AbstractSuperoxide dismutase (SOD) from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrobaculumaerophilum (a facultative aerobe) has been cloned and expressed in a mesophilic host (Escherichia coli) as a soluble tetrameric apoprotein. The purified apoprotein can be reconstituted with either Mn or Fe by heating the protein with the appropriate metal salt at an elevated temperature (95C). Both Mn- and Fe-reconstituted P.aerophilum SOD exhibit superoxide dismutase activity, with the Mn-containing enzyme having the higher activity. P.aerophilum SOD is extremely thermostable and the reconstitution with Mn(II) can be performed in an autoclave (122C, 18psi). The Mn(III) optical absorption spectrum of Mn-reconstituted P.aerophilum SOD is distinct from that of most other MnSODs and is unchanged upon addition of NaN3. The optical absorption spectrum of Fe-reconstituted P.aerophilum SOD is typical of Fe-substituted MnSODs and authentic FeSOD and exhibits a pH-dependent transition with an effective pKa value higher than that found for Fe-substituted MnSOD from either E.coli or Thermus spp. Amino acid sequence analysis shows that the P.aerophilum SOD is closely related to SODs from other hyperthermophilic archaea (Aeropyrumpernix and Sulfolobus spp.), forming a family of enzymes distinct from the hyperthermophilic bacterial SOD from Aquifexpyrophilus and from mesophilic SODs.