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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)

Molybdenum- and molybdenum cofactor-free nitrate reductases recently isolated by us from vanadate-reducing bacteria Pseudomonas isachenkovii are likely to mediate vanadate reduction. During anaerobic growth of P. isachenkovii on medium supplemented with nitrate and vanadate, vanadate dissimilation was followed by nitrate consumption, and this process was associated with some structural reorganizations of nitrate reductases. The homogeneous membrane-bound nitrate reductase of P. isachenkovii reduced vanadate with NADH as an electron donor.
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PMID:Vanadate reduction by molybdenum-free dissimilatory nitrate reductases from vanadate-reducing bacteria. 1108 19

Under anaerobic conditions and in the presence of nitrate, the facultative anaerobe Escherichia coli synthesises an electron-transport chain comprising a primary dehydrogenase and the terminal membrane-bound nitrate reductase A (NarGHI). This review focuses on recent advances obtained on the structure and function of the three protein subunits of membrane-bound nitrate reductases. We discuss a global architecture for the Mo-bisMGD-containing subunit (NarG) and a coordination model for the four [Fe-S] centres of the electron-transfer subunit (NarH) and for the two b-type haems of the anchor subunit NarI.
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PMID:The coordination and function of the redox centres of the membrane-bound nitrate reductases. 1128

Respiratory reduction of nitrate to nitrite is the first key step in the denitrification process that leads to nitrate loss from soils. In Paracoccus pantotrophus, the enzyme system that catalyzes this reaction is encoded by the narKGHJI gene cluster. Expression of this cluster is maximal under anaerobic conditions in the presence of nitrate. Upstream from narK is narR, a gene encoding a member of the FNR family of transcriptional activators. narR is transcribed divergently from the other nar genes. Mutational analysis reveals that NarR is required for maximal expression of the membrane-bound nitrate reductase genes and narK but has no other regulatory function related to denitrification. NarR is shown to require nitrate and/or nitrite is order to activate gene expression. The N-terminal region of the protein lacks the cysteine residues that are required for formation of an oxygen-sensitive iron-sulfur cluster in some other members of the FNR family. Also, NarR lacks a crucial residue involved in interactions of this family of regulators with the sigma(70) subunit of RNA polymerase, indicating that a different mechanism is used to promote transcription. narR is also found in Paracoccus denitrificans, indicating that this species contains at least three FNR homologues.
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PMID:Maximal expression of membrane-bound nitrate reductase in Paracoccus is induced by nitrate via a third FNR-like regulator named NarR. 1137 24

To gain an insight into the diurnal changes of nitrogen assimilation in roots the in vitro activities of cytosolic and plasma membrane-bound nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1), nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1) and cytosolic and plastidic glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) were studied. Simultaneously, changes in the contents of total protein, nitrate, nitrite, and ammonium were followed. Roots of intact tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun) were extracted every 3 h during a diurnal cycle. Nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase and glutamine synthetase were active throughout the day-night cycle. Two temporarily distinct peaks of nitrate reductase were detected: during the day a peak of soluble nitrate reductase in the cytosol, in the dark phase a peak of plasma membrane-bound nitrate reductase in the apoplast. The total activities of nitrate reduction were similar by day and night. High activities of nitrite reductase prevented the accumulation of toxic amounts of nitrite throughout the entire diurnal cycle. The resulting ammonium was assimilated by cytosolic glutamine synthetase whose two activity peaks, one in the light period and one in the dark, closely followed those of nitrate reductase. The contribution of plastidic glutamine synthetase was negligible. These results strongly indicate that nitrate assimilation in roots takes place at similar rates day and night and is thus differently regulated from that in leaves.
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PMID:Diurnal changes in nitrogen assimilation of tobacco roots. 1143 47

In contrast to its parent strain, transposon Tn5-Mob insertion mutant HB6 of the facultative chemoautotroph Ralstonia eutropha was unable to grow organoautotrophically on formate and exhibited no activity of Mo-dependent, membrane-bound formate dehydrogenase (M-FDH) when cultivated mixotrophically on fructose plus formate. The activity of another molybdoenzyme, the soluble, NAD+-linked formate dehydrogenase which is the key enzyme of formate utilization in R. eutropha, was greatly diminished in the mutant. HB6 also lacked the W-dependent M-FDH activities that were newly discovered in organoautotrophically, lithoautotrophically, or mixotrophically grown wildtype cells. However, an additional W-dependent M-FDH activity, observed in heterotrophically grown stationary-phase cells, was present in the mutant although at a considerably reduced level. Sequence analyses of the complementing chromosomal wildtype and the corresponding mutant DNA fragment revealed the transposon insertion to be located in moeA, a gene involved in the biosynthesis of the molybdopterin cofactor (MoCo). Nevertheless, mutant HB6 was able to grow on xanthine as carbon and energy source and with nitrate as nitrogen source. The utilization of these substrates requires the function of the MoCo-containing enzymes xanthine dehydrogenase and assimilatory nitrate reductase, respectively, that were still active in the mutant. A moeA deletion mutant exhibited the same phenotype as that of HB6. The moeA gene belongs to an unusual mol operon consisting of four genes (moeA, moaD, moaE, and moaF) and being constitutively expressed at low level. Unlike MoeA, the large subunit of molybdopterin synthase encoded by moaE is essential for molybdopterin biosynthesis as was evident by the phenotype of a moaE deletion mutant. MoaF is a novel gene product which showed no similarity to proteins with known function but was indispensable for reconstituting organoautotrophic growth in HB6. The findings suggest that MoeA of R. eutropha is differentially involved in the biosynthesis or incorporation of pterin cofactors of/into the various molybdo- and tungstoenzymes.
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PMID:Involvement of an unusual mol operon in molybdopterin cofactor biosynthesis in Ralstonia eutropha. 1154 79

Preliminary studies showed that the periplasmic nitrate reductase (Nap) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides and the membrane-bound nitrate reductases of Escherichia coli are able to reduce selenate and tellurite in vitro with benzyl viologen as an electron donor. In the present study, we found that this is a general feature of denitrifiers. Both the periplasmic and membrane-bound nitrate reductases of Ralstonia eutropha, Paracoccus denitrificans, and Paracoccus pantotrophus can utilize potassium selenate and potassium tellurite as electron acceptors. In order to characterize these reactions, the periplasmic nitrate reductase of R. sphaeroides f. sp. denitrificans IL106 was histidine tagged and purified. The V(max) and K(m) were determined for nitrate, tellurite, and selenate. For nitrate, values of 39 micromol x min(-1) x mg(-1) and 0.12 mM were obtained for V(max) and K(m), respectively, whereas the V(max) values for tellurite and selenate were 40- and 140-fold lower, respectively. These low activities can explain the observation that depletion of the nitrate reductase in R. sphaeroides does not modify the MIC of tellurite for this organism.
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PMID:Characterization of the reduction of selenate and tellurite by nitrate reductases. 1167 35

In roots and leaves of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun) three functional transcripts (3.6 kb, 3.1 kb, and 1.8 kb) were found to at least partly represent nitrate reductase mRNA. With specific probes for the transcripts of the different domains of nitrate reductase it was shown that the smallest transcript was shortened in the region coding for the flavin adenine dinucleotide domain and might be the transcript coding for plasma-membrane-bound nitrate reductase. The expression of the 3.1 kb and 1.8 kb transcripts in roots was differently regulated during the day-night cycle with the maximum amount of the 3.1 kb transcript in the middle and of the 1.8 kb transcript at the end of the light period.
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PMID:Different diurnal cycles of expression of two nitrate reductase transcripts in tobacco roots. 1173 32

In the present study nitrate uptake by maize (Zea mays L.) roots was investigated in the presence or absence of ferricyanide (hexacyanoferrate III) or dicumarol. Nitrate uptake caused an alkalization of the medium. Nitrate uptake of intact maize seedlings was inhibited by ferricyanide while the effect of dicumarol was not very pronounced. Nitrite was not detected in the incubation medium, neither with dicumarol-treated nor with control plants after application of 100 microM nitrate to the incubation solution. In a second set of experiments interactions between nitrate and ferricyanide were investigated in vivo and in vitro. Nitrate (1 or 3 mM) did neither influence ferricyanide reductase activity of intact maize roots nor NADH-ferricyanide oxidoreductase activity of isolated plasma membranes. Nitrate reductase activity of plasma-membrane-enriched fractions was slightly stimulated by 25 microM dicumarol but was not altered by 100 microM dicumarol, while NADH-ferricyanide oxidoreductase activity was inhibited in the presence of dicumarol. These data suggest that plasma-membrane-bound standard-ferricyanide reductase and nitrate reductase activities of maize roots may be different. A possible regulation of nitrate uptake by plasmalemma redox activity, as proposed by other groups, is discussed.
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PMID:Interaction between electron transport at the plasma membrane and nitrate uptake by maize (Zea mays L.) roots. 1173 41

Periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapABC enzyme) has been characterized from a variety of proteobacteria, especially Paracoccus pantotrophus. Whole-genome sequencing of Escherichia coli revealed the structural genes napFDAGHBC, which encode NapABC enzyme and associated electron transfer components. E. coli also expresses two membrane-bound proton-translocating nitrate reductases, encoded by the narGHJI and narZYWV operons. We measured reduced viologen-dependent nitrate reductase activity in a series of strains with combinations of nar and nap null alleles. The napF operon-encoded nitrate reductase activity was not sensitive to azide, as shown previously for the P. pantotrophus NapA enzyme. A strain carrying null alleles of narG and narZ grew exponentially on glycerol with nitrate as the respiratory oxidant (anaerobic respiration), whereas a strain also carrying a null allele of napA did not. By contrast, the presence of napA+ had no influence on the more rapid growth of narG+ strains. These results indicate that periplasmic nitrate reductase, like fumarate reductase, can function in anaerobic respiration but does not constitute a site for generating proton motive force. The time course of phi(napF-lacZ) expression during growth in batch culture displayed a complex pattern in response to the dynamic nitrate/nitrite ratio. Our results are consistent with the observation that phi(napF-lacZ) is expressed preferentially at relatively low nitrate concentrations in continuous cultures (H. Wang, C.-P. Tseng, and R. P. Gunsalus, J. Bacteriol. 181:5303-5308, 1999). This finding and other considerations support the hypothesis that NapABC enzyme may function in E. coli when low nitrate concentrations limit the bioenergetic efficiency of nitrate respiration via NarGHI enzyme.
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PMID:Periplasmic nitrate reductase (NapABC enzyme) supports anaerobic respiration by Escherichia coli K-12. 1184 60

Dissimilatory nitrate reductase (Nar) was solubilized and partially purified from the large particle (mitochondrial) fraction of the denitrifying fungus Fusarium oxysporum and characterized. Many lines of evidence showed that the membrane-bound Nar is distinct from the soluble, assimilatory nitrate reductase. Further, the spectral and other properties of the fungal Nar were similar to those of dissimilatory Nars of Escherichia coli and denitrifying bacteria, which are comprised of a molybdoprotein, a cytochrome b, and an iron-sulfur protein. Formate-nitrate oxidoreductase activity was also detected in the mitochondrial fraction, which was shown to arise from the coupling of formate dehydrogenase (Fdh), Nar, and a ubiquinone/ubiquinol pool. This is the first report of the occurrence in a eukaryote of Fdh that is associated with the respiratory chain. The coupling with Fdh showed that the fungal Nar system is more similar to that involved in the nitrate respiration by Escherichia coli than that in the bacterial denitrifying system. Analyses of the mutant species of F. oxysporum that were defective in Nar and/or assimilatory nitrate reductase conclusively showed that Nar is essential for the fungal denitrification.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase-formate dehydrogenase couple involved in the fungal denitrification by Fusarium oxysporum. 1192 96


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