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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)
Nitrite functioned as an effective inducer of
nitrate reductase
, the enzyme responsible for the reduction of nitrate in the nitrate assimilation pathway in Candida utilis. Nitrite-induced synthesis of
nitrate reductase
in C. utilis was repressed by various metabolites of nitrate, including
ammonia
. Readily-assimilable sources of nitrogen such as
ammonia
and glutamate exerted a stronger repression on
nitrate reductase
induction than did less-readily assimilable hydrazine and hydroxylamine. Nitrite-mediated induction of
nitrate reductase
appeared more sensitive to repression by nitrate metabolites than was nitrate-mediated induction. Based on the inducer-specific differences in the sensitivity of the enzyme to repression by various intermediary metabolites and on other properties, it is proposed that the C. utilis
nitrate reductase
is either polymorphic or utilizes alternative receptor(s) for binding various gratuitous inducers including nitrite in initiating the induction pathway.
...
PMID:Product-mediated regulation reveals the polymorphic nature of the yeast assimilatory nitrate reductase. 833 54
Staphylococcus carnosus reduces nitrate to
ammonia
in two steps. (i) Nitrate was taken up and reduced to nitrite, and nitrite was subsequently excreted. (ii) After depletion of nitrate, the accumulated nitrite was imported and reduced to
ammonia
, which again accumulated in the medium. The localization, energy gain, and induction of the nitrate and nitrite reductases in S. carnosus were characterized.
Nitrate reductase
seems to be a membrane-bound enzyme involved in respiratory energy conservation, whereas nitrite reductase seems to be a cytosolic enzyme involved in NADH reoxidation. Syntheses of both enzymes are inhibited by oxygen and induced to greater or lesser degrees by nitrate or nitrite, respectively. In whole cells, nitrite reduction is inhibited by nitrate and also by high concentrations of nitrite (> or = 10 mM). Nitrite did not influence nitrate reduction. Two possible mechanisms for the inhibition of nitrite reduction by nitrate that are not mutually exclusive are discussed. (i) Competition for NADH
nitrate reductase
is expected to oxidize the bulk of the NADH because of its higher specific activity. (ii) The high rate of nitrate reduction could lead to an internal accumulation of nitrite, possibly the result of a less efficient nitrite reduction or export. So far, we have no evidence for the presence of other dissimilatory or assimilatory nitrate or nitrite reductases in S. carnosus.
...
PMID:Physiology and interaction of nitrate and nitrite reduction in Staphylococcus carnosus. 860 76
The reduction of nitrate to nitrite catalyzed by
nitrate reductase
(NR) is considered to be the rate-limiting and regulated step of nitrate assimilation, a major metabolic pathway occurring in a wide range of organisms which in turn supply the nutritional nitrogen requirements for other forms of life. Chlorella vulgaris NR mRNA levels are very responsive to changes in nitrogen source. In the presence of
ammonia
as the sole nitrogen source, under repressed conditions, NR mRNA is undetectable. Under inducing conditions, the removal of
ammonia
and addition of nitrate, rapid NR mRNA synthesis occurs. We are studying the elements involved in regulating the expression of this important gene. Two overlapping genomic clones (NRS1 and NR5') were isolated from a cosmid library. The two clones were sequenced and their sequences were aligned with that of a full-length NR cDNA. The gene is approximately 8 kb long and consists of 19 exons and 18 introns. Unlike NR isolated from other species, the exons which code for the functional domains of C. vulgaris are separated by introns. Two transcription start points (tsp) were identified and each is surrounded by potential initiator sequences. No TATA, CAAT or GC-rich promoter elements were located. A time course of NR induction revealed that while transcription initiation from one tsp remains at a constant level from the point of induction through steady state, the level of initiation from another tsp is high upon induction, but decreases as steady state is attained.
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of the nitrate reductase-encoding gene from Chlorella vulgaris: structure and identification of transcription start points and initiator sequences. 866 64
Nitrate assimilation in many plants, algae, yeasts and bacteria is mediated by two enzymes,
nitrate reductase
(EC 1.6.6.2) and nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1). They catalyse the stepwise reduction of nitrate to nitrite and nitrite to
ammonia
respectively. The nitrite reductase from an industrially important yeast, Candida utilis, has been purified to homogeneity. Purified nitrite reductase is a heterodimer and the molecular masses of the two subunits are 58 and 66 kDa. The native enzyme exhibits a molecular mass of 126 kDa as analysed by gel filtration. The identify of the two subunits of nitrite reductase was confirmed by immunoblotting using antibody for Cucurbita pepo leaf nitrite reductase. The presence of two different sized transcripts coding for the two subunits was confirmed by (a) in vitro translation of mRNA from nitrate-induced C. utilis followed by immunoprecipitation of the in vitro translated products with heterologous nitrite reductase antibody and (b) Northern-blot analysis. The 66 kDa subunit is acidic in nature which is probably due to its phosphorylated status. The enzyme is stable over a range of temperatures. Both subunits can catalyse nitrite reduction, and the reconstituted enzyme, at a higher protein concentration, shows an activity similar to that of the purified enzyme. Each of these subunits has been shown to contain a few unique peptides in addition to a large number of common peptides. Reduced Methyl Viologen has been found to be as effective an electron donor as NADPH in the catalytic process, a phenomenon not commonly seen for nitrite reductases from other systems.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of assimilatory nitrite reductase from Candida utilis. 869 57
Anaerobic metabolism of the simplest, best understood enteric bacteria such as Escherichia coli is unexpectedly complex. Recent studies of the biochemistry and genetics of nitrate reduction via nitrite to
ammonia
by enteric bacteria have provided insights into the reasons for this complexity. An NADH-dependent nitrite reductase in the cytoplasm works in partnership with the respiratory nitrate reductase on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane when nitrate is abundant. There is also an electrogenic, formate-dependent nitrite reductase ready to work in partnership with a periplasmic
nitrate reductase
when nitrite is available but nitrate is scarce. A third E. coli
nitrate reductase
, NarZYWV, and the poorly expressed formate dehydrogenase O possibly facilitate rapid adaptation to oxygen starvation pending the synthesis of the major respiratory formate-nitrate oxidoreductase. Although most anaerobically expressed genes are subject to transcription control, none of them are totally switched off. This enables the bacteria to be ready for a change in fortune: when growing anaerobically with nitrate, they can respond equally rapidly whether times get better with the arrival of oxygen, or get worse when the nitrate is depleted. Far from being redundant, the complexity is essential for survival in a changing environment.
...
PMID:Nitrate reduction to ammonia by enteric bacteria: redundancy, or a strategy for survival during oxygen starvation? 891 48
In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the genes required for nitrate assimilation, including the gene encoding
nitrate reductase
(NIT1), are subject to repression by
ammonia
. To study the mechanism of
ammonia
repression, we employed two approaches to search for mutants with defective repression of NIT1 gene expression. (1) PF14, a gene required for flagellar function, was used as a reporter gene for expression from the NIT1 promoter. When introduced into a pf14 mutant host, the NIT1;PF14 chimeric construct produced a transformant (T10-10B) with a conditional swimming phenotype. Spontaneous mutants with defective
ammonia
repression of the NIT1 promoter were screened for by isolating cells that gained constitutive motility. (2) Insertional mutagenesis was performed, followed by screening for chlorate sensitivity in the presence of ammonia ion. One insertional mutant and six spontaneous mutants were allelic and defined a new gene, FAR1 (free from
ammonia
repression). FAR1 was mapped to Linkage Group I, 7.7 cM to the right of the centromere. The far1-1 mutant strain was used to clone DNA adjacent to the site of plasmid insertion, which was then used as a hybridization probe to clone the FAR1 gene from wild type.
...
PMID:FAR1, a negative regulatory locus required for the repression of the nitrate reductase gene in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 913 6
During microbial denitrification, NO is produced by reduction of nitrite by either the reduced high spin d1 hemes in a unique reductase (NIR) or at the expense of a blue copper protein that transfers electrons that move first to a type I copper and then to a type II copper in a unique trimeric NIR. This latter type of NIR is also produced by several denitrifying filamentous fungi. Reduction of NO is then carried out by either a specific cytochrome be complex NOR in denitrifying bacteria or a unique cytochrome P-450 in denitrifying filamentous fungi. NO is also produced by an anomalous reaction of a molybdoprotein,
nitrate reductase
(
NAR
), acting on an odd substrate, NO2-. NO is also reduced by a multiheme NIR that serves physiologically for reduction of NO2- to
NH3
. This type NIR reduces NO to either N2O, if only partially reduced, or
NH3
, if fully reduced, when it encounters NO. This multiheme NIR is very sensitive to cyanide. Transcription of the genes for NIR and NOR production in a denitrifier is activated by NO, a process that also requires the presence of the gene product, a transcriptional activator, NnrR.
...
PMID:Microbial and plant metabolism of NO. 923 39
During anaerobic nitrate respiration Bacillus subtilis reduces nitrate via nitrite to
ammonia
. No denitrification products were observed. B. subtilis wild-type cells and a
nitrate reductase
mutant grew anaerobically with nitrite as an electron acceptor. Oxygen-sensitive dissimilatory nitrite reductase activity was demonstrated in cell extracts prepared from both strains with benzyl viologen as an electron donor and nitrite as an electron acceptor. The anaerobic expression of the discovered nitrite reductase activity was dependent on the regulatory system encoded by resDE. Mutation of the gene encoding the regulatory Fnr had no negative effect on dissimilatory nitrite reductase formation.
...
PMID:Ammonification in Bacillus subtilis utilizing dissimilatory nitrite reductase is dependent on resDE. 942 13
The nitrate and nitrite reductases of Bacillus subtilis have two different physiological functions. Under conditions of nitrogen limitation, these enzymes catalyze the reduction of nitrate via nitrite to
ammonia
for the anabolic incorporation of nitrogen into biomolecules. They also function catabolically in anaerobic respiration, which involves the use of nitrate and nitrite as terminal electron acceptors. Two distinct nitrate reductases, encoded by narGHI and nasBC, function in anabolic and catabolic nitrogen metabolism, respectively. However, as reported herein, a single NADH-dependent, soluble nitrite reductase encoded by the nasDE genes is required for both catabolic and anabolic processes. The nasDE genes, together with nasBC (encoding
assimilatory nitrate reductase
) and nasF (required for nitrite reductase siroheme cofactor formation), constitute the nas operon. Data presented show that transcription of nasDEF is driven not only by the previously characterized nas operon promoter but also from an internal promoter residing between the nasC and nasD genes. Transcription from both promoters is activated by nitrogen limitation during aerobic growth by the nitrogen regulator, TnrA. However, under conditions of oxygen limitation, nasDEF expression and nitrite reductase activity were significantly induced. Anaerobic induction of nasDEF required the ResDE two-component regulatory system and the presence of nitrite, indicating partial coregulation of NasDEF with the respiratory nitrate reductase NarGHI during nitrate respiration.
...
PMID:Nitrogen and oxygen regulation of Bacillus subtilis nasDEF encoding NADH-dependent nitrite reductase by TnrA and ResDE. 976 65
Symbioses between chemoautotrophic bacteria and marine invertebrates living at deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other sulfide-rich environments function autotrophically by oxidizing hydrogen sulfide as an energy source and fixing carbon dioxide into organic compounds. For chemoautotrophy to support growth, these symbioses must be capable of inorganic nitrogen assimilation, a process that is not well understood in these or other aquatic symbioses. Pathways of inorganic nitrogen assimilation were investigated in several of these symbioses: the vent tubeworms Riftia pachyptila and Tevnia jerichonana, the vent bivalves Calyptogena magnifica and Bathymodiolus thermophilus, and the coastal bivalve Solemya velum.
Nitrate reductase
activity was detected in R. pachyptila, T. jerichonana and B. thermophilus, but not in C. magnifica and S. velum. This is evidence for nitrate utilization, either assimilation or respiration, by some vent species and is consistent with the high levels of nitrate availability at vents. The
ammonia
assimilation enzymes glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were detected in all symbioses tested, indicating that
ammonia
resulting from nitrate reduction or from environmental uptake can be incorporated into amino acids. A complicating factor is that GS and GDH are potentially of both host and symbiont origin, making it unclear which partner is involved in assimilation. GS, which is considered to be the primary
ammonia
-assimilating enzyme of autotrophs, was investigated further. Using a combination of molecular and biochemical approaches, host and symbiont GS were distinguished in the intact association. On the basis of Southern hybridizations, immunoreactivity, subunit size and thermal stability, symbiont GS was found to be a prokaryote GS. Host GS was distinct from prokaryote GS. The activities of host and symbiont GS were separated by anion-exchange chromatography and quantified. Virtually all activity in symbiont-containing tissue was due to symbiont GS in R. pachyptila, C. magnifica and B. thermophilus. In contrast, no symbiont GS activity was detected in the gill of S. velum, the predominant activity in this species appearing to be host GS. These findings suggest that
ammonia
is primarily assimilated by the symbionts in vent symbioses, whereas in S. velum
ammonia
is first assimilated by the host. The relationship between varying patterns of GS expression and host-symbiont nutritional exchange is discussed.
...
PMID:Pathways of inorganic nitrogen assimilation in chemoautotrophic bacteria-marine invertebrate symbioses: expression of host and symbiont glutamine synthetase 988 41
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