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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)
Nitric oxide
(NO) is an important signaling molecule in animals and plants. In mammals, NO is produced from Arg by the enzyme NO synthase. In plants, NO synthesis from Arg using an NO synthase-type enzyme and from nitrite using
nitrate reductase
has been demonstrated previously. The data presented in this report strongly support the hypothesis that plant tissues also synthesize NO via the nonenzymatic reduction of apoplastic nitrite. As measured by mass spectrometry or an NO-reactive fluorescent probe, Hordeum vulgare (barley) aleurone layers produce NO rapidly when nitrite is added to the medium in which they are incubated. NO production requires an acid apoplast and is accompanied by a loss of nitrite from the medium. Phenolic compounds in the medium can increase the rate of NO production. The possible significance of apoplastic NO production for germinating grain and for plant roots is discussed.
...
PMID:Apoplastic synthesis of nitric oxide by plant tissues. 1474 74
In wild-type Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. and other higher plants,
nitrate reductase
(NR) is regulated at the post-translational level and is rapidly inactivated in response to, for example, a light-to-dark transition. This inactivation is caused by phosphorylation of a conserved regulatory serine residue, Ser 521 in tobacco, and interaction with divalent cations or polyamines, and 14-3-3 proteins. The physiological importance of the post-translational NR modulation is presently under investigation using a transgenic N. plumbaginifolia line. This line expresses a mutated tobacco NR where Ser 521 has been changed into aspartic acid (Asp) by site-directed mutagenesis, resulting in a permanently active NR enzyme. When cut leaves or roots of this line (S(521)) were placed in darkness in a buffer containing 50 mM KNO(3), nitrite was excreted from the tissue at rates of 0.08-0.2 micromol (g FW)(-1) h(-1) for at least 5 h. For the control transgenic plant (C1), which had the regulatory serine of NR intact, nitrite excretion was low and halted completely after 1-3 h. Without nitrate in the buffer in which the tissue was immersed, nitrite excretion was also low for S(521), although 20-40 micromol (g FW)(-1) nitrate was present inside the tissue. Apparently, stored nitrate was not readily available for reduction in darkness. Leaf tissue and root segments of S(521) also emitted much more
nitric oxide
(NO) than the control. Importantly, NO emission from leaf tissue of S(521) was higher in the dark than in the light, opposite to what was usually observed when post-translational NR modulation was operating.
...
PMID:Mutation of the regulatory phosphorylation site of tobacco nitrate reductase results in high nitrite excretion and NO emission from leaf and root tissue. 1476 69
Nitric oxide
(NO) is a reactive gas involved in many biological processes of animals, plants and microbes. Previous work has demonstrated that NO is formed during hypoxia in alfalfa ( Medicago sativa L.) root cultures and that the levels of NO detected are inversely related to the levels of expression of class-1 hemoglobin expressed in the tissue. The objectives of this study were: to examine whether NO is produced in transgenic maize ( Zea mays L.) cell-suspension cultures exposed to anoxic growth conditions; to determine whether a similar relationship existed between a class-1 hemoglobin and the amount of NO detected under these conditions; and, to estimate the route of formation and breakdown of NO in the tissue. Maize cell-suspension cultures, transformed to express the sense or antisense strands of barley hemoglobin were used to overexpress or underexpress class-1 hemoglobin. A maize cell-suspension culture transformed with an empty vector was used as a control. Up to 500 nmol NO (g FW)(-1) was detected in maize cells exposed to low oxygen tensions for 24 h. The steady-state levels of NO in the different cell lines under anoxic conditions had an inverse relationship to the level of hemoglobin in the cells. There was no detectable NO produced under aerobic growth conditions. Spectroscopic data demonstrated that recombinant maize hemoglobin reacted with NO to form methemoglobin and NO(3)(-). Nitrate was shown to be a precursor of NO in anoxic maize cell-suspension cultures by using (15)NO(3)(-) and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, suggesting that NO is formed via
nitrate reductase
during hypoxia. The results demonstrate that NO is produced in plant tissues grown under low oxygen tensions and suggest that class-1 hemoglobins have a significant function in regulating NO levels.
...
PMID:Class-1 hemoglobins, nitrate and NO levels in anoxic maize cell-suspension cultures. 1496 9
We have quantitatively measured
nitric oxide
production in the leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana and Vicia faba by adapting ferrous dithiocarbamate spin tapping methods previously used in animal systems. Hydrophobic diethyldithiocarbamate complexes were used to measure NO interacting with membranes, and hydrophilic N-methyl-d-glucamine dithiocarbamate was used to measure NO released into the external solution. Both complexes were able to trap levels of NO, readily detectable by EPR spectroscopy. Basal rates of NO production (in the order of 1 nmol g(-) (1) h(-1)) agreed with previous studies. However, use of methodologies that corrected for the removal of free NO by endogenously produced superoxide resulted in a significant increase in trapped NO (up to 18 nmol g(-) (1) h(-1)). Basal NO production in leaves is therefore much higher than previously thought, but this is masked by significant superoxide production. The effects of nitrite (increased rate) and nitrate (decreased rate) are consistent with a role for
nitrate reductase
as the source of this basal NO production. However, rates under physiologically achievable nitrite concentrations never approach that reported following pathogen induction of plant nitric-oxide synthase. In Hibiscus rosa sinensis, the addition of exogenous nitrite generated sufficient NO such that EPR could be used to detect its production using endogenous spin traps (forming paramagnetic dinitrosyl iron complexes). Indeed the levels of this nitrosylated iron pool are sufficiently high that they may represent a method of maintaining bioavailable iron levels under conditions of iron starvation, thus explaining the previously observed role of NO in preventing chlorosis under these conditions.
...
PMID:Endogenous superoxide production and the nitrite/nitrate ratio control the concentration of bioavailable free nitric oxide in leaves. 1505 52
In higher plants,
nitrate reductase
(NR) is inactivated by the phosphorylation of a conserved Ser residue and binding of 14-3-3 proteins in the presence of divalent cations or polyamines. A transgenic Nicotiana plumbaginifolia line (S521) has been constructed where the regulatory, conserved Ser 521 of tobacco NR (corresponding to Ser 534 in Arabidopsis) was mutated into Asp. This mutation resulted in the complete abolition of activation/inactivation in response to light/dark transitions or other treatments known to regulate the activation state of NR. Analysis of the transgenic plants showed that, under certain conditions, when whole plants or cut tissues are exposed to high nitrate supply, post-translational regulation is necessary to avoid nitrite accumulation. Abolition of the post-translational regulation of NR also results in an increased flux of
nitric oxide
from the leaves and roots. In view of the results obtained from examining the different transgenic N. plumbaginifolia lines, compartmentation of nitrate into an active metabolic pool and a large storage pool appears to be an important factor for regulating nitrate reduction. The complex regulation of nitrate reduction is likely to have evolved not only to optimize nitrogen assimilation, but also to prevent and control the formation of toxic, and possibly regulatory, products of NR activities. Phos phorylation of NR has previously been found to influence the degradation of NR in spinach leaves and Arabidopsis cell cultures. However, experiments with whole plants of N. plumbaginifolia, Arabidopsis, or squash are in favour of NR degradation being the same in light and darkness and independent of phosphorylation at the regulatory Ser.
...
PMID:Mechanism and importance of post-translational regulation of nitrate reductase. 1510 52
A simple and sensitive method is presented to measure the unstable molecule
nitric oxide
(NO) by reconversion of nitrate/nitrite to NO. Nitrate and nitrite are the stable degradation products of NO that accumulate in supernatants of biological samples that release
nitric oxide
. First, nitrate is enzymatically converted to nitrite using
nitrate reductase
. In a second step, nitrite is reduced to equimolar NO concentrations by an acidic iodide solution and quantified with an amperometric Clark-type electrode. This method provides the ability to assess basal-and agonist-stimulated cumulative NO formation in different biological models and is a sensitive alternative to the widely used Griess assay.
...
PMID:Measurement of nitric oxide by reconversion of nitrate/nitrite to NO. 1519 32
Excised root systems of tomato plants (early fruiting stage, 2nd flush) were subjected to a gradual transition from normoxia to anoxia by seating the hydroponic root medium while aeration was stopped. Oxygen level in the medium and respiration rate decreased and reached very low values after 12 h of treatment, indicating that the tissues were anoxic thereafter. Nitrate loss from the nutrient solution was strongly stimulated by anoxia (after 26 h) concomitantly with a release of nitrite starting only after 16 h of treatment. This effect was not observed in the absence of roots or in the presence of tungstate, but occurred with whole plants or with sterile in vitro cultured root tissues. These results indicate that biochemical processes in the root involve
nitrate reductase
. NR activity assayed in tomato roots increased during anoxia. This phenomenon appeared in intact plants and in root tissues of detopped plants. The stimulating effect of oxygen deprivation on nitrate uptake was specific; anoxia simultaneously entailed a release of orthophosphate, sulfate, and potassium by the roots. Anoxia enhanced nitrate reduction by root tissues, and nitrite ions were released into xylem sap and into medium culture. In terms of the overall balance, the amount of nitrite recovered represented only half of the amount of nitrate utilized. Nitrite reduction into
nitric oxide
and perhaps into nitrogen gas could account for this discrepancy. These results appear to be the first report of an increase in nitrate uptake by plant roots under anoxia of tomato at the early fruiting stage, and the rates of nitrite release in nutrient medium by the asphyxiated roots are the fastest yet reported.
...
PMID:Nitrate uptake and nitrite release by tomato roots in response to anoxia. 1531 75
Nitric oxide
(NO) is an intra- and extracellular messenger that mediates diverse signaling pathways in target cells and is known to play an important role in many physiological processes including neuronal signaling, immune response, inflammatory response, modulation of ion channels, phagocytic defense mechanism, penile erection, and cardiovascular homeostasis and its decompensation in atherogenesis. Recent studies have also revealed a role for NO as signaling molecule in plant, as it activates various defense genes and acts as developmental regulator. In plants, NO can also be produced by
nitrate reductase
. NO can operate through posttranslational modification of proteins (nitrosylation). NO is also a causative agent in various pathophysiological abnormalities. One of the very important systems, the cardiovascular system, is affected by NO production, as this bioactive molecule is involved in the regulation of cardiovascular motor tone, modulation of myocardial contractivity, control of cell proliferation, and inhibition of platelet activation, aggregation, and adhesion. The prime source of NO in the cardiovascular system is endothelial NO synthase, which is tightly regulated with respect to activity and localization. The inhibition of chronic NO synthesis leads to neurogenic and arterial hypertensions, which later contribute to development of myocardial fibrosis. Overall, the modulation of NO synthesis is associated with hypertension. This review briefly describes the physiology of NO, its synthesis, catabolism, and targeting, the mechanism of NO action, and the pharmacological role of NO with special reference to its essential role in hypertension.
...
PMID:Nitric Oxide as a Unique Bioactive Signaling Messenger in Physiology and Pathophysiology. 1546 63
Wild type (WT), and
nitrate reductase
(NR)- and nitrite-reductase (NiR)-deficient cells of Chlorella sorokiniana were used to characterize
nitric oxide
(NO) emission. The NO emission from nitrate-grown WT cells was very low in air, increased slightly after addition of nitrite (200 microM), but strongly under anoxia. Importantly, even completely NR-free mutants, as well as cells grown on tungstate, emitted NO when fed with nitrite under anoxia. Therefore, this NO production from nitrite was independent of NR and other molybdenum cofactor enzymes. Cyanide and inhibitors of mitochondrial complex III, myxothiazol or antimycin A, but not salicylhydroxamic acid (inhibitor of alternative oxidase) inhibited NO production by NR-free cells. In contrast, NiR-deficient cells growing on nitrate accumulated nitrite and emitted NO at very high equal rates in air and anoxia. This NO emission was 50% inhibited by salicylhydroxamic acid, indicating that in these cells the alternative oxidase pathway had been induced and reduced nitrite to NO.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial electron transport as a source for nitric oxide in the unicellular green alga Chlorella sorokiniana. 1547 28
To explore the effects of bilirubin on alveolar macrophages (AM) and expression of iNOS and NO in them in emphysema model, the rats were pretreated with bilirubin before exposed to smoke. AM were isolated from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) and cultured. Pathological microscopic examination of AM and immunohistochemical analysis of iNOS were performed.
Nitric oxide
(NO) content in the samples was determined by
nitrate reductase
technique. The results showed both alveoli and alveolar septum appeared normal in size and shape in normal group. AM showed kidney-shaped nucleus and were rich in Golgi complexes and primary lysosomes in the cytoplasm. The inner membrane of mitochondrion was continuous. Most cristae of the mitochondria were intact. In model group, the alveoli were expanded, ruptured and bullaes were formed. Both the population and sizes of AM increased significantly. Secondary lysosomes were rich in the cytoplasm. Deformation and pyknosis of the nucleus, swelling of the mitochondrions and rupture of the inner mitochondrial membrane could also be seen. At high magnification, most of the mitochondrial cristae were broken, or completely lost at certain points. In bilirubin group, alveoli partly expanded and the population of AM also increased, with morphological changes being slighter than that in model group. Both NO contents and expression of iNOS in model group were higher than those in normal group (P<0.05). In bilirubin group the two indice were lower than those in model group (P<0.05). Our findings suggested that high expression of iNOS and high NO content in AM accelerate the development of emphysema associated with smoking in rats. Bilirubin may exert protective effects on AM and retards the development of emphysema in rats.
...
PMID:Effects of bilirubin on alveolar macrophages in rats with emphysema and expression of iNOS and NO in them. 1558 89
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