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      Vanadium nitrogenase: a two-hit wonder?

      Dalton Transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)
      Amino Acid Sequence, Biocatalysis, Carbon Monoxide, metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Nitrogen Fixation, Nitrogenase, chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction

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          Abstract

          Nitrogenase catalyzes the biological conversion of atmospheric dinitrogen to bioavailable ammonia. The molybdenum (Mo)- and vanadium (V)-dependent nitrogenases are two homologous members of this metalloenzyme family. However, despite their similarities in structure and function, the characterization of V-nitrogenase has taken a much longer and more winding path than that of its Mo-counterpart. From the initial discovery of this nitrogen-fixing system, to the recent finding of its CO-reducing capacity, V-nitrogenase has proven to be a two-hit wonder in the over-a-century-long research of nitrogen fixation. This perspective provides a brief account of the catalytic function and structural basis of V-nitrogenase, as well as a short discussion of the theoretical and practical potentials of this unique metalloenzyme.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          22101422
          3823560
          10.1039/c1dt11535a

          Chemistry
          Amino Acid Sequence,Biocatalysis,Carbon Monoxide,metabolism,Molecular Sequence Data,Nitrogen Fixation,Nitrogenase,chemistry,Oxidation-Reduction

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