Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.7.1.2 (nitrate reductase)
3,861 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anaerobic lactose and/or amino acid transport by membrane vesicles prepared from Escherichia coli ML 308-225 can be coupled to at least four electron transfer systems: alpha-glycerol-P-dehydrogenase:nitrate reductase, formate dehydrogenase:nitrate reductase, alpha-glycerol-P dehydrogenase:fumarate reductase, and formate dehydrogenase:fumarate reductase. Vesicles contain one or more of these electron transfer systems depending on the growth conditions of the parent cells. alpha-Glycerol-P dehydrogenase and fumarate reductase are present only in vesicles prepared from cells grown in the presence of glycerol or fumarate, respectively. Formate dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase activities, on the other hand, are present in vesicles from cells grown on a variety of media. alpha-Glycerol-P and formate are able to drive aerobic transport in vesicles prepared from anaerobically grown cells, indicating coupling between aerobic and anaerobic electron transfer systems.
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PMID:Anaerobic transport in Escherichia coli membrane vesicles. 109 94

An open reading frame from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae strain VF39, previously identified and found to be similar to Escherichia coli fnr and Rhizobium meliloti fixK (orf240, thereafter called fnrN), was further analysed. Analysis of the expression of an fnrN-lacZ transcriptional fusion revealed that fnrN is preferentially expressed under oxygen limitation. Using R. meliloti fixN-lacZ fusions it was shown that the fnrN gene product only mediates transcriptional activation under microaerobiosis, indicating that the FnrN protein responds, directly or indirectly, to oxygen. Plasmids which expressed fnrN under the control of an E. coli promoter were able to complement an E. coli fnr mutant with respect to anaerobic growth on nitrate but not fumarate, and to promote anaerobic but not aerobic activation of the Fnr-dependent E. coli genes narGHJI, nirB and fdnGHI coding for nitrate reductase, NADH-dependent nitrite reductase and formate dehydrogenase-N, respectively. Fumarate and DMSO reductase activities were not induced by FnrN. The E. coli fnr gene substituted for fnrN in oxygen-regulated transcription of nirB- and fixN-lacZ fusions in R. leguminosarum. The results indicate that Fnr and FnrN are functionally very similar and share a common mode of oxygen-dependent transcriptional activation. From hybridization studies, it appeared that fnrN-like genes are present in a number of different R. leguminosarum strains.
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PMID:The Rhizobium leguminosarum FnrN protein is functionally similar to Escherichia coli Fnr and promotes heterologous oxygen-dependent activation of transcription. 148 91

A biochemical and immunological study has revealed a new formate dehydrogenase isoenzyme in Escherichia coli. The enzyme is an isoenzyme of the respiratory formate dehydrogenase (FDH-N) which forms part of the formate to nitrate respiratory pathway found in the organisms when it is grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate. The new enzyme, termed FDH-Z, cross reacts with antibodies raised to FDH-N and possesses a similar polypeptide composition to FDH-N. FDH-Z catalyses the phenazine methosulphate-linked formate dehydrogenase activity present in the aerobically-grown bacterium. FDH-Z and FDH-N exhibit distinct regulation. Like formate dehydrogenase N, formate dehydrogenase Z is a membrane-bound molybdoenzyme. With nitrate reductase it can catalyse electron transfer between formate and nitrate. Quinones are required for the physiological electron transfer to nitrate. It seems likely that like FDH-N, FDH-Z functions physiologically as a formate: quinone oxidoreductase.
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PMID:A second phenazine methosulphate-linked formate dehydrogenase isoenzyme in Escherichia coli. 150 73

During anaerobic growth, nitrate induces synthesis of the anaerobic respiratory enzymes formate dehydrogenase-N and nitrate reductase. This induction is mediated by a transcription activator, the narL gene product. The narX gene product may be involved in sensing nitrate and phosphorylating NARL. We isolated narX mutants, designated narX*, that caused nitrate-independent expression of the formate dehydrogenase-N and nitrate reductase structural genes. We used lambda narX specialized transducing phage to genetically analyze these lesions in single copy. Two previously isolated narX* mutations, narX32 and narX71, were also constructed by site-specific mutagenesis. We found that each of these alleles caused nitrate-independent synthesis of formate dehydrogenase-N and nitrate reductase, and each was recessive to narX+. The narX* mutations lie in a region of similarity with the methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein Tsr. We suggest that the narX* proteins have lost a transmembrane signalling function such that phosphoprotein phosphatase activity is reduced relative to protein kinase activity.
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PMID:Mutational analysis reveals functional similarity between NARX, a nitrate sensor in Escherichia coli K-12, and the methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins. 159 21

A 3.7-kb DNA region encoding part of the Rhodospirillum rubrum CO oxidation (coo) system was identified by using oligonucleotide probes. Sequence analysis of the cloned region indicated four complete or partial open reading frames (ORFs) with acceptable codon usage. The complete ORFs, the 573-bp cooF and the 1,920-bp cooS, encode an Fe/S protein and the Ni-containing carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH), respectively. The four 4-cysteine motifs encoded by cooF are typical of a class of proteins associated with other oxidoreductases, including formate dehydrogenase, nitrate reductase, dimethyl sulfoxide reductase, and hydrogenase activities. The R. rubrum CODH is 67% similar to the beta subunit of the Clostridium thermoaceticum CODH and 47% similar to the alpha subunit of the Methanothrix soehngenii CODH; an alignment of these three peptides shows relatively limited overall conservation. Kanamycin cassette insertions into cooF and cooS resulted in R. rubrum strains devoid of CO-dependent H2 production with little (cooF::kan) or no (cooS::kan) methyl viologen-linked CODH activity in vitro, but did not dramatically alter their photoheterotrophic growth on malate in the presence of CO. Upstream of cooF is a 567-bp partial ORF, designated cooH, that we ascribe to the CO-induced hydrogenase, based on sequence similarity with other hydrogenases and the elimination of CO-dependent H2 production upon introduction of a cassette into this region. From mutant characterizations, we posit that cooH and cooFS are not cotranscribed. The second partial ORF starts 67 bp downstream of cooS and would be capable of encoding 35 amino acids with an ATP-binding site motif.
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PMID:Genetic and physiological characterization of the Rhodospirillum rubrum carbon monoxide dehydrogenase system. 164 55

For the study of molybdenum uptake by Escherichia coli, we generated Tn5lac transposition mutants, which were screened for the pleiotropic loss of molybdoenzyme activities. Three mutants A1, A4, and M22 were finally selected for further analysis. Even in the presence of 100 microM molybdate in the growth medium, no active nitrate reductase, formate dehydrogenase, and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase were detected in these mutants, indicating that the intracellular supply of molybdenum was not sufficient. This was also supported by the observation that introduction of plasmid pWK225 carrying the complete nif regulon of Klebsiella pneumoniae did not lead to a functional expression of nitrogenase. Finally, molybdenum determination by induced coupled plasma mass spectroscopy confirmed a significant reduction of cell-bound molybdenum in the mutants compared with that in wild-type E. coli, even at high molybdate concentrations in the medium. A genomic library established with the plasmid mini-F-derived cop(ts) vector pJE258 allowed the isolation of cosmid pBK229 complementing the molybdate uptake deficiency of the chlD mutant and the Tn5lac-induced mutants. Certain subfragments of pBK229 which do not contain the chlD gene are still able to complement the Tn5lac mutants. Mapping experiments showed that the Tn5lac insertions did not occur within the chromosomal region present in pBK229 but did occur very close to that region. We assume that the Tn5lac insertions have a polar effect, thus preventing the expression of transport genes, or that a positively acting regulatory element was inactivated.
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PMID:Isolation of Escherichia coli mutants defective in uptake of molybdate. 165 15

The pterin cofactor in formate dehydrogenase isolated from Methanobacterium formicium is identified as molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide. The pterin, stabilized as the alkylated, dicarboxamidomethyl derivative, is shown to have absorption and chromatographic properties identical to those of the previously characterized authentic compound. Treatment with nucleotide pyrophosphatase produced the expected degradation products GMP and carboxyamidomethyl molybdopterin. The molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide released from the enzyme by treatment with 95% dimethyl sulfoxide is shown to be functional in the in vitro reconstitution of the cofactor-deficient nitrate reductase in extracts of the Neurospora crassa nit-1 mutant.
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PMID:Identification of molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide in formate dehydrogenase from Methanobacterium formicicum. 203 31

Previous studies have shown that narL+ is required for nitrate regulation of anaerobic respiratory enzyme synthesis, including formate dehydrogenase-N, nitrate reductase, and fumarate reductase. Insertions in the closely linked narX gene decrease, but do not abolish, nitrate regulation of anaerobic enzyme synthesis. Analysis of sequence similarities suggests that NarX and NarL comprise a two-component regulatory pair. We constructed lacZ operon and gene fusions to investigate the operon structure of narXL. We found evidence for a complex operon with at least two promoters; PXL-narX-PL-narL. We also investigated the role of NarX in nitrate regulation of anaerobic respiratory enzyme synthesis by constructing nonpolar loss of function narX alleles. These deletions were studied on narL+ lambda specialized transducing bacteriophage. The narX deletions had no effect on nitrate regulation in delta (narXL) strains. This finding suggest that the subtle effects of previously studied narX insertions are due to decreased expression of narL and that narX+ is not essential for normal nitrate regulation. The role of NarX in nitrate regulation remains to be determined.
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PMID:Nitrate regulation of anaerobic respiratory gene expression in narX deletion mutants of Escherichia coli K-12. 214 76

A mutation in a new gene, molR, prevented the synthesis in Escherichia coli of molybdoenzymes, including the two formate dehydrogenase isoenzymes, nitrate reductase and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase. This phenotype was suppressed by supplementing the media with molybdate. Thus, the molR mutant was phenotypically similar to previously described chlD mutants, thought to be defective in molybdate transport. The molR gene is located at 65.3 min in the E. coli chromosome, in contrast to the chlD gene, which maps at 17 min and thus can be readily distinguished. The molR gene is also cotransducible with a hitherto unidentified gene essential for the production of 2-oxoglutarate from isocitrate, designated icdB (located at 66 min). The molR mutant strain SE1100 also failed to produce the hydrogenase component of formate hydrogenlyase (HYD3) in molybdate-unsupplemented media. The amount of molybdate required by strain SE1100 for the production of parental levels of formate hydrogenlyase activity was dependent on the growth medium. In Luria-Bertani medium, this value was about 100 microM, and in glucose-minimal medium, 1.0 microM was sufficient. In low-sulfur medium, this value decreased to about 50 nM. The addition of sulfate or selenite increased the amount of molybdate needed for the production of formate hydrogenlyase activity. These data suggest that in the absence of the high-affinity molybdate transport system, E. coli utilizes sulfate and selenite transport systems for transporting molybdate, preferring sulfate transport over the selenite transport system.
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PMID:Identification of a new gene, molR, essential for utilization of molybdate by Escherichia coli. 215 10

Formate oxidation coupled to nitrate reduction constitutes a major anaerobic respiratory pathway in Escherichia coli. This respiratory chain consists of formate dehydrogenase-N, quinone, and nitrate reductase. We have isolated a recombinant DNA clone that likely contains the structural genes, fdnGHI, for the three subunits of formate dehydrogenase-N. The fdnGHI clone produced proteins of 110, 32 and 20 kDa which correspond to the subunit sizes of purified formate dehydrogenase-N. Our analysis indicates that fdnGHI is organized as an operon. We mapped the fdn operon to 32 min on the E. coli genetic map, close to the genes for cryptic nitrate reductase (encoded by the narZ operon). Expression of phi(fdnG-lacZ) operon fusions was induced by anaerobiosis and nitrate. This induction required fnr+ and narL+, two regulatory genes whose products are also required for the anaerobic, nitrate-inducible activation of the nitrate reductase structural gene operon, narGHJI. We conclude that regulation of fdnGHI and narGHJI expression is mediated through common pathways.
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PMID:Structural genes for nitrate-inducible formate dehydrogenase in Escherichia coli K-12. 216 48


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