Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.7.1.2 (nitrate reductase)
3,861 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nitrogen metabolism is not only one of the basic processes of plant physiology, but also one of the important parts of global chemical cycle. Plant nitrogen assimilation directly takes part in the synthesis and conversion of amino acid through the reduction of nitrate. During this stage, some key enzymes, e.g., nitrate reductase (NR), glutamine synthetase (GS), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), glutamine synthase (GOGAT), aspargine synthetase (AS), and asparate aminotransferase (AspAT) participate these processes. The protein is assimilated in plant cell through amino acid, and becomes a part of plant organism through modifying, classifying, transporting and storing processes, etc. The nitrogen metabolism is associated with carbonic metabolism through key enzyme regulations and the conversion of products, which consists of basic life process. Among these amino acids in plant cell, glutamic acid (Glu), glutamine (Gln), aspartic acid (Asp) and asparagines (Asn), etc., play a key role, which regulates their conversion each other and their contents in the plant cell through regulating formation and activity of those key enzymes. Environmental factors also affect the conversion and recycle of the key amino acids through regulating gene expression of the key enzymes and their activities. Nitrate and light intensity positively regulate the gene transcription of NR, but ammonium ions and Glu, Gln do the negative way. Water deficit is a very serious constraint on N2 fixation rate and soybean (Glycine max Merr.) grain yield, in which, ureide accumulation and degradation under water deficit appear to be the key issues of feedback mechanism on nitrogen fixation. Water stress decreases NR activity, but increases proteinase activity, and thus, they regulate plant nitrogen metabolism, although there are some different effects among species and cultivars. Water stress also decreases plant tissue protein content, ratio of protein and amino acid, and reduces the absorption of amino acid by plant. On the contrary, soil flooding decreases the content and accumulation amount of root nitrogen in winter wheat by 11.9% from booting to flowering stages and 39.1% during grain filling stage, and reduces the ratio of carbon and nitrogen by 79.6%. The results misadjust the metabolism between carbon and nitrogen, and result in the end of the root growth. Elevated CO2 level could decrease plant leaf nitrogen content under well-watered condition, but almost maintain stable under water deficit condition. The radiation of UV-B significantly reduces the partitioning coefficient and synthetic rate of Rubisco, which significantly decreases the photosynthetic rate. This paper reviewed the pathway of plant nitrogen assimilation, characteristics of key enzymes and their regulating mechanisms with picturing the regulating mode of NR, and described the signal sensing and conduct of plant nitrogen metabolism and the formation, transportation, storage and degradation of plant cell protein with picturing the schedule of protein transport of membrane system in plant cell. Seven key tasks are emphasized in this paper in terms of the review on the effects and mechanisms of key ecological factors including water stress on plant nitrogen metabolism. They are: 1) the absorption mechanism of plant based on different nitrogen sources and environmental regulations, 2) the localization and compartmentalization of the key enzymes of nitrogen mechanism in plant cell, 3) the gene and environmental regulating model and their relationships in various key enzymes of nitrogen metabolism, 4) the function of main cell organs and their responses to environmental factors in nitrogen metabolism process, 5) physiological and chemical mechanism of nitrogen and the relationship between the mechanism and protein formation during crop grain filling, 6) improving gene structure of special species or cultivars using gene engineering methods to enhance the resistance to environmental factor stress and the efficiency of absorption and transportation of nitrogen, and 7) the mechanism of natural nitrogen cycle and its response to human activity disturbance.
...
PMID:[Research advance in nitrogen metabolism of plant and its environmental regulation]. 1522 8

When nitrate is the only nitrogen source, Neurospora crassa's nitrate reductase (NR) shows endogenous oscillations in its nitrate reductase activity (NRA) on a circadian time scale. These NRA oscillations can be observed in darkness or continuous light conditions and also in a frq(9) mutant in which no functional FRQ protein is formed. Even in a white-collar-1 knockout mutant, NRA oscillations have been observed, although with a highly reduced amplitude. This indicates that the NRA oscillations are not a simple output rhythm of the white-collar-driven frq oscillator but may be generated by another oscillator that contains the nit-3 autoregulatory negative feedback loop as a part. In this negative feedback loop, a product in the reaction chain catalyzed by nitrate reductase, probably glutamine, induces repression of the nitrate reductase gene and thus downregulates its own production. This is the first example of an endogenous, nutritionally induced daily rhythm with known molecular components that is observed in the absence of an intact FRQ protein.
...
PMID:A nitrate-induced frq-less oscillator in Neurospora crassa. 1524 47

Penicillium griseoroseum has been studied because of its efficient pectinases production. In this work, the Penicillium griseoroseum nitrate reductase gene was characterized, transcriptionally analyzed in different nitrogen sources, and used to create a phylogenetic tree and to develop a homologous transformation system. The regulatory region contained consensus signals involved in nitrogen metabolism and the structural region was possibly interrupted by 6 introns coding for a deduced protein with 864 amino acids. RT-PCR analysis revealed high amounts of niaD transcript in the presence of nitrate. Transcription was repressed by ammonium, urea, and glutamine showing an efficient turnover of the niaD mRNA. Phylogenetics analysis showed distinct groups clearly separated in accordance with the classical taxonomy. A mutant with a 122-bp deletion was used in homologous transformation experiments and showed a transformation frequency of 14 transformants/microg DNA. All analyzed transformants showed that both single- and double-crossover recombination occurred at the niaD locus. The establishment of this homologous transformation system is an essential step for the improvement of pectinase production in Penicillium griseoroseum.
...
PMID:Characterization, regulation, and phylogenetic analyses of the Penicillium griseoroseum nitrate reductase gene and its use as selection marker for homologous transformation. 1564 6

Effects of atmospheric carbon dioxide enrichment on nitrogen metabolism were studied in barley primary leaves (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Brant). Seedlings were grown in chambers under ambient (36 Pa) and elevated (100 Pa) carbon dioxide and were fertilized daily with complete nutrient solution providing 12 millimolar nitrate and 2.5 millimolar ammonium. Foliar nitrate and ammonium were 27% and 42% lower (P </= 0.01) in the elevated compared to ambient carbon dioxide treatments, respectively. Enhanced carbon dioxide affected leaf ammonium levels by inhibiting photorespiration. Diurnal variations of total nitrate were not observed in either treatment. Total and Mg(2+)inhibited nitrate reductase activities per gram fresh weight were slightly lower (P </= 0.01) in enhanced compared to ambient carbon dioxide between 8 and 15 DAS. Diurnal variations of total nitrate reductase activity in barley primary leaves were similar in either treatment except between 7 and 10 h of the photoperiod when enzyme activities were decreased (P </= 0.05) by carbon dioxide enrichment. Glutamate was similar and glutamine levels were increased by carbon dioxide enrichment between 8 and 13 DAS. However, both glutamate and glutamine were negatively impacted by elevated carbon dioxide when leaf yellowing was observed 15 and 17 DAS. The above findings showed that carbon dioxide enrichment produced only slight modifications in leaf nitrogen metabolism and that the chlorosis of barley primary leaves observed under enhanced carbon dioxide was probably not attributable to a nutritionally induced nitrogen limitation.
...
PMID:Responses of nitrogen metabolism in N-sufficient barley primary leaves to plant growth in elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide. 1622 42

Nitrate is an important nitrogen source for plants, but also a signal molecule that controls various aspects of plant development. In the present study the role of nitrate on seed dormancy in Arabidopsis was investigated. The effects of either mutations affecting the Arabidopsis nitrate reductase genes or of different nitrate regimes of mother plants on the dormancy of the seeds produced were analysed. Altogether, data show that conditions favouring nitrate accumulation in mother plants and in seeds lead to a lower dormancy of seeds with little other morphological or biochemical differences. Analysis of germination during seed development indicated that nitrate does not prevent the onset of dormancy but rather its maintenance. The effect of an exogenous supply of nitrate on seed germination was tested: nitrate in contrast to glutamine or potassium chloride clearly stimulated the germination of dormant seeds. Data show, moreover, that the Arabidopsis dual affinity nitrate transporter NRT1.1 (CHL1) may be involved in conveying the nitrate signal into seeds. Thus, nitrate provided exogenously or by mother plants to the produced seeds, acts as a signal molecule favouring germination in Arabidopsis. This signalling may involve interaction with the abscisic acid or gibberellin pathway.
...
PMID:Nitrate, a signal relieving seed dormancy in Arabidopsis. 1622 82

Diurnal variations in nitrate reductase (NR) activity and nitrogen metabolites were examined in wild-type Nicotiana plumbaginifolia and transformants with various degrees of NR deregulation. In the C1 line, NR was only deregulated at the transcriptional level by placing the NR gene under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S RNA promoter. In the Del8 and S521D lines, NR was additionally deregulated at the posttranslational level either by a deletion mutation in the N-terminal domain or by a mutation of the regulatory phosphorylation site (serine-521). Posttranslational regulation was essential for pronounced diurnal variations in NR activity. Low nitrate content was related to deregulation of NR, whereas the level of total free amino acids was much higher in plants with fully deregulated NR. Abolishing transcriptional and posttranslational regulation (S521D plants) resulted in an increase of glutamine and asparagine by a factor of 9 and 14, respectively, compared with wild type, whereas abolishing transcriptional regulation (C1 plants) only resulted in increases of glutamine and asparagine by factors <2. Among the minor amino acids, isoleucine and threonine, in particular, showed enhanced levels in S521D. Nitrate uptake rates were the same in S521D and wild type as determined with (15)N feeding. Deregulation of NR appears to set the level of certain amino acids, whereas diurnal variations were still determined by light/dark. Generally, deregulation of NR at the transcriptional level did not have much influence on metabolite levels, but additional deregulation at the posttranslational level resulted in profound changes of nitrogen metabolite levels.
...
PMID:Posttranslational regulation of nitrate reductase strongly affects the levels of free amino acids and nitrate, whereas transcriptional regulation has only minor influence. 1646 78

The size of tissue amino acid pools in plants may indicate nitrogen status and provide a signal that can regulate nitrate uptake and assimilation. The effects of treating barley roots with glutamine have been examined, first to identify the transport system for the uptake of the amino acid and then to measure root NR activity and cellular pools of nitrate. Treating N replete roots with glutamine elicited a change in the cell membrane potential and the size of this response was concentration dependent. In addition, the size of the electrical change depended on the previous exposures of the root to glutamine and was lost after a few cycles of treatment. Whole root tissue pools of glutamine and phenylalanine increased when roots were incubated in a nutrient solution containing 10 mM nitrate and 1 mM glutamine. Treating roots with 1 mM glutamine increased cytosolic nitrate activity from 3 mM to 7 mM and this change peaked after 2 h of treatment. Parallel measurements of root nitrate reductase activity during treatment with 1 mM glutamine showed a decrease. These measurements provide evidence for feedback regulation on NR activity that result in changes in cytosolic nitrate activity. After 6 h in glutamine both root NR activity and cytosolic nitrate activity returned to pretreatment values, while tissue concentrations of glutamine and phenylalanine remained elevated. The data are discussed in terms of the mechanisms that are most likely to be responsible for the changes in cytosolic nitrate.
...
PMID:Glutamine transport and feedback regulation of nitrate reductase activity in barley roots leads to changes in cytosolic nitrate pools. 1654 28

A nitrate uptake system is induced (along with nitrate reductase) when NH(4) (+)-grown Penicillium chrysogenum is incubated with inorganic nitrate in synthetic medium in the absence of NH(4) (+). Nitrate uptake and nitrate reduction are probably in steady state in fully induced mycelium, but the ratios of the two activities are not constant during the induction period. Substrate concentrations of ammonium cause a rapid decay of nitrate uptake and nitrate reductase activity. The two activities are differentially inactivated (the uptake activity being more sensitive). Glutamine and asparagine are as effective as NH(4) (+) in suppressing nitrate uptake activity. Glutamate and alanine were about half as effective as NH(4) (+). Cycloheximide interferes with the NH(4) (+)-induced decay of nitrate uptake activity. The ammonium transport system is almost maximally deinhibited (or derepressed) in nitrate-grown mycelium.
...
PMID:Regulation of Nitrate Uptake in Penicillium chrysogenum by Ammonium Ion. 1665 63

The induction of nitrate reductase activity in root tips of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) was regulated by several amino acids and by ammonium. Glycine, glutamine, and asparagine strongly inhibited induction of activity by nitrate and also decreased growth of sterile-cultured roots on a nitrate medium. Methionine, serine, and alanine weakly inhibited induction, and 11 other amino acids had little or no effect. Ammonium also decreased induction in root tips, but was most effective only at pH 7 or higher. The optimum conditions for ammonium regulation of induction were identical to those for growth of sterile-cultured roots on ammonium as the sole nitrogen source. Aspartate and glutamate strongly stimulated induction, but several lines of evidence indicated that the mechanism of this response was different from that elicited by the other amino acids. The effects of amino acids on induction appeared to be independent of nitrate uptake.In green shoot tissues, all attempts to demonstrate regulation of induction by amino acids failed. The great difference in observed responses of root and shoot to amino acids suggests that their nitrate reductase activities are regulated differently. Differential regulation of this enzyme is consistent with the responses of root and shoot nitrate reductase activity to nitrate.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of nitrate reductase induction in roots and shoots of cotton plants. 1665 46

When amino acids or ammonia are added to plant systems, the effects on the development of nitrate-dependent nitrate reductase activity are variable. In addition, amino acids added singly or as casein hydrolysate may not support a normal growth. A physiologically correct mixture of amino acids, one similar in composition to amino acids released by the endosperm, has been shown to support normal growth and protein synthesis in corn (Zea mays) embryos. In this investigation, we have used the mixture of corn amino acids to determine whether amino acids have an effect on the appearance or disappearance of nitrate reductase activity. The results show that these amino acids partially inhibit the induction of nitrate reductase in corn roots. The effect is more pronounced in mature root than in root tip sections. When glutamine and asparagine are included along with the "corn amino acid mixture," the inhibition is more severe. Amino acids or amino acid analogues added singly to the induction medium have a similar effect: i.e. when the induction of nitrate reductase is inhibited in the root tips (lysine, canavanine, azaserine, azetidine-2-carboxylic acid, dl-4-azaleucine, asparagine, and glutamine), that inhibition is more severe in mature root sections. Arginine enhanced the recovery of nitrate reductase in root tips but inhibited it in mature root sections. The effect of the amino acids is apparently on some phase of the induction processes (i.e. the uptake or distribution of nitrate or a direct effect on the synthesis of the enzyme) and not on the turnover of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Ammonium and amino acids as regulators of nitrate reductase in corn roots. 1665 59


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>