Archaeoglobus fulgidus, a hyperthermophilic sulfate-reducing Archaeon, contains high Fe3+-EDTA reductase activity in its soluble protein fraction. The corresponding enzyme, which constitutes about 0.75% of the soluble protein, was purified 175-fold to homogeneity, Based on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the ferric reductase consists of a single subunit with a M-r of 18,000, The M-r of the native enzyme was determined by size exclusion chromatography to be 40,000 suggesting that the native ferric reductase is a homodimer, The enzyme uses both NADH and NADPH as electron donors to reduce Fe3+-EDTA. Other Fe3+ complexes and dichlorophenolindophenol serve as alternative electron accepters, but uncomplexed Fe3+ is not utilized. The purified enzyme strictly requires FMN or FAD as a catalytic intermediate for Fe3+ reduction. Ferric reductase also reduces FMN and FAD, but not riboflavin, with NAD(P)H which classifies the enzyme as a NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase. The enzyme exhibits a temperature optimum of 88 degrees C. When incubated at 85 degrees C, the enzyme activity half-life was 2 h, N-terminal sequence analysis of the purified ferric reductase resulted in the identification of the hypothetical gene, AF0830, of the A. fulgidus genomic sequence. The A. fulgidus ferric reductase shares amino acid sequence similarity with a family of NAD(P)H:FMN oxidoreductases but not with any ferric reductases suggesting that the A. fulgidus ferric reductase is a novel enzyme.