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The Nitrogen Cycle and Nitrogen Fixation The biosynthetic pathways to amino acids and nucleotides share a requirement for nitrogen. Soluble, biologically useful nitrogen compounds are scarce in natural environments, so amino acids, ammonia and nucleotides are used economically by most organisms. How is nitrogen from the environment introduced into biological systems? The most abundant form of nitrogen is present in air, which is 4/5 molecular N2. Only a few species of organisms can convert atmospheric nitrogen into forms useful for living organisms. Therefore, the metabolic processes of different organisms function in an independent manner to salvage and reuse biologically available nitrogen in a vast Nitrogen Cycle. The first step in the nitrogen cycle is the reduction (Fixation) of atmospheric nitrogen by nitrogen-fixing bacteria to ammonia. Ammonia can be used by most organisms, however, soil bacteria that derive their energy by oxidation of NH3 to nitrite (NO2) and nitrate (NO3) are so abundant that nearly all ammonia reaching the soil becomes oxidized to nitrate. This process is called Nitrification. Plants and bacteria can reduce nitrate to ammonia by the action of nitrate reductases (Nitrate assimilation). Ammonia so formed can be used for biosynthesis of amino acids in plants, and then used by animals for protein synthesis. Microbial degradation of proteins after death of an organisms returns ammonia to the soil, where nitrifying bacteria convert it to nitrate and nitrite again. A balance is achieved between fixed nitrogen and atomospheric nitrogen by bacteria that convert nitrate to N2 under anaeobic conditions. In this process, Denitrification, soil bacteria use NO3 rather than O2 as the final electron acceptor in a series of reactions (like Ox. Phos.) that generates a proton gradient for ATP synthesis. Amino acids and other N-containing compounds. Nitrate Assimilation Reduction by some anaerobic bacteria; most plants Denitrification NO3- N2 Nitrogen fixation + NH4 Degradation by animals and bacteria Rhizobium Azotobacter NO2Nitrification by soil bacteria Synthesis in plants and bacteria Nitrification by soil bacteria Nitrate Assimilation Nitrate assimilation occurs in two steps: Two electron reduction of nitrate to nitrite catalyzed by nitrate reductase, and the six electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia, catalyzed by nitrite reductase. Nitrate assimilation is the predominant means by which green plants, algae and many microorganisms acquire nitrogen. The pathway accounts for over 99% of the inorganic nitrogen (nitrate or N2) assimilated into organisms. Nitrate Reductase NO3- + 2H+ + 2e- NO2- + H2O Nitrate reductase passes electrons via a mini electron transport chain from NADH to NO3- to reduce it to NO2-. NADH NADH+ [SH FAD cytochrome b557 MoCo] NO3NO2- Nitrite Reductase in Plants NO2- + 8H+ + 6e- NH4 + 2H2O Nitrite reductase requires 6 electrons to reduce NO2- to ammonia. These electrons are obtained from photosynthetically reduced ferredoxin (Fdred). Light 6 Fdred 6 Fdox [(4FeS) siroheme] NO2NH4+ Nitrite reductases in higher plants are found in the chloroplast, where they have access to (Fdred). Only a few species of microorganisms, all prokaryotic, can fix atmospheric nitrogen. Some are free living, and others live as symbionts in the root nodules of leguminous plants. The first product is ammonia, and the reduction of N2 to ammonia is a highly exergonic process: N2 + 3H2 2NH3; delta G=-33 KJ/mol The N-N triple bond is very stable, and so nitrogen fixation has a very high activation energy. The overall reaction for biological nitrogen fixation: N2 + 10H+ + 8e- + 16ATP 2NH4+ +16ADP + 16Pi + H2 Biological nitrogen fixation is carried out by a highly conserved complex of proteins called the nitrogenase complex that has two components, dinitrogenase reductase and dinitrogenase. Dinitrogenase reductase is a dimer of two identical subunits. It contains a single Fe4-S4 center and can be oxidized and reduced by one electron. It also has two binding sites for ATP and hydrolyzes ATP during electron transfer. Dinitrogenase is a tetramer with two copies of two different subunits. It contains both Fe and Mo, and its redox centers contain a total of 2 Mo, 32Fe and 30S per tetramer. 1/2 of the Fe and S are present as Fe4-S4 centers. The remainder is a novel Fe-Mo cofactor (FeMoCo). Some forms of the enzyme contain vanadium instead of molybdenum. Nitrogen fixation is carried out by a highly reduced form of dinitrogenase, and it requries 8 electrons; six for the reduction of N2 and two to produce one molecule of H2. Dinitrogenase is reduced by transfer of electrons from dinitrogenase reductase, and the 8 electrons are transferred one at a time, with the reduced reductase binding and the oxidized reductase dissociating from dinitrogenase in a cycle. This cycle requires the hydrolysis of ATP. The source of electrons varies, but is usually ferredoxin or flavodoxin. Reduced Ferredoxin or Flavodoxin electron transfer Dinitrogenase Reductase electron transfer, ATP hydrolysis Dinitrogenase electron transfer NH4+ Both ATP hydrolysis and ATP binding bring about conformational changes that overcome the high activation energy. Two ATP are hydrolyzed per electron transferred (16 ATP total). Nitrogenase is very unstable in the presence of oxygen. The reductase is inactivated in air, with a half-life of 30s. Dinitrogenase has a half-life of 10 min. in air. Nitrogen fixing organisms cope with this problem in a variety of ways. Regulation of Nitrogen Fixation ADP inhibits the activity of nitrogenase. As the energy charge of the cell drops, nitrogen fixation is blocked. Ammonia represses the expression of the nif genes, the genes that encode the proteins of the nitrogen fixing system. Mechanisms for Dealing with Oxygen Toxicity: •Some organisms live in an anaerobic environment. •Some aerobic organisms uncouple their electron transport chains. This results in an increase in the rate of electron transport and an increased consumption of oxygen. •Some filamentous cyanobacteria produce specialized cells called heterocysts that have a very thick wall that prevents oxygen from diffusing into the cell. •The root nodules of plants produce the protein leghemoglobin. This protein binds oxygen with high affinity and transfers the oxygen to the electron transport system.