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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)

Membrane fractions with L-lactate dehydrogenase, sn-glycerol-3-phosphate (G3P) dehydrogenase, and nitrate reductase activities were prepared from Staphylococcus aureus wild-type and hem mutant strains. These preparations reduced ferric to ferrous iron with L-lactate or G3P as the source of reductant, using ferrozine to trap the ferrous iron. Reduction of ferric iron was insensitive to 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO) with either L-lactate or G3P as reductant, but oxalate and dicumarol inhibited reduction with L-lactate as substrate. The membranes had L-lactate- and G3P-nitrate reductase activities, which were inhibited by azide and by HQNO. Reduction of ferric iron under anaerobic conditions was inhibited by nitrate with preparations from the wild-type strain. This effect of nitrate was abolished by blocking electron transport to the nitrate reductase system with azide or HQNO. Nitrate did not inhibit reduction of ferric iron in heme-depleted membranes from the hem mutant unless hemin was added to restore L-lactate- and G3P-nitrate reductase activity. We conclude that reduced components of the electron transport chain that precede cytochrome b serve as the source of reductant for ferric iron and that these components are oxidized preferentially by a functional nitrate reductase system.
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PMID:Reduction of ferric iron by L-lactate and DL-glycerol-3-phosphate in membrane preparations from Staphylococcus aureus and interactions with the nitrate reductase system. 20 71

Respiratory nitrate reductase with lactate as a hydrogen donor has been studied in cells and spheroplast preparations of wild type and heme-deficienct mutants of Staphylococcus aureus. The activity is rapidly induced when suspensions of aerobically grown cells are incubated without aeration in a complete medium with nitrate. In ruptured spheroplast preparations, the activity with lactate as the donor is located in the membrane fraction, whereas at least 50% of the activity assayed with reduced benzyl viologen is in the cytoplasm. The reductase is inhibited by azide and cyanide, and the lactate-linked system is also sensitive to oxamate, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, dicoumarol, and p-chloromercuribenzoate. An inactive form of the reductase is apparently made during induction with tungstate; this can be activated by subsequent incubation with molybdate in the presence of chloramphenicol. Nitrate reductase activity with reduced benzyl viologen as the donor is induced in suspensions of heme-deficient mutants in the presence or absence of heme. The proportion of cytoplasmic activity is increased in the absence of heme. The staphylococcal nitrate reductase has many of the characteristics commonly associated with the respiratory enzyme in other organisms, but the apparent predominance of cytoplasmic activity is unusual.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase system in Staphylococcus aureus wild type and mutants. 114 Nov 99

The involvement of cytochromes in the electron-transport pathway to the periplasmic NO3- reductase of Rhodobacter capsulatus was studied in cells grown photoheterotrophically in the presence of nitrate with butyrate as carbon source. The specific rate of NO3- reduction by such cells was five times higher than when malate was carbon source. Reduced minus NO3(-)-oxidized spectra of cells had peaks in the alpha-band region for cytochromes at 552 nm and 559 nm, indicating the involvement of c- and b-type cytochromes in the electron-transport pathway to NO3-. The total ferricyanide-oxidizable cytochrome that was also oxidized in the steady state by NO3- was greater in cells grown with butyrate rather than malate. Low concentrations of cyanide inhibited NO3- reduction. Neither CN-, nor a previously characterized inhibitor of NO3- reduction, 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide, prevented the oxidation of the cytochromes by NO3-. This suggested a site of action for these inhibitors on the reducing side of the b- and c-type cytochromes involved in electron transport to the NO3- reductase. The predominant cytochrome in a periplasmic fraction prepared from cells of R. capsulatus grown on butyrate medium was cytochrome c2 but a c-type cytochrome with an alpha-band reduced absorbance maximum at 552 nm could also be identified. The reduced form of this latter cytochrome, but not that of cytochrome c2, was oxidized upon addition of NO3- to a periplasmic fraction. The NO3(-)-oxidizable cytochrome co-purified with the periplasmic NO3- reductase through fractionation procedures that included ammonium sulphate precipitation, gel filtration at low and high salt concentrations, and ion-exchange chromatography. A NO3(-)-reductase-cytochrome-c552 redox complex that comprised two types of polypeptide, a nitrate reductase subunit and a c-type cytochrome subunit, was purified. The polypeptides were separated when the complex was chromatographed on a phenyl-Sepharose hydrophobic chromatography column.
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PMID:The identification of cytochromes involved in the transfer of electrons to the periplasmic NO3- reductase of Rhodobacter capsulatus and resolution of a soluble NO3(-)-reductase--cytochrome-c552 redox complex. 217 75

The respiratory nitrate reductase from Paracoccus denitrificans has been purified in the non-ionic detergent Nonidet P-40. The enzyme comprises three polypeptides, alpha, beta and gamma with estimated relative molecular masses of 127 000, 61 000 and 21 000. Duroquinol or reduced-viologen compounds acted as the reducing substrates. The nitrate reductase contained a b-type cytochrome that was reduced by duroquinol and oxidised by nitrate. A preparation of the enzyme that lacked both detectable b-type cytochrome and the gamma subunit was obtained from a trailing peak of nitrate reductase activity collected from a gel filtration column. Absence of the gamma subunit correlated with failure to use duroquinol as reductant; activity with reduced viologens was retained. It is concluded that in the plasma membrane of P. denitrificans the gamma subunit catalyses electron transfer to the alpha and beta subunits of nitrate reductase from ubiquinol which acts as a branch point in the respiratory chain. A new assay was introduced for both nitrate and quinol-nitrate oxidoreductase activity. Diaphorase was used to couple the oxidation of NADH to the production of duroquinol which acted as electron donor to nitrate reductase. Under anaerobic conditions absorbance changes at 340 nm were sensitive to nitrate concentrations in the low micromolar range. This coupled assay was used to determine that the purified enzyme had Km(NO-3) of 13 microM and a Km of 470 microM for ClO-3, an alternative substrate. With viologen substrates Km(NO-3) of 283 microM and Km(ClO-3) of 470 microM were determined; the enzymes possessed a considerably higher Vmax with either NO-3 or ClO-3 than was found when duroquinol was substrate. Azide was a competitive inhibitor of nitrate reduction in either assay system (Ki = 0.55 microM) but 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide was effective only with the complete three-subunit enzyme and duroquinol as substrate, consistent with a site of action for this inhibitor on the b-type cytochrome. The low Km for nitrate observed in the duriquinol assay is comparable with the apparent Km(NO-3) recently reported for intact cells of P. denitrificans [Parsonage, D., Greenfield, A. J. & Ferguson, S. J. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 807, 81-95]. This similarity is discussed in terms of a possible requirement for a nitrate transport system. The nitrate reductase system from P. denitrificans is compared with that from Escherichia coli.
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PMID:The respiratory nitrate reductase from Paracoccus denitrificans. Molecular characterisation and kinetic properties. 373 77

Downey, R. J. (University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind.). Nitrate reductase and respiratory adaptation in Bacillus stearothermophilus. J. Bacteriol. 91:634-641. 1966.-Bacillus stearothermophilus 2184 required nitrate to grow in the absence of oxygen. Like many facultative microorganisms, the growth obtained anaerobically was considerably less than that obtained aerobically, even though the dissimilatory reduction of nitrate is, in effect, anaerobic respiration. The ability to reduce nitrate depended on the induction of nitrate reductase. Although oxygen at low levels did not retard induction of the enzyme, enzyme synthesis was considerably lessened by aeration. A semisynthetic medium containing nitrate supported aerobic growth of the thermophile but did not support anaerobic growth. The adaptation to nitrate resulted in a decrease in the level of cytochrome oxidase normally present in aerobically grown cells. Although the aerobic oxidation of succinate by the respiratory enzymes from aerobically grown cells was inhibited by 2-N-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, the anaerobic oxidation of succinate by nitrate in a similar preparation from nitrate-adapted cells was not. The nitrate reductase in the bacillus was strongly inhibited by cyanide and azide but not by carbon monoxide. The nitrate reductase catalyzed the anaerobic oxidation of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, and appeared to transfer electrons from cytochrome b(1) to nitrate. Cytochrome c(1) did not appear to be involved in the transfer.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase and respiratory adaptation in Bacillus stearothermophilus. 428 85

The participation of distinct formate dehydrogenases and cytochrome components in nitrate reduction by Escherichia coli was studied. The formate dehydrogenase activity present in extracts prepared from nitrate-induced cells of strain HfrH was active with various electron acceptors, including methylene blue, phenazine methosulfate, and benzyl viologen. Certain mutants which are unable to reduce nitrate had low or undetectable levels of formate dehydrogenase activity assayed with methylene blue or phenazine methosulfate as electron acceptor. Of nine such mutants, five produced gas when grown anaerobically without nitrate and possessed a benzyl viologen-linked formate dehydrogenase activity, suggesting that distinct formate dehydrogenases participate in the nitrate reductase and formic hydrogenlyase systems. The other four mutants formed little gas when grown anaerobically in the absence of nitrate and lacked the benzyl viologen-linked formate dehydrogenase as well as the methylene blue or phenazine methosulfate-linked activity. The cytochrome b(1) present in nitrate-induced cells was distinguished by its spectral properties and its genetic control from the major cytochrome b(1) components of aerobic cells and of cells grown anaerobically in the absence of nitrate. The nitrate-specific cytochrome b(1) was completely and rapidly reduced by 1 mm formate but was not reduced by 1 mm reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide; ascorbate reduced only part of the cytochrome b(1) which was reduced by formate. When nitrate was added, the formate-reduced cytochrome b(1) was oxidized with biphasic kinetics, but the ascorbate-reduced cytochrome b(1) was oxidized with monophasic kinetics. The inhibitory effects of n-heptyl hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide on the oxidation of cytochrome b(1) by nitrate provided evidence that the nitrate-specific cytochrome is composed of two components which have different redox potentials but identical spectral properties. We conclude from these studies that nitrate reduction in E. coli is mediated by the sequential operation of a specific formate dehydrogenase, two specific cytochrome b(1) components, and nitrate reductase.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase complex of Escherichia coli K-12: participation of specific formate dehydrogenase and cytochrome b1 components in nitrate reduction. 490 36

Nitrite oxidase and nitrate reductase in Nitrobacter agilis were shown to be separate enzymes. The best separation of the two systems was achieved by ammonium sulphate fractionation. The effects of various compounds, including antimycin A, 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide and chlorate, also clearly distinguish between the two enzyme reactions. The relationship between the two opposing reactions in Nitrobacter is discussed.
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PMID:Nitrite oxidase and nitrate reductase in Nitrobacter agilis. 580 6

Low concentrations (1-50mum) of ubiquinol(1) were rapidly oxidized by spheroplasts of Escherichia coli derepressed for synthesis of nitrate reductase using either nitrate or oxygen as electron acceptor. Oxidation of ubiquinol(1) drove an outward translocation of protons with a corrected -->H(+)/2e(-) stoichiometry [Scholes & Mitchell (1970) J. Bioenerg.1, 309-323] of 1.49 when nitrate was the acceptor and 2.28 when oxygen was the acceptor. Proton translocation driven by the oxidation of added ubiquinol(1) was also observed in spheroplasts from a double quinone-deficient mutant strain AN384 (ubiA(-)menA(-)), whereas a haem-deficient mutant, strain A1004a, did not oxidize ubiquinol(1). Proton translocation was not observed if either the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone or the respiratory inhibitor 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide was present. When spheroplasts oxidized Diquat radical (DQ(+)) to the oxidized species (DQ(++)) with nitrate as acceptor, nitrate was reduced to nitrite according to the reaction: [Formula: see text] and nitrite was further reduced in the reaction: [Formula: see text] Nitrite reductase activity (2) was inhibited by CO, leaving nitrate reductase activity (1) unaffected. Benzyl Viologen radical (BV(+)) is able to cross the cytoplasmic membrane and is oxidized directly by nitrate reductase to the divalent cation, BV(++). In the presence of CO, this reaction consumes two protons: [Formula: see text] The consumption of these protons could not be detected by a pH electrode in the extra-cellular bulk phase of a suspension of spheroplasts unless the cytoplasmic membrane was made permeable to protons by the addition of nigericin or tetrachlorosalicylanilide. It is concluded that the protons of eqn. (3) are consumed at the cytoplasmic aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane. Diquat radical, reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulphate and its sulphonated analogue N-methylphenazonium-3-sulphonate (PMSH) and ubiquinol(1) are all oxidized by nitrate reductase via a haem-dependent, endogenous quinone-independent, 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide-sensitive pathway. Approximate-->H(+)/2e(-) stoichiometries were zero with Diquat radical, an electron donor, 1.0 with reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulphate or its sulphonated analogue, both hydride donors, and 2.0 with ubiquinol(1) (QH(2)), a hydrogen donor. It is concluded that the protons appearing in the medium are derived from the reductant and the observed-->H(+)/2e(-) stoichiometries are accounted for by the following reactions occurring at the periplasmic aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane.: [Formula: see text]
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PMID:The mechanism of proton translocation driven by the respiratory nitrate reductase complex of Escherichia coli. 625 43

The membrane fraction of Bacterionema matruchotii contains an electron transport chain with oxidizing activity for NADH and succinate. Respiration was inhibited by KCN, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, UV light irradiation and CO. UV light irradiation, analysis of membrane extracts, and reconstitution of respiration in UV light treated membranes suggested that respiration is mediated by a menaquinone derivative. The membranes contained cytochromes a, b, and c. Inhibition studies and the effect of KCN and CO on the cytochrome spectrum indicated the presence of an a+a3 cytochrome oxidase and cytochrome o. The membrane fraction from cells grown under O2-limiting conditions contained nitrate reductase activity. In B. matruchotii, electron transport is coupled to oxidative phosphorylation as judged by the effects of substrates and inhibitors on the intracellular ATP concentration.
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PMID:The electron transport chain of Bacterionema matruchotii. 627 95

A strain of Pseudomonas putida that can express a nitrate reductase that is located in the periplasmic compartment was isolated from freshwater. The enzyme was active in vivo during arginine fermentation and at the onset of oxygen limitation in batch cultures. The activity of the enzyme increased the yield of bacteria following fermentative growth under anoxic conditions with arginine, but nitrate reduction did not support growth on non-fermentable carbon substrates under anoxic conditions. Cells expressing the periplasmic nitrate reductase were capable of reducing nitrate in the presence of oxygen. Nitrate reduction under oxic conditions was clearly coupled to a respiratory electron transport chain because: (1) the process was sensitive to the respiratory inhibitors rote-none and 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide, and (2) membrane-bound and periplasmic cytochromes were involved. This is the first report of the presence of a periplasmic nitrate reductase in a member of the gamma proteobacteria.
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PMID:Isolation and characterisation of a strain of Pseudomonas putida that can express a periplasmic nitrate reductase. 777 73


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