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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 seasonal change in leaf water potential and its components, stomatal resistance, specific leaf weight, photosynthesis rate, the activities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and nitrate reductase, and soluble proteins were measured in flag leaves (ninth from base in position), seventh and fifth leaves of wheat Triticum aestivum L. cv Kalyansona. Flag leaves had a lower water and solute potential and lower or equal turgor pressure than seventh and fifth leaves. These differences were found to be independent of environment. The rate of photosynthesis and nitrate reductase activity were always lower in fifth and seventh leaves than in flag leaf. The photosynthetic efficiency in flag leaves appeared to be associated with lower stomatal resistance and higher specific leaf weight. The relations between leaf water potential and relative water content showed a change with leaf position. This change possibly allows flag leaf to maintain its functional efficiency despite its lower water potential.
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PMID:Differences in water relations and physiological characteristics in leaves of wheat associated with leaf position on the plant. 1666

Recent work identified acetaldehyde oxime as the predominant product purged by inert gases from anaerobic in vivo nitrate reductase (NR) assays of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) leaves. Another recent study supported earlier research findings which identified the primary product evolved from soybean leaves as nitric oxide (NO). This paper provides evidence that eliminates acetaldehyde oxime and confirms that NO is the primary nitrogenous product purged from the in vivo NR assay system. A portion of the evidence is based on the high water solubility of acetaldehyde oxime. Other evidence presented is the failure by chemical and spectrophotometric means to detect oximes in gases emitted in the purging of the reaction medium or in the leaf tissues. The gaseous product from the in vivo NR assay system reacted identically to NO standards and did not resemble acetaldehyde oxime standards. It was concluded that the predominant N product within the leaves was nitrite and that the predominant gaseous N product evolved from the assay was NO.
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PMID:Nitric Oxide Emissions from Soybean Leaves during in Vivo Nitrate Reductase Assays. 1666 92

A barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutant (Az34) has been identified with low basal levels of abscisic acid (ABA) and with reduced capacity for producing ABA in response to water stress. The mutation is in a gene controlling the molybdenum cofactor resulting in a pleiotropic deficiency in at least three molybdoenzymes, nitrate reductase, xanthine dehydrogenase, and aldehyde oxidase. The mutant was found to lack aldehyde oxidase activity with several substrates including: (a) ABA aldehyde, a putative precursor of ABA; (b) an acetylenic analog of ABA aldehyde; and (c) heptaldehyde. Elevating the growth temperature from 18 to 26 degrees C caused mutant leaves to wilt and brown. Desiccation of mutant leaves was prevented by applying ABA. These results indicate that ABA biosynthesis at some developmental stages is dependent upon a molybdoenzyme which may be an aldehyde oxidase.
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PMID:Reduced Accumulation of ABA during Water Stress in a Molybdenum Cofactor Mutant of Barley. 1666 35

A custom oxygen analyzer in conjunction with an infrared carbon dioxide analyzer and humidity sensors permitted simultaneous measurements of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapor fluxes from the shoots of intact barley plants (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Steptoe). The oxygen analyzer is based on a calciazirconium sensor and can resolve concentration differences to within 2 microliters per liter against the normal background of 210,000 microliters per liter. In wild-type plants receiving ammonium as their sole nitrogen source or in nitrate reductase-deficient mutants, photosynthetic and respiratory fluxes of oxygen equaled those of carbon dioxide. By contrast, wild-type plants exposed to nitrate had unequal oxygen and carbon dioxide fluxes: oxygen evolution at high light exceeded carbon dioxide consumption by 26% and carbon dioxide evolution in the dark exceeded oxygen consumption by 25%. These results indicate that a substantial portion of photosynthetic electron transport or respiration generates reductant for nitrate assimilation rather than for carbon fixation or mitochondrial electron transport.
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PMID:Oxygen and carbon dioxide fluxes from barley shoots depend on nitrate assimilation. 1666 24

The correlation between CO(2) assimilation and nitrate reduction in detached spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves was examined by measuring light-dependent changes in leaf nitrate levels in response to mild water stress and to artificially imposed CO(2) deficiency. The level of extractable nitrate reductase (NR) activity was also measured. The results are: (a) In the light, detached turgid spinach leaves reduced nitrate stored in the vacuoles of mesophyll cells at rates between 3 and 10 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour. Nitrate fed through the petiole was reduced at similar rates as storage nitrate. Nitrate reduction was accompanied by malate accumulation. (b) Under mild water stress which caused stomatal closure, nitrate reduction was prevented. The inhibition of nitrate reduction observed in water stressed leaves was reversed by external CO(2) concentrations (10-15%) high enough to overcome stomatal resistance. (c) Nitrate reduction was also inhibited when turgid leaves were kept in CO(2)-free air or at the CO(2)-compensation point or in nitrogen. (d) When leaves were illuminated in CO(2)-free air, activity of NR decreased rapidly. It increased again, when CO(2) was added back to the system. The half-time for a 50% change in activity was about 30 min. It thus appears that there is a rapid inactivation/activation mechanism of NR in leaves which couples nitrate reductase to net photosynthesis.
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PMID:Low CO(2) Prevents Nitrate Reduction in Leaves. 1666 63

Assimilatory nitrate reductase activity (NRA) in crude spinach leaf (Spinacia oleracea) extracts undergoes rapid changes following fluctuations in photosynthesis brought about by changes in external CO(2) or by water stress (WM Kaiser, E Brendle-Behnisch [1991] Plant Physiol 96:363-367). A modulation of NRA sharing several characteristics (stability, response to Mg(2+) or Ca(2+), kinetic constants) with the in vivo modulation was obtained in vitro by preincubating desalted leaf extracts with physiological concentrations of Mg(2+) and ATP (deactivating) or AMP (activating). When nitrate reductase (NR) was inactivated in vivo by illuminating leaves at the CO(2) compensation point, it could be reactivated in vitro by incubating leaf extracts with AMP. For the in vitro inactivation, ATP could be replaced by GTP or UTP. Nonhydrolyzable ATP analogs (beta, gamma-imido ATP, beta, gamma-methyl-ATP) had no effect on NR, whereas gamma-S-ATP caused an irreversible inactivation. This suggests that NR modulation involves ATP hydrolysis. In contrast to NR in crude leaf extracts, partially purified NR did not respond to ATP or AMP. ATP and AMP levels in whole leaf extracts changed in the way predicted by the modulation of NRA when leaves were transferred from photosynthesizing (low ATP/AMP) to photorespiratory (high ATP/AMP) conditions. Adenine nucleotide levels in leaves could be effectively manipulated by feeding mannose through the leaf petiole. NRA followed these changes as expected from the in vitro results. This suggests that cytosolic ATP/AMP levels are indeed the central link between NRA in the cytosol and photosynthesis in the chloroplast. Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of NR or of NR-regulating protein factors is discussed as a mechanism for a reversible modulation of NR by ATP and AMP.
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PMID:Rapid Modulation of Spinach Leaf Nitrate Reductase by Photosynthesis : II. In Vitro Modulation by ATP and AMP. 1666 95

Drought and high-temperature stresses have been extensively studied; however, little is known about their combined impact on plants. In the present study, we determined the photosynthetic gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, nitrogen level, and lipid peroxidation of the leaves of a perennial grass (Leymus chinensis (Trin.) Tzvel.) subjected to three constant temperatures (23, 29 and 32 degrees C), and five soil-moisture levels (75-80%, 60-65%, 50-55%, 35-40% and 25-30% of field capacity, respectively). High temperature significantly decreased plant biomass, leaf green area, leaf water potential, photosynthetic rate (A), maximal efficiency of PSII photochemistry (F (v)/F (m)), actual PSII efficiency (Phi(PSII)), the activities of nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) and glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2), but markedly increased the ratio of leaf area to leaf weight (SLA), endopeptidase (EP; EC 3.4.24.11) activity, and malondialdehyde (MDA) content, especially under severe water stress conditions. The A and F (v)/F (m) were significantly and positively correlated with leaf-soluble protein content, and the activities of NR and GS. However, both photosynthesis parameters were significantly and negatively correlated with EP activity and MDA content (P < 0.05). It is suggested that high temperature, combined with severe soil drought, might reduce the function of PSII, weaken nitrogen anabolism, strengthen protein catabolism, and provoke lipid peroxidation. The results also indicate that severe water stress might exacerbate the adverse effects of high temperature, and their combination might reduce the plant productivity and distribution range of L. chinensis in the future.
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PMID:Combined effects of water stress and high temperature on photosynthesis, nitrogen metabolism and lipid peroxidation of a perennial grass Leymus chinensis. 1668 24

Pollutants like O(3) and NO(2) enter leaves through the stomata and cause damage during reactions with components of biological cell membranes. The steady-state flux rates of these gases into the leaf are determined by a series of physical and biochemical resistances including stomatal aperture, reactions occurring within the cell wall and the ability of the leaf to remove the products of apoplastic reactions. In the present study, multiple regression models incorporating stomatal conductance, apoplastic and symplastic ascorbate concentrations, and nitrate reductase (NR) activities were generated to explain the observed variations in leaf-level flux rates of O(3) and NO(2). These measurements were made on the plant Catharanthus roseus (Madagascar periwinkle). The best-fit model explaining NO(2) flux included stomatal conductance, apoplastic ascorbate and NR activity. This model explained 89% of the variation in observed leaf fluxes and suggested physical resistances, reaction between NO(2) and apoplastic ascorbate, and the removal rate of nitrate (generated by reactions of NO(2) and water) from the apoplast all play controlling roles in NO(2) flux to leaves. O(3) flux was best explained by stomatal conductance and symplastic ascorbate explaining 66% of the total variation in leaf flux. Both models demonstrate the importance of measuring processes other than stomatal conductance to explain steady-state leaf-level fluxes of pollutant gases.
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PMID:Predicting leaf-level fluxes of O3 and NO2: the relative roles of diffusion and biochemical processes. 1691 63

The products of the NpR1527 and NpR1526 genes of the filamentous, diazotrophic, fresh-water cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme strain ATCC 29133 were identified as a nitrate transporter (NRT) and nitrate reductase (NR) respectively, by complementation of nitrate assimilation mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942. While other fresh-water cyanobacteria, including S. elongatus, have an ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-type NRT, the NRT of N. punctiforme belongs to the major facilitator superfamily, being orthologous to the one found in marine cyanobacteria (NrtP). Unlike the ABC-type NRT, which transports both nitrate and nitrite with high affinity, Nostoc NrtP transported nitrate preferentially over nitrite. NrtP was distinct from ABC-type NRT also in its insensitivity to ammonium-promoted regulation at the post-translational level. The nitrate reductase of N. punctiforme was, on the other hand, inhibited upon addition of ammonium to medium, lending ammonium sensitivity to nitrate assimilation.
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PMID:Characterization of the nitrate-nitrite transporter of the major facilitator superfamily (the nrtP gene product) from the cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme strain ATCC 29133. 1709 Sep 31

The Escherichia coli NapA (periplasmic nitrate reductase) contains a [4Fe-4S] cluster and a Mo-bis-molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide cofactor. The NapA holoenzyme associates with a di-heme c-type cytochrome redox partner (NapB). These proteins have been purified and studied by spectropotentiometry, and the structure of NapA has been determined. In contrast to the well characterized heterodimeric NapAB systems ofalpha-proteobacteria, such as Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Paracoccus pantotrophus, the gamma-proteobacterial E. coli NapA and NapB proteins purify independently and not as a tight heterodimeric complex. This relatively weak interaction is reflected in dissociation constants of 15 and 32 mum determined for oxidized and reduced NapAB complexes, respectively. The surface electrostatic potential of E. coli NapA in the apparent NapB binding region is markedly less polar and anionic than that of the alpha-proteobacterial NapA, which may underlie the weaker binding of NapB. The molybdenum ion coordination sphere of E. coli NapA includes two molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide dithiolenes, a protein-derived cysteinyl ligand and an oxygen atom. The Mo-O bond length is 2.6 A, which is indicative of a water ligand. The potential range over which the Mo(6+) state is reduced to the Mo(5+) state in either NapA (between +100 and -100 mV) or the NapAB complex (-150 to -350 mV) is much lower than that reported for R. sphaeroides NapA (midpoint potential Mo(6+/5+) > +350 mV), and the form of the Mo(5+) EPR signal is quite distinct. In E. coli NapA or NapAB, the Mo(5+) state could not be further reduced to Mo(4+). We then propose a catalytic cycle for E. coli NapA in which nitrate binds to the Mo(5+) ion and where a stable des-oxo Mo(6+) species may participate.
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PMID:Spectropotentiometric and structural analysis of the periplasmic nitrate reductase from Escherichia coli. 1713 Jan 27


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