Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

A cosmid complementing narG mutants defective in nitrate reductase activity was isolated from a genomic library of Escherichia coli. The restriction map of the insert differed from that of the narGHI operon. The new enzyme, termed NarZ, required molybdenum for activity. The expression of narZ was not affected by the factors controlling narGHI. Insertion mutations indicated that the narZ locus covered about 8 kb of DNA; narZ is located at 32.5 U on the chromosome, in the cotransduction gap near the replication terminus. Southern blot experiments under stringent conditions using narGHI or narZ DNA as probes revealed a large extent of homology, with a small area of very high homology. We propose that narZ and narGHI have descended from a common ancestor by gene duplication.
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PMID:Presence in the 'silent' terminus region of the Escherichia coli K12 chromosome of cryptic gene(s) encoding a new nitrate reductase. 332 96

The sequence of nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) mRNA from the plant Arabidopsis thaliana has been determined. A 3.0-kilobase-long cDNA was isolated from a lambda gt10 cDNA library of Arabidopsis leaf poly(A)+ RNA. The cDNA hybridized to a 3.2-kilobase mRNA whose level increased 15-fold in response to treatment of the plant with nitrate. An open reading frame encoding a 917 amino acid protein was found in the sequence. This protein is very similar to tobacco nitrate reductase, being greater than 80% identical within a section of 450 amino acids. By comparing the Arabidopsis protein sequence with other protein sequences, three functional domains were deduced: (i) a molybdenum-pterin-binding domain that is similar to the molybdenum-pterin-binding domain of rat liver sulfite oxidase, (ii) a heme-binding domain that is similar to proteins in the cytochrome b5 superfamily, and (iii) an FAD-binding domain that is similar to NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase.
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PMID:Sequence and nitrate regulation of the Arabidopsis thaliana mRNA encoding nitrate reductase, a metalloflavoprotein with three functional domains. 339 28

In vivo complementation between different wild and mutant strains defective for nitrate assimilation has been performed by isolating diploid strains from the appropriate crosses. Twenty-two diploids homozygous or heterozygous with respect to nitrate reduction and able to grow on nitrate medium were obtained and their diploid character demonstrated from analyses of mating type, cell volume, nuclear size and progeny of crosses with haploid wild-type. All diploids were assayed for overall- and terminal-nitrate reductase (NR) activity and for the occurrence of the NR-diaphorase subunit. Data on NR activities in heterozygotes carrying mutation(s) in structural gene(s) (nit-1 or nit-1a, nit-1b) agree with the heteromultimeric nature of the enzyme complex previously described (Franco et al. (1984) EMBO J 3: 1403-1407), and indicate that subunits are exchangeable to form hybrid enzymes. In addition, in vitro complementation tests with mutant nit-1 of C. reinhardtii indicate that this mutant has defective NR-diaphorase subunits but intact terminal subunits. Super-repression caused by the mutant allele nit-2 is suppressed by the wild allele in heterozygotes, which suggests a positive control by the nit-2 product on structural gene(s) transcription. Mutant alleles of genes for the biosynthesis of molybdenum-containing cofactor, either nit-4 or nit-5 and nit-6, were recessive in diploids carrying them. The mutant allele of nit-3, from strain 307, was codominant in all heterozygotes suggesting that nit-3 codes for a protein whose activity is limiting for the molybdenum-cofactor biosynthetic pathway.
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PMID:In vivo complementation analysis of nitrate reductase-deficient mutants in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 344 23

Two nitrate reductase (NaR)-deficient mutants of pea (Pisum sativum L.), E1 and A300, both disturbed in the molybdenum cofactor function and isolated, respectively, from cv Rondo and cv Juneau, were tested for allelism and were compared in biochemical and growth characteristics. The F1 plants of the cross E1 X A300 possessed NaR and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) activities comparable to those of the wild types, indicating that these mutants belong to different complementation groups, representing two different loci. Therefore, mutant E1 represents, besides mutant A300 and the allelic mutants A317 and A334, a third locus governing NaR and is assigned the gene destignation nar 3. In comparison with the wild types, cytochrome c reductase activity was increased in both mutants. The mutants had different cytochrome c reductase distribution patterns, indicating that mutant A300 could be disturbed in the ability to dimerize NaR apoprotein monomers, and mutant E1 in the catalytic function of the molybdenum cofactor. In growth characteristics studied, A300 did not differ from the wild types, whereas fully grown leaves of mutant E1 became necrotic in soil and in liquid media containing nitrate.
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PMID:Biochemical and genetic comparison of two nitrate reductase-deficient pea mutants disturbed in the cofactor. 347 18

Bradyrhizobium japonicum JH mutants deficient in molybdenum metabolism into the enzymes nitrogenase and nitrate reductase were isolated by using the vector pSUP1011, which carries transposon Tn5 (streptomycin and kanamycin resistance). Mutants in Mo metabolism were obtained at a frequency of 3.6 X 10(-3) (per Kan Strr colony). The mutants were detected by their poor ability to grow in nitrate-containing medium without added Mo. One of the mutant types required 10(5) times more molybdate than the wild type to obtain maximal nitrogen fixation activity. Double-reciprocal plots of Mo uptake versus concentration indicated that the wild-type strain had a high- and a lower-affinity component for Mo binding. Mutant strains JH-90 and JH-119 lacked the high-affinity Mo uptake component and were also clearly deficient in Mo accumulation into a nonexchangeable form. Nitrogenase activity as well as Mo uptake ability could be restored in strains JH-90 and JH-119 by the addition of the sterile supernatant fraction of the wild type. Therefore, mutant strains JH-90 and JH-119 appeared to be deficient in an extracellular Mo-binding factor produced by the wild type. Mutant strains JH-14 and JH-143 had Mo uptake kinetics like those of the wild type (both high- and low-affinity binding for Mo) and appeared to be deficient in intracellular Mo metabolism processes. The addition of the wild-type supernatant did not restore Mo uptake or nitrogenase activity in these strains.
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PMID:Bradyrhizobium japonicum mutants defective in nitrogen fixation and molybdenum metabolism. 347 63

Use of radioactive molybdenum demonstrates that the tetrathionate reductase of Salmonella typhimurium is a molydenum containing enzyme. It is proposed that this enzyme shares with other molybdo-proteins, such as nitrate reductase, a common molybdenum containing cofactor the defect of which leads to the loss of the tetrathionate reductase and nitrate reductase activities.
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PMID:Tetrathionate reductase of Salmonella thyphimurium: a molybdenum containing enzyme. 351 17

Nitrate reductase (nitrite: (acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.7.99.4) and trimethylamine N-oxide reductase (NADH : trimethylamine-N-oxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.9) activities were reconstituted by incubation of the association factor FA (the putative product of the chlB gene) with the soluble extract of the chlB mutant grown anaerobically in the presence of trimethylamine N-oxide. When soluble extracts of the chlB mutant grown on 10 mM sodium tungstate, a molybdenum competitor, were used in complementation systems, no enzymatic reactivation was observed. Heated extracts of the parental strain 541 were shown to contain a thermoresistant molybdenum cofactor by their ability to reactivate NADPH-nitrate reductase activity in the nit1 mutant of Neurospora crassa. By complementation of parental strain heated extract with association factor FA and soluble extract of the chlB mutant grown in the presence of sodium tungstate, we were able to show for the first time that the molybdenum cofactor is an activator common to the in vitro reconstitution of both nitrate reductase and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase activities.
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PMID:Molybdenum cofactor: a compound in the in vitro activation of both nitrate reductase and trimethylamine-N-oxide reductase activities in Escherichia coli K12. 352 87

The chlorate-resistant (chlR) mutants are pleiotropically defective in molybdoenzyme activity. The inactive derivative of the molybdoenzyme, respiratory nitrate reductase, present in the cell-free extract of a chlB mutant, can be activated by the addition of protein FA, the probable active product of the chlB locus. Protein FA addition, however, cannot bring about the activation if 10 mM sodium tungstate is included in the culture medium for the chlB strain. The inclusion of a heat-treated preparation of a wild-type or chlB strain prepared after growth in the absence of tungstate, restores the protein-FA-dependent activation of nitrate reductase. All attempts to activate nitrate reductase in extracts prepared from tungstate-grown wild-type Escherichia coli strains failed. It appears that during growth with tungstate, the possession of the active chlB gene product leads to the synthesis of a nitrate reductase derivative which is distinct from that present in the tungstate-grown chlB mutant. Heat-treated preparations from chlA and chlE mutants which do not possess molybdenum cofactor activity fail to restore the activation. Fractionation by gel filtration of the heat-treated preparation from a wild-type strain produced two active peaks in the eluate of approximate Mr 12000 and less than or equal to 1500. The active material in the heat-treated extract was resistant to exposure to proteinases, but after such treatment the active component, previously of approximate Mr 12000, eluted from the gel filtration column with the material of Mr less than or equal to 1500. The active material is therefore of low molecular mass and can exist either in a protein-bound form or in an apparently free state. Molybdenum cofactor activity, assayed by the complementation of the apoprotein of NADPH:nitrate oxidoreductase in an extract of the nit-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa, gave a profile following gel filtration similar to that of the ability to restore respiratory nitrate reductase activity to the tungstate-grown chlB mutant soluble fraction. This was the case even after proteinase treatment of the heat-stable fraction. Analysis of the chlC (narC) mutant, defective in the structural gene for nitrate reductase, revealed that heat treatment is not necessary for the expression of the active component. Furthermore both the active component and molybdenum cofactor activity are present in corresponding bound and free fractions in the non-heat-treated soluble subcellular fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Activation in vitro of respiratory nitrate reductase of Escherichia coli K12 grown in the presence of tungstate. Involvement of molybdenum cofactor. 352 61

Escherichia coli trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) reductase I, the major enzyme among inducible TMAO reductases, was purified to homogeneity by an improved method including heat treatment, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and chromatographies on Bio-Gel A-1.5m, DEAE-cellulose, and Reactive blue-agarose. The molecular weight was estimated by gel filtration to be approximately 200,000. A single subunit peptide with a molecular weight of 95,000 was found by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This enzyme contained 1.96 atoms of molybdenum, 0.96 atoms of iron, 1.52 atoms of zinc, and less than 0.4 atoms of acid-labile sulfur per molecular weight of 200,000. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme showed a peak at 278 nm and a shoulder at 288 nm, but no characteristic absorption was found from 350 to 700 nm. A fluorescent derivative of molybdenum cofactor was found when the enzyme was boiled with iodine in acidic solution; its fluorescence spectra were almost the same as those of the form A derivative of molybdopterin found in sulfite oxidase. The molybdenum cofactor released from heated TMAO reductase I reconstituted nitrate reductase in the extracts of Neurospora crassa mutant strain nit-1 lacking molybdenum cofactor. Thus, TMAO reductase I contains molybdopterin, which is a common constituent of some molybdenum-containing enzymes. Some kinetic properties were also determined.
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PMID:Further characterization of trimethylamine N-oxide reductase from Escherichia coli, a molybdoprotein. 352 39

The molybdopterin cofactor from the formate dehydrogenase of Methanobacterium formicicum was studied. The cofactor was released by guanidine denaturation of homogeneous enzyme, which also released greater than 80% of the molybdenum present in the enzyme. The anoxically isolated cofactor was nonfluorescent, but after exposure to air it fluoresced with spectra similar to those of described molybdopterin cofactors. Aerobic release from acid-denatured formate dehydrogenase in the presence of I2 and potassium iodide produced a mixture of fluorescent products. Alkaline permanganate oxidation of the mixture yielded pterin-6-carboxylic acid as the only detectable fluorescent product. The results showed that the cofactor from formate dehydrogenase contained a pterin nucleus with a 6-alkyl side chain of unknown structure. Covalently bound phosphate was also present. The isolated cofactor was unable to complement the cofactor-deficient nitrate reductase of the Neurospora crassa nit-1 mutant.
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PMID:Molybdopterin cofactor from Methanobacterium formicicum formate dehydrogenase. 370 Mar 35


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