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)

Far-Western overlays of soluble extracts of cauliflower revealed many proteins that bound to digoxygenin (DIG)-labelled 14-3-3 proteins. Binding to DIG-14-3-3s was prevented by prior dephosphorylation of the extract proteins or by competition with 14-3-3-binding phosphopeptides, indicating that the 14-3-3 proteins bind to phosphorylated sites. The proteins that bound to the DIG-14-3-3s were also immunoprecipitated from extracts with anti-14-3-3 antibodies, demonstrating that they were bound to endogenous plant 14-3-3 proteins. 14-3-3-binding proteins were purified from cauliflower extracts, in sufficient quantity for amino acid sequence analysis, by affinity chromatography on immobilised 14-3-3 proteins and specific elution with a 14-3-3-binding phosphopeptide. Purified 14-3-3-binding proteins included sucrose-phosphate synthase, trehalose-6-phosphate synthase, glutamine synthetases, a protein (LIM17) that has been implicated in early floral development, an approximately 20 kDa protein whose mRNA is induced by NaCl, and a calcium-dependent protein kinase that was capable of phosphorylating and rendering nitrate reductase (NR) sensitive to inhibition by 14-3-3 proteins. In contrast to the phosphorylated NR-14-3-3 complex which is activated by dissociation with 14-3-3-binding phosphopeptides, the total sugar-phosphate synthase activity in plant extracts was inhibited by up to 40% by a 14-3-3-binding phosphopeptide and the phosphopeptide-inhibited activity was reactivated by adding excess 14-3-3 proteins. Thus, 14-3-3 proteins are implicated in regulating several aspects of primary N and C metabolism. The procedures described here will be valuable for determining how the phosphorylation and 14-3-3-binding status of defined target proteins change in response to extracellular stimuli.
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PMID:Phosphorylation-dependent interactions between enzymes of plant metabolism and 14-3-3 proteins. 1034 39

Despite 14-3-3 proteins being implicated in the control of the eukaryotic cell cycle, metabolism, cell signalling and survival, little is known about the global regulation or functions of the phosphorylation-dependent binding of 14-3-3s to diverse target proteins. We identified Arabidopsis cytosolic proteins that bound 14-3-3s in competition with a 14-3-3-binding phosphopeptide, including nitrate reductase, glyceraldehyde- 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a calcium-dependent protein kinase, sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) and glutamyl-tRNA synthetase. Remarkably, in cells starved of sugars or fed with non-metabolizable glucose analogues, all 14-3-3 binding was lost and the target proteins were selectively cleaved into proteolytic fragments. 14-3-3 binding reappeared after several hours of re-feeding with sugars. Starvation-induced degradation was blocked by 5-amino imidazole-4-carboxamide riboside (which is converted to an AMP-mimetic) or the protease inhibitor MG132 (Cbz-leu-leu-leucinal). Extracts of sugar-starved (but not sugar-fed) Arabidopsis cells contained an ATP-independent, MG132-sensitive, neutral protease that cleaved Arabidopsis SPS, and the mammalian 14-3-3-regulated transcription factor, FKHR. Cleavage of SPS and phosphorylated FKHR in vitro was blocked by binding to 14-3-3s. The finding that 14-3-3s participate in a nutrient-sensing pathway controlling cleavage of many targets may underlie the effects of these proteins on plant development.
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PMID:14-3-3s regulate global cleavage of their diverse binding partners in sugar-starved Arabidopsis cells. 1085 32

WPK4 is a wheat protein kinase related to the yeast protein kinase SNF1, which plays a role in catabolite repression. To identify proteins involved in signal transduction through WPK4, we performed yeast two-hybrid screens and isolated two cDNA clones designated as TaWIN1 and TaWIN2. Both encode 14-3-3 proteins that, upon autophosphorylation, bind the C-terminal regulatory domain of WPK4. Mutational analysis through amino acid substitution revealed that TaWIN1 and TaWIN2 primarily bind WPK4 through phosphoserines at the positions 388 and 418, both located in the C-terminal region. Mutations in the conserved residues of the TaWIN1 amphipathic groove impaired the ability of TaWIN1 to bind to WPK4. A screen for in vitro phosphorylation of proteins involved in nutrient metabolism revealed a putative WPK4 substrate, nitrate reductase; its hinge 1 region was efficiently phosphorylated by WPK4. Subsequent far Western blots showed that it specifically bound TaWIN1. Since nitrate reductase has been shown to be inactivated by phosphorylation upon 14-3-3 binding, the present findings strongly suggest that WPK4 is the protein kinase responsible for controlling the nitrogen metabolic pathway, assembling the nitrate reductase and 14-3-3 complex through its phosphorylation specificity.
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PMID:Specific binding of a 14-3-3 protein to autophosphorylated WPK4, an SNF1-related wheat protein kinase, and to WPK4-phosphorylated nitrate reductase. 1091 58

The nitrate reductase activity from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was not altered when extracts were incubated with yeast 14-3-3 proteins in the presence of Mg-ATP. However, the C. reinhardtii extracts contained 14-3-3 proteins capable of inhibiting the spinach nitrate reductase, raising the question of their physiological substrates. Two C. reinhardtii proteins of about 48 and 35 kDa were eluted from 14-3-3 affinity chromatography columns and bound to 14-3-3s in overlay assays. The 48-kDa protein corresponded to the cytosolic isoform of glutamine synthetase (GS1). The GSI was phosphorylated by a Ca2+-and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase partially purified from the alga. However, neither phosphorylation nor 14-3-3 binding seemed to change GS catalytic activity.
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PMID:Cytosolic glutamine synthetase and not nitrate reductase from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is phosphorylated and binds 14-3-3 proteins. 1121 47

This review highlights progress in dissecting how plant nitrate reductase (NR) activity is regulated by Ca2+, protein kinases, protein kinase kinases, protein phosphatases, 14-3-3 proteins and protease(s). The signalling components that regulate NR have also been discovered to target other enzymes of metabolism, vesicle trafficking and cellular signalling. Extracellular sugars exert a major impact on the 14-3-3-binding status and stability of many target proteins, including NR in plants, whereas other stimuli affect the regulation of some targets and not others. We thus begin to see how selective or global switches in cellular behaviour are triggered by regulatory networks in response to different environmental stimuli. Surprisingly, the question of how changes in NR activity actually affect the rate of nitrate assimilation is turning out to be a tough problem.
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PMID:Regulation of plant NR activity by reversible phosphorylation, 14-3-3 proteins and proteolysis. 1128 2

Assimilatory nitrate reductase (NR) of higher plants is a most interesting enzyme, both from its central function in plant primary metabolism and from the complex regulation of its expression and control of catalytic activity and degradation. Here, present knowledge about the mechanism of post-translational regulation of NR is summarized and the properties of the regulatory enzymes involved (protein kinases, protein phosphatases and 14-3-3-binding proteins) are described. It is shown that light and oxygen availability are the major external triggers for the rapid and reversible modulation of NR activity, and that sugars and/or sugar phosphates are the internal signals which regulate the protein kinase(s) and phosphatase. It is also demonstrated that stress factors like nitrate deficiency and salinity have remarkably little direct influence on the NR activation state. Further, changes in NR activity measured in vitro are not always associated with changes in nitrate reduction rates in vivo, suggesting that NR can be under strong substrate limitation. The degradation and half-life of the NR protein also appear to be affected by NR phosphorylation and 14-3-3 binding, as NR activation always correlates positively with its stability. However, it is not known whether the molecular form of NR in vivo affects its susceptibility to proteolytic degradation, or whether factors that affect the NR activation state also independently affect the activity or induction of the NR protease(s). A second and potentially important function of NR, the production of nitric oxide (NO) from nitrite is briefly described, but it remains to be determined whether NR produces NO for pathogen/stress signalling in vivo.
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PMID:Post-translational regulation of nitrate reductase: mechanism, physiological relevance and environmental triggers. 1155 33

Plant SNF1-related protein kinase (SnRK1) phosphorylates 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-Coenzyme A, nitrate reductase and sucrose phosphate synthase in vitro, and is required for expression of sucrose synthase in potato tubers and excised leaves. In this study, a barley (Hordeum vulgare) endosperm cDNA, SnIP1, was isolated by two-hybrid screening with barley SnRK1b, a seed-specific form of SnRK1. The protein encoded by the SnIP1 cDNA was found to interact with barley SnRK1b protein in vitro. Southern analysis suggested that barley contains a single SnIP1 gene or small gene family. SnIP1 transcripts were detected in RNA isolated from leaf, root and mid-maturation seed. Sequence similarity searches against protein, nucleotide and expressed sequence tag databases identified hitherto uncharacterized sequences related to SnIP1 from maize (Zea mays, accession number AI691404), arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana. AC079673 and AB016886) and poplar (Populus balsamifera, AI166543). No homologous sequences were identified from outside the plant kingdom, but weak sequence similarity was found between the SnIP1 peptide and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) SNF4 and its mammalian homologue AMPKy. Nevertheless, SnIP1 failed to complement a yeast snf4 mutant. SnIP1 was found to have little overall sequence similarity with the PV42 family of SNF4-like plant proteins, but proteins of both the SnIP1 and PV42 families contain a conserved hydrophobic sequence we named the SnIP motif.
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PMID:Identification of SnIP1, a novel protein that interacts with SNF1-related protein kinase (SnRK1). 1200 97

Although it has been shown that leaf nitrate reductase (NR: EC 1.6.6.1) is phosphorylated by subjecting plants to darkness, there is no evidence for the existence of dark-activated or dark-induced NR kinase. This study was undertaken to investigate the occurrence of a protein kinase phosphorylating NR in response to dark treatments. Immediately after transferring Komatsuna (Brassica campestris L.) plants to darkness, we observed rapid increases in the phosphorylating activity of the synthetic peptide, which is designed for the amino acid sequence surrounding the regulatory serine residue of the hinge 1 region of Komatsuna NR, in crude extracts from leaves. The activity reached a maximum after 10 min of darkness. Inactivation states of NR estimated from relative activities with or without Mg2+ were correlated to activities of the putative dark-activated protein kinase. Using the synthetic peptide as a substrate, we purified a protein kinase from dark-treated leaves by means of successive chromatographies on Q-Sepharose, Blue Sepharose, FPLC Q-Sepharose, and ATP-gamma-Sepharose columns. The purified kinase had an apparent molecular mass of 150 kDa with a catalytic subunit of 55 kDa, and it was Ca2+-independent. The purified kinase phosphorylated a recombinant cytochrome c reductase protein, a partial protein of NR, and holo NR, and inactivated NR in the presence of both 14-3-3 protein and Mg2+. The kinase also phosphorylated synthetic peptide substrates designed for sucrose phosphate synthase and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-Coenzyme A reductase. Among inhibitors tested, only K252a, a potent and specific serine/threonine kinase inhibitor, completely inhibited the activity of the dark-activated kinase. The activity of the purified kinase was also specifically inhibited by K252a. Taken together with these findings, results obtained suggest that the putative dark-activated protein kinase may be the purified kinase itself, and may be responsible for in vivo phosphorylation of NR and its inactivation during darkness.
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PMID:A protein kinase activated by darkness phosphorylates nitrate reductase in Komatsuna (Brassica campestris) leaves. 1212 55

The regulation of sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) and nitrate reductase (NR) activities from mature spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves share many similarities in vivo and in vitro. Both enzymes are light/dark modulated by processes that involve, at least in part, reversible protein phosphorylation. Experiments using desalted crude extracts show that the ATP-dependent inactivation of spinach SPS and NR is sensitive to inhibition by glucose-6-phosphate. Also, a synthetic peptide homolog of the spinach SPS phosphorylation site inhibits the ATP-dependent inactivation of both enzymes with a similar concentration dependence. We have addressed the possibility that SPS and NR are regulated by the same protein kinase by partially purifying the protein kinases involved. Three unique kinase activities can be separated by anion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatography. Each peak of activity has a different substrate specificity. By gel filtration, they have apparent molecular masses of approximately 45, 60, and 150 kD. Additionally, the activities of the two smaller kinases are dependent on micromolar concentrations of Ca2+, whereas the 150-kD kinase is not. Finally, the 150-kD kinase has a subunit molecular mass of about 65 kD as determined by renaturing the kinase activity in situ following sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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PMID:Spinach Leaf Sucrose-Phosphate Synthase and Nitrate Reductase Are Phosphorylated/Inactivated by Multiple Protein Kinases in Vitro. 1222 28

Evidence is accumulating that the activity of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf NADH:nitrate reductase (NR) is modulated both in vitro and in vivo by protein phosphorylation. From the present study we report the partial purification of the two protein factors needed for NR inactivation. We identified NR-protein kinase (NR-PK) as a calcium-dependent and metabolite-regulated protein kinase and have provided additional evidence that phosphorylation of NR is necessary but not sufficient to inactivate the enzyme. The inhibitor protein required for inactivation of phospho-NR was purified 625-fold by polyethylene glycol fractionation and sequential column chromatography. Using partially purified inhibitor protein and NR-PK, we characterized NR inactivation (increased sensitivity to Mg2+ inhibition) in a reconstituted in vitro system. NR-PK activity was inhibited by a variety of metabolic phosphate esters including di-hydroxyacetone phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate. Light-to-dark transition experiments with a starchless tobacco (Nicotiana sylvestris) mutant, which accumulates phosphate esters during the photoperiod, indicated that NR inactivation in vivo might, indeed, be down-regulated by metabolites. Additionally, we postulate that cytosolic free calcium could play an important role in the regulation of NR activity in vivo.
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PMID:Partial Purification and Characterization of a Calcium-Dependent Protein Kinase and an Inhibitor Protein Required for Inactivation of Spinach Leaf Nitrate Reductase. 1222 29


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