Abstract
Nitrogenase iron (Fe) proteins reduce CO2 to CO and/or hydrocarbons under ambient conditions. Here, we report a 2.4-Å crystal structure of the Fe protein from Methanosarcina acetivorans (MaNifH), which is generated in the presence of a reductant, dithionite, and an alternative CO2 source, bicarbonate. Structural analysis of this methanogen Fe protein species suggests that CO2 is possibly captured in an unactivated, linear conformation near the [Fe4S4] cluster of MaNifH by a conserved arginine (Arg) pair in a concerted and, possibly, asymmetric manner. Density functional theory calculations and mutational analyses provide further support for the capture of CO2 on MaNifH while suggesting a possible role of Arg in the initial coordination of CO2 via hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions. These results provide a useful framework for further mechanistic investigations of CO2 activation by a surface-exposed [Fe4S4] cluster, which may facilitate future development of FeS catalysts for ambient conversion of CO2 into valuable chemical commodities.
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Rettberg, L. A., Kang, W., Stiebritz, M. T., Hiller, C. J., Lee, C. C., Liedtke, J., … Hu, Y. H. Y. (2019). Structural analysis of a nitrogenase iron protein from methanosarcina acetivorans: Implications for CO2 capture by a surface-exposed [Fe4S4] cluster. MBio, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01497-19
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