tion of column chromatography and ammonium
sulfate fractionation.
Having established the culture conditions that allow
the accumulation ofVnfAinthe cytosol of E. coli,
EPR spectroscopy using whole E. coli cells overex-
pressing vnfA was attempted to obtain information
regarding the metals present inthe prosthetic group.
The results obtained are shown in Fig. 1. Regardless
of the aeration level ofthe culture, the cells produced
distinctive signals at g = 2.03 and 2.01 at 10 °K (aero-
bic cultures are shown Fig. 1A; data not shown for
micro-aerobic cultures), and this is different from the
native signals of E. coli, which are mainly the result of
high-spin Mn
2+
species and free organic radicals [23]
(Fig. 1B). Figure 1D shows the overall shape of the
signals obtained by subtraction of Fig. 1B from
Fig. 1A, which is consistent with an oxidized 3Fe-4S
cluster ([Fe
3
S
4
]
+
) found in metalloproteins, such as
inactive cytosolic aconitases, ferredoxin and enzymes
bearing [Fe
3
S
4
] [24]. The temperature dependence of
the signal intensity also supports the presence of an
Fe-S cluster. Weaker signals are observed at higher
temperature and almost disappear at 50 °K (Fig. 1C).
Thus, the EPR results indicate the accumulation
of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in E. coli overexpressing vnfA (i.e. the
involvement of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in VnfA). However, the EPR
data cannot exclude possible presence of other types of
Fe-S clusters, such as 4Fe-4S ([Fe
4
S
4
]) and 2Fe-2S
([Fe
2
S
2
]), because theFe-S clusters could be EPR-silent
depending on their oxidation state. To address this
measurement problem encountered in vivo, we purified
and characterized VnfAin vitro.
Purification of recombinant VnfA
VnfA produced inthe cytosol of E. coli was purified
by column chromatography and ammonium sulfate
fractionation under aerobic conditions. The addition
of 1 mm dithiothreitol throughout the procedure and
0.2% (v ⁄ v) Triton X-100 after the final step (heparin
Sepharose column chromatography) was, however,
essential for suppressing aggregation ofthe protein.
In the absence of dithiothreitol and Triton X-100,
purified VnfA precipitated after several hours, even at
4 °C. Complete elimination of E. coli chromosomal
DNA during the first pass through an anion exchange
column was also crucial for the subsequent purification
steps because VnfA cannot be resolublized once co-
precipitated with DNA. An almost homogeneous band
was obtained after the final step, comprising heparin
column chromatography on SDS-PAGE (Fig. S1). The
estimated molecular mass ofthe band was 58 kDa,
in agreement with the calculated value of VnfA
(57 608 Da) based on the nucleotide sequence of vnfA
[3]. Conclusive confirmation was obtained by N-termi-
nal amino acid sequence analysis ofthe first ten resi-
dues ofthe purified protein, providing the sequence
MSSLPQYCEC, which is identical to the sequence of
VnfA. The yield of purified protein after the final step
was approximately 3 mg if started with 20 g of cell pel-
lets. Thus, we have successfully purified a recombinant
VnfA that is amenable to further investigation in vitro.
Reconstitution oftheFe-Sclusterin apo-VnfA
By contrast to the results ofthe EPR performed in
vivo, the UV-visible spectrum of aerobically purified
VnfA shows no features arising from any Fe-S clusters
(Fig. 2A, dotted line) other than an unidentified shoul-
der band observed at 330 nm. Because some Fe-S
clusters in proteins are unstable in atmospheric oxy-
gen, the vanishment oftheFe-Sclusterfrom purified
VnfA could be a result ofthe disassembly of the
cluster during aerobic purification. Fe-S clusters in
2.03
2.01
A
B
C
D
300 320 340 360 380
Ma
g
netic field (mT)
Fig. 1. Whole cell EPR spectra of E. coli JM109 strain cultured
under aerobic conditions: (A) overexpressing vnfA recorded at
10 °K, (B) transformed with pKK223-3 carrying no structural gene
of VnfA and (C) overexpressing vnfA recorded at 50 °K. (D) Differ-
ence spectrum obtained from (A) – (B). Spectra were recorded at
2.5 mW microwave power and a field modulation of 0.8 mT. The
intensities ofthe spectra were normalized with native signals of
Mn
2+
species from E. coli.
H. Nakajima et al. VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster
FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 819
apo-proteins in vitro are commonly reconstituted to
regenerate their original structures and functions
[25–27]. Therefore, we attempted the reconstitution of
purified VnfA under anaerobic conditions. Enzymatic
production of S
2)
from l-cysteine by cysteine desulfur-
ase (IscS) from A. vinelandii [28] was used rather than
Na
2
S to avoid coprecipitation ofVnfA with a large
amount ofFe-S colloids formed during the reaction.
After reconstitution and subsequent purification using
desalting columns, fractions containing VnfA showed
an apparent shoulder and broad bands at 310 and
420 nm, respectively (Fig. 2A, solid line). The latter
band was bleached upon the addition ofthe reductant,
dithionite salt (Fig. 2A, dashed line). These character-
istic properties indicate that apo-VnfA is reconstituted
with [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
and ⁄ or [Fe
4
S
4
]
2+
. EPR spectroscopy
provides further information on the nature ofthe Fe-S
cluster. The reconstituted holo-VnfA gave a signal with
a g-value of 2.01, which disappeared upon the addition
of the reductant (Fig 2B). Although the rhombicity of
the spectrum found inthe whole cell measurement
vanishes, the observed properties are common to
[Fe
3
S
4
]
+
. Quantification ofthe signals using
Cu(II)EDTA as a standard indicated that the concen-
tration of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
was approximately 34 lm, which
corresponds to approximately 70% oftheVnfA mono-
mer concentration (50 lm) determined by the bicinch-
oninic acid (BCA) method. The iron and sulfur
contents inthe reconstituted holo-VnfA were deter-
mined by inductively coupled plasma–optical emission
spectroscopy and acid labile sulfide analysis, respec-
tively. The reconstituted holo-VnfA was found to con-
tain 2.8 ± 0.1 equivalents of iron and 3.5 ± 0.3
equivalents of sulfur per monomer (Table S1), corre-
sponding to one monomer bearing one Fe-S cluster.
These quantitative results indicate that [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
is a
major species found inVnfA reconstituted under the
present conditions. No EPR signals assignable to
[Fe
4
S
4
]
2+
were observed, either before or after reduc-
tion by dithionite salt.
The lost rhombicity inthe EPR spectrum was
partially recovered by the addition of 5¢-adenylyl-
b,c-imidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) to the reconstituted
holo-VnfA, although the signal at g = 2.03 in vivo was
still shifted to 2.02 (Fig. 2C). AMP-PNP is a nonhy-
drolysable ATP analog that is used to trap an ATP
binding state of ATP hydrolases. Some ATPases asso-
ciated with various cellular activities (AAA+) proteins
are known to bind AMP-PNP and reproduce their
conformational changes to exert the original functions
of the proteins [29,30]. Although the ATPase activity
has not been reported for VnfA so far, the central
domain ofVnfA is deduced to be an AAA+ domain
based on high homology to the AAA+ domain of
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
300 400 500 600 700
Wavelength (nm)
Absorbance
2.0
A
B
D
C
2.03 2.012.02
340 350330
Magnetic field (mT)
Fig. 2. (A) UV-visible spectra. Dotted line,
aerobically purified VnfA (apo-form); solid
line, after reconstitution with an Fe-S clus-
ter; dashed line, the reconstituted holo-VnfA
after addition ofthe reductant, dithionite
salt. (B) EPR spectrum ofthe holo-VnfA
with a g-value of 2.01 (solid line) that disap-
peared following reduction with dithionite
salt (dotted line). (C) EPR spectrum of the
holo-VnfA after the addition of 1 m
M AMP-
PNP. (D) EPR spectrum reproduced from
Fig. 1D for facile comparison with the spec-
tra (B) and (C). The concentration of VnfA
for both UV-visible and EPR measurements
was 50 l
M in 20 mM HGDT buffer (deter-
mined by the BCA method). EPR spectra
were recorded at 10 °K using 2.5 mW
microwave power and a field modulation of
0.8 mT.
VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster H. Nakajima et al.
820 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS
NifA [3]. Consistently, our preliminary study of
N-terminally truncated VnfA constituted with the cen-
tral and C-terminal domains had exhibited ATPase
activity compatible with other r
N
-dependent transcrip-
tional activators, such as NorR [31] (N. Takatani,
H. Nakajima, Y. Watanabe, unpublished data). There-
fore, it is likely that VnfA binds AMP-PNP inthe cen-
tral domain to initiate a conformational change
required for the subsequent hydrolysis. Indeed, limited
protease digestion assays with either apo- or reconsti-
tuted holo-VnfA have provided results that reveal
several conformations ofVnfA corresponding to a
combination ofthe presence and absence of AMP-PNP
and theFe-Scluster (vide infra). This could help to
solve the problem of why binding AMP-PNP has an
influence on theFe-Scluster detected inthe EPR mea-
surement. This point will be discussed subsequently.
The studies with the reconstitution ofFe-S clusters
in aerobically purified apo-VnfA support the presence
of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in VnfA. To obtain further evidence
demonstrating the involvement oftheFe-Scluster in
in vitro experiments, we attempted the anaerobic
purification ofVnfA attached to a Strep-tag at the
C-terminus ofthe protein.
Anaerobic purification of Strep-tag attached VnfA
Attempts to purify VnfA as a fusion protein to gluta-
thione S-transferase, thioredoxine or His-tag were
unsuccessful because the produced proteins were insol-
uble, despite manipulation ofthe aeration and temper-
ature inthe culture conditions. VnfA conjugated with
Strep-tag at the C-terminus (Strep-VnfA) yielded a
small amount of soluble protein inthe cell-free lysate
(Fig. S2). However, the solubility of Strep-VnfA was
markedly improved when the SUF proteins, which are
known to be involved in biological Fe-Scluster assem-
bly [32,33], were co-produced with Strep-VnfA. After
single-step purification under anaerobic conditions
using streptavidin attached to an affinity column,
Strep-VnfA provided an almost homogeneous band on
SDS-PAGE.
The UV-visible spectrum of anaerobically purified
Strep-VnfA showed bands at 330 and 420 nm
(Fig. 3A, solid line), which diminished upon the addi-
tion of dithionite salt (dotted line). Featureless absorp-
tion observed at wavelengths longer than 500 nm
might indicate the participation of some [Fe
2
S
2
]
2+
spe-
cies. However, the EPR measurement for Strep-VnfA
showed a single signal characteristic of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
at
g = 2.01 before the reduction (Fig 3B, solid line) and
no signal assignable to [Fe
2
S
2
]
+
even after the reduc-
tion (dotted line). Although the rhombicity ofthe EPR
signal of Strep-VnfA is still unclear, the overall shape
is rather similar to that observed inthe whole cell mea-
surements. Thus, Strep-VnfA purified under anaerobic
conditions affords additional support for the involve-
ment of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in VnfA as a prosthetic group.
Limited protease digestion assay
To obtain experimental evidence for a conformational
change ofVnfA triggered by AMP-PNP binding, VnfA
of either the apo- or reconstituted holo-form was sub-
jected to limited trypsin digestion inthe presence and
absence of AMP-PNP. Figure 4 shows the time course
of proteolysis for VnfA under each set of conditions.
AMP-PNP afforded a higher resistance to the
300 400 500 600 700
Wavelength (nm)
Absorbance
0.0
0.4
0.8
A
B
1.2
1.6
2.01
300 320 340 360 380
Magnetic field (mT)
C
Fig. 3. (A) UV-visible and (B) EPR spectra of anaerobic purified
Strep-VnfA. The solid lines represent the spectra of purified Strep-
VnfA. The dotted line represents the spectra following reduction
with dithionite. (C) EPR spectrum reproduced from Fig. 1D for
facile comparison with the spectra in (B). The EPR spectra were
recorded at 10 °K using 2.5 mW microwave power and a field
modulation of 0.8 mT.
H. Nakajima et al. VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster
FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 821
proteolysis for both the apo- and holo-forms, as dem-
onstrated by a much slower digestion ofthe original
bands under +AMP-PNP conditions, whereas the
digestion patterns of both the apo- and holo-form
appeared to be little affected by the presence or
absence of AMP-PNP. By contrast, an effect of the
Fe-S cluster on the proteolysis was not found in the
sensitivity to the digestion but was observed with
respect to the alteration ofthe digestion patterns (i.e.
digestion sites in apo- and holo-VnfA). One particular
change inthe digestion pattern was found between 31
and 45 kDa in which two major fragments inthe apo-
form were not observed inthe holo-form, whereas the
fragment at 28 kDa inthe holo-form was scarce in the
apo-form. A fragment at 19 kDa inthe holo-form is
the other major difference, although this was hardly
observed inthe apo-form. Regarding the effect of
AMP-PNP on the proteolysis of VnfA, a similar effect
of the nucleotide binding was reported in a study of
the limited trypsin digestion with NifA + MgADP, in
which binding MgADP to the central AAA+ domain
is ascribed to the trigger of a conformational change
of NifA to avoid further proteolysis [34,35]. By anal-
ogy with the study on NifA, the observed transforma-
tion ofVnfA to a more resistant form to proteolysis is
ascribed to a conformational change induced by bind-
ing AMP-PNP, presumably at the central domain of
VnfA. Similarly, the changes inthe fragmentation
depending on theFe-Scluster can be accounted for by
a conformational change caused by thecluster forma-
tion in VnfA. The variation inthe digestion patterns
corresponding to a combination ofthe presence and
absence of AMP-PNP and theFe-Scluster suggests
that the conformational changes by theFe-S cluster
and AMP-PNP are interdependent.
Number of subunits in native VnfA
The molecular mass of native VnfA with and without
the Fe-Scluster was determined to characterize
the quaternary structure of VnfA. Gel permeation
chromatography (GPC) of purified VnfA bearing no
Fe-S cluster (apo-VnfA) eluted in a single and some-
what broad peak that corresponds to a molecular mass
of 224 kDa (Fig. S3). This value is 3.9-fold higher than
that oftheVnfA monomer (57 608 Da, calculated
from the inferred amino acid sequence). Because of
technical difficulties in performing GPC under fully
anaerobic conditions, the mass of reconstituted holo-
VnfA could not be measured by GPC. Instead, holo-
VnfA was subjected to anaerobic blue native PAGE
[36] using degassed electrophoresis buffers and an
argon atmosphere. Holo-VnfA provided a homoge-
neous band with a molecular mass of 213 kDa, which
corresponds to a 3.7-fold higher mass ofthe subunit
(Fig. S4). Thus, the mass analyses ofVnfA confirm a
tetrameric configuration both inthe presence and
absence oftheFe-S cluster. As described for the recon-
stitution ofVnfA with theFe-S cluster, quantitative
analyses for iron and acid labile sulfur inthe reconsti-
tuted VnfA indicated one Fe-Sclusterin each mono-
mer, as well as the stoichiometry of four Fe-S clusters
in native VnfA.
Functional analyses oftheFe-S cluster
To clarify the roles oftheFe-Scluster found in VnfA,
we performed in vivo assays under various growth
conditions by using a heterogeneous reporter system
carrying the lacZ gene preceded by the vnfH promoter
in the E. coli JM109 strain. With the view of immuno-
logical detection of produced VnfA, we employed
Strep-VnfA as a source ofVnfA for the reporter sys-
tem. A similar heterogeneous reporter system has been
reported and was shown to be valid for elucidating the
biological properties ofVnfA and NifAL [6,19].
To determine whether theFe-Scluster is required
for transcriptionally active VnfA, we employed o-phe-
nanthroline (o-phen) as a metal chelater for the assay,
which is expected to permeate cell membranes and
restrict iron atoms available for Fe-Scluster assembly
in the cell [37,38]. Activity was determined by the
66.2
45
KDa
Apo-VnfA
31
21.5
14.4
116.3
Holo-VnfA
0 5 10 30 60 0 5 10 30 60 min
0 5 10 30 60 0 5 10 30 60 min
–AMP-PNP +AMP-PNP –AMP-PNP +AMP-PNP
VnfA
38
32
19
VnfA
38
32
19
28
28
Fig. 4. Limited tryptic digestion assays with
VnfA of either apo- or reconstituted holo-
form inthe presence or absence of AMP-
PNP. The reactions were analyzed on 15%
polyacrylamide gels. Digestion fragments
were obtained by the reaction with trypsin
(weight ratio 1 : 180) at 20 °C for 60 min.
Details ofthe reaction conditions are pro-
vided inthe Materials and methods.
VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster H. Nakajima et al.
822 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS
transcript level ofthe lacZ gene immediately after the
addition of o-phen to minimize the effect ofthe growth
inhibition by o-phen on thetranscriptional activity of
VnfA. Figure 5 shows the time course ofthe VnfA
activity immediately after the addition of 150 lm
o-phen to the growth medium under micro-aerobic
conditions. Five minutes after the addition of o-phen,
the activity began to decrease and reached 30% of the
initial level in 45 min, whereas a control assay under
same conditions without the addition of o-phen
showed virtually no alteration inthe lacZ gene tran-
script. Because a western blot analysis confirmed the
constant level of Strep-VnfA during the assays both in
the presence and absence of o-phen, it would be
rational to ascribe the drop inthe lacZ transcript to
the repression ofthetranscriptional activity of Strep-
VnfA. The specific EPR signals of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
observed
for E. coli overexpressing vnfA disappeared after
o-phen treatment and, instead, a signal of free ferric
iron emerged at g = 4.3 (data not shown), indicating
that the reaction of o-phen brings about disassembly
of theFe-Sclusterin transcriptionally active VnfA.
Thus, we conclude that theFe-Scluster is essential for
transcriptionally active VnfA and disassembly and ⁄ or
that deformation oftheFe-Scluster turns active VnfA
inactive.
The transcript assay with o-phen under aerobic con-
ditions provided virtually the same result as that
obtained under micro-aerobic conditions (data not
shown), implying that thetranscriptional activity of
VnfA is insensitive to the aeration conditions. Then,
we inspected the effect ofthe aeration conditions on
the transcriptional activity ofVnfA (Fig. 6). A shift of
the micro-aerobically grown cells to the aerobic culture
caused no significant change inthe transcript level of
lacZ. A consistent result was also obtained by the
b-galactosidase (b-gal activity) assay (Table S3). The
accumulation of b-gal inthe reporter strain was at the
same level after the aerobic and micro-aerobic cultures.
This finding contrasts with previous studies on tran-
scriptional regulation by NifAL. As observed in the
in vivo activity assay using the homogeneous reporter
strain, NifL produced inthe E. coli reporter strain also
showed sensitivity to cytosolic O
2
of the aerobic
culture. Consequently, thetranscriptional activity of
the NifAL system was affected by the aeration condi-
tions ofthe growth media [7]. Thus, the results
obtained allow the inference that the 3Fe-4S cluster in
VnfA is insensitive to O
2
permeating living cells from
the air, and therefore cannot serve as an O
2
sensor
Time (min)
Relative transcription level
of lacZ gene
15 30 60450 min
Strep-VnfA
5
Micro-
aerobic
culture
Aerobic
culture
A
B
15 30 60450
1.0
0.25
0
0.5
0.75
Fig. 6. (A) Time course oftheVnfA activity assessed by lacZ tran-
script level at early exponential phase. After culture under micro-
anaerobic conditions, the cells was divided into aerobic (
) and
micro-aerobic (
) cultures at 0 min for the subsequent assay. Each
plot presents the mean values from three independent experi-
ments, normalized with the activity at 0 min. (B) Western blot anal-
yses for Strep-VnfA recorded at a time corresponding to the
performed assays.
15 30 6045
0
1.0
0.25
0
Time (min)
Relative transcription level
of lacZ gene
0.5
0.75
15 30 60450
min
Strep-VnfA
5
– o-phen
+ o-phen
A
B
Fig. 5. (A) Time course oftheVnfA activity assessed by lacZ tran-
script level at early exponential phase. After the addition of 150 l
M
o-phen ( ,+o-phen); no addition of o-phen ( , )o-phen). Each plot
presents the mean values from three independent experiments,
normalized with the activity at 0 min. (B) Western blot analyses for
Strep-VnfA recorded at a time corresponding to the performed
assays.
H. Nakajima et al. VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster
FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 823
under physiological conditions. Then, we screened the
effect of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on the tran-
scriptional function of VnfA.
As shown in Fig. 7, the level ofthe lacZ transcript
decreased upon the addition of phenazine methosulfate
(PMS), which is known to be an efficient superoxide
generator in aerobically grown cells [39]. The initial
induction period immediate after the addition of PMS
was followed by a drop inthe transcript level by 90%
in 60 min. Because the level ofVnfA was largely unaf-
fected by PMS during the assay, the observed decrease
in the transcript was not associated with growth inhibi-
tion ofthe strain but, instead, is ascribed to immediate
inactivation ofVnfA by PMS. The EPR spectrum
from E. coli overexpressing vnfA under the same con-
ditions exhibits replacement ofthe signals from
[Fe
3
S
4
]
+
with a strong signal at g = 2.00, which is
assignable to organic radicals generated by the reaction
of amino acid residues with ROS such as superoxide
and peroxide (Fig. 8) [23]. These findings indicate that
ROS formed inthe cytosol are reactive with the Fe-S
cluster and turn active VnfA inactive VnfA. Thus,
ROS could be considered as candidate environmental
factors. However, further evidence is needed before
this conclusion can be made because ROS are known
to cause rearrangement and ⁄ or disassembly of Fe-S
clusters in proteins regardless ofthe physiological sig-
nificance ofthe reaction [40–42].
Transcriptional activity of cysteine variants of
VnfA
The findings obtained inthe present study indicate that
VnfA bears the 3Fe-4S cluster as the prosthetic group.
The involvement of some metal ion as a prosthetic
group was originally deduced fromthe characteristic
cysteine-rich motif, 8-CXCXXXXC-15, inthe N-termi-
nal region ofVnfA and a mutagenesis study for AnfA
[3,12]. Therefore, it is likely that these cysteine residues
participate in binding the cluster. However, VnfA has
additional three cysteine residues, namely at position
107, at position 134 inthe GAF domain and at posi-
tion 267 inthe possible AAA+ domain. Accordingly,
to determine which Cys are associated with the binding
of theFe-S cluster, we prepared six Cys variants of
Strep-VnfA (C8A, C10A, C15A, C107A, C134A and
C267A, in which each cysteine residue was replaced
with alanine) and performed thein vivo b-gal activity
assay for each variant (Fig. 9). The result obtained
apparently classifies the variants in two parts. Three
variants ofthe N-terminal Cys residues (C8A, C10A
and C15A) showed significantly low transcriptional
activities corresponding to 12%, 23% and 1% of that
of wild-type, respectively. On the other hand, the
remaining variants (C107A, C134A and C267A)
2.00
300 320 340 360 380
Magnetic field (mT)
Fig. 8. Effect of PMS on the whole cell EPR spectrum of aerobi-
cally grown E. coli JM109 overexpressing vnfA. Addition of PMS to
the NFDM medium (final concentration of 50 l
M) was followed by
60 min of further culture and then harvesting. The spectrum was
recorded at 10 °K using 2.5 mW microwave power and a field mod-
ulation of 0.8 mT.
Time (min)
Relative transcription level
of lacZ gene
15 30 60450 min
Strep-VnfA
5
+PMS
A
B
–PMS
15 30 60450
1.0
0.25
0.5
0.75
0
Fig. 7. (A) Time course oftheVnfA activity assessed by lacZ tran-
script level at early exponential phase after the addition of 50 l
M
PMS ( , +PMS); no addition of PMS ( , )PMS). Each plot
presents the mean values from three independent experiments,
normalized with the activity at 0 min. (B) Western blot analyses for
Strep-VnfA recorded at a time corresponding to the performed
assays.
VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster H. Nakajima et al.
824 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS
retained almost original or rather higher activities
(65%, 81% and 117% of that of wild-type, respec-
tively). Western blot analysis showed approximately
the same stability ofthe variants compared to that of
wild-type, confirming that the difference in activity of
the variants reflects the intrinsic ability ofthe variants
compared to thetranscriptional activator. The result
obtained indicates that the N-terminal cysteine-rich
motif serves to harbor theFe-Sclusterin VnfA. How-
ever, it is still controversial whether all cysteine
residues inthe N-terminal participate in binding the
same Fe-Scluster because the amino acid sequence,
Cys8Glu9Cys10, restricts the cysteine residues from
binding to the same cluster.
Discussion
Prosthetic group of VnfA
The EPR data ofthe whole E. coli cells overexpressing
vnfA suggested the involvement ofthe 3Fe-4S cluster
in VnfA, which was supported by the spectroscopic
analyses for the reconstituted VnfA and anaerobically
purified Strep-VnfA. The quantitative analyses for the
reconstituted VnfA provide the estimate that appro-
ximately 70% of apo-VnfA is reconstituted with
[Fe
3
S
4
]
+
, indicating that [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
is a major species in
VnfA reconstituted under the present experimental
conditions. However, the UV-visible spectrum indi-
cated the partial participation of some 2Fe-2S cluster
species inthe purified Strep-VnfA, which offers the
possible involvement of other types ofFe-S clusters in
VnfA. Further identification oftheFe-Scluster in
transcriptionally active VnfA, including its conforma-
tion and oxidation state, is required. Regarding a locus
of theFe-S cluster, information pertinent to the pres-
ent study was provided by a previous systematic muta-
genesis study [12] ofthe N-terminal Ser and Cys
residues of AnfA. In that study, it was demonstrated
that Cys21 and 26, corresponding to Cys10 and 15 in
VnfA, respectively, are essential for the transcriptional
activity of AnfA. In agreement with such a finding,
our in vivo b-gal activity assays for cysteine variants of
Strep-VnfA indicate that the N-terminal cysteine resi-
dues are plausible candidates for the ligands of the
Fe-S cluster. Thus, the locus oftheFe-Scluster should
be inthe N-terminal GAF domain. Because a single
residue gap between Cys8 and Cys10 is unusual in
ligands for a single Fe-S cluster, it is unlikely that all
the N-terminal cysteine residues inthe subunit of
VnfA bind the single Fe-S cluster. A possible scenario
is that two of three cysteine residues (Cys15 and Cys8
or Cys10) bind theFe-Scluster and the remaining resi-
due binds the neighboring Fe-S cluster. Alternatively,
a non-cysteinyl residue such as histidine, aspirate or
glutamate could comprise a third ligand. Then, the
reduction ofthetranscriptional activity for C8A or
C10A is associated with the indirect influence of muta-
genesis at the neighboring residue.
The EPR spectrum ofthe reconstituted VnfA
showed a signal (g = 2.01) of different rhombicity
from those observed inthe whole E. coli cell measure-
ment (g = 2.01 and 2.03). The addition of AMP-PNP
to the reconstituted VnfA served to recover the rhomb-
icity. Although the signal at g = 2.03 still shifted to
2.02 and a fully identical spectrum to that observed in
the whole cell measurement has not been reproduced
under the present reconstitution conditions, the partial
recovery ofthe rhombicity implies that VnfA can bind
a nucleotide, and the whole cell EPR spectrum might
reflect VnfAofthe nucleotide binding form. It has
been reported that binding of ATP or ADP to NifA of
A. vinelandii leads to rearrangement of interaction
between the GAF and AAA+ domains (and thereby a
conformational change inthe protein), which are con-
sidered to couple with transmission processes of the
sensing events [34]. Considering the functional and
structural analogies to NifA, it is presumably rational
to expect that VnfA also causes a conformational
change in a similar manner to NifA; the binding of the
ATP analog induces the rearrangement ofthe GAF
and possible AAA+ (the central domain) domains in
VnfA. Indeed, the limited protease assays confirmed
that the conformational changes are dependent on a
0
500
Wild type
C8A
C10A
C15A
C107A
C134A
C267A
–VnfA
Wild type
C8A
C10A
C15A
C107A
C134A
C267A
1000
1500
2000
2500
Miller units OD
600
–1
min
–1
Fig. 9. Conventional in vivo b-gal activity assays for the Strep-VnfA
wild-type and Cys variants under aerobic conditions. The upper
panel shows the stability ofthe wild-type and variants as monitored
by western blot analysis. )VnfA, the kpvnfH strain transformed with
the plasmid, pASK-IBA3
plus
, carrying no structural gene of VnfA.
H. Nakajima et al. VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster
FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS 825
combination ofthe presence and absence of AMP-
PNP and theFe-S cluster. As described above, N-ter-
minal cysteine residues located immediately upstream
of the GAF domain are the potential ligands of the
Fe-S cluster. Consequently, the binding ofthe ATP
analog and the subsequent rearrangement ofthe inter-
domain interaction affects the electronic condition of
the Fe-Scluster through the protein scaffold, resulting
in an alteration ofthe signal rhombicity ofthe EPR
spectrum. The divergence ofthe g-value from that of
the whole cell spectrum remains to be solved. The dif-
fering conditions during biosynthetic assembly in vivo
and artificial reconstitution in vitro may affect the
spectra. For example, the signal intensity ratio of
the EPR spectra of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
changes in response to
the buffer composition, such as the concentration of
glycerol [43]. In ferredoxin II from Desulfovibrio gigas,
differing purification conditions cause variation in the
shape ofthe EPR spectrum of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
[44]. Further
modification ofthe reconstitution procedure is still in
progress, aiming to obtain an EPR spectrum identical
to that observed inthe whole cell measurement.
Native molecular mass analyses by native PAGE
and GPC show that VnfA remains tetrameric both in
the presence and absence oftheFe-S cluster. A similar
oligomeric configuration has been reported for trun-
cated AnfA, which is in equilibrium between the
dimeric and tetrameric forms, whereas NifA of A. vine-
landii is known to exist as a dimer [22]. A previous
investigation ofthe vnfH promoter revealed that the
binding site ofVnfA consists of two dyad upstream
activator sequence (UAS) motifs (5¢-GTAC-N6-
GAAC-3¢ and 5¢-GTAC-N6-GTAC-3¢) that lie on top
of each other on the same face ofthe DNA helix
[11,17,19]. Similar features are commonly required for
promoters of r
M
-dependent transcriptional regulators,
although there are several variations with respect to
the number and distance ofthe dyad UAS motifs. In
most cases, the regulators in a dimeric form bind to
each dyad UAS motif cooperatively to associate with
the target promoters [45]. However, such a binding
mode is unlikely for tetrameric VnfA because it has
four DNA binding parts. Simultaneous binding to all
four UAS motifs on the vnfH promoter is therefore
the most plausible association mode for single native
VnfA.
Native VnfA takes the tetrameric form irrespective
of the presence or absence oftheFe-S cluster, raising
the problem of how theFe-Scluster regulates the tran-
scriptional activity of VnfA. To address this, we
attempted an in vitro DNA binding assay using the flu-
orescence polarization technique for apo- and reconsti-
tuted VnfA with an oligo nucleotide containing one of
the cognate promoters (i.e. the vnfH promoter). The
reconstituted VnfA provided a dissociation constant of
87 nm (Fig. S5), whereas, as a result ofthe propensity
for facile aggregation with the oligo-nucleotide, quanti-
tative analysis for apo-VnA has not succeeded to date.
Further modification ofthe fluorescence polarization
technique is ongoing aiming to avoid the aggregation
of apo-VnfA during measurement.
Candidates for an environmental factor for VnfA
Previous studies have reported that neither molybde-
num (Mo) nor vanadium (V) show a direct effect on
the transcriptional function ofVnfA [9,20,21,46].
We also obtained results consistent with these findings
in the b-gal activity assays regarding Mo and V
(Table S4). Previous studies on the expression from
promoters of vnfA, vnfH and vnfDGK demonstrated
that V is not required for the transcription of each
promoter [20,21], but is for the translation of the
vnfDGK transcript [46], and that the repressive effect
of Mo on the vnfH and vnfDGK promoters is mediated
through the repression ofvnfA transcription [9]. On
the basis of these considerations, we conclude that
both Mo and V are excluded from being candidates
for theVnfA environmental factor. O
2
is a well-known
environmental factor for nitrogenase transcriptional
regulators. This is also true for the NifAL system in
A. vinelandii, in which a prosthetic molecule in NifL,
flavin, undergoes a redox reaction with O
2
to control
the transcriptional activity of NifA [7,8]. Recent
kinetic studies on Fnr, a well-studied O
2
responsive
transcriptional regulator bearing a 4Fe-4S cluster, have
proposed the transient formation of [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
in Fnr
upon reaction with O
2
, followed by self-disassembly to
[Fe
2
S
2
]
2+
and a complete loss oftheFe-S cluster
[47,48]. In accordance with this mechanism, it could be
considered that [Fe
3
S
4
]
+
observed for VnfAin the
EPR measurement is a stable intermediate generated
from EPR silent [Fe
4
S
4
]
+
in the process of O
2
sensing.
However, our in vivo assays performed under aerobic
and micro-aerobic conditions provided no supportive
data for O
2
sensing and revealed that VnfA is sensitive
to ROS generated inthe cytosol, which represses its
transcriptional activity. Because the lacZ transcript
assay with o-phen confirms that theFe-Scluster is an
essential component of transcriptionally active VnfA
and that disassembly ofthecluster turns active VnfA
inactive, the observed inactivation ofVnfA by ROS
could be associated with disassembly ofthe 3Fe-4S
cluster upon reaction with ROS.
The production of ROS by nitrogenases has been
proposed as an initial reaction of a possible protection
VnfA contains an iron-sulfur cluster H. Nakajima et al.
826 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS
[...]... ofAzotobactervinelandii – N-terminal domainof AnfA is responsible for dependence on nitrogenase Fe protein J Bacteriol 176, 6545–6549 Jacob J & Drummond M (1993) Construction of chimeric proteins fromthe sigma(N)-associated transcriptional activators VnfA and AnfA ofAzotobactervinelandii shows that the determinants of promoter specificity lie outside the recognition helix ofthe HTH motif in the. .. protection ofnitrogenaseinAzotobacter species: is a widely held hypothesis unequivocally supported by experimental evidence? FEMS Microbiol Rev 24, 321–333 53 Flint DH (1996) Escherichia coli contains a protein that is homologous in function and N-terminal sequence to the protein encoded by the nifS gene ofAzotobactervinelandii and that can participate inthe synthesis oftheFe-Sclusterof dihydroxy-acid... interactions inthe complex between the enhancer binding protein NIFA and the sensor NIFL fromAzotobactervinelandii J Bacteriol 183, 1359–1368 35 Soderback E, Reyes-Ramirez F, Eydmann T, Austin S, Hill S & Dixon R (1998) The redox- and fixed nitrogenresponsive regulatory protein NIFL fromAzotobactervinelandii comprises discrete flavin and nucleotidebinding domains Mol Microbiol 28, 179–192 36 Reisinger... and domain relationships of ntrC and nifA from Klebsiella pneumoniae – homologies to other regulatory proteins EMBO J 5, 441–447 5 Anantharaman V, Koonin EV & Aravind L (2001) Regulatory potential, phyletic distribution and evolution of ancient, intracellular small-molecule-binding domains J Mol Biol 307, 1271–1292 6 Martinez-Argudo I, Little R & Dixon R (2004) Roleofthe amino-terminal GAF domain of. .. Supporting information The following supplementary material is available online: Fig S1 SDS-PAGE of fractions containing VnfA after each purification step Fig S2 SDS-PAGE of E coli JM109 producing StrepVnfA Fig S3 Elution profile of GPC on Superdex-200 with purified apo-tag-less VnfA Fig S4 Blue native PAGE ofthe reconstituted holotag-less VnfA Fig S5 The binding ofthe reconstituted holo-tag-lessVnfA... TTG-3¢ The PCR product was cloned into pCR4 vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) to give pUC-VnfAE and then digested with EcoRI to provide an EcoRI fragment carrying thevnfA gene The fragment was inserted into an EcoRI site inthe pKK223-3 expression vector to afford pKKVnfAE and then subsequently used to transform the E coli strain, JM109 JM109 bearing pKK-VnfAE was cultured in LB medium containing... domainofthe NifA activatorin controlling the response to the antiactivator protein NifL Mol Microbiol 52, 1731–1744 7 Dixon R (1998) The oxygen-responsive NIFL-NIFA complex: a novel two-component regulatory system controlling nitrogenase synthesis in gamma-proteobacteria Arch Microbiol 169, 371–380 8 Key J, Hefti M, Purcell EB & Moffat K (2007) Structure ofthe redox sensor domainofAzotobacter vinelandii. .. resuspended in Z buffer The cells were broken by sonication and b-gal activity inthe lysate was determined using o-nitrophenyl-b-d-galactopyranoide, as described previously [60] DNA binding assay in vitro DNA binding by the reconstituted holo-tag-less VnfA was quantified using fluorescence polarization [61,62] Binding assays were performed in HGDT buffer with a 55 bp DNA probe containing the vnfH promoter... inthe C-terminal domain Mol Microbiol 10, 813–821 Premakumar R, Loveless TM & Bishop PE (1994) Effect of amino-acid substitutions in a potential metalbinding site of AnfA on expression fromthe anfH promoter inAzotobactervinelandii J Bacteriol 176, 6139–6142 Klassen G, Pedrosa FO, Souza EM, Yates MG & Rigo LU (1999) Sequencing and functional analysis ofthe nifENXorf1orf2 gene clusterof Herbaspirillum... promoter ofthe vanadium-dependent nitrogen-fixation pathway inAzotobactervinelandii FEMS Micorbiol Lett 98, 169–173 FEBS Journal 277 (2010) 817–832 ª 2010 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2010 FEBS H Nakajima et al 21 Walmsley J, Toukdarian A & Kennedy C (1994) Theroleof regulatory genes nifA, vnfA, anfA, nfrX, ntrC, and rpoN in expression of genes encoding the three nitrogenases ofAzotobactervinelandii . The role of the Fe-S cluster in the sensory domain of
nitrogenase transcriptional activator VnfA from
Azotobacter vinelandii
Hiroshi. stoichiometry of four Fe-S clusters
in native VnfA.
Functional analyses of the Fe-S cluster
To clarify the roles of the Fe-S cluster found in VnfA,
we performed in