Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

1. NADPH-dependent nitrite reductase from the leaves of higher plants was purified at least 70-fold and separated into two enzyme fractions. The first enzyme, a diaphorase with ferredoxin-NADP-reductase activity, is required only to transfer electrons from NADPH to a suitable electron acceptor, which then donates electrons to nitrite reductase proper. 2. Purified nitrite reductase accepted electrons from ferredoxin (the natural donor) or from reduced dyes. Ferredoxin was reduced by illuminated chloroplasts or dithionite, or by NADPH when diaphorase was present. The purified enzyme did not accept electrons directly from NADPH. 3. Ferredoxins purified from maize, spinach or Clostridium were interchangeable in the nitrite-reductase system. 4. Nitrite reductase had K(m) 0.15mm for nitrite. The pH optimum varied with plant and method of assay. The preparation had low sulphite-reductase activity. Ammonia was the product of nitrite reduction. 5. For some plants, the assay of crude preparations with NADPH was limited by diaphorase and the addition of diaphorase gave a better estimate of nitrite-reductase activity. A simple method of assay is described that uses dithionite with benzyl viologen as electron donor.
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PMID:The purification and properties of nitrite reductase from higher plants, and its dependence on ferredoxin. 438 17

Rapid reaction studies presented herein show that ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR, EC 1.18.1.2) catalyzes electron transfer from spinach ferredoxin (Fd) to NADP+ via a ternary complex, Fd X FNR X NADP+. In the absence of NADP+, reduction of ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase by Fd was much slower than the catalytic rate: 37-80 s-1 versus at least 445 e-s-1; dissociation of oxidized spinach ferredoxin (Fdox) from one-electron reduced ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase (FNRsq) limited the reduction of FNR. This confirms the steady-state kinetic analysis of Masaki et al. (Masaki, R., Yoshikaya, S., and Matsubara, H. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 700, 101-109). Occupation of the NADP+ binding site of FNR by NADP+ or by 2',5'-ADP (a nonreducible NADP+ analogue) greatly increased the rate of electron transfer from Fd to FNR, releiving inhibition by Fdox. NADP+ (and 2',5'-ADP) probably facilitate the dissociation of Fdox; equilibrium studies have shown that nucleotide binding decreases the association of Fd with FNR (Batie, C. J. (1983) Ph.D. dissertation, Duke University; Batie, C. J., and Kamin, H. (1982) in Flavins and Flavoproteins VII (Massey, V., and Williams, C. H., Jr., eds) pp. 679-683, Elsevier, New York; Batie, C.J., and Kamin, H. (1982) Fed. Proc. 41, 888; and Batie, C.J., and Kamin, H. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 8832-8839). Premixing Fd with FNR was found to inhibit the reaction of the flavoprotein with NADP+ and with NADPH; thus, substrate binding may be ordered, NADP+ first, then Fd. FNRred and NADP+ very rapidly formed an FNRred X NADP+ complex with flavin to nicotinamide charge transfer bands. The Fdred X NADP+ complex then relaxed to an equilibrium species; the spectrum indicated a predominance of FNRox X NADPH charge-transfer complex. However, charge-transfer species were not observed during turnover; thus, their participation in catalysis of electron transfer from Fd to NADP+ remains uncertain. The catalytic rate of Fd to NADP+ electron transfer, as well as the rates of electron transfer from Fd to FNR, and from FNR to NADP+ were decreased when the reactants were in D2O; diaphorase activity was unaffected by solvent. On the basis of the data presented, a scheme for the catalytic mechanism of catalysis by FNR is presented.
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PMID:Electron transfer by ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase. Rapid-reaction evidence for participation of a ternary complex. 648 May 92

Diethyl pyrocarbonate inhibited diaphorase activity of ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase with a second-order rate constant of 2 mM-1 X min-1 at pH 7.0 and 20 degrees C, showing a concomitant increase in absorbance at 242 nm due to formation of carbethoxyhistidyl derivatives. Activity could be restored by hydroxylamine, and the pH curve of inactivation indicated the involvement of a residue having a pKa of 6.8. Derivatization of tyrosyl residues was also evident, although with no effect on the diaphorase activity. Both NADP+ and NADPH protected the enzyme against inactivation, suggesting that the modification occurred at or near the nucleotide binding domain. The reductase lost all of its diaphorase activity after about two histidine residues had been blocked by the reagent. In differential-labeling experiments with NADP+ as protective agent, it was shown that diaphorase inactivation resulted from blocking of only one histidyl residue per mole of enzyme. Modified reductase did not bind pyridine nucleotides. Modification of the flavoprotein in the presence of NADP+, i.e., with full preservation of diaphorase activity, resulted in a significant impairment of cytochrome c reductase activity, with a second-order rate constant for inactivation of about 0.5 mM-1 X min-1. Reversal by hydroxylamine and spectroscopic data indicated that this second residue was also a histidine. Ferredoxin afforded only slight protection against this inhibition. Conversely, carbethoxylation of the enzyme did not affect complex formation with the ferrosulfoprotein. Redox titration of the modified reductase with NADPH and with reduced ferredoxin suggested that the second histidine might be located in the electron pathway between FAD and ferredoxin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Essential histidyl residues of ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase revealed by diethyl pyrocarbonate inactivation. 668 70

Periodate-oxidized NADP+ (dialdehyde-NADP+) inactivated soluble ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase and combined covalently to the enzyme. This inactivation was first order with respect to dialdehyde-NADP+ and followed saturation kinetics, indicating that the enzyme initially forms a reversible complex with the inactivator. NADP+ afforded complete protection against inactivation, while spinach ferredoxin was uneffective. In the presence of exogenous ferredoxin and illuminated thylakoids, the nucleotide analog functioned as a coenzyme for the reductase, although with rather lower efficiency than NADP+. It also acted as a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADPH in diaphorase activity. Incorporation of radioactivity from periodate-oxidized [3H]NADP+ gave a stoichiometry of 0.85 mol of reagent/mol of reductase, indicating that the modification of a single residue in the flavoprotein is responsible for the loss of enzymatic activity.
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PMID:Affinity labeling of spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase with periodate-oxidized NADP+. 670

The water-soluble carbodiimide, N-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide was found to effectively cross-link ferredoxin to ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. The covalent complex has a stoichiometry of 1 mol of ferredoxin per mol of the reductase. The flavoprotein moiety of the cross-linked complex maintains most of its diaphorase activity and more interestingly has gained the capacity to catalyze the NADPH-cytochrome c reaction without addition of free ferredoxin in the assay mixture. Furthermore, the cross-linked complex binds NADP+ with a Kd = 88 microM at an ionic strength of 0.02 M. These results show that a ternary complex among the reductase and its substrates can be formed, suggesting that the binding sites for ferredoxin and the pyridine nucleotides are distinct. The bound ferredoxin can interact with cytochrome c; the iron-sulfur cluster of the cross-linked complex is shown to be reduced under anaerobic conditions by NADPH and to be required for the catalysis of the NADPH-cytochrome c reductase reaction. The cross-linked complex, added to thylakoids inhibited by the antibody against the reductase, catalyzes the H2O-cytochrome c photoreduction, which suggests that the ferredoxin moiety of the complex can interact with its electron donor in the photosynthetic chain. Restoration of NADP+ photoreduction requires the addition of free ferredoxin.
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PMID:A cross-linked complex between ferredoxin and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. 672 48

The enzyme ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase (EC 1.18.1.2) from whole filaments of Anabaena cylindrica can be separated into four major fractions by chromatography on phosphocellulose; chromatography using ferredoxin-Sepharose 4B proved to be less satisfactory in separating the fractions. The purified fractions, designated 1, 2, 3 and 4, all showed diaphorase and ferredoxin-dependent cytochrome c reductase activity. The major fractions present were 2 and 3 which were each obtained in an electrophoretically homogeneous state (forms 2 and 3) and represented 30-37% and 30-42%, respectively, of the total enzyme activity. Each was a monomeric species with a molecular weight of approx. 33 000 as determined by gel filtration and sodium dodecyl (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Evidence for the presence of a 70 000 molecular weight dimer was also obtained. Forms 2 and 3 had isoelectric points of 5.75 and 6.0, respectively, had similar kinetic properties and were flavoproteins. Extracts of isolated heterocysts showed no form 2 or 3 activity but contained a single form which closely resembled one of the species present in fraction 4; fraction 1 may have been a purification artifact because it was not detected in crude extracts of the cyanobacterium.
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PMID:Molecular heterogeneity of ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase from the cyanobacterium Anabaena cylindrica. 678

The purification by affinity chromatography up to homogeneity and the properties of NAD-reductase from purple sulfur bacterium Thiocapsa roseopersicina, strain BBS, are described. The molecular weight of NAD-reductase is about 80000; pI is 3.9. The enzyme consists of two subunits. According to the stabilizing effect of FAD at preparative electrophoresis and the inhibitory effect of atebrine NAD-reductase is a flavoprotein. The bulk of the enzyme (about 75%) is localized in the cell periplasmic space. NAD-reductase is less thermostable and has a lower O2 stability as compared to the NADP-reductase from the same organism. The enzyme is specific to NADH ane catalyzes the menadione-reductase reaction, diaphorase reaction of benzyl viologen and methyl viologen reductions. In the presence of NADH NAD-reductase reduces cytochromes c552 and "c3" from T. roseopersicina and forms a complex with spinach ferredoxin.
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PMID:[Purification and properties of NAD-reductase from phototrophic bacterium Thiocapsa roseopersicina]. 723 99

The flavoprotein NADP+ reductase from spinach chloroplasts may form a ternary complex with one molecule of NADP+ and one molecule of ferredoxin. Spectroscopic titration studies show that the NADP+ binding site and the ferredoxin binding site are totally independent, that is previous binding of ferredoxin does not modify binding of NADP+, and conversely. Since NADP+ reductase conditions the diaphorase reaction, that is an electron transfer between NADPH and various acceptors such as ferricyanide, the binding of ferrocyanide and its possible interaction with NADP+ and ferredoxin has been studied. Ferrocyanide behaves as a competitive inhibitor with respect to both NADP+ and ferredoxin. This seems paradoxical since NADP+ and ferredoxin are independently bound at two different non-overlapping sites of the flavoprotein. This apparent paradox may be resolved by a theoretical analysis of the interactions between either ferrocyanide and NADP+, or ferrocyanide and ferredoxin. Theory shows that if ferrocyanide is non-specifically bound at two independent sites, namely the NADP+ and the ferredoxin binding sites, it appears competitive with respect to both NADP+ and ferredoxin, although ternary flavoprotein-ferredoxin-ferrocyanide and flavoprotein-NADP+-ferrocyanide complexes are formed. The binding constants of NADP+, ferredoxin and ferrocyanide for the enzyme have been determined. These results are discussed in connection with the possible mechanism of the diaphorase reaction.
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PMID:Complex-forming properties of spinach NADP+ reductase with ferredoxin, ferrocyanide and NADP+. 740 54

Soluble extracts of Escherichia coli contain four NADPH:paraquat diaphorases that were separable by anion-exchange HPLC over Mono Q. One of these was induced when the cells were exposed to paraquat. This was the case in a soxRS-competent strain but not in a soxRS-null strain, while a soxRS-constitutive strain overexpressed this diaphorase without the stimulus of exposure to paraquat. This NADPH:paraquat diaphorase could use cytochrome c or nitroblue tetrazolium as an electron acceptor, whereas O2 was a relatively poor acceptor. This diaphorase was identified as the NADPH:ferredoxin reductase. A role for reduced ferredoxin and flavodoxin in the adaptive soxRS response to oxidative stress and in the regulation of the redox status of soxR is discussed.
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PMID:NADPH: ferredoxin oxidoreductase acts as a paraquat diaphorase and is a member of the soxRS regulon. 810 11

A mutant of spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, in which Lys-88 has been changed to glutamine, has been obtained by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzyme was fully active as a diaphorase, but partially impaired in ferredoxin-dependent cytochrome c reductase activity. By steady-state kinetics, the Km for ferredoxin of the K88Q enzyme was found to have increased 10-fold, whereas the kcat was unaffected by the amino acid replacement. The interaction between oxidized ferredoxin and the enzyme forms was also studied by spectrofluorimetric titration: Kd values of 110 and 10 nM were determined for the mutant and wild-type proteins, respectively. These data point out the importance of a positive charge at position 88 of the reductase for the interaction with ferredoxin, confirming previous cross-linking studies.
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PMID:Involvement of lysine-88 of spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase in the interaction with ferredoxin. 817 9


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