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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)
Paracoccus pantotrophus grown anaerobically under denitrifying conditions expressed similar levels of the periplasmic
nitrate reductase
(NAP) when cultured in molybdate- or tungstate-containing media. A native PAGE gel stained for
nitrate reductase
activity revealed that only NapA from molybdate-grown cells displayed readily detectable
nitrate reductase
activity. Further kinetic analysis showed that the periplasmic fraction from cells grown on molybdate (3 microM) reduced nitrate at a rate of V(max)=3.41+/-0.16 micromol [NO(3)(-)] min(-1) mg(-1) with an affinity for nitrate of K(m)=0.24+/-0.05 mM and was heat-stable up to 50 degrees C. In contrast, the periplasmic fraction obtained from cells cultured in media supplemented with tungstate (100 microM) reduced nitrate at a much slower rate, with much lower affinity (V(max)=0.05+/-0.002 micromol [NO(3)(-)] min(-1) mg(-1) and K(m)=3.91+/-0.45 mM) and was labile during prolonged incubation at >20 degrees C. Nitrate-dependent growth of Escherichia coli strains expressing only
nitrate reductase
A was inhibited by sub-mM concentrations of tungstate in the medium. In contrast, a strain expressing only NAP was only partially inhibited by 10 mM tungstate. However, none of the above experimental approaches revealed evidence that
tungsten
could replace molybdenum at the active site of E. coli NapA. The combined data show that
tungsten
can function at the active site of some, but not all, molybdoenzymes from mesophilic bacteria.
...
PMID:Properties of the periplasmic nitrate reductases from Paracoccus pantotrophus and Escherichia coli after growth in tungsten-supplemented media. 1267 Jun 90
The maturation of Escherichia coli
nitrate reductase
A requires the incorporation of the Mo-(bis-MGD) cofactor to the apoprotein. For this process, the NarJ chaperone is strictly required. We report the first description of protein interactions between molybdenum cofactor biosynthetic proteins (MogA, MoeA, MobA, and MobB) and the aponitrate reductase (NarG) using a bacterial two-hybrid approach. Two conditions have to be satisfied to allow the visualization of the interactions, (i) the presence of an active and mature molybdenum cofactor and (ii) the presence of the NarJ chaperone and of the NarG structural partner subunit, NarH. Formation of
tungsten
-substituted cofactor prevents the interaction between NarG and the four biosynthetic proteins. Our results suggested that the final stages of molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis occur on a complex made up by MogA, MoeA, MobA, and MobB, which is also in charge with the delivery of the mature cofactor onto the aponitrate reductase A in a NarJ-assisted process.
...
PMID:Involvement of the molybdenum cofactor biosynthetic machinery in the maturation of the Escherichia coli nitrate reductase A. 1524 36
Molybdenum and
tungsten
are second- and third-row transition elements, respectively, which are found in a mononuclear form in the active site of a diverse group of enzymes that generally catalyze oxygen atom transfer reactions. Mononuclear Mo-containing enzymes have been classified into three families: xanthine oxidase, DMSO reductase, and sulfite oxidase. The proteins of the DMSO reductase family present the widest diversity of properties among its members and our knowledge about this family was greatly broadened by the study of the enzymes
nitrate reductase
and formate dehydrogenase, obtained from different sources. We discuss in this review the information of the better characterized examples of these two types of Mo enzymes and W enzymes closely related to the members of the DMSO reductase family. We briefly summarize, also, the few cases reported so far for enzymes that can function either with Mo or W at their active site.
...
PMID:Mo and W bis-MGD enzymes: nitrate reductases and formate dehydrogenases. 1531 35
Kinetics of the oxygen atom transfer reactions [M(IV)(QC6H2-2,4,6-Pr(i)3)(S2C2Me2)2]1- + XO --> [M(VI)O(QC6H2-2,4,6-Pr(i)3)(S2C2Me2)2]1- + X in acetonitrile with substrates XO = NO3- and (CH2)4SO have been determined. The reactants are bis(dithiolene) complexes with M = Mo, W and sterically encumbered axial ligands with Q = O, S to stabilize mononuclear square pyramidal structures. The complex [MoIV(SC6H2-2,4,6-Pr(i)3)(S2C2Me2)2]1- is an analogue of the active site of dissimilatory
nitrate reductase
which in the reduced state contains a molybdenum atom bound by two pyranopterindithiolene ligands and a cysteinate residue. Nitrate reduction was studied with
tungsten
complexes because of unfavorable stability properties of the molybdenum complexes. Product nitrite was detected by a colorimetric method. All reactions with both substrates are second-order with associative transition states (deltaS approximately -20 eu). Variation of atoms M and Q, together with data from prior work, allows certain kinetics comparisons to be made. Among them, k2W/k2Mo = 25 for (CH2)4SO reduction (Q = S), an expression of the kinetic metal effect. Further, k2S/k2O = 28 and approximately 10(4) for nitrate and (CH2)4SO reduction, respectively, effects attributed to relatively more steric congestion in achieving the transition state with hindered phenolate vs thiolate ligands. The effect is more pronounced with the larger substrate. These results demonstrate the feasibility of
tungsten
-mediated nitrate reduction by direct atom transfer using molecules with both axial thiolate and phenolate ligands. Complexes of the type [M(IV)(OR)(S2C2Me2)2] are capable of reducing biological N-oxide, S-oxide, and nitrate substrates and thus constitute functional analogue reaction systems of enzymic transformations.
...
PMID:Reaction systems related to dissimilatory nitrate reductase: nitrate reduction mediated by bis(dithiolene)tungsten complexes. 1585 88
The salt-tolerant Rhodotorula glutinis yeast strain grew in medium containing nitrate, 1 mM
tungsten
, and trace amounts of molybdenum (as impurities from the reagents used). Isolation of electrophoretically homogenous preparation of
nitrate reductase
from the Rh. glutinis cells grown under these growth conditions is described. The isolated
nitrate reductase
is a molybdenum-containing homodimer with molecular mass of 130 kD, containing 0.177 mol of Mo per mol of the enzyme. The activity of the enzyme is maximal at pH 7.0 and 35-45 degrees C and is inhibited by low concentrations of azide and cyanide. The enzyme is almost insensitive to 1 mM
tungsten
.
...
PMID:Isolation, purification, and characterization of nitrate reductase from a salt-tolerant Rhodotorula glutinis yeast strain grown in the presence of tungsten. 1609 46
Mutant strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum that required higher levels of molybdate than the wild-type strain for growth on NO(3)-containing medium were obtained after transposon Tn5 mutagenesis of the wild-type strain. The mutant strains expressed more than fivefold-greater
nitrate reductase
activities in the range of 0.1 to 1.0 mM added molybdate compared with activities expressed upon incubation in non-Mo-supplemented medium, whereas the
nitrate reductase
activity of the wild-type strain (JH) was not markedly influenced by Mo supplementation. In free-living culture, mutant strains JH310 and JH359 expressed substantial nitrogenase activity, even in medium treated to remove molybdate, and nitrogenase activity was influenced little by Mo supplementation, whereas the wild-type strain required 100 nM added Mo for highest nitrogenase activity. Double-reciprocal plots of Mo uptake rates versus Mo concentration showed that both bacteroids and free-living cells of mutant strain JH359 had about the same affinity for Mo as did the parent strain. Bacteroids of both the mutants and the wild type also exhibited similar Mo accumulation rates over a 9-min period under very-low-Mo (4 nM) conditions. Nitrogenase activities for strain JH359 and for the wild-type strain in free-living culture were both strongly inhibited by
tungsten
; thus, the nitrogenase activities of both strains are probably the result of a "conventional" Mo-containing nitrogenase. Soybeans inoculated with strain JH359 and grown under either Mo-supplemented or Mo-deficient conditions had greater specific acetylene reduction rates and significantly greater plant fresh weight than those inoculated with the wild-type strain. Under Mo-deficient conditions, the acetylene reduction rates and plant fresh weights were up to 35 and 58% greater, respectively, for mutant-nodulated plants compared with wild-type-strain-nodulated plants.
...
PMID:Mutant Strain of Bradyrhizobium japonicum with Increased Symbiotic N(2) Fixation Rates and Altered Mo Metabolism Properties. 1634 47
Polychlorobiphenyl (PCB) degradation usually occurs through reductive dechlorination under anaerobic conditions and phenolic ring cleavage under aerobic conditions. In this paper, we provide evidence of
nitrate reductase
(NaR) mediated dechlorination of hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB-153) in Phanerochaete chrysosporium under non-ligninolytic condition and the gene involved. The NaR enzyme and its cofactor, molybdenum (Mo), were found to mediate reductive dechlorination of PCBs even in aerobic condition.
Tungsten
(W), a competitive inhibitor of this enzyme, was found to suppress this dechlorination. Chlorine release assay provided further evidence of this
nitrate reductase
mediated dechlorination. Commercially available pure NaR enzyme from Aspergillus was used to confirm these results. Through homology search using TBLASTN program, NaR gene was identified, primers were designed and the RT-PCR product was sequenced. The NaR gene was then annotated in the P. chrysosporium genome (GenBank accession no. AY700576). This is the first report regarding the presence of
nitrate reductase
gene in this fungus with the explanation why this fungus can dechlorinate PCBs even in aerobic condition. These fungal inoculums are used commercially as pellets in sawdust for enhanced bioremediation of PCBs at the risk of depleting soil nitrates. Hence, the addition of nitrates to the pellets will reduce this risk as well as enhance its activity.
...
PMID:Nitrate reductase gene involvement in hexachlorobiphenyl dechlorination by Phanerochaete chrysosporium. 1640 92
Molybdenum is absolutely required for the nitrate-reducing activity of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
nitrate reductase
complex isolated from Chlorella fusca. The whole enzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
nitrate reductase
is formed by cells grown in the absence of added molybdate, but only its first activity (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase) is functional. The second activity of the complex, which subsequently participates also in the enzymatic transfer of electrons from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to nitrate (FNH(2)-
nitrate reductase
), depends on the presence of molybdenum. Neither molybdate nor nitrate is required for
nitrate reductase
synthesis de novo, but ammonia acts as a nutritional repressor of the complete enzyme complex. Under conditions which exclude de novo synthesis of
nitrate reductase
, the addition of molybdate to molybdenum-deficient cells clearly increases the activity level of this enzyme, thus suggesting in vivo incorporation of the trace metal into the pre-existing inactive apoenzyme.Competition studies with tungstate corroborate these conclusions and indicate that the only role played by molybdenum in Chlorella is connected with the reduction of nitrate to nitrite.
Tungsten
seems to act by replacing molybdenum in the
nitrate reductase
complex, thus rendering inactive the FNH(2)-
nitrate reductase
portion of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
nitrate reductase
complex.
...
PMID:Role of molybdenum in nitrate reduction by chlorella. 1665 84
The effect of
tungsten
on the development of endogenous and nitrate-induced NADH- and FMNH(2)-linked
nitrate reductase
activities in primary leaves of 10-day-old soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) seedlings was studied. The seedlings were grown with or without exogenous nitrate. High levels of endogenous
nitrate reductase
activities developed in leaves of seedlings grown without nitrate. However, no endogenous nitrite reductase activity was detected in such seedlings. The FMNH(2)-linked
nitrate reductase
activity was about 40% of NADH-linked activity.
Tungsten
had little or no effect on the development of endogenous NADH- and FMNH(2)-linked
nitrate reductase
activities, respectively. By contrast, in nitrate-grown seedlings,
tungsten
only inhibited the nitrate-induced portion of NADH-linked
nitrate reductase
activity, whereas the FMNH(2)-linked activity was inhibited completely.
Tungsten
had no effect on the development of nitrate-induced nitrite reductase activity. The complete inhibition of FMNH(2)-linked
nitrate reductase
activity by
tungsten
in nitrate-grown plants was apparently an artifact caused by the reduction of nitrite by nitrite reductase in the assay system. The results suggest that in soybean leaves either the endogenous
nitrate reductase
does not require molybdenum or the molybdenum present in the seed is preferentially utilized by the enzyme complex as compared to nitrate-induced
nitrate reductase
.
...
PMID:Differential effect of tungsten on the development of endogenous and nitrate-induced nitrate reductase activities in soybean leaves. 1666 75
Nitrate reductase
(NR, EC 1.6.6.1) from higher plants is a homodimeric enzyme carrying a molybdenum cofactor at the catalytic site.
Tungsten
can be substituted for molybdenum in the cofactor structure, resulting in an inactive enzyme. When nitratefed Nicotiana tabacum plants were grown on a nutrient solution in which tungstate was substituted for molybdate, NR activity in the leaves decreased to a very low level within 24 hours while NR protein accumulated progressively to a level severalfold higher than the control after 6 days. NR mRNA level in molybdate-grown plants exhibited a considerable day-night fluctuation. However, when plants were treated with tungstate, NR mRNA level remained very high. NR activity and protein increased over a 24-hour period when nitrate was added back to N-starved molybdate-grown plants. NR mRNA level increased markedly during the first 2 hours and then decreased. In the presence of tungstate, however, the induction of NR activity by nitrate was totally abolished while high levels of NR protein and mRNA were both induced, and the high level of NR mRNA was maintained over a 10-hour period. These results suggest that the substitution of
tungsten
for molybdenum in NR complex leads to an overexpression of the NR structural gene. Possible mechanisms involved in this deregulation are discussed.
...
PMID:Tungstate, a molybdate analog inactivating nitrate reductase, deregulates the expression of the nitrate reductase structural gene. 1666 15
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