Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.7.1.2 (
nitrate reductase
)
3,861
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Milk xanthine oxidase oxidizes xanthine at pH 9.6 and reduces nitrates at pH 5.2. It is shown that the
nitrate reductase
activity requires molybdenum and sulfur-containing sites in the enzyme, whereas oxidation of xanthine also requires iron-containing sites and
FAD
. As the pH changes from 5.2 to 9.6, the conformation of the enzyme molecule is modified as demonstrated by changes in the absorption, fluorescence, and circular dichroism spectra. When the enzyme is treated with dithioerythritol, it may pass from the oxidase to the dehydrogenase form with a marked increase in the
nitrate reductase
activity.
...
PMID:The nitrate reductase activity of milk xanthine oxidase. 384 Apr 69
NADH:
nitrate reductase
(EC 1.6.6.1) was isolated from squash cotyledons (Cucurbita maxima L.) by a combination of Blue Sepharose and zinc-chelate affinity chromatographies followed by gel filtration on Bio-Gel A-1.5m. These preparations gave a single protein staining band (Mr = 115,000) on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, indicating that the enzyme is homogeneous. The native Mr of
nitrate reductase
was found to be 230,000, with a minor form of Mr = 420,000 also occurring. These results indicate that the native
nitrate reductase
is a homodimer of Mr = 115,000 subunits. Acidic amino acids predominate over basic amino acids, as shown both by the amino acid composition of the enzyme and an isoelectric point for
nitrate reductase
of 5.7. The homogeneous
nitrate reductase
had a UV/visible spectrum typical of a b-type cytochrome. The enzyme was found to contain one each of flavin (as
FAD
), heme iron, molybdenum, and Mo-pterin/Mr = 115,000 subunit. A model is proposed for squash
nitrate reductase
in which two Mr = 115,000 subunits are joined to made the native enzyme. Each subunit contains 1 eq of
FAD
, cytochrome b, and molybdenum/Mo-pterin.
...
PMID:Quaternary structure and composition of squash NADH:nitrate reductase. 403 8
1. The assimilatory nitrite reductase of the N(2)-fixing bacterium Azotobacter chroococcum was prepared in a soluble form from cells grown aerobically with nitrate as the nitrogen source, and some of its properties have been studied. 2. The enzyme is a
FAD
-dependent metalloprotein (mol.wt. about 67000), which stoicheiometrically catalyses the direct reduction of nitrite to NH(3) with NADH as the electron donor. 3. NADH-nitrite reductase can exist in two either active or inactive interconvertible forms. Inactivation in vitro can be achieved by preincubation with NADH. Nitrite can specifically protect the enzyme against this inactivation and reverse the process once it has occurred. 4. A. chroococcum nitrite reductase is an adaptive enzyme whose formation depends on the presence of either nitrate or nitrite in the nutrient solution. 5. Tungstate inhibits growth of the microorganism very efficiently, by competition with molybdate, when nitrate is the nitrogen source, but does not interfere when nitrite or NH(3) is substituted for nitrate. The addition of tungstate to the culture media results in the loss of
nitrate reductase
activity but does not affect nitrite reductase.
...
PMID:Reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide-nitrite reductase from Azotobacter chroococcum. 414 87
The reductase enzymes in Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter were studied under anaerobic conditions when the oxidase enzymes were inactive. The most effective electron-donor systems for
nitrate reductase
in Nitrobacter were reduced benzyl viologen alone, phenazine methosulphate with either NADH or NADPH, and FMN or
FAD
with NADH. Nitrite and hydroxylamine reductases were found in both nitrifying bacteria, and optimum activity for each enzyme was obtained with NADH or NADPH with either FMN or
FAD
. The product of both these enzymes was identified as ammonia. In extracts of Nitrosomonas the ammonia was further utilized by an NADPH-specific glutamate dehydrogenase. (15)N-labelled nitrite, hydroxylamine and ammonia were rapidly incorporated into cell protein by Nitrosomonas, and Nitrobacter in addition incorporated [(15)N]nitrate. Relatively gentle methods of cell disruption were compared with ultrasonic treatment, to enable a more exact study to be undertaken of the intracellular distribution of the oxidase and reductase enzymes. The functional relationship of these opposing enzyme systems in the nitrifying bacteria is considered.
...
PMID:Properties of some reductase enzymes in the nitrifying bacteria and their relationship to the oxidase systems. 438 32
Blue Dextran has been coupled covalently to Sepharose-4B to purify the enzymatic complex
NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase
(EC 1.6.6.2) from the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii by affinity chromatography. The optimum conditions for the accomplishment of the chromatographic process have been determined. The adsorption of
nitrate reductase
on Blue Dextran Sepharose is optimum when a phosphate buffer of low ionic strength and pH 6.5-7.0 is used. Once the enzyme has been bound to Blue Dextran Sepharose, it can be specifically eluted by addition of NADH and
FAD
to the washing buffer. However, none of the nucleotides added separately is able to promote the elution of the enzyme from the column. The elution can be also achieved, but not specifically, by increasing the ionic strength of the buffer with KCl. These results have made possible a procedure for the purification of A. braunii
nitrate reductase
which led to electrophoretic homogeneity, with an overall yield of 70% and a specific activity of 49 units/mg of protein.
...
PMID:[Affinity chromatography of Ankistrodesmus braunii nitrate reductase using blue dextran-sepharose (author's transl)]. 615 80
The molecular basis for the action of two natural inactivator proteins, isolated from rice and corn, on a purified
assimilatory nitrate reductase
has been examined by several physical techniques. Incubation of purified Chlorella
nitrate reductase
with either rice inactivator protein or corn inactivator protein results in a loss of NADH:
nitrate reductase
and the associated partial activity, NADH:cytochrome c reductase, but no loss in nitrate-reducing activity with reduced methyl viologen as the electron donor. The molecular weight of the reduced methyl viologen:
nitrate reductase
species, determined by sedimentation equilibrium in the Beckman airfuge after complete inactivation with rice inactivator protein or with corn inactivator protein, was 595,000 and 283,000, respectively, compared to a molecular weight of 376,000 for the untreated control determined under the same conditions. Two protein peaks were observed after molecular-sieve chromatography on Sephacryl S-300 of
nitrate reductase
inactivated by corn inactivator protein. The Stokes radii of these fragments were 68 and 24 A, compared to a value of 81 A for untreated
nitrate reductase
. The large fragment contained molybdenum and heme but no flavin, and had nitrate-reducing activity with reduced methyl viologen as electron donor. The small fragment contained
FAD
but had no NADH:cytochrome c reductase or nitrate-reducing activities. Molecular weights determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis were 67,000 and 28,000 for the large and small fragments, respectively, compared to a subunit molecular weight of 99,000 determined for the untreated control. No change in subunit molecular weight of
nitrate reductase
after inactivation by rice inactivator protein was observed. These results indicate that rice inactivator protein acts by binding to
nitrate reductase
. The stoichiometry of binding is 1-2 molecules of rice inactivator protein to one tetrameric molecule of
nitrate reductase
. Corn inactivator protein, in contrast, acts by cleavage of a Mr 30,000 fragment from
nitrate reductase
which is associated with
FAD
. The remaining fragment is a tetramer of Mr 70,000 subunits which retains nitrate-reducing activity and contains molybdenum and heme but has no NADH:dehydrogenase activity. The action of rice inactivator protein was partially prevented by NADH and completely prevented by a combination of NADH and cyanide, while the action of corn inactivator protein was not significantly affected by these effectors.
...
PMID:Mode of action of natural inactivator proteins from corn and rice on a purified assimilatory nitrate reductase. 654 59
Assimilatory
nitrate reductase
(NAD(P)H-nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) from the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii can be purified to homogeneity by dye-ligand chromatography on blue-Sepharose. The purified enzyme, whose turnover number is 623 s-1, presents an optimum pH of 7.5 and Km values of 13 microM, 23 microM and 0.15 mM for NADH, NADPH and nitrate, respectively. The NADH-nitrate reductase activity exhibits an iso ping pong bi bi kinetic mechanism. The molecular weight of the native
nitrate reductase
is 467 400, while that of its subunits is 58 750. These values suggest an octameric structure for the enzyme, which has been confirmed by electron microscopy. As deduced from spectrophotometric and fluorimetric studies, the enzyme contains
FAD
and cytochrome b-557 as prosthetic groups.
FAD
is not covalently bound to the protein and is easily dissociated in diluted solutions from the enzyme. Its apparent Km value is 4 nM, indicative of a high affinity of the enzyme for
FAD
. The results of the quantitative analyses of prosthetic groups indicate that
nitrate reductase
contains four molecules of flavin, four heme irons, and two atoms of molybdenum. The three components act sequentially transferring electrons from reduced pyridine nucleotides to nitrate, thus forming a short electron transport chain along the protein. A mechanism is proposed for the redox interconversion of the
nitrate reductase
activity. Inactivation seems to occur by formation of a stable complex of reduced enzyme with cyanide or superoxide, while reactivation is a consequence of reoxidation of the inactive enzyme. Both reactions imply the transfer of only one electron.
...
PMID:Assimilatory nitrate reductase from the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii. 668 79
Milk xanthine oxidase possesses the
nitrate reductase
activity at pH 5.2; the pH optimum of the xanthine oxidase activity for the enzyme lies at 9.6. After removal of
FAD
and binding of Mo and Fe with a simultaneous measurement at the pH optima of the above activities it was found that only the Mo-containing site is necessary for the
nitrate reductase
activity. The switch-over of the enzyme from the xanthine oxidase to the
nitrate reductase
activity is associated with considerable conformational changes of the enzyme molecule.
...
PMID:[Functional groups involved in the nitrate reductase activity of milk xanthine oxidase]. 668 66
Nitrate reductase
(NADPH:nitrate oxidoreductase; EC 1.6.6.1-3) was purified to apparent homogeneity from mycelium of Penicillium chrysogenum. The final preparation catalyzed the NADPH-dependent,
FAD
-mediated reduction of nitrate with a specific activity of 170-225 units X mg of protein-1. Gel filtration and glycerol density centrifugation yielded, respectively, a Stokes radius of 6.3 nm and an s20,w of 7.4. The molecular weight was calculated to be 199,000. On sodium dodecyl sulfate gels, the enzyme displayed two almost contiguous dye-staining bands corresponding to molecular weights of about 97,000 and 98,000. The enzyme prefers NADPH to NADH (kspec ratio = 2813),
FAD
to FMN (kspec ratio = 141),
FAD
(+ NADPH) to FADH2 (kspec ratio = 12,000), and nitrate to chlorate (kspec ratio = 4.33), where the kspec (the specificity constant for a given substrate) represents Vmax/Km. The Penicillium enzyme will also catalyze te NADPH-dependent,
FAD
-mediated reduction of cytochrome c with a specific activity of 647 units X mg of protein-1 (Kmcyt = 1.25 X 10(-5) M), and the reduced methyl viologen (MVH2, i.e. methyl viologen + dithionite)-dependent, NADPH and
FAD
-independent reduction of nitrate with a specific activity of 250 units X mg of protein-1 kmMVH2 = 3.5 X 10(-6) M). Initial velocity studies showed intersecting NADPH-
FAD
and nitrate-
FAD
reciprocal plot patterns. The NADPH-nitrate pattern was a series of parallel lines at saturating and unsaturating
FAD
levels. NADP+ was competitive with NADPH, uncompetitive with nitrate (at saturating and unsaturating
FAD
levels), and a mixed-type inhibitor with respect to
FAD
. Nitrite was competitive with nitrate, uncompetitive with NADPH (at saturating and unsaturating
FAD
levels), and a mixed-type inhibitor with respect to
FAD
. At unsaturating nitrate and
FAD
, NADPH exhibited substrate inhibition, perhaps as a result of binding to the
FAD
site(s). At very low
FAD
concentrations, low concentrations of NADP+ activated the reaction slightly. The initial velocity and product inhibition patterns are consistent with either of the two kinetic mechanisms. One (rather unlikely) mechanism involves the rapid equilibrium random binding of all ligands with (a) NADP+ and NADPH mutually exclusive, (b) nitrate and nitrite mutually exclusive, (c) the binding of NADPH strongly inhibiting the binding of nitrate and vice versa, (d) the binding of NADPH strongly promoting the binding of nitrite and vice versa, and (e) the binding of nitrate strongly promoting the binding of NADP+ and vice versa...
...
PMID:Nitrate reductase from Penicillium chrysogenum. Purification and kinetic mechanism. 679 May 45
NADPH-nitrate reductase [NADPH : nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.3] was purified 500-fold from Aspergillus nidulans with an overall yield of about 20%. The purified enzyme catalyzed NADPH-nitrate, NADPH-cytochrome c, FADH2-nitrate and reduced methyl viologen-
nitrate reductase
activities. Its molecular weight was estimated to be 180,000 from the Stokes radius and sedimentation coefficient. The oxidized enzyme exhibited an absorption spectrum having a peak at 412 nm and a broad shoulder at about 450 nm. When reduced with NADPH, absorption peaks appeared at 423 (Soret), 527 (beta) and 557 (alpha) nm, and absorption in the 450 nm region decreased. Upon treatment of the reduced enzyme with KNO3, the spectrum returned to that of the oxidized enzyme. The presence of protoheme in the enzyme was confirmed by the absorption spectrum of reduced pyridine hemochromogen. It was concluded that a b-type cytochrome ("cytochrome b-557") is present in the enzyme and is involved in the intramolecular electron transport from NADPH to nitrate. The NADPH-nitrate and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activities, but not the other two activities, were significantly decreased by incubation of the enzyme at 37 degrees C in the absence of
FAD
. Analysis by SDS slab gel electrophoresis suggested that the
nitrate reductase
consists of two each of two subunits of 59,000 and 38,000 daltons and that a dissociation of 38,000 subunits from the native enzyme occurs during heat treatment, resulting in alteration of the catalytic activity.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the assimilatory NADPH-nitrate reductase of Aspergillus nidulans. 704 1
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>