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)

In response to nitrate availability, Escherichia coli regulates the synthesis of a number of enzymes involved in anaerobic respiration and fermentation. When nitrate is present, nitrate reductase (narGHJI) gene expression is induced, while expression of the DMSO/TMAO reductase (dmsABC), fumarate reductase (frdABCD) and fermentation related genes are repressed. The narL and narX gene products are required for this nitrate-dependent control, and apparently function as members of a two-component regulatory system. NarX is a presumed sensor-transmitter for nitrate and possibly molybdenum detection. The presumed response-regulator, NarL, when activated by NarX then binds at the regulatory DNA sites of genes to modulate their expression. In this study a third nitrate regulatory gene, narQ, was identified that also participates in nitrate-dependent gene regulation. Strains defective in either narQ or narX alone exhibited no nitrate-dependent phenotype whereas mutants defective in both narQ and narX were fully inactive for nitrate-dependent repression or activation. In all conditions tested, this regulation required a functional narL gene product. These findings suggest that the narX and narQ products have complementary sensor-transmitter functions for nitrate detection, and can work independently to activate NarL, for eliciting nitrate-dependent regulation of anaerobic electron transport and fermentation functions. The narQ gene was cloned, sequenced, and compared with the narX gene. Both gene products are similar in size, hydrophobicity, and sequence, and contain a highly conserved histidine residue common to sensor-transmitter proteins.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of narQ, a second nitrate sensor for nitrate-dependent gene regulation in Escherichia coli. 150 40

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

narK mutants of Escherichia coli produce wild-type levels of nitrate reductase but, unlike the wild-type strain, do not accumulate nitrite when grown anaerobically on a glucose-nitrate medium. Comparison of the rates of nitrate and nitrite metabolism in cultures growing anaerobically on glucose-nitrate medium revealed that a narK mutant reduced nitrate at a rate only slightly slower than that in the NarK+ parental strain. Although the specific activities of nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase were similar in the two strains, the parental strain accumulated nitrite in the medium in almost stoichiometric amounts before it was further reduced, while the narK mutant did not accumulate nitrite in the medium but apparently reduced it as rapidly as it was formed. Under conditions in which nitrite reductase was not produced, the narK mutant excreted the nitrite formed from nitrate into the medium; however, the rate of reduction of nitrate to nitrite was significantly slower than that of the parental strain or that which occurred when nitrite reductase was present. These results demonstrate that E. coli is capable of taking up nitrate and excreting nitrite in the absence of a functional NarK protein; however, in growing cells, a functional NarK promotes a more rapid rate of anaerobic nitrate reduction and the continuous excretion of the nitrite formed. Based on the kinetics of nitrate reduction and of nitrite reduction and excretion in growing cultures and in washed cell suspensions, it is proposed that the narK gene encodes a nitrate/nitrite antiporter which facilitates anaerobic nitrate respiration by coupling the excretion of nitrite to nitrate uptake. The failure of nitrate to suppress the reduction of trimethylamine N-oxide in narK mutants was not due to a change in the level of trimethylamine N-oxide reductase but apparently resulted from a relative decrease in the rate of anaerobic nitrate reduction caused by the loss of the antiporter system.
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PMID:NarK enhances nitrate uptake and nitrite excretion in Escherichia coli. 204 60

The apo-nitrate reductase precursor in an Escherichia coli chlB mutant preparation obtained following growth in the presence of tungstate is activated by incubation with protein FA and a heat-treated preparation from an E. coli crude extract. We show that the requirement for heat-treated E. coli crude extract can be fulfilled by material obtained from either of two heat-denatured purified E. coli molybdoenzymes, namely nitrate reductase or trimethylamine N-oxide reductase. Apo-trimethylamine N-oxide reductase precursor in the tungstate-grown chlB preparation can be activated in a similar manner with material from either heat-denatured molybdoenzyme. The active component in the denatured molybdoenzyme preparations is shown to be the molybdenum cofactor by Neurospora crassa nit1 molybdenum cofactor assay, size estimation and fluorimetric analysis. The direct demonstration of the requirement for molybdenum cofactor in the E. coli tungstate-grown chlB complementation system is an important step towards the molecular definition of the activation process and an understanding of the mechanism of cofactor acquisition during molybdoenzyme biosynthesis.
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PMID:Molybdenum cofactor requirement for in vitro activation of apo-molybdoenzymes of Escherichia coli. 214 Oct 97

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

Fumarate reductase catalyzes the final step of anaerobic electron transport in Escherichia coli when fumarate is used as a terminal electron acceptor. Transcription of the fumarate reductase operon (frdABCD) was repressed when cells were grown in the presence of either of the preferred terminal electron acceptors, oxygen or nitrate, and was stimulated modestly by fumarate. We have previously identified a locus called frdR which pleiotropically affects nitrate repression of fumarate reductase, trimethylamine N-oxide reductase, and alcohol dehydrogenase gene expression and nitrate induction of nitrate reductase expression (L. V. Kalman and R. P. Gunsalus, J. Bacteriol. 170:623-629, 1988). Transformation of various frdR mutants with plasmids identified two complementation groups, indicating that the frdR locus is composed of two genes. One class of mutants was not completely restored to wild-type frdA-lacZ expression or nitrate reductase induction when complemented with multicopy narX+ plasmids, whereas low-copy narX+ plasmid-containing strains were. A second class of frdR mutants was identified and shown to correspond to a previously described gene, narL (frdR2). Complementation of these strains with multicopy narL+ plasmids resulted in superrepression of frdA-lacZ expression and moderate elevation of nitrate reductase expression. Multicopy plasmids containing both narL+ and narX+ or only narL+ were able to complement narL mutants, whereas narX+ plasmids complemented narX mutants only when present in a copy number approximately equal to that of narL. Both narL and narX mutants retained normal oxygen control of frdA-lacZ expression. Both types of mutants are pleiotropic, as evidenced by derepressed levels of the fumarate reductase and trimethylamine N-oxide reductase enzymes and by defective induction of nitrate reductase when cells were grown in the presence of nitrate. These results indicate that both the narL and narX gene products must be present in a defined ratio in the cell. We conclude that these proteins interact to effect normal nitrate control of the anaerobic electron transport-associated operons. From these studies, we propose that narX encodes a nitrate sensor protein while narL encodes a DNA-binding regulatory protein which together function in a manner analogous to other two-component regulatory systems.
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PMID:Identification of a second gene involved in global regulation of fumarate reductase and other nitrate-controlled genes for anaerobic respiration in Escherichia coli. 254 57

Fumarate reductase catalyzes the terminal step of anaerobic electron transport with fumarate as a terminal electron acceptor. Transcription of the fumarate reductase (frdABCD) operon in Escherichia coli is repressed in the presence of the preferred terminal electron acceptors, oxygen and nitrate. To identify trans-acting genes involved in regulation by nitrate, a number of E. coli mutants were generated in which expression of a frdA'-'lacZ protein fusion was no longer fully repressed by nitrate. One of these mutants, strain LK23R35, exhibited 17-fold higher beta-galactosidase activity than the wild-type strain when grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate. When grown aerobically in the presence of nitrate, it contained three- to fourfold more beta-galactosidase activity than the wild-type strain did. Oxygen regulation of frd expression, however, was unaffected by the mutation, since the level of beta-galactosidase activity in both strains was nearly identical when they were grown in the absence of nitrate either aerobically or anaerobically. To confirm that the mutation acts in trans to frdABCD, we measured fumarate reductase levels and found them to parallel FrdA'-beta-galactosidase activity under all growth conditions tested. The effect of the mutation is pleiotropic, since the levels of nitrate reductase in LK23R35 were not induced by the addition of nitrate. The frdR mutant was also derepressed for nitrate control of the trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase and alcohol dehydrogenase enzymes. The mutation maps in a region between trp and hemA at 27 min on the E. coli chromosome. This gene, where we call frdR, is involved in both positive and negative regulation of electron transport and fermentation associated genes. A cloned 4.9-kilobase fragment of chromosomal DNA was found to complement the frdR mutation; both repression of fumarate reductase gene expression and activation of nitrate reductase gene expression were restored.
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PMID:The frdR gene of Escherichia coli globally regulates several operons involved in anaerobic growth in response to nitrate. 327 62

Genes different from those of the narGHI operon and encoding a nitrate reductase activity have been cloned by Bonnefoy et al. (unpublished results). We have shown by the use of well-known assay methods that the encoded enzyme activity is catalyzed by a true nitrate reductase and not by trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase or formate dehydrogenase. The biochemical and immunological study, employing anti-(nitrate reductase) serum raised against the known enzyme, revealed that Escherichia coli contains a second nitrate reductase (nitrate reductase Z) which shares some similarities as well as differences with the known enzyme. By using a strain with a deletion of the narGHI operon and carrying a multicopy plasmid having the nitrate reductase Z genes, we have shown that nitrate reductase Z is a membrane-bound molybdoenzyme able to couple formate oxidation with nitrate reduction. Like the known nitrate reductase, this enzyme has chlorate reductase activity. The molecular mass and pH and temperature dependence of enzyme Z are similar to these of the known enzyme. On the other hand the two enzymes have significant difference in their electrophoretic mobility on polyacrylamide gels. Unlike the known enzyme, enzyme Z is synthesized in small amounts; the expression of its structural genes does not seem to be induced by nitrate, repressed by oxygen or activated by the product of the fnr gene. The immunological comparison of the two enzymes was performed by rocket immunoelectrophoresis, double diffusion on agar plates and immunoblots. These techniques disclosed a difference between the two enzymes in their recognition by the antiserum and showed that E. coli has two types of nitrate reductase.
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PMID:Biochemical and immunological evidence for a second nitrate reductase in Escherichia coli K12. 331 49

Nitrate reductase (nitrite: (acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.7.99.4) and trimethylamine N-oxide reductase (NADH : trimethylamine-N-oxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.9) activities were reconstituted by incubation of the association factor FA (the putative product of the chlB gene) with the soluble extract of the chlB mutant grown anaerobically in the presence of trimethylamine N-oxide. When soluble extracts of the chlB mutant grown on 10 mM sodium tungstate, a molybdenum competitor, were used in complementation systems, no enzymatic reactivation was observed. Heated extracts of the parental strain 541 were shown to contain a thermoresistant molybdenum cofactor by their ability to reactivate NADPH-nitrate reductase activity in the nit1 mutant of Neurospora crassa. By complementation of parental strain heated extract with association factor FA and soluble extract of the chlB mutant grown in the presence of sodium tungstate, we were able to show for the first time that the molybdenum cofactor is an activator common to the in vitro reconstitution of both nitrate reductase and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase activities.
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PMID:Molybdenum cofactor: a compound in the in vitro activation of both nitrate reductase and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase activities in Escherichia coli K12. 352 87

Escherichia coli trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) reductase I, the major enzyme among inducible TMAO reductases, was purified to homogeneity by an improved method including heat treatment, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and chromatographies on Bio-Gel A-1.5m, DEAE-cellulose, and Reactive blue-agarose. The molecular weight was estimated by gel filtration to be approximately 200,000. A single subunit peptide with a molecular weight of 95,000 was found by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This enzyme contained 1.96 atoms of molybdenum, 0.96 atoms of iron, 1.52 atoms of zinc, and less than 0.4 atoms of acid-labile sulfur per molecular weight of 200,000. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme showed a peak at 278 nm and a shoulder at 288 nm, but no characteristic absorption was found from 350 to 700 nm. A fluorescent derivative of molybdenum cofactor was found when the enzyme was boiled with iodine in acidic solution; its fluorescence spectra were almost the same as those of the form A derivative of molybdopterin found in sulfite oxidase. The molybdenum cofactor released from heated TMAO reductase I reconstituted nitrate reductase in the extracts of Neurospora crassa mutant strain nit-1 lacking molybdenum cofactor. Thus, TMAO reductase I contains molybdopterin, which is a common constituent of some molybdenum-containing enzymes. Some kinetic properties were also determined.
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PMID:Further characterization of trimethylamine N-oxide reductase from Escherichia coli, a molybdoprotein. 352 39


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