M. Friedrich et B. Schink, HYDROGEN FORMATION FROM GLYCOLATE DRIVEN BY REVERSED ELECTRON-TRANSPORT IN MEMBRANE-VESICLES OF A SYNTROPHIC GLYCOLATE-OXIDIZING BACTERIUM, European journal of biochemistry, 217(1), 1993, pp. 233-240
Oxidation of glycolate to 2 CO2 and 3 H-2 (DELTAG-degrees' = +36 kJ/mo
l glycolate) by the proton-reducing, glycolate-fermenting partner bact
erium of a syntrophic coculture (strain FlGlyM) depends on a low hydro
gen partial pressure (p(H-2)). The first reaction, glycolate oxidation
to glyoxylate (E-degrees' = -92 mV) with protons as electron acceptor
s (E-degrees' = -414 mV), is in equilibrium only at a p(H-2) of 1 muPa
which cannot-be maintained by the syntrophic partner bacterium Methan
ospirillum hungatei; energy therefore needs to be spent to drive this
reaction. Glycolate dehydrogenase activity (0.3-0.96 U . mg protein-1)
was detected which reduced various artificial electron acceptors such
as benzyl viologen, methylene blue, dichloroindophenol, K3[Fe(CN)6],
and water-soluble quinones. Fractionation of crude cell extract of the
glycolate-fermenting bacterium revealed that glycolate dehydrogenase,
hydrogenase, and proton-translocating ATPase were membrane-bound. Men
aquinones were found as potential electron carriers. Everted membrane
vesicles of the glycolate-fermenting bacterium catalyzed ATP-dependent
H-2 formation from glycolate (30-307 nmol H-2 . min-1 . mg protein-1)
. Protonophores, inhibitors of proton-translocating ATPase, and the qu
inone analog antimycin A inhibited H-2 formation from glycolate, indic
ating the involvement of proton-motive force to drive the endergonic o
xidation of glycolate to glyoxylate with concomitant H-2 release. This
is the first demonstration of a reversed electron transport in syntro
phic interspecies hydrogen transfer.