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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)
The heterogeneous form of
nitrate reductase
released from the membrane fraction of Escherichia coli by heat treatment was converted to a new electrophoretic form by incubation with
trypsin
. As a result of the
trypsin
treatment, the heat-released enzyme was converted from an associating-dissociating system to a nonassociating monomer (Mr approximately 200,000) which retained full enzymatic activity. Several distinct subunits in the 47,000- to 59,000-dalton range were converted to a single 43,000-dalton subunit during the
trypsin
treatment, while the other major subunit (155,000 daltons) was unaffected.
Nitrate reductase
extracted from the membrane fraction with deoxycholate and ammonium sulfate was composed of two apparently homogeneous subunits (155,000 and 59,000 daltons). The detergent-extracted enzyme preparation was converted by
trypsin
to an electrophoretic form very similar to the product of
trypsin
treatment of the heat-released enzyme with an identical subunit composition (155,000 and 43,000 daltons). These results demonstrate that the heterogeneous subunits present in the heat-released enzyme are produced during heat treatment by proteolytic cleavage of a single 59,000-dalton subunit. The fragments removed by
trypsin
treatment are implicated in the self-associating properties of the heat-released enzyme.
...
PMID:Limited proteolysis of nitrate reductase purified from membranes of Escherichia coli. 32 Feb 11
Molybdenum cofactor activity was found in the soluble fraction of cell-free extracts of Escherichia coli grown aerobically in media supplemented with molybdate. Cofactor was detected by its ability to complement the
nitrate reductase
-deficient mutant of Neurospora crossa, nit-1, resulting in the vitro formation of
nitrate reductase
activity. Acid treatment of E. coli extracts was not required for release of cofactor activity. Cofactor was able to diffuse through a membrane of nominal 2,000-molecular-weight cutoff and was insensitive to
trypsin
. The cofactor was associated with a carrier molecule (approximately 40,000 daltons) during gel filtration and sucrose gradient centrifugation, but was easily removed from the carrier by dialysis. The carrier molecule protected the cofactor from inactivation by heat or oxygen. E. coli grown in molybdenum-free media, without and with tungsten, synthesized a metal-free "empty" cofactor and its tungsten analog, respectively, both of which were subsequently activated by the addition of molybdate. Empty and tungsten-containing cofactor complemented the
nitrate reductase
subunits in the nit-1 extract, forming inactive, but intact, 7.9S
nitrate reductase
. Addition of molybdate to the enzyme complemented in this manner restored
nitrate reductase
activity.
...
PMID:Characterization of molybdenum cofactor from Escherichia coli. 38 15
The cytoplasmic
nitrate reductase
in heme mutant H-14 of Staphylococcus aureus was partially purified by steps which included ammonium sulfate fractionation and chromatography on Bio-Gel A 1.5m and ion-exchange columns. The active fractions from the ion-exchange columns showed two forms of the enzyme upon electrophoresis in nondenaturing gels of polyacrylamide; these corresponded to proteins of R(f) 0.16 and 0.28. Each form contained a predominant polypeptide of molecular weight 140,000, as shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The R(f) 0.16 form contained another major polypeptide of molecular weight 57,000, but the R(f) 0.28 form contained several other polypeptides. The sedimentation properties of the enzyme were examined after partial purification on Bio-Gel A 1.5m. In sucrose gradients containing Triton X-100 the enzyme sedimented as a homogeneous peak with an estimated molecular weight of 225,000; without detergent a heterogeneous profile was observed of molecular weight greater than 250,000. Treatment of the enzyme with
trypsin
increased the specific activity, and the enzyme sedimented as a homogeneous peak in sucrose gradients without Triton X-100, with an estimated molecular weight of 202,000. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that
trypsin
treatment converted the polypeptide of molecular weight 140,000 to a polypeptide of molecular weight 112,000. We conclude that the cytoplasmic
nitrate reductase
of S. aureus has a large subunit of molecular weight 140,000, which can be modified by
trypsin
to a polypeptide of molecular weight 112,000 without loss of catalytic activity.
...
PMID:Partial purification and some properties of the Staphylococcus aureus cytoplasmic nitrate reductase. 45 98
1. Starved cells of a strain of Escherichia coli and its mutant uncA, treated with colicin K, E2 or E3, remained fully rescuable upon
trypsin
treatment (stage I in colicin action). The transition to stage II in colicin action (cells no longer rescuable by
trypsin
) was promoted by the addition of either glucose or D-lactate. 2. Aerobically glucose-grown cells of the normal strain were irreversibly killed by colicin K, E2 or E3 under anerobic conditions, while similarly treated cells ot its mutant uncA remained fully rescuable. The stage I-stage II transition in colicin action was blocked in normal cells under anaerobic conditions when succinate was the sole carbon source. 3. Arsenate alone had little effect on the progression of the stage I-stage II transition in normal cells, treated with colicin K. However, this transition was abolished in the presence of both arsenate and anaerobic conditions. 4. The initiation of colicin action could be coupled to the anaerobic electron transfer systems formate dehydrogenase-
nitrate reductase
and alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase-fumarate reductase. 5. These results indicate that an energized state of the cytoplasmic membrane is required for the initiation of colicin action and that no high-energy phosphorylated compounds are necessary.
...
PMID:Energy requirement for the initiation of colicin action in Escherichia coli. 109 62
Fragments of spinach
nitrate reductase
(NR) were prepared by limited proteolysis of immunopurified enzyme using both Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease and
trypsin
. Incubation of NR with V8 protease yielded two enzymically active fragments which could be size separated by FPLC on a Superose 12 column or subjected to further proteolysis while bound to a blue Sepharose affinity column. An NADH-ferricyanide (NADH-FR) active fragment bound to, and was eluted from, a blue Sepharose column by micromolar concentrations of NADH. A fragment with methyl viologen-NR activity was either eluted from the same column using 1 M KNO3 or on further treatment in situ on the blue Sepharose column with
trypsin
. Incubation of holo-NR with
trypsin
resulted in the loss of all terminal nitrate reducing activities but no loss in either NADH-FR activity or NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity. Two protease-sensitive regions of NR are shown which connect essentially between the flavin (FAD) and haem domains, and between the haem and molybdenum domains of NR. Amino acid analysis of the FAD- and FAD/haem-containing domains yielded two partial sequences which are compared with sequences deduced from complementary DNA (cDNA) of NR from Arabidopsis, tobacco and spinach. The deduced sequences from Arabidopsis and tobacco are found to be ca 80% and the spinach 100% homologous to the sequence obtained for spinach NR fragments.
...
PMID:Isolation and partial amino acid sequence of domains of nitrate reductase from spinach. 136 37
Two nitrate reductases,
nitrate reductase
A and
nitrate reductase
Z, exist in Escherichia coli. The
nitrate reductase
Z enzyme has been purified from the membrane fraction of a strain which is deleted for the operon encoding the
nitrate reductase
A enzyme and which harbours a multicopy plasmid carrying the
nitrate reductase
Z structural genes; it was purified 219 times with a yield of about 11%. It is an Mr-230,000 complex containing 13 atoms iron and 12 atoms labile sulfur/molecule. The presence of a molybdopterin cofactor in the
nitrate reductase
Z complex was demonstrated by reconstitution experiments of the molybdenum-cofactor-deficient NADPH-dependent
nitrate reductase
activity from a Neurospora crassa nit-1 mutant and by fluorescence emission and excitation spectra of stable derivatives of molybdoterin extracted from the purified enzyme. Both nitrate reductases share common properties such as relative molecular mass, subunit composition and electron donors and acceptors. Nevertheless, they diverge by two properties: their electrophoretic migrations are very different (RF of 0.38 for
nitrate reductase
Z versus 0.23 for
nitrate reductase
A), as are their susceptibilities to
trypsin
. An immunological study performed with a serum raised against
nitrate reductase
Z confirmed the existence of common epitopes in both complexes but unambiguously demonstrated the presence of specific determinants in
nitrate reductase
Z. Furthermore, it revealed a peculiar aspect of the regulation of both nitrate reductases: the
nitrate reductase
A enzyme is repressed by oxygen, strongly inducible by nitrate and positively controlled by the fnr gene product; on the contrary, the
nitrate reductase
Z enzyme is produced aerobically, barely induced by nitrate and repressed by the fnr gene product in anaerobiosis.
...
PMID:Purification and further characterization of the second nitrate reductase of Escherichia coli K12. 213 7
All molybdenum enzymes except nitrogenase contain a common molybdenum cofactor, whose organic moiety is a novel pterin called molybdopterin (MPT). To assist in elucidating the biosynthetic pathway of MPT, two MPT-deficient mutants of Escherichia coli K-12 were isolated. They lacked activities of the molybdenum enzymes
nitrate reductase
and formate dehydrogenase, did not reconstitute apo
nitrate reductase
from a Neurospora crassa nit-1 strain, and did not yield form A, a derivative of MPT. By P1 mapping, these two mutations mapped to chlA and chlE, loci previously postulated but never definitely shown to be involved in MPT biosynthesis. The two new mutations are in different genetic complementation groups from previously isolated chlA and chlE mutations and have been designated as chlM and chlN (closely linked to chlA and chlE, respectively). The reported presence of Mo cofactor activity in the chlA1 strain is shown to be due to in vitro synthesis of MPT through complementation between a
trypsin
-sensitive macromolecule from the chlA1 strain and a low-molecular-weight compound from the nit-l strain.
...
PMID:Involvement of chlA, E, M, and N loci in Escherichia coli molybdopterin biosynthesis. 294 96
The interconversion of
nitrate reductase
from Escherichia coli between low-pH and high-pH Mo(V) e.p.r. signal-giving species was re-investigated [cf. Vincent & Bray (1978) Biochem. J. 171, 639-647]. The process cannot be described by a single pK value, since the apparent pK for interconversion is raised by the presence of various anions. The low-pH form of the enzyme exists as a series of complexes with different anion ligands of molybdenum. Each complex has specific and slightly different e.p.r. parameters, but all show strong coupling of Mo(V) to a single proton, exchangeable with the solvent, having A(1H)av. 1.0 to 1.3 mT. Complexes with Cl-, F- [A(19F)av. 0.7 mT], NO3- and NO2- give particularly well-defined spectra. The high-pH form of the enzyme is now shown to bear a coupled proton. Like that in the low-pH species, this proton is exchangeable with the solvent, but the coupling is much weaker, with A(1H)av. 0.3 mT. Thus, contrary to earlier assumptions, the proton detectable by e.p.r. is probably not identical with the proton whose dissociation controls interconversion between the two species; the latter proton could be located in the protein rather than on a ligand of molybdenum. Treatment of the enzyme with
trypsin
[Morpeth & Boxer (1985) Biochemistry 24, 40-46] did not affect its Mo(V) e.p.r. signals.
...
PMID:Complexes with halide and other anions of the molybdenum centre of nitrate reductase from Escherichia coli. 298 8
Assimilatory
nitrate reductase
from Chlorella is a homotetramer which contains one of each of the prosthetic groups FAD, heme, and molybdenum per subunit. Besides the reduction of nitrate by NADH,
nitrate reductase
also catalyzes the partial activities NADH:cytochrome c reductase, NADH:ferricyanide reductase, and reduced methyl viologen:
nitrate reductase
. Incubation of native
nitrate reductase
with either
trypsin
, Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, or a natural inactivator protease from corn results in a loss of NADH:
nitrate reductase
and NADH:cytochrome c reductase activities but no loss of reduced methyl viologen:
nitrate reductase
activity. Incubation of
nitrate reductase
with V8 protease or corn inactivator protease resulted in two different products, each of which retained a different partial activity. Reduced methyl viologen:
nitrate reductase
activity was associated with a homotetrameric fragment of about 260 kDa which contained heme and molybdenum but no FAD. The molecular mass of native
nitrate reductase
determined under the same conditions was 375 kDa. NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity was associated with a monomeric species of approximately 30 kDa which contained FAD and the NADH-binding site. These results are consistent with a structure-function model of
nitrate reductase
which has the following features: FAD/NADH-binding domains exposed on the surface of the molecule, a protease-sensitive hinge region which connects the nitrate-reducing and NADH dehydrogenase moieties, and the quaternary structure maintained via association sites on the heme/molybdenum domain.
...
PMID:Functional domains of assimilatory NADH:nitrate reductase from Chlorella. 301 63
The functional structure of assimilatory NADH-nitrate reductase from spinach leaves was studied by limited proteolysis experiments. After incubation of purified
nitrate reductase
with
trypsin
, two stable products of 59 and 45 kDa were observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The fragment of 45 kDa was purified by Blue Sepharose chromatography. NADH-ferricyanide reductase and NADH-cytochrome c reductase activities were associated with this 45-kDa fragment which contains FAD, heme, and NADH binding fragment. After incubation of purified
nitrate reductase
with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, two major peaks were observed by high performance liquid chromatography size exclusion gel filtration. FMNH2-
nitrate reductase
and reduced methyl viologen-
nitrate reductase
activities were associated with the first peak of 170 kDa which consists of two noncovalently associated (75-90-kDa) fragments. NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity, however, was associated with the second peak which consisted of FAD and NADH binding sites. Incubation of the 45-kDa fragment with S. aureus V8 protease produced two major fragments of 28 and 14 kDa which contained FAD and heme, respectively. These results indicate that the molybdenum, heme, and FAD components of spinach
nitrate reductase
are contained in distinct domains which are covalently linked by exposed hinge regions. The molybdenum domain appears to be important in the maintenance of subunit interactions in the enzyme complex.
...
PMID:Limited proteolysis of the nitrate reductase from spinach leaves. 319 46
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