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Study reveals insights into enzyme that combats a common greenhouse gas
Three states of the maturation apparatus of N2O reductase: A complex of the proteins NosF (yellow), NosY (red) and NosD (green) changes its conformation by consuming biochemical energy and can thus take over a copper ion from the transport protein NosL (blue) and pass it on to the enzyme in the next step. Image courtesy: Du and Lü Labs, Van Andel Institute.



GRAND RAPIDS, MI.- An enzyme that combats the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) may one day give scientists a potent new tool for reducing the amount of the gas in the atmosphere thanks in part to new findings published in Nature.

The study details how the enzyme—N2O reductase—is assembled and offers key insights into its ability to render nitrous oxide into harmless nitrogen and water. The research was co-led by VAI Associate Professor Juan Du, Ph.D., VAI Associate Professor Wei Lü, Ph.D., and University of Freiburg Professor Oliver Einsle, Ph.D.

"Addressing greenhouse gases is a massive, multi-faceted endeavor. Today's findings are an early but important step toward development of another tool to potentially combat one contributor to climate change," Du said.

Greenhouse gases trap heat in the Earth's atmosphere and contribute to increasing global temperatures. Nitrous oxide only accounts for about 7% of greenhouse gases produced by human activities but its impact is 300-fold that of the most common greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. Nitrous oxide is most frequently generated by agricultural practices, such as the use of nitrogen fertilizers, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. It can remain in the atmosphere for more than a century.

N2O reductase is used by certain microbes to break down nitrogen-based molecules as part of the Earth's natural nitrogen cycle. Use of nitrogen-heavy fertilizers can overwhelm these microbes' ability to fully mitigate nitrous oxide, allowing it to escape into the atmosphere. Understanding exactly how this happens is a crucial step toward strategies to mediate nitrous oxide, thus reducing atmospheric levels.

The study centered on N2O reductase's structure and the way it interacts with other molecular complexes. Using a host of mapping and modeling techniques, the team discovered that N2O reductase acts as a conduit that converts chemical energy into mechanical energy, which in turn powers the delivery of copper ions required for the creation of more N2O reductase.

The findings reshape a decade-old belief about this crucial copper delivery system and reveal a novel mode of operation for similar molecules. Although additional research is needed, the findings provide a detailed blueprint that may be translated into future environmental remediation strategies.







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