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Query: EC:1.7.1.1 (
nitrate reductase
)
3,728
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Preparation of a
nitrate reductase
lysate of Escherichia coli MC1061 to measure nitrate and nitrite in biologic fluids is described. To obtain the crude bacterial lysate containing
nitrate reductase
activity, E. coli MC1061 was subjected to 16-20 freeze-thawing cycles, from -70 to 60 degrees C, until nitrite reductase activity was < or = 25%. Nitrate reductase activity was detected mainly in the crude preparation. To validate the nitrate reduction procedure, standard nitrate solutions (1.6-100 microM) were incubated with the
nitrate reductase
preparation for 3 h at 37 degrees C, and nitrite was estimated by the Griess reaction in a microassay. Nitrate solutions were reduced to nitrite in a range of 60-70%. Importantly, no cofactors were necessary to perform nitrate reduction. The biological samples were first reduced with the
nitrate reductase
preparation. After centrifugation, samples were deproteinized with either methanol/ether or zinc
sulfate
and nitrite was quantified. The utility of the
nitrate reductase
preparation was assessed by nitrate+nitrite determination in serum of animals infected with the protozoan Entamoeba histolytica or the bacteria E. coli and in the supernatant of cultured lipopolysaccharide-stimulated RAW 264.7 mouse macrophages. Our results indicate that the
nitrate reductase
-containing lysate provides a convenient tool for the reduction of nitrate to determine nitrate+nitrite in biological fluids by spectrophotometric methods.
...
PMID:Indirect determination of nitric oxide production by reduction of nitrate with a freeze-thawing-resistant nitrate reductase from Escherichia coli MC1061. 1508 2
Excised root systems of tomato plants (early fruiting stage, 2nd flush) were subjected to a gradual transition from normoxia to anoxia by seating the hydroponic root medium while aeration was stopped. Oxygen level in the medium and respiration rate decreased and reached very low values after 12 h of treatment, indicating that the tissues were anoxic thereafter. Nitrate loss from the nutrient solution was strongly stimulated by anoxia (after 26 h) concomitantly with a release of nitrite starting only after 16 h of treatment. This effect was not observed in the absence of roots or in the presence of tungstate, but occurred with whole plants or with sterile in vitro cultured root tissues. These results indicate that biochemical processes in the root involve
nitrate reductase
. NR activity assayed in tomato roots increased during anoxia. This phenomenon appeared in intact plants and in root tissues of detopped plants. The stimulating effect of oxygen deprivation on nitrate uptake was specific; anoxia simultaneously entailed a release of orthophosphate,
sulfate
, and potassium by the roots. Anoxia enhanced nitrate reduction by root tissues, and nitrite ions were released into xylem sap and into medium culture. In terms of the overall balance, the amount of nitrite recovered represented only half of the amount of nitrate utilized. Nitrite reduction into nitric oxide and perhaps into nitrogen gas could account for this discrepancy. These results appear to be the first report of an increase in nitrate uptake by plant roots under anoxia of tomato at the early fruiting stage, and the rates of nitrite release in nutrient medium by the asphyxiated roots are the fastest yet reported.
...
PMID:Nitrate uptake and nitrite release by tomato roots in response to anoxia. 1531 75
Nitrate assimilation in autotrophs provides most of the reduced nitrogen on earth. In eukaryotes, reduction of nitrate to nitrite is catalyzed by the molybdenum-containing NAD(P)H:
nitrate reductase
(NR;
EC 1.7.1.1
-3). In addition to the molybdenum center, NR contains iron-heme and flavin adenine dinucleotide as redox cofactors involved in an internal electron transport chain from NAD(P)H to nitrate. Recombinant, catalytically active Pichia angusta nitrate-reducing, molybdenum-containing fragment (NR-Mo) was expressed in P. pastoris and purified. Crystal structures for NR-Mo were determined at 1.7 and 2.6 angstroms. These structures revealed a unique slot for binding nitrate in the active site and identified key Arg and Trp residues potentially involved in nitrate binding. Dimeric NR-Mo is similar in overall structure to sulfite oxidases, with significant differences in the active site.
Sulfate
bound in the active site caused conformational changes, as compared with the unbound enzyme. Four ordered water molecules located in close proximity to Mo define a nitrate binding site, a penta-coordinated reaction intermediate, and product release. Because yeast NAD(P)H:NR is representative of the family of eukaryotic NR, we propose a general mechanism for nitrate reduction catalysis.
...
PMID:Structural basis of eukaryotic nitrate reduction: crystal structures of the nitrate reductase active site. 1577 87
Xanthomonas maltophilia ATCC 17666 is an obligate aerobe that accumulates nitrite when grown on nitrate. Spectra of membranes from nitrate-grown cells exhibited b-type cytochrome peaks and A(615-630) indicative of d-type cytochrome but no absorption peaks corresponding to c-type cytochromes. The
nitrate reductase
(NR) activity was located in the membrane fraction. Triton X-100-extracted reduced methyl viologen-NRs were purified on DE-52, hydroxylapatite, and Sephacryl S-300 columns to specific activities of 52 to 67 mumol of nitrite formed per min per mg of protein. The cytochrome-containing NR(I) separated on sodium dodecyl
sulfate
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis into a 135-kDa alpha-subunit, a 64-kDa beta-subunit, and a 23-kDa gamma-subunit with relative band intensities indicative of a 1:1:1 alpha/beta/gamma subunit ratio and a M(r) of 222,000. The electronic spectrum of dithionite-reduced purified NR displayed peaks at 425, 528, and 558 nm, indicative of the presence of a cytochrome b, an interpretation consistent with the pyridine hemochrome spectrum formed. The cytochrome b of the NR was reduced under anaerobic conditions by menadiol and oxidized by nitrate with the production of nitrite. This NR contained 0.96 Mo, 12.5 nonheme iron, and 1 heme per 222 kDa: molybdopterin was detected with the Neurospora crassa nit-1 assay. A smaller reduced methyl viologen-NR (169 kDa), present in various concentrations in the Triton X-100 preparations, lacked a cytochrome spectrum and did not oxidize menadiol. The characteristics of the NRs and the absence of c-type cytochromes provide insights into why X. maltophilia accumulates nitrite.
...
PMID:Purification of Two Nitrate Reductases from Xanthomonas maltophilia Grown in Aerobic Cultures. 1634 5
When cultured tobacco cells are provided growth-limiting concentrations of sulfur as
sulfate
, the rate of development of
nitrate reductase
(NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.1) is proportional to the initial
sulfate
concentration. When the cells are provided growth-limiting concentrations of nitrogen as nitrate, the rate of derepression of ATP sulfurylase (ATP:sulfate adenylyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.4) is proportional to the initial nitrate concentration. These results are taken to be indicative of a reciprocal regulatory coupling between the nitrate and
sulfate
assimilation pathways.
...
PMID:Regulatory coupling of nitrate and sulfate assimilation pathways in cultured tobacco cells. 1659 17
As measured 7, 14, and 21 days after the application of 10(-2) M vanadyl
sulfate
solution to the foliage of 4.5-month-old sugar beet plants, significantly less growth of the leaves and an increase in the sucrose content of the storage root resulted. Accompanying these alterations were a higher rate of carbon dioxide fixation, a lower rate of respiration, and a decreased rate of
nitrate reductase
, glutamic-pyruvic transaminase, phosphatase, and invertase activity. The enzymes of sucrose synthesis, sucrose synthetase, sucrose phosphate synthetase and uridine diphosphate glucose-pyrophosphorylase were stimulated. The content of reducing sugar, nitrite N, amino acids and protein was less, and that of nitrate N was greater in the vanadium-treated plants. In the majority of cases the greatest magnitude of change occurred during the first 7 days following treatment. The changes in growth and chemical composition are believed to be closely related to the stimulation or inhibition of the various enzymes by vanadyl
sulfate
.
...
PMID:Effect of Vanadium on Growth, Chemical Composition, and Metabolic Processes of Mature Sugar Beet (Beta vulgaris L.) Plants. 1665 5
The
nitrate reductase
complex from Chlorella pyrenoidosa has been purified by a procedure which includes as main steps, ammonium
sulfate
fractionation, polyethylene glycol treatment, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The Michaelis constants for NADH, FAD, and NO(3) (-) in the
NADH-nitrate reductase
assay are 10 mum, 2.6 mum, and 0.23 mm, respectively. Heat treatment exerts varying effects on the enzymatic activities associated with the
nitrate reductase
complex.
...
PMID:Partial Purification of the NADH-Nitrate Reductase Complex from Chlorella pyrenoidosa. 1665 75
Exposure of the leaf canopy of corn seedlings (Zea mays L.) to atmospheric CO(2) levels ranging from 100 to 800 mul/l decreased nitrate accumulation and
nitrate reductase
activity. Plants pretreated with CO(2) in the dark and maintained in an atmosphere containing 100 mul/l CO(2) accumulated 7-fold more nitrate and had 2-fold more
nitrate reductase
activity than plants exposed to 600 mul/l CO(2), after 5 hours of illumination. Induction of
nitrate reductase
activity in leaves of intact corn seedlings was related to nitrate content. Changes in soluble protein were related to in vitro
nitrate reductase
activity suggesting that in vitro
nitrate reductase
activity was a measure of in situ nitrate reduction. In longer experiments, levels of
nitrate reductase
and accumulation of reduced N supported the concept that less nitrate was being absorbed, translocated, and assimilated when CO(2) was high. Plants exposed to increasing CO(2) levels for 3 to 4 hours in the light had increased concentrations of malate and decreased concentrations of nitrate in the leaf tissue. Malate and nitrate concentrations in the leaf tissue of seven of eight corn genotypes grown under comparable and normal (300 mul/l CO(2)) environments, were negatively correlated. Exposure of roots to increasing concentrations of potassium carbonate with or without potassium
sulfate
caused a progressive increase in malate concentrations in the roots. When these roots were subsequently transferred to a nitrate medium, the accumulation of nitrate was inversely related to the initial malate concentrations. These data suggest that the concentration of malate in the tissue seem to be related to the accumulation of nitrate.
...
PMID:Effect of carbon dioxide on nitrate accumulation and nitrate reductase induction in corn seedlings. 1665 19
The 4S cytochrome c (Cyt c) reductase activity of several plant species was markedly stimulated by cyanide and ferrocyanide but those of the 8S
nitrate reductase
component and other particulate components of the maize (Zea mays L.) scutellum by comparison, were increased only slightly. The effect of cyanide and ferrocyanide was not due to elimination of cytochrome oxidase interference but resulted from the stimulation of NADH-dependent reduction of Cyt c. A 4S Cyt c reductase component which could be isolated by ammonium
sulfate
fractionation and diethyl-aminoethyl-cellulose chromatography was found to be stimulated markedly by cyanide and ferrocyanide. The remaining 4S Cyt c reductase, which was insensitive to cyanide and ferrocyanide, was also fractionated with ammonium
sulfate
into two components. One of these, like the 8S Cyt c reductase, was sensitive to a protease from the maize roots which is relatively specific for
nitrate reductase
. This 4S Cyt c reductase species could be a subunit of
nitrate reductase
.
...
PMID:Nitrate Reductase and Soluble Cytochrome c Reductase(s) in Higher Plants. 1666 Mar 77
A
NADH-nitrate reductase
inhibitor has been isolated from young soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. Var. Amsoy) leaves that had been in the dark for 54 hours. The presence of the inhibitor was first suggested by the absence of
nitrate reductase
activity in the homogenate until the inhibitor was removed by diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography. The inhibitor inactivated the enzyme in homogenates of leaves harvested in the light. Nitrate reductases in single whole cells isolated through a sucrose gradient were equally active from leaves grown in light or darkness, but were inhibited by addition of the active inhibitor.The
NADH-nitrate reductase
inhibitor was purified 2,500-fold to an electrophoretic homogeneous protein by a procedure involving DEAE- cellulose chromatography, Sephadex G-100 filtration, and ammonium
sulfate
precipitation followed by dialysis. The assay was based on
nitrate reductase
inhibition. A rapid partial isolation procedure was also developed to separate
nitrate reductase
from the inhibitor by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and elution with KNO(3). The inhibitor was a heat-labile protein of about 31,000 molecular weight with two identical subunits. After electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel two adjacent bands of protein were present; an active form and an inactive form that developed on standing. The active factor inhibited leaf
NADH-nitrate reductase
but not NADPH-nitrate reductase, the bacterial
nitrate reductase
or other enzymes tested. The site of inhibition was probably at the reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide-NR reaction, since it did not block the partial reaction of NADH-cytochrome c reductase. The inhibitor did not appear to be a protease. Some form of association of the active inhibitor with
nitrate reductase
was indicated by a change of inhibitor mobility through Sephadex G-75 in the presence of the enzyme. The inhibition of
nitrate reductase
was noncompetitive with nitrate but caused a decrease in V(max).The isolated inhibitor was inactivated in the light, but after 24 hours in the dark full inhibitory activity returned. Equal amounts of inhibitor were present in leaves harvested from light or darkness, except that the inhibitor was at first inactive when rapidly isolated from leaves in light. Photoinactivation of yellow impure inhibitor required no additional components, but inactivation of the purified colorless inhibitor required the addition of flavin.Preliminary evidence and a procedure are given for partial isolation of a component by DEAE-cellulose chromatography that stimulated
nitrate reductase
. The data suggest that light-dark changes in
nitrate reductase
activity are regulated by specific protein inhibitors and stimulators.
...
PMID:NADH-Nitrate Reductase Inhibitor from Soybean Leaves. 1666 Apr 85
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