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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (
NQO1
)
6,196
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1)-inactivating factor has been isolated from 8-day-old wheat leaves. The purification schedule involved ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex G-100 filtration, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and Sephadex G-150 filtration. No accurate assessment could be made as to the degree of purification relative to crude extract as the inactivating factor could not be detected in crude extract. However a 2,446-fold purification was achieved from the ammonium sulfate fraction to the pooled enzyme from the Sephadex G-150 step.The inactivating factor was heat-labile and had a molecular weight of 37,500. The inactivating factor was particularly sensitive to the divalent metal chelators, 1,10-phenanthroline and bathophenanthroline. Evidence indicated that Fe(2+) may be the functional metal. The trypsin inhibitors N-alpha-p-tosyl-l-lysine chloromethyl ketone and alpha-N-benzoyl-l-arginine were inhibitory. However, phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride, an inhibitor of serine peptide hydrolases, was not inhibitory. Neither casein nor hemoglobin nor a range of artificial substrates were hydrolyzed by the inactivating factor. Highly purified wheat leaf nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.99.3) and
ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase
:oxygenase (
EC 4.1.1.39
) were not affected by the nitrate reductase-inactivating factor.The inactivating factor was more active toward the NADH-nitrate reductase compared to either of the component enzymic activities flavin adenine mononucleotide-nitrate reductase and methyl viologen-nitrate reductase. The NADH-ferricyanide reductase (
diaphorase
) component was the least sensitive.
...
PMID:In Vitro Stability of Nitrate Reductase from Wheat Leaves: III. Isolation and Partial Characterization of a Nitrate Reductase-inactivating Factor. 1666 Oct 24
Chloroplasts of maize leaves differentiate into specific bundle sheath (BS) and mesophyll (M) types to accommodate C(4) photosynthesis. Chloroplasts contain thylakoid and envelope membranes that contain the photosynthetic machineries and transporters but also proteins involved in e.g. protein homeostasis. These chloroplast membranes must be specialized within each cell type to accommodate C(4) photosynthesis and regulate metabolic fluxes and activities. This quantitative study determined the differentiated state of BS and M chloroplast thylakoid and envelope membrane proteomes and their oligomeric states using innovative gel-based and mass spectrometry-based protein quantifications. This included native gels, iTRAQ, and label-free quantification using an LTQ-Orbitrap. Subunits of Photosystems I and II, the cytochrome b(6)f, and ATP synthase complexes showed average BS/M accumulation ratios of 1.6, 0.45, 1.0, and 1.33, respectively, whereas ratios for the light-harvesting complex I and II families were 1.72 and 0.68, respectively. A 1000-kDa BS-specific
NAD(P)H dehydrogenase
complex with associated proteins of unknown function containing more than 15 proteins was observed; we speculate that this novel complex possibly functions in inorganic carbon concentration when carboxylation rates by
ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase
/oxygenase are lower than decarboxylation rates by malic enzyme. Differential accumulation of thylakoid proteases (Egy and DegP), state transition kinases (STN7,8), and Photosystem I and II assembly factors was observed, suggesting that cell-specific photosynthetic electron transport depends on post-translational regulatory mechanisms. BS/M ratios for inner envelope transporters phosphoenolpyruvate/P(i) translocator, Dit1, Dit2, and Mex1 were determined and reflect metabolic fluxes in carbon metabolism. A wide variety of hundreds of other proteins showed differential BS/M accumulation. Mass spectral information and functional annotations are available through the Plant Proteome Database. These data are integrated with previous data, resulting in a model for C(4) photosynthesis, thereby providing new rationales for metabolic engineering of C(4) pathways and targeted analysis of genetic networks that coordinate C(4) differentiation.
...
PMID:Consequences of C4 differentiation for chloroplast membrane proteomes in maize mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. 1845 40
Prior studies with Nicotiana and Arabidopsis described failed assembly of the chloroplastic NDH [
NAD(P)H dehydrogenase
] supercomplex by serial mutation of several subunit genes. We examined the properties of Zea mays leaves containing Mu and Ds insertions into nuclear gene exons encoding the critical o- and n-subunits of NDH, respectively. In vivo reduction of plastoquinone in the dark was sharply diminished in maize homozygous mutant compared to normal leaves but not to the extreme degree observed for the corresponding lesions in Arabidopsis. The net carbon assimilation rate (A) at high irradiance and saturating CO2 levels was reduced by one-half due to NDH mutation in maize although no genotypic effect was evident at very low CO2 levels. Simultaneous assessment of chlorophyll fluorescence and A in maize at low (2% by volume) and high (21%) O2 levels indicated the presence of a small, yet detectable, O2-dependent component of total linear photosynthetic electron transport in 21% O2 This O2-dependent component decreased with increasing CO2 level indicative of photorespiration. Photorespiration was generally elevated in maize mutant compared to normal leaves. Quantification of the proportion of total electron transport supporting photorespiration enabled estimation of the bundle sheath cell CO2 concentration (Cb) using a simple kinetic model of
ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase
function. The A versus Cb relationships overlapped for normal and mutant lines consistent with occurrence of strictly CO2-limited photosynthesis in the mutant bundle sheath cell. The results are discussed in terms of a previously reported CO2 concentration model [Laisk A, Edwards GE (2000) Photosynth Res 66: 199-224].
...
PMID:Evidence for a Role for NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase in Concentration of CO2 in the Bundle Sheath Cell of Zea mays. 2700 61