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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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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)
The Haloferax mediterranei nar operon has been sequenced and its regulation has been characterized at transcriptional level. The nar operon encodes seven open reading frames(ORFs) (ORF1 narB, narC, ORF4, narG, narH, ORF7 and narJ). ORF1, ORF4 and ORF7 are open reading frames with no assigned function, however the rest of them encoded different proteins. narB codes for a 219-amino-acid-residue
iron
Rieske protein. narC encodes a protein of 486 amino acid residues identified by databases searches as cytochrome-b (narC). The narG gene encodes a protein with 983 amino acid residues and is identified as a respiratory nitrate reductase catalytic subunit (narG). NarH protein has been identified as an electron transfer respiratory nitrate reductase subunit (narH). The last ORF encodes a chaperonin-like protein (narJ) of 242 amino acid residues. The respiratory nitrate reductase was purified 21-fold from H. mediterranei membranes. Based on SDS-PAGE and gel-filtration chromatography under native conditions, the enzyme complex consists of two subunits of 112 and 61 kDa. The optimum temperature for activity was 70 degrees C at 3.4 M NaCl and the stability did not show a direct dependence on salt concentration. Respiratory
nitrate reductase
showed maximum activity at pH 7.9 and pH 8.2 when assays were carried out at 40 and 60 degrees C, respectively. The absorption spectrum indicated that Nar contains Fe-S clusters. Reverse transcriptase (RT-PCR) shows that regulation of nar genes occurs at transcriptional level induced by oxygen-limiting conditions and the presence of nitrate.
...
PMID:Respiratory nitrate reductase from haloarchaeon Haloferax mediterranei: biochemical and genetic analysis. 1534 13
The periplasmic
nitrate reductase
(Nap) is wide-spread in proteobacteria. NapA, the
nitrate reductase
catalytic subunit, contains a Mo-bisMGD cofactor and one [4Fe-4S] cluster. The nap gene clusters in many bacteria, including Rhodobacter sphaeroides DSM158, contain an napF gene, disruption of which drastically decreases both in vitro and in vivo
nitrate reductase
activities. In spite its importance in the Nap system, NapF has never been characterized biochemically, and its role remains unknown. The NapF protein has four polycysteine clusters that suggest that it is an
iron
-sulfur-containing protein. In the present study, a His(6)-tagged NapF protein was overproduced in Escherichia coli and purified anaerobically. The purified NapF protein was used to obtain polyclonal antibodies raised in rabbit, and cellular fractionation of R. sphaeroides followed by immunoprobing with anti-NapF antibodies revealed that the native NapF protein is located in the cytoplasm. This contrasts with the periplasmic location of the mature NapA. However, NapA could not be detected in an isogenic napF(-) strain of R. sphaeroides. The His(6)-tagged NapF protein displayed spectral properties indicative of Fe-S clusters, but these features were rapidly lost, suggesting cluster lability. However, reconstitution of the Fe-S centers into the apo-NapF protein was achieved in the presence of Azotobacter vinelandii cysteine desulfurase (NifS), and this allowed the recovery of
nitrate reductase
activity in NapA protein that had previously been treated with 2,2'-dipyridyl to remove the [4Fe-4S] cluster. This activity was not recovered in the absence of NapF. Taking into account the cytoplasmic localization of NapF, the presence of labile Fe-S clusters in the protein, the napF(-) strain phenotype, and the NapF-dependent reactivation of the 2,2'-dipyridyl-treated NapA, we propose a role for NapF in assembling the [4Fe-4S] center of the catalytic subunit NapA.
...
PMID:NapF is a cytoplasmic iron-sulfur protein required for Fe-S cluster assembly in the periplasmic nitrate reductase. 1537 24
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
A
nitrate reductase
was solubilized with Triton X-100 from the membranes of Pseudomonas chlororaphis DSM 50135 grown microaerobically in the presence of nitrate. Like other membrane-bound nitrate reductases, it contains three subunits, of 129, 66 (64) and 24 kDa, referred to in the literature as alpha, beta and gamma, respectively. Electrocatalytic studies revealed that only the membrane-bound, not the solubilized form of the enzyme, can accept electrons from a menaquinone analog, menadione, whereas both forms can accept electrons from methylviologen. The isolated enzyme possesses several
iron
-sulfur clusters and a molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide active center. The
iron
-sulfur clusters can be grouped in two classes according to their redox properties, the high-potential and low-potential clusters. In the as-isolated enzyme, two forms of the molybdenum center, high- and low-pH, are detectable by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The low-pH form shows a hyperfine splitting due to a proton, suggesting the presence of an -OHx ligand. Dithionite reduces the Mo(V) center to Mo(IV) and subsequent reoxidization with nitrate originates a new Mo(V) signal, identical to the oxidized low-pH form but lacking its characteristic hyperfine splitting. The isolated preparation also contains heme c (in a sub-stoichiometric amount) with the ability to relay electrons to the molybdenum center, suggesting that this
nitrate reductase
may contain heme c instead of the heme b usually found in this class of enzymes.
...
PMID:Isolation and spectroscopic characterization of the membrane-bound nitrate reductase from Pseudomonas chlororaphis DSM 50135. 1580 88
The mRNA level of the aconitase gene acn of Corynebacterium glutamicum is reduced under
iron
limitation. Here we show that an AraC-type regulator, termed RipA for "regulator of
iron
proteins A," is involved in this type of regulation. A C. glutamicum DeltaripA mutant has a 2-fold higher aconitase activity than the wild type under
iron
limitation, but not under
iron
excess. Comparison of the mRNA profiles of the DeltaripA mutant and the wild type revealed that the acn mRNA level was increased in the DeltaripA mutant under
iron
limitation, but not under
iron
excess, indicating a repressor function of RipA. Besides acn, some other genes showed increased mRNA levels in the DeltaripA mutant under
iron
starvation (i.e. those encoding succinate dehydrogenase (sdhCAB), nitrate/nitrite transporter and
nitrate reductase
(narKGHJI), isopropylmalate dehydratase (leuCD), catechol 1,2-dioxygenase (catA), and phosphotransacetylase (pta)). Most of these proteins contain
iron
. Purified RipA binds to the upstream regions of all operons mentioned above and in addition to that of the catalase gene (katA). From 13 identified binding sites, the RipA consensus binding motif RRGCGN(4)RYGAC was deduced. Expression of ripA itself is repressed under
iron
excess by DtxR, since purified DtxR binds to a well conserved binding site upstream of ripA. Thus, repression of acn and the other target genes indicated above under
iron
limitation involves a regulatory cascade of two repressors, DtxR and its target RipA. The modulation of the intracellular
iron
usage by RipA supplements mechanisms for
iron
acquisition that are directly regulated by DtxR.
...
PMID:The AraC-type regulator RipA represses aconitase and other iron proteins from Corynebacterium under iron limitation and is itself repressed by DtxR. 1617 44
The narB gene of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 encodes an
assimilatory nitrate reductase
that uses photosynthetically reduced ferredoxin as the physiological electron donor. This gene was expressed in Escherichia coli and electrophoretically pure preparations of the enzyme were obtained using affinity chromatography with either reduced-ferredoxin or NarB antibodies. The electronic absorption spectrum of the oxidized enzyme showed a shoulder at around 320 nm and a broad absorption band between 350 and 500 nm. These features are indicative of the presence of an
iron
-sulfur centre(s) and accordingly metal analysis showed ca. 3 atoms of Fe per molecule of protein that could represent a [3Fe-4S] cluster. Further analysis indicated the presence of 1 atom of Mo and 2 molecules of ribonucleotide-conjugated molybdopterin per molecule of protein. This, together with the requirement of a mobA gene for production of an active enzyme, strongly suggests the presence of Mo in the form of the bis-MGD (bis-molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide) cofactor in Synechococcusnitrate reductase. A model for the coordination of the Mo atom to the enzyme is proposed. Four conserved Cys residues were replaced by site-directed mutagenesis. The effects of these changes on the enzyme activity and electronic absorption spectra support the participation of those residues in
iron
-sulfur cluster coordination.
...
PMID:Purification, cofactor analysis, and site-directed mutagenesis of Synechococcus ferredoxin-nitrate reductase. 1622 31
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
The occurrence of the
iron
-reducing phenomenon among some common fungi was studied. Results indicated that (i) the reduction of ferric
iron
to the ferrous state by fungi seems to be restricted to
nitrate reductase
-inducible strains such as Actinomucor repens, Alternaria tenuis, Fusarium oxysporum, and F. solani and (ii) the amount of dissolved ferrous
iron
may be reduced progressively by increasing the amount of nitrate added to the medium. Compared with a complex medium (Sabouraud medium), less
iron
became reduced if NO(3) was the only nitrogen source (Czapek Dox medium). These data strongly support the view that ferric
iron
is acting as an hydrogen acceptor in respiration, competing with nitrate for electrons that are mediated by the enzyme
nitrate reductase
. The significance of this property from an ecological viewpoint is discussed.
...
PMID:Enzymatic reduction of iron oxide by fungi. 1634 55
The hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrobaculum aerophilum used 20 mM Fe(III) citrate, 100 mM poorly crystalline Fe(III) oxide, and 10 mM KNO3 as terminal electron acceptors. The two forms of
iron
were reduced at different rates but with equal growth yields. The insoluble
iron
was reduced when segregated spatially by dialysis tubing, indicating that direct contact with the
iron
was not necessary for growth. When partitioned, there was no detectable Fe(III) or Fe(II) outside of the tubing after growth, suggesting that an electron shuttle, not a chelator, may be used as an extracellular mediator of
iron
reduction. The addition of 25 and 50% (vol vol(-1)) cell-free spent insoluble
iron
media to fresh media led to growth without a lag phase. Liquid chromatography analysis of spent media showed that cultures grown in
iron
, especially insoluble
iron
, produced soluble extracellular compounds that were absent or less abundant in spent nitrate medium. NADH-dependent ferric reductase activity increased approximately 100-fold, while
nitrate reductase
activity decreased 10-fold in whole-cell extracts from
iron
-grown cells relative to those from nitrate-grown cells, suggesting that dissimilatory
iron
reduction was regulated. A novel 2,6-anthrahydroquinone disulfonate oxidase activity was more than 580-fold higher in
iron
-grown cells than in nitrate-grown cells. The activity was primarily (>95%) associated with the membrane cellular fraction, but its physiological function is unknown. Nitrate-grown cultures produced two membrane-bound, c-type cytochromes that are predicted to be monoheme and part of nitrite reductase and a bc1 complex using genome analyses. Only one cytochrome was present in cells grown on Fe(III) citrate whose relative abundance was unchanged.
...
PMID:Characterization of dissimilatory Fe(III) versus NO3- reduction in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrobaculum aerophilum. 1638 43
Plants have four nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes. NOS1 appears mitochondrial, and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) chloroplastic. Distinct peroxisomal and apoplastic NOS enzymes are predicted. Nitrite-dependent NO synthesis is catalyzed by cytoplasmic
nitrate reductase
or a root plasma membrane enzyme, or occurs nonenzymatically. Nitric oxide undergoes both catalyzed and uncatalyzed oxidation. However, there is no evidence of reaction with superoxide, and S-nitrosylation reactions are unlikely except during hypoxia. The only proven direct targets of NO in plants are metalloenzymes and one metal complex. Nitric oxide inhibits apoplastic catalases/ascorbate peroxidases in some species but may stimulate these enzymes in others. Plants also have the NO response pathway involving cGMP, cADPR, and release of calcium from internal stores. Other known targets include chloroplast and mitochondrial electron transport. Nitric oxide suppresses Fenton chemistry by interacting with ferryl ion, preventing generation of hydroxyl radicals. Functions of NO in plant development, response to biotic and abiotic stressors,
iron
homeostasis, and regulation of respiration and photosynthesis may all be ascribed to interaction with one of these targets. Nitric oxide function in drought/abscisic acid (ABA)-induction of stomatal closure requires
nitrate reductase
and NOS1. Nitric oxide synthasel likely functions to produce sufficient NO to inhibit photosynthetic electron transport, allowing nitrite accumulation. Nitric oxide is produced during the hypersensitive response outside cells undergoing programmed cell death immediately prior to loss of plasma membrane integrity. A plasma membrane lipid-derived signal likely activates apoplastic NOS. Nitric oxide diffuses within the apoplast and signals neighboring cells via hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-dependent induction of salicylic acid biosynthesis. Response to wounding appears to involve the same NOS and direct targets.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide signaling in plants. 1649 76
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