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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 NAD(P)H-dependent nitrate reductase system in Clostridium perfringens was reconstituted with rubredoxin (Rd), nitrate reductase (NaR), and an unadsorbed fraction, on a DEAE-cellulose column, of the extract (designated as fraction A), under nitrogen gas. Ferredoxin in place of Rd was not effective as an electron carrier in this reconstituted system. NAD(P)H-dependent nitrate reducing activity was also obtained by replacing fraction A with ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from spinach. We propose the following scheme for the electron transfer in this NAD(P)H dependent nitrate reduction system. NAD(P)H----NAD(P)H-Rd reductase----Rd----NaR----NO3-.
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PMID:Rubredoxin as an intermediary electron carrier for nitrate reduction by NAD(P)H in Clostridium perfringens. 290 73

Nitrate reductase activity is usually measured by colorimetric determination of the nitrite formed. Since reduced pyridine nucleotides interfere with color formation, the use of NADPH or NADH in the assay requires a specific postassay treatment to remove excess substrate. A "stop mix" containing 1.5 mM phenazine methosulfate and 4.0 mM ferricyanide (final concentrations 0.136 and 0.36 mM, respectively) can remove excess NAD(P)H and terminate the enzymatic reaction quickly in a single, time-saving step. For activity tests containing dithionite we recommend the use of a 1:1 mixture of the two color reagents to avoid incomplete color formation. This may occur during longer time intervals between addition of the color reagents due to destruction of the diazonium salt formed with the first reagent by oxidation product(s) of dithionite.
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PMID:Nitrate reductase activity test: phenazine methosulfate-ferricyanide stop reagent replaces postassay treatment. 293 67

Biochemical and microbiological studies were conducted to characterize the mechanism of bacterial formation of N-nitrosomorpholine from morpholine and nitrite at neutral pH. Nitrosating activity was markedly induced when bacteria were cultured anaerobically in minimal culture medium containing nitrate, while the presence of cysteine or tungsten in the medium inhibited induction. Of various metals, coenzymes and inhibitors tested for their effects on in vitro nitrosation of morpholine, potassium cyanide, sodium azide, NAD(P)H and nitrate strongly inhibited nitrosation. Several mutants of Escherichia coli A10 strain were prepared in order to examine whether nitrosation activity is linked to specific loci. Niridazole-resistant mutants, which lack nitroreductase, had as much nitrosating activity as the original E. coli A10, but chlorate-resistant mutants had completely lost this activity. A good correlation was observed between nitrate reductase activity and nitrosating activity in these mutants. These results indicate that bacterial nitrosation is an enzyme-mediated reaction closely associated with molybdenoenzymes such as the nitrate reductase/formate hydrogenlyase system.
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PMID:Biochemical studies on the catalysis of nitrosation by bacteria. 330 Oct 45

Expression of the tripeptide permease gene tppB is anaerobically induced. This induction is independent of the fnr (oxrA) gene product, which is known to be required for the anaerobic induction of several respiratory enzymes. We isolated, characterized, and mapped mutations in two genes, oxrC and tppR, which prevent the anaerobic induction of tppB expression. Mutations in oxrC were highly pleiotropic, preventing the anaerobic expression of the formate dehydrogenase component of formate hydrogen lyase (fhl), a tripeptidase (pepT), and two of the three known hydrogenase isoenzymes (hydrogenases 1 and 3). On the other hand, expression of nitrate reductase, fumarate reductase, and a number of other fnr (oxrA)-dependent enzymes was not affected by mutations in oxrC. Thus, there appeared to be at least two distinct classes of anaerobically induced genes, those which required fnr for their expression and those which required oxrC. It seems that fnr-dependent enzymes perform primarily respiratory functions, whereas oxrC-dependent enzymes served fermentative or biosynthetic roles. We found the primary defect of oxrC mutants to be a deficiency in phosphoglucose isomerase activity, implying that a product of glycolysis functions as an anaerobic regulatory signal. Mutations in tppR were specific for tppB and did not affect expression of other oxrC-dependent genes. However, tppR did exhibit phenotypes other than the regulation of tppB. Both oxrC and tppR mutants were hypersensitive to the toxic NAD analog 6-aminonicotinic acid. This suggests that oxrC and tppR may play a role in the regulation of NAD biosynthesis or, alternatively, that NAD or a related nucleotide serves as the anaerobic signal for oxrC-dependent enzymes.
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PMID:Two genetically distinct pathways for transcriptional regulation of anaerobic gene expression in Salmonella typhimurium. 353 Nov 76

The addition of nitrate, EDTA and dithiothreitol to the enzyme extraction buffer resulted in improved stability of the assimilatory nitrate reductase activity from the food yeast Candida utilis at both 4 degrees C and -10 degrees C. By incorporating this critical step in the following sequence the yeast NAD(P)H: nitrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.6.2) was purified approximately 68-fold by protamine sulphate precipitation, calcium gel adsorption, ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Both NADPH-nitrate reductase and NADH-nitrate reductase activities remained in constant association and ratio (2:3) during the entire course of purification. The enzyme showed an absolute requirement of NADPH or NADH for its activity. Maximal enzyme activity was obtained with 10-120 micrograms protein in a 10 min assay at 30 degrees C at pH 6.5, with an apparent Michaelis constant of 0.69 mM for nitrate as substrate. The enzyme is a molybdoflavo-protein involving sulphydryl groups, and is highly sensitive to free reducing agents, heavy metal ions and electron-transfer inhibitors. The results also suggested possible involvement of a second metal ion, perhaps iron, which was hypothesized to participate in the electron transfer scheme catalysed by this enzyme.
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PMID:Partial purification and properties of the assimilatory nitrate reductase of the food yeast Candida utilis. 378 22

Chlorella nitrate reductase catalyzes the reduction of nitrate to nitrite by NADH. Initial velocity studies showed that the kinetic mechanism is sequential, indicating that both substrates must bind to the enzyme before any products are released. Product inhibition with NAD and nitrite showed that competitive inhibition was observed when the inhibitor was similar to the varied substrate, while noncompetitive inhibition was observed when the inhibitor was dissimilar to the varied substrate. Likewise, dead-end inhibition with adenosine 5'-diphosphoribose and thiocyanate showed competitive inhibition when the inhibitor was similar to the varied substrate and noncompetitive inhibition when the inhibitor was dissimilar to the varied substrate. These results indicate that Chlorella nitrate reductase follows a random bi bi kinetic mechanism. Phosphate was found to stimulate NADH:nitrate reductase activity and 2-fold. The NADH:cytochrome c reductase activity associated with nitrate reductase was not affected by phosphate suggesting the effect of phosphate is on the nitrate-reducing moiety of the enzyme. Phosphate increases Vmax but has no effect on the apparent Km for nitrate.
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PMID:Kinetic mechanism of assimilatory NADH:nitrate reductase from Chlorella. 627 5

When strains and mutants of the strictly aerobic hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium Alcaligenes eutrophus are grown heterotrophically on gluconate or fructose and are subsequently exposed to anaerobic conditions in the presence of the organic substrates, molecular hydrogen is evolved. Hydrogen evolution started immediately after the suspension was flushed with nitrogen, reached maximum rates of 70 to 100 mumol of H2 per h per g of protein, and continued with slowly decreasing rates for at least 18 h. The addition of oxygen to an H2-evolving culture, as well as the addition of nitrate to cells (which had formed the dissimilatory nitrate reductase system during the preceding growth), caused immediate cessation of hydrogen evolution. Formate is not the source of H2 evolution. The rates of H2 evolution with formate as the substrate were lower than those with gluconate. The formate hydrogenlyase system was not detectable in intact cells or crude cell extracts. Rather the cytoplasmic, NAD-reducing hydrogenase is involved by catalyzing the release of excessive reducing equivalents under anaerobic conditions in the absence of suitable electron acceptors. This conclusion is based on the following experimental results. H2 is formed only by cells which had synthesized the hydrogenases during growth. Mutants lacking the membrane-bound hydrogenase were still able to evolve H2. Mutants lacking the NAD-reducing or both hydrogenases were unable to evolve H2.
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PMID:Hydrogen evolution by strictly aerobic hydrogen bacteria under anaerobic conditions. 637 84

In vitro complementation of the soluble assimilatory NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase (NAD(P)H:nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) was attained by mixing cell-free preparations of Chlamydomonas reinhardii mutant 104, uniquely possessing nitrate-inducible NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase, and mutant 305 which possesses solely the nitrate-inducible FMNH2- and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activities. Full activity and integrity of NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase from mutant 104 and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase from mutant 305 are needed for the complementation to take place. A constitutive and heat-labile molybdenum-containing cofactor, that reconstitutes the NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase activity of nit-1 Neurospora crassa but is incapable of complementing with 104 from C. reinhardii, is present in the wild type and 305 algal strains. The complemented NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase has been purified 100-fold and was found to be similar to the wild enzyme in sucrose density sedimentation, molecular size, pH optimum, kinetic parameters, substrate affinity and sensitivity to inhibitors and temperature. From previous data and data presented in this article on 104 and 305 mutant activities, it is concluded that C. reinhardii NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase is a heteromultimeric complex consisting of, at least, two types of subunits separately responsible for the NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and the reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activities.
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PMID:In vitro complementation of assimilatory NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase from mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardii. 645 69

Neurospora crassa nmr-1 mutants, selected on the basis of their sensitivity to chlorate in the presence of glutamine, have elevated levels of the nitrate assimilation enzymes, NADPH-nitrate reductase and NAD(P)H-nitrite reductase. Immunoelectrophoretic determinations show that the higher nitrate reductase activities in nmr-1 mutants are due to greater enzyme concentrations. The half-life of nitrate reductase in these mutants is unaltered. As in wild-type, expression of nitrate assimilation in nmr-1 mutants is dependent on induction by nitrate. Reduced nitrogen metabolites like ammonium and glutamine still repress this expression in nmr-1 mutants, but not as effectively as in wild-type. Enzymatic activity measurements in double mutant strains confirm that the nit regulatory loci, nit-2 and nit-4/5, are epistatic to nmr-1, but nmr-1 is epistatic to nit-3, the nitrate reductase structural gene. The results imply that nmr-1 is involved in post-transcriptional control of nitrate assimilation.
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PMID:The regulation of nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa: biochemical analysis of the nmr-1 mutants. 645 34

Assimilatory nitrate reductase (NAD(P)H-nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) from the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii can be purified to homogeneity by dye-ligand chromatography on blue-Sepharose. The purified enzyme, whose turnover number is 623 s-1, presents an optimum pH of 7.5 and Km values of 13 microM, 23 microM and 0.15 mM for NADH, NADPH and nitrate, respectively. The NADH-nitrate reductase activity exhibits an iso ping pong bi bi kinetic mechanism. The molecular weight of the native nitrate reductase is 467 400, while that of its subunits is 58 750. These values suggest an octameric structure for the enzyme, which has been confirmed by electron microscopy. As deduced from spectrophotometric and fluorimetric studies, the enzyme contains FAD and cytochrome b-557 as prosthetic groups. FAD is not covalently bound to the protein and is easily dissociated in diluted solutions from the enzyme. Its apparent Km value is 4 nM, indicative of a high affinity of the enzyme for FAD. The results of the quantitative analyses of prosthetic groups indicate that nitrate reductase contains four molecules of flavin, four heme irons, and two atoms of molybdenum. The three components act sequentially transferring electrons from reduced pyridine nucleotides to nitrate, thus forming a short electron transport chain along the protein. A mechanism is proposed for the redox interconversion of the nitrate reductase activity. Inactivation seems to occur by formation of a stable complex of reduced enzyme with cyanide or superoxide, while reactivation is a consequence of reoxidation of the inactive enzyme. Both reactions imply the transfer of only one electron.
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PMID:Assimilatory nitrate reductase from the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii. 668 79


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