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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)
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf
nitrate reductase
(
NADH
:NR;
NADH
:nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.1) activity was found to rapidly change during light/dark transitions. The most rapid and dramatic changes were found in a form of NR which was sensitive to inhibition by millimolar concentrations of magnesium. This form of NR predominated in leaves in the dark, but was almost completely absent from leaves incubated in the light for only 30 min. When the leaves were returned to darkness, the NR rapidly became sensitive to Mg2+ inhibition. Modulation of the overall reaction involving
NADH
as electron donor was also found when reduced methyl viologen was the donor (MV:NR), indicating that electron transfer had been blocked, at least in part, at or near the terminal molybdenum cofactor site. Changes in activity appear to be the result of a covalent modification that affects sensitivity of NR to inhibition by magnesium, and our results suggest that protein phosphorylation may be involved. NR was phosphorylated in vivo after feeding excised leaves [32P]Pi. The NR subunit was labeled exclusively on seryl residues in both light and dark. Tryptic peptide mapping indicated three major 32P-labeled phosphopeptide (Pp) fragments. Labeling of two of the P-peptides (designated Pp1 and 3) was generally correlated with NR activity assayed in the presence of Mg2+. In vivo, partial dephosphorylation of these sites (and activation of NR assayed with Mg2+) occurred in response to light or feeding mannose in darkness. The light effect was blocked completely by feeding okadaic acid via the transpiration stream, indicating the involvement of type 1 and/or type 2A protein phosphatases in vivo. While more detailed analysis is required to establish a causal link between the phosphorylation status of NR and sensitivity to Mg2+ inhibition, the current results are highly suggestive of one. Thus, in addition to the molecular genetic mechanisms regulating this key enzyme of nitrate assimilation, NR activity may be controlled in leaves by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of the enzyme protein resulting from metabolic changes taking place during light/dark transitions.
...
PMID:Reversible light/dark modulation of spinach leaf nitrate reductase activity involves protein phosphorylation. 160 45
In the absence of
NADH
, at 25 degrees C, partially purified
NADH
:
nitrate reductase
undergoes an approximately 50% reduction of its initial activity during 2 h. With the increase of inactivation, the
NADH
and nitrite concentration time curves become typical "sigmoidal," i.e. the reaction velocity of the
nitrate reductase
catalyzed reaction goes through a maximum before equilibrium is reached. About 80% of the original activity of
nitrate reductase
is restored when the enzyme is incubated for 2 min with 200 microM
NADH
or NADPH. Also other
NADH
substrate analogues have similar effects in restoring the lost activity. After incubation with the reduced pyridine nucleotides, the sigmoidal appearance of the
NADH
concentration time curve disappears almost completely. Despite the fact that NADPH increases the activity of the enzyme, NADPH does not show any competition with the
NADH
-binding site of
nitrate reductase
and does not produce nitrite in the absence of
NADH
. It is therefore concluded that there must be an additional allosteric site which binds either
NADH
or NADPH, or other pyridine nucleotides with the effect of increasing the activity of the enzyme. A kinetic model is presented which simulates the observed experimental findings.
...
PMID:Hysteretic behavior of nitrate reductase. Evidence of an allosteric binding site for reduced pyridine nucleotides. 161 48
Nitrate reductase
(NR) assays revealed a bispecific NAD(P)H-NR (EC 1.6.6.2.) to be the only nitrate-reducing enzyme in leaves of hydroponically grown birches. To obtain the primary structure of the NAD(P)H-NR, leaf poly(A)+ mRNA was used to construct a cDNA library in the lambda gt11 phage. Recombinant clones were screened with heterologous gene probes encoding
NADH
-NR from tobacco and squash. A 3.0 kb cDNA was isolated which hybridized to a 3.2 kb mRNA whose level was significantly higher in plants grown on nitrate than in those grown on ammonia. The nucleotide sequence of the cDNA comprises a reading frame encoding a protein of 898 amino acids which reveals 67%-77% identity with NADH-nitrate reductase sequences from higher plants. To identify conserved and variable regions of the multicentre electron-transfer protein a graphical evaluation of identities found in NR sequence alignments was carried out. Thirteen well-conserved sections exceeding a size of 10 amino acids were found in higher plant nitrate reductases. Sequence comparisons with related redox proteins indicate that about half of the conserved NR regions are involved in cofactor binding. The most striking difference in the birch NAD(P)H-NR sequence in comparison to
NADH
-NR sequences was found at the putative pyridine nucleotide binding site. Southern analysis indicates that the bi-specific NR is encoded by a single copy gene in birch.
...
PMID:Sequence of a cDNA encoding the bi-specific NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase from the tree Betula pendula and identification of conserved protein regions. 167 24
The nitrate induction of
NADH
:
nitrate reductase
mRNA in maize roots, scutella and leaves was investigated in the presence and absence of inhibitors of protein synthesis. In the absence of inhibitors, nitrate treatment caused a fairly rapid (2 to 3 h) increase in the level of the
nitrate reductase
transcript in all tissues. When cytoplasmic protein synthesis was inhibited by cycloheximide,
nitrate reductase
mRNA was induced by nitrate in all tissues to levels equal to or greater than those found with nitrate treatment alone. Treatment of maize tissues with cycloheximide in the absence of nitrate had only a small effect on the accumulation of the
nitrate reductase
mRNA. Inhibition of organellar protein synthesis with chloramphenicol also had little or no effect on nitrate-induced
nitrate reductase
mRNA accumulation in roots and scutella, but did appear to partially inhibit appearance of transcript in leaves. Excision of scutella in the absence of nitrate was sufficient to cause some accumulation of the
nitrate reductase
transcript. Since cytoplasmic protein synthesis was not required for expression of
nitrate reductase
transcripts, induction of these transcripts by nitrate is a primary response of maize to this environmental signal. Thus, it appears that the signal transduction system mediating this response is constitutively expressed in roots, scutella and leaves of maize.
...
PMID:Nitrate reductase transcript is expressed in the primary response of maize to environmental nitrate. 173 78
Assimilatory
nitrate reductase
(NR) from Chlorella is homotetrameric, each subunit containing FAD, heme, and Mo-pterin in a 1:1:1 stoichiometry. Measurements of NR activity and steady-state reduction of the heme component under conditions of
NADH
limitation or competitive inhibition by nitrite suggested intramolecular electron transfer between heme and Mo-pterin was a rate-limiting step and provided evidence that heme is an obligate intermediate in the transfer of electrons between FAD and Mo-pterin. In addition to the physiological substrates
NADH
and nitrate, various redox mediators undergo reactions with one or more of the prosthetic groups. These reactions are coupled by NR to
NADH
oxidation or nitrate reduction. To test whether intramolecular redox reactions of NR were rate-determining, rate constants for redox reactions between NR and several chemically diverse mediators were measured by cyclic voltammetry in the presence of
NADH
or nitrate. Reduction of ferrocenecarboxylic acid, dichlorophenolindophenol, and cytochrome c by
NADH
-reduced NR was coupled to reoxidation at a glassy carbon electrode (ferrocene and dichlorophenolindophenol) or at a bis(4-pyridyl) disulfide modified gold electrode (cytochrome c), yielding rate constants of 10.5 x 10(6), 1.7 x 10(6), and 2.7 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, respectively, at pH 7. Kinetics were consistent with a second-order reaction, implying that intramolecular heme reduction by
NADH
and endogenous FAD was not limiting. In contrast, reduction of methyl viologen and diquat at a glassy carbon electrode, coupled to oxidation by NR and nitrate, yielded similar kinetics for the two dyes. In both cases, second-order kinetics were not obeyed, and reoxidation of dye-reduced Mo-pterin of NR by nitrate became limiting at low scan rates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Electrochemical and kinetic analysis of electron-transfer reactions of Chlorella nitrate reductase. 174 83
Nucleotide sequences were determined for cDNA clones for squash
NADH
:nitrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.6.1), which is one of the most completely characterized forms of this higher plant enzyme. An open reading frame of 2754 nucleotides began at the first ATG. The deduced amino acid sequence contains 918 residues, with a predicted Mr = 103,376. The amino acid sequence is very similar to sequences deduced for other higher plant nitrate reductases. The squash sequence has significant similarity to the amino acid sequences of sulfite oxidase, cytochrome b5, and
NADH
:cytochrome b5 reductase. Alignment of these sequences with that of squash defines domains of
nitrate reductase
that appear to bind its 3 prosthetic groups (molybdopterin, heme-iron, and FAD). The amino acid sequence of the FAD domain of squash
nitrate reductase
was aligned with FAD domain sequences of other
NADH
:nitrate reductases,
NADH
:cytochrome b5 reductases, NADPH:nitrate reductases, ferredoxin:NADP+ reductases, NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductases, NADPH:sulfite reductase flavoproteins, and Bacillus megaterium cytochrome P-450BM-3. In this multiple alignment, 14 amino acid residues are invariant, which suggests these proteins are members of a family of flavoenzymes. Secondary structure elements of the structural model of spinach ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase were used to predict the secondary structure of squash
nitrate reductase
and the other related flavoenzymes in this family. We suggest that this family of flavoenzymes, nearly all of which reduce a hemoprotein, be called "flavoprotein pyridine nucleotide cytochrome reductases."
...
PMID:The sequence of squash NADH:nitrate reductase and its relationship to the sequences of other flavoprotein oxidoreductases. A family of flavoprotein pyridine nucleotide cytochrome reductases. 174 31
A partial cDNA clone coding for the haem-binding domain of
NADH
:
nitrate reductase
(EC 1.6.6.1) (NR) from the unicellular green alga Chlorella vulgaris has been isolated, sequenced and expressed. A 1.2 kb cDNA (pCVNR1) was isolated from a lambda gt11 expression library produced from polyadenylated RNA extracted from nitrate-grown Chlorella cells. pCVNR1 hybridized to a 3.5 kb mRNA transcript that was nitrate-inducible and absent from ammonium-grown cells. The entire sequence of pCVNR1 was obtained and found to have a single uninterrupted reading frame. The derived amino acid sequence of 318 amino acids has a 45-50% similarity to higher-plant NRs, including Arabidopsis thaliana, spinach (Spinacia oleracea) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). A comparison with the putative domain structure of higher-plant nitrate reductases suggested that this sequence contains the complete haem-binding domain, approximately one-third of the Mo-pterin domain and no FAD-binding domain. A 32% sequence similarity is evident when comparing the Chlorella NR haem domain with that of calf cytochrome b5. Expression of pCVNR1 in a pET vector synthesized a 35 kDa protein that was antigenic to anti-(Chlorella NR) antibody. The spectral properties of this protein (reduced and oxidized) in the 400-600 nm region are identical with those of native Chlorella NR and indicate that haem is associated with the protein.
...
PMID:Expression of a cDNA clone encoding the haem-binding domain of Chlorella nitrate reductase. 188 30
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) has both
NADH
-specific and NAD(P)H-bispecific nitrate reductases. Genomic and cDNA clones of the
NADH
nitrate reductase
have been sequenced. In this study, a genomic clone (pMJ4.1) of a second type of
nitrate reductase
was isolated from barley by homology to a partial-length
NADH
nitrate reductase
cDNA and the sequence determined. The open reading frame encodes a polypeptide of 891 amino acids and its interrupted by two small introns. The deduced amino acid sequence has 70% identity to the barley
NADH
-specific
nitrate reductase
. The non-coding regions of the pMJ4.1 gene have low homology (ca. 40%) to the corresponding regions of the
NADH
nitrate reductase
gene. Expression of the pMJ4.1
nitrate reductase
gene is induced by nitrate in root tissues which corresponds to the induction of NAD(P)H
nitrate reductase
activity. The pMJ4.1
nitrate reductase
gene is sufficiently different from all previously reported higher plant
nitrate reductase
genes to suggest that it encodes the barley NAD(P)H-bispecific
nitrate reductase
.
...
PMID:Characterization and sequence of a novel nitrate reductase from barley. 189 7
The activity of the pH 7.5
NADH
-linked
nitrate reductase
isoform from soybeans is termed inducible. Activity can be observed only in seedlings which have been supplied nitrate. Steady-state levels of mRNA for this isoform also show an absolute requirement for nitrate.
Nitrate reductase
specific mRNA can be observed within 2 h after nitrate treatment. Levels peaked 48 h after nitrate treatment, while the addition of glutamine to nitrate diminished amounts of
nitrate reductase
specific mRNA. Using nuclear runoff transcription assays, we have shown that one level of control of
nitrate reductase
synthesis is transcriptional.
...
PMID:Regulation of the inducible nitrate reductase isoform from soybeans. 198 91
Operon fusion strains and mutants of Escherichia coli K-12 lacking the
NADH
-dependent nitrite reductase have been used to determine the regulation and physiological roles of two independent pathways for nitrite reduction to ammonia. Both the formate- and
NADH
-dependent pathways (Nrf and Nir, respectively) were totally repressed during aerobic growth, partially active during anaerobic growth in the absence of nitrite and further induced anaerobically by nitrite. Both were dependent upon a functional Fnr protein (a transcription activator of genes for anaerobic respiration). During anaerobic growth in the presence of nitrate, the Nir pathway was fully induced but Nrf was strongly repressed. Mutants defective in the NarL protein, which induces transcription of
nitrate reductase
genes but represses fumarate reductase genes in the presence of nitrate, were derepressed for Nrf activity during growth with nitrate, but the Nir enzyme was less active. The synthesis of Nrf components was also sensitive to glucose repression and weak activation by NarL during growth in the absence of nitrate. These data indicate that the Nir pathway provides a mechanism for detoxifying nitrite formed in the cytoplasm as a product of nitrate reduction. In contrast, the electrogenic reduction of nitrite by the Nrf pathway provides a secondary source of energy during anaerobic growth and is consequently repressed by the NarL protein when the thermodynamically more favourable electron acceptor, nitrate, is available. Two short DNA sequences, 5'-TACCAT-3' and 5'-CTCCTT-3', were found in the promoters of operons known to be activated or repressed by the NarL protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Different physiological roles of two independent pathways for nitrite reduction to ammonia by enteric bacteria. 217 95
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