Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.7.1.4 (nitrite reductase)
1,847 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chlorate resistant spontaneous mutants of Azospirillum spp. (syn. Spirillum lipoferum) were selected in oxygen limited, deep agar tubes with chlorate. Among 20 mutants from A. brasilense and 13 from A. lipoferum all retained their functional nitrogenase and 11 from each species were nitrate reductase negative (nr-). Most of the mutants were also nitrite reductase negative (nir-), only 3 remaining nir+. Two mutants from nr+ nir+ parent strains lost only nir and became like the nr+ nir- parent strain of A. brasilense. No parent strain or nr+ mutant showed any nitrogenase activity with 10 mM NO3-. In all nr- mutants, nitrogenase was unaffected by 10 mM NO3-. Nitrite inhibited nitrogenase activity of all parent strains and mutants including those which were nir-. It seems therefore, that inhibition of nitrogenase by nitrate is dependent on nitrate reduction. Under aerobic conditions, where nitrogenase activity is inhibited by oxygen, nitrate could be used as sole nitrogen source for growth of the parent strains and one mutant (nr- nir-) and nitritite of the parent strains and 10 mutants (all types). This indicates the loss of both assimilatory and dissimilatory nitrate reduction but only dissimilatory nitrite reduction in the mutants selected with chlorate.
...
PMID:Nitrate and nitrite reductase negative mutants of N2-fixing Azospirillum spp. 69 99

The herbicide chlorate has been used extensively to isolate mutants that are defective in nitrate reduction. Chlorate is a substrate for the enzyme nitrate reductase (NR), which reduces chlorate to the toxic chlorite. Because NR is a substrate (NO(3) (-))-inducible enzyme, we investigated the possibility that chlorate may also act as an inducer. Irrigation of ammonia-grown Arabidopsis plants with chlorate leads to an increase in NR mRNA in the leaves. No such increase was observed for nitrite reductase mRNA following chlorate treatment; thus, the effect seems to be specific to NR. The increase in NR mRNA did not depend on the presence of wild-type levels of NR activity or molybdenum-cofactor, as a molybdenum-cofactor mutant with low levels of NR activity displayed the same increase in NR mRNA following chlorate treatment. Even though NR mRNA levels were found to increase after chlorate treatment, no increase in NR protein was detected and the level of NR activity dropped. The lack of increase in NR protein was not due to inactivation of the cells' translational machinery, as pulse labeling experiments demonstrated that total protein synthesis was unaffected by the chlorate treatment during the time course of the experiment. Chlorate-treated plants still retain the capacity to make functional NR because NR activity could be restored by irrigating the chlorate-treated plants with nitrate. The low levels of NR protein and activity may be due to inactivation of NR by chlorite, leading to rapid degradation of the enzyme. Thus, chlorate treatment stimulates NR gene expression in Arabidopsis that is manifested only at the mRNA level and not at the protein or activity level.
...
PMID:Effect of Chlorate Treatment on Nitrate Reductase and Nitrite Reductase Gene Expression in Arabidopsis thaliana. 1666 25

Chlorate resistant mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana were isolated, of which 10 exhibited a lowered nitrate reductase activity and 51 were chlorate-resistant because of an impaired uptake of chlorate. The 51 mutants of this type are all affected in the same gene. The mutants with a lowered nitrate reductase activity fall into 7 different complementation groups. Three of these mutants grow poorly on media with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source, while the others apparently can reduce sufficient nitrate to bring about growth. In all cases a low nitrate reductase activity coincides with an enhanced nitrite reductase activity. After sucrose gradient centrifugation of wildtype extracts nitrate reductase is found at the 8S position, whereas cytochrome-c reductase is found both at 4 and 8S positions. It is suggested that the functional nitrate reductase is a complex consisting of 4S subunits showing cytochrome-c reductase activity and a Mo-bearing cofactor. All mutants except B25 are capable of assembling the 4S subunits into complexes which for most mutants have a lower S value and exhibit a lower nitrate reductase activity than the wildtype complexes. Since the mutants B25 and B73 exhibit a low xanthine dehydrogenase activity, the Mo-bearing cofactor is probably less available in these mutants than in the wildtype. B73 appears to be the only mutant which is partly repaired by excessive Mo. The possible role of several genes is discussed.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of nitrate reductase-deficient mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. 2426 29