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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 study of 52 strains of rapidly growing mycobacteria showed that Mycobacterium fortuitum and M. chelonei were clearly distinguished by the aid of seven key tests (nitrate reductase, iron uptake, beta-glucosidase, penicillinase, growth on fructose, resistance to pipemidic acid, and resistance to capreomycin) and by analysis of their respective mycolic acids. However, the subdivision of these species into M. fortuitum var. fortuitum and M. fortuitum var. peregrinum and M. chelonei subsp. chelonei and M. chelonei subsp. abscessus was not satisfactorily accomplished.
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PMID:Identification of Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium chelonei. 619 Aug 37

Squash cotyledon NADH:nitrate reductase catalyzes the reduction of the siderophore ferrioxamine B. The enzyme also reduced ferric ion in a buffer system containing the chelators oxalate and maleate. Ferrioxamine B reduction was maximal at pH 4; ferric ion reduction was maximal at pH 8. The present study indicates that iron assimilation by higher plants may occur with microbial siderophores serving as ferric ion sources and nitrate reductase functioning as the siderophore reductase.
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PMID:Siderophore reduction catalyzed by higher plant NADH:nitrate reductase. 623 24

Membrane-bound nitrate reductase purified from Escherichia coli was resolved into two separate forms. The majority of the enzyme complex had a subunit composition of 2A:2B:4C, exhibited cytochrome b spectra, and was found to be stable after purification. A second form of nitrate reductase activity was a modified complex with a subunit composition of 2A:2B and lacked cytochrome. The subunit B from this complex was altered in its mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The cytochrome-containing enzyme had 28 +/- 2 atoms of iron and 1.35 atoms of molybdenum whereas iron and molybdenum in cytochromeless enzyme were 24 +/- 2 atoms and 1.18 atoms/molecule, respectively. Besides cytochrome-containing nitrate reductase, two other cytochrome b-containing fractions were also resolved. These were cytochrome b associated with formate dehydrogenase and a novel cytochrome b with reduced absorption maxima at 430, 529.5, and 560 nm. Nitrate reductase cytochrome b (subunit C) was isolated from subunits A and B as a partially denatured form and its renaturation was accomplished by dialyzing against hemin. The renatured cytochrome yielded absorption spectra similar to the holoenzyme. The pure cytochrome aggregated upon heating, even in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. It had a high isoelectric point (pH greater than 9.5) and had 45% hydrophobic amino acids.
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PMID:Cytochrome b from Escherichia coli nitrate reductase. Its properties and association with the enzyme complex. 634 95

Subunits A and B were isolated from purified nitrate reductase by preparative electrophoresis in low levels of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Nonheme iron and low levels of molybdenum were associated with isolated subunit A but not with isolated subunit B. After dialysis against a source of molybdenum cofactor, subunit A regained tightly bound molybdenum and concomitantly regained enzyme activity and reactivity with anti-nitrate reductase antiserum. Subunit B neither bound cofactor nor regained activity or reactivity with antiserum. These data indicate that subunit A contains the active site of the enzyme. Subunit A was also found to be modified posttranslationally in a similar fashion as is subunit B. This was determined by comparison of partial proteolytic digests and amino acid analyses of A subunits from precursor and membrane-bound forms of nitrate reductase.
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PMID:Escherichia coli nitrate reductase subunit A: its role as the catalytic site and evidence for its modification. 640 9

The carbon monoxide oxidases (COXs) purified from the carboxydotrophic bacteria Pseudomonas carboxydohydrogena and Pseudomonas carboxydoflava were found to be molybdenum hydroxylases, identical in cofactor composition and spectral properties to the recently characterized enzyme from Pseudomonas carboxydovorans (O. Meyer, J. Biol. Chem. 257:1333-1341, 1982). All three enzymes exhibited a cofactor composition of two flavin adenine dinucleotides, two molybdenums, eight irons and eight labile sulfides per dimeric molecule, typical for molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoproteins. The millimolar extinction coefficient of the COXs at 450 nm was 72 (per two flavin adenine dinucleotides), a value similar to that of milk xanthine oxidase and chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase at 450 nm. That molybdopterin, the novel prosthetic group of the molybdenum cofactor of a variety of molybdoenzymes (J. Johnson and K. V. Rajagopalan, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79:6856-6860, 1982) is also a constituent of COXs from carboxydotrophic bacteria is indicated by the formation of identical fluorescent cofactor derivatives, by complementation of the nitrate reductase activity in extracts of Neurospora crassa nit-l, and by the presence of organic phosphate additional to flavin adenine dinucleotides. Molybdopterin is tightly but noncovalently bound to the protein. COX, sulfite oxidase, xanthine oxidase, and xanthine dehydrogenase each contains 2 mol of molybdopterin per mol of enzyme. The presence of a trichloroacetic acid-releasable, so-far-unidentified, phosphorous-containing moiety in COX is suggested by the results of phosphate analysis.
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PMID:Molybdopterin in carbon monoxide oxidase from carboxydotrophic bacteria. 658 59

We show that NADH:nitrate reductase from squash cotyledons can catalyze the reduction of ferric citrate. When nitrate reductase was purified to homogeneity using a two-step affinity chromatography procedure, an NADH:Fe(III)-citrate reductase activity copurified with it and had identical electrophoretic mobility to it. The iron reductase activity was optimum near pH 6.3, had an apparent Km for Fe(III)-citrate of 0.02 mM, and was inhibited by monospecific anti-nitrate reductase rabbit sera. Differential inhibition of the enzyme's activities indicated iron and nitrate were reduced at different sites. In addition to its role in nitrogen assimilation, nitrate reductase catalyzes ferric citrate reduction and could have a role in iron assimilation.
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PMID:Reduction of ferric citrate catalyzed by NADH:nitrate reductase. 668 26

Dissimilatory nitrate reductase was purified to homogeneity from anaerobic cultures of the denitrifying bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The following procedures were used in the rapid isolation of this unstable enzyme: induction by nitrate in semianaerobic cell suspension, heat-stimulated activation and solubilization from the membrane fraction, and purification by hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was estimated by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, sucrose density gradient sedimentation, and gel filtration chromatography. Subunit molecular weights were estimated by electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The active enzyme monomer, with a molecular weight of 176,000 to 260,000 (depending upon the method of determination), was composed of subunits with molecular weights of approximately 64,000 and 118,000. The monomer aggregated to form an inactive tetramer of about 800,000 molecular weight. Purified enzyme exhibited a broad pH optimum, between 6.5 and 7.5. Kinetic studies showed that the apparent Km was 0.30 mM for nitrate, and 2.2 to 2.9 microM for dithionite-reduced benzyl viologen. Azide was an effective inhibitor: the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was 21 to 24 microM. Azide inhibition was competitive with nitrate (Ki = 2.0 microM) but uncompetitive with reduced benzyl viologen (Ki = 25 microM). Based upon spectral evidence, the purified molybdo-enzyme had no associated cytochromes but did contain nonhaem iron that responded to dithionite reduction and nitrate oxidation. The enzyme that was purified after being heat solubilized from membranes had properties essentially identical to those of the enzyme that was purified after deoxycholate solubilization.
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PMID:Properties of dissimilatory nitrate reductase purified from the denitrifier Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 680 38

The facultative phototroph Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides DSM158 was incapable of either assimilating or dissimilating nitrate, although the organism could reduce it enzymatically to nitrite either anaerobically in the light or aerobically in the dark. Reduction of nitrate was mediated by a nitrate reductase bound to chromatophores that could be easily solubilized and functioned with chemically reduced viologens or photochemically reduced flavins as electron donors. The enzyme was solubilized, and some of its kinetic and molecular parameters were determined. It seemed to be nonadaptive, ammonia did not repress its synthesis, and its activity underwent a rapid decline when the cells entered the stationary growth phase. Studies with inhibitors and with metal antagonists indicated that molybdenum and possibly iron participate in the enzymatic reduction of nitrate. The conjectural significance of this nitrate reductase in phototrophic bacteria is discussed.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase from Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. 697 83

Molybdenum is required for induction of nitrate reductase and of NAD-linked formate dehydrogenase activities in suspensions of wild type Paracoccus denitrificans; tungsten prevents the development of these enzyme activities. The wild type forms a membrane protein Mr150,000 when incubated with tungsten and inducers of nitrate reductase and this is presumed to represent an inactive form of the enzyme. Suspensions of mutuant M-1 did not develop nitrate reductase or formate dehydrogenase activities but the membrane protein Mr150,000 was formed under all conditions tested, including without inducers and without molybdenum. Analysis of membranes, solubilized with deoxycholate, by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions showed that the mutant protein had similar electrophoretic mobility to the active nitrate reductase formed by the wild type. Autoradiography of preparations from cells incubated with 55Fe showed that the mutant and wild type proteins contained iron. However, in similar experiments with 99Mo, incorporation of molybdenum into the mutant protein was not detectable. We conclude that mutant M-1 is defective in one or more steps required to process molybdenum for incorporation into molybdoenzymes. This failure affects the normal regulation of nitrate reductase protein with respect to the role of inducers.
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PMID:Effects of molybdenum and tungsten on induction of nitrate reductase and formate dehydrogenase in wild type and mutant Paracoccus denitrificans. 719 82

Assimilatory NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.2) from Ankistrodesmus braunii has been purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography on blue Sepharose. The specific activity of the purified enzyme is in the range of 72 to 80 units/mg of protein. The electronic spectrum of the native enzyme shows absorption maxima at 278, 414 (Soret), 532 (beta), 562 (alpha), and 669 nm and shoulders at 455 and 484 nm, with an A278/A414 ratio of 2.56. The reduced enzyme shows absorption maxima at 424 (Soret), 528 (beta), 557 (alpha),and 669 n. The enzyme complex (Mr = 467,400) is composed of eight similar subunits (Mr = 58,750) and contains 4 molecules of FAD, 4 heme groups, and 2 atoms of molybdenum. Labile sulfide and nonheme iron were not detected. Electron micrographs show the eight subunits arranged alternately in two planes, and an 8-fold rotational symmetry was deduced from highly magnified images processed by optical superposition.
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PMID:Composition and structure of assimilatory nitrate reductase from Ankistrodesmus braunii. 719


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