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Flavin-based electron bifurcation is a long hidden mechanism of energetic coupling present mainly in anaerobic bacteria and archaea that suffer from energy limitations in their environment. Electron bifurcation saves precious cellular ATP and enables lithotrophic life of acetate-forming (acetogenic) bacteria that grow on H2 + CO2 by the only pathway that combines CO2 fixation with ATP synthesis, the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway. The energy barrier for the endergonic reduction of NADP+, an electron carrier in the Wood–Ljungdahl pathway, with NADH as reductant is overcome by an electron-bifurcating, ferredoxin-dependent transhydrogenase (Nfn) but many acetogens lack nfn genes. We have purified a ferredoxin-dependent NADH:NADP+ oxidoreductase from Sporomusa ovata, characterized the enzyme biochemically and identified the encoding genes. These studies led to the identification of a novel, Sporomusa type Nfn (Stn), built from existing modules of enzymes such as the soluble [Fe–Fe] hydrogenase, that is widespread in acetogens and other anaerobic bacteria.
Interspecies hydrogen transfer in anoxic ecosystems is essential for the complete microbial breakdown of organic matter to methane. Acetogenic bacteria are key players in anaerobic food webs and have been considered as prime candidates for hydrogen cycling. We have tested this hypothesis by mutational analysis of the hydrogenase in the model acetogen Acetobacterium woodii. Hydrogenase-deletion mutants no longer grew on H2 + CO2 or organic substrates such as fructose, lactate, or ethanol. Heterotrophic growth could be restored by addition of molecular hydrogen to the culture, indicating that hydrogen is an intermediate in heterotrophic growth. Indeed, hydrogen production from fructose was detected in a stirred-tank reactor. The mutant grew well on organic substrates plus caffeate, an alternative electron acceptor that does not require molecular hydrogen but NADH as reductant. These data are consistent with the notion that molecular hydrogen is produced from organic substrates and then used as reductant for CO2 reduction. Surprisingly, hydrogen cycling in A. woodii is different from the known modes of interspecies or intraspecies hydrogen cycling. Our data are consistent with a novel type of hydrogen cycling that connects an oxidative and reductive metabolic module in one bacterial cell, "intracellular syntrophy."