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Query: EC:1.7.1.4 (
nitrite reductase
)
1,847
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The described bacterium was isolated by enrichment culture in peptone broth inoculated with garden soil, pasteurized and then put to incubate under N2O at 32 degrees. It is a Gram-negative rod, motile with peritrichous flagella, and producing oval spores without exosporium in swollen sporangia. However, cells have the thick walls, mesosomes and persistant septa characteristic of Gram-positive bacteria. It lacks fermentative activity, does not attack carbohydrates, has complex growth requirements, and will grow anaerobically only if one of the following electron acceptors is present: NO3, NO2, N2O, S4O6, and fumarate. Nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide are denitrified with production of N2. The microorganism is mesophilic, gives a positive oxidase reaction, synthesizes a type of c cytochrome, and does not hydrolyse gelatin, starch nor "Tween 80". The following enzymes are present: nitrate reductase A, respiratory
nitrite reductase
, tetrathionate and fumarate reductases, L-glutamate dehydrogenase, and
superoxide dismutase
. The following enzymes are absent: thiosulfate reductase, urease, lecithinase, arginine dihydrolase, L-alanine dehydrogenase, phenylalanine desaminase, and catalase. The GC% of its DNA is 39. The bacterium described can be considered to be a new species. We propose the name Bacillus azotoformans n. sp.
...
PMID:[A new, sporulating, denitrifying, mesophilic bacterium: Bacillus azotoformans N. SP. (author's transl)]. 102 Aug 72
Enzymes and proteins: AO, amine oxidase; and as proposed in reference 3, BSAO, bovine serum AO; SSAO, swine serum AO; SKDAO, swine kidney AO; PSAO, pea seedling AO; APAO, arthrobacter P1AO; MADH, methylamine dehydrogenase; AAO, ascorbic acid oxidase; alpha-AE, alpha-amidating enzyme; Az, azurin; COX, cytochrome c oxidase; CP, ceruloplasmin; DBH, dopamine beta-hydroxylase; GO, galactose oxidase; Hc, hemocyanin; MT, metallotheonein; NIR,
nitrite reductase
;
SOD
,
superoxide dismutase
. Cofactors: Dopa, 3,4 dihydroxyphenylalanine; Topa, 3,4,6 trihydroxyphenyl-alanine; PLP, pyridoxal-phosphate; PQQ, pyrroloquinolinequinone. Reagents: DDC, diethyldithiocarbamate; DMG, diaminoguanidine; DMSA, dimercaptosuccinic acid; NTA, nitrilotriacetic acid. Technique-related: XANES, x-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy; EXAFS, extended x-ray absorption fine structure; ENDOR, electron-nuclear double resonance; ESEEM, electron spin echo envelope modulation; CD, circular dichroism; MCD, magnetic circular dichroism; NMRD, nuclear magnetic resonance dispersion; nqi, nuclear quadrupole interaction; DSC, differential scanning calorimetry.
...
PMID:Copper in biological systems. A report from the 6th Manziana Conference, September 23-27, 1990. 175 86
The amino acid composition and major physico-chemical properties of the "nonblue" copper protein isolated earlier from Pseudomonas aeruginosa have been determined. It has been found that the azurin oxidase, cytochrome c551 oxidase and
superoxide dismutase
activities of the enzyme are inhibited by this protein. The inhibition seems to be due to the protein interaction with the electron-accepting center of
nitrite reductase
.
...
PMID:[Properties of a nitrite reductase inhibitor protein from Pseudomonas aeruginosa]. 821 61
Denitrification is one of the main steps of the global nitrogen cycle that is sustained by prokaryotic organisms. Denitrifying bacteria use two entirely different enzymes in this process, one based on haem cd1 prosthetic groups and the other on type 1-type 2 Cu centres. Copper-containing nitrite reductases (NiRs) are sub-divided into blue and green NiRs, which are respectively thought to be redox partners of azurins and pseudo-azurins. Crystallographic structures of the blue
nitrite reductase
from Alcaligenes xylosoxidans (AxNiR) are presented in the oxidised hexagonal form and the substrate-bound orthorhombic form to 2.1 A and 2.8 A resolution, respectively. The complete amino acid sequence of AxNiR has been determined by conventional chemical analysis. A 3 A structure of AxNiR has been published where the modelling was based on the sequence of another blue NiR. The higher resolution of the hexagonal form together with the correct sequence allows a detailed comparison with the crystallographic structures of the green NiRs. There is a striking difference in the overall surface charge distribution between the two sub-groups, providing a neat structural explanation for their different reactivities to pseudoazurin or azurin and supporting the view that electron transfer proceeds via complex formation. A detailed examination of the type-1 Cu site, the site responsible for the colour, reveals several subtle differences, including a lateral displacement of 0.7 A for Smet. The structure of the type-2 Cu site, and changes that occur upon substrate binding are discussed in terms of the catalytic mechanism. The similarity of the type 2 Cu site to the catalytic Zn site in carbonic anhydrase and the catalytic Cu site of
superoxide dismutase
is re-examined in view of the high-resolution (2.1 A) structure.
...
PMID:X-ray structure of a blue-copper nitrite reductase in two crystal forms. The nature of the copper sites, mode of substrate binding and recognition by redox partner. 973 94
We have reconstructed, from experimental approximately 2 nm resolution X-ray solution scattering profiles, the corresponding shapes and sizes of myoglobin, troponin C, spermadhesin PSP-I/PSP-II, chymotrypsinogen A,
superoxide dismutase
, ovalbumin, tubulin,
nitrite reductase
, catalase, the structural change of troponin C upon dissociation of the two high affinity Ca(2+), and the solution model structure of a tandem pair of fibronectin type III cytoplasmic domains of integrin alpha6beta4 before determination of its crystal structure. To this purpose we have designed a new genetic algorithm which gradually explores a discrete search space and evolves convergent models made of several hundred beads (down to 0.3 nm radius) best fitting the scattering profile upon Debye calculation, without geometrical constraints or penalty for loose beads. This is a procedure of effective numerical transformation of the one-dimensional scattering profiles into three-dimensional model structures. The number of beads in models is correlated with the protein molecular mass (with one exception). The shape and approximate dimensions of each protein have been retrieved by a set of ten solution models, essentially superimposable with the available crystal structures.
...
PMID:Reconstruction of protein form with X-ray solution scattering and a genetic algorithm. 1087 53
Solution of the phase problem is central to crystallographic structure determination. The conventional methods of isomorphous replacement (MIR or SIR) and molecular replacement are ineffective in the absence of a suitable isomorphous heavy-atom derivative or knowledge of the structure of a homologous protein. A recent method utilizing the low-resolution molecular shape determined from solution X-ray scattering data has shown to be successful in locating the molecular shape within the crystallographic unit cell in the case of the trimer
nitrite reductase
(NiR, 105 kDa) [Hao et al. (1999), Acta Cryst. D55, 243-246]. This was achieved by performing a direct real-space search for orientation and translation using knowledge of the orientation of the polar angles of the non-crystallographic axis obtained by performing a self-rotation on crystallographic data. This effectively reduces the potential six-dimensional search to a four-dimensional one (Eulerian angle gamma and three translational parameters). In the case of NiR, the direct four-dimensional search produced a clear solution that was in good agreement with the known structure. The program FSEARCH incorporating this method has been generalized to handle molecules from all space groups and in particular those in possession of non-crystallographic symmetry. However, the method employed was initially unsuccessful when applied to the small dimeric molecule
superoxide dismutase
(
SOD
, 32 kDa) owing to the absence of strong reflections at low resolution caused by saturation at the detector. The determined solution deviated greatly from that of the known structure [Hough & Hasnain (1999), J. Mol. Biol. 287, 579-592]. It was found that once these absent reflections were replaced by a series of randomly generated intensity values and cluster analysis was performed on the output, the signal-to-noise ratio was improved and a most probable solution was found. The electron-density map of the stochastically determined solution agrees well with the known structure; the phase error calculated from this map was 67 degrees within 14 A resolution.
...
PMID:Implementation of cluster analysis for ab initio phasing using the molecular envelope from solution X-ray scattering. 1094 37
Solution of the phase problem is central to crystallographic structure determination. Conventional molecular-replacement methods are ineffective in the absence of knowledge of the structure of a homologous protein. A recent method utilizing the low-resolution molecular shape determined from solution X-ray scattering data has been shown to be successful in locating the molecular shape within the crystallographic unit cell for the cases of the trimeric
nitrite reductase
(AxNiR, 105 kDa) and the dimeric
superoxide dismutase
(
SOD
, 32 kDa). This was achieved by performing a direct real-space search for orientation and translation using the orientation of the non-crystallographic axis obtained by performing a self-rotation on the crystallographic data. This effectively reduces the potential six-dimensional search to a four-dimensional one (Eulerian angle gamma and three translational parameters). The program FSEARCH incorporating this method has been generalized to handle molecules from all space groups. The program can also be used in general six-dimensional cases for a molecular-replacement solution given a predetermined envelope from any source, such as electron-microscopic images or solution scattering, provided that the envelope can be converted to the standard CCP4 map format or expressed in terms of spherical harmonics. It is hoped that this method will greatly facilitate the ab initio structure determination of proteins and provide a good foundation for further structure refinement.
...
PMID:Phasing from an envelope. 1156 53
A copper-nitrosyl intermediate forms during the catalytic cycle of
nitrite reductase
, the enzyme that mediates the committed step in bacterial denitrification. The crystal structure of a type 2 copper-nitrosyl complex of
nitrite reductase
reveals an unprecedented side-on binding mode in which the nitrogen and oxygen atoms are nearly equidistant from the copper cofactor. Comparison of this structure with a refined nitrite-bound crystal structure explains how coordination can change between copper-oxygen and copper-nitrogen during catalysis. The side-on copper-nitrosyl in
nitrite reductase
expands the possibilities for nitric oxide interactions in copper proteins such as
superoxide dismutase
and prions.
...
PMID:Side-on copper-nitrosyl coordination by nitrite reductase. 1513 Dec 98
A series of five-coordinate thiolate-ligated complexes [M(II)(tren)N4S(Me2)]+ (M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn; tren = tris(2-aminoethyl)amine) are reported, and their structural, electronic, and magnetic properties are compared. Isolation of dimeric [Ni(II)(SN4(tren)-RS(dang))]2 ("dang"= dangling, uncoordinated thiolate supported by H bonds), using the less bulky [(tren)N4S](1-) ligand, pointed to the need for gem-dimethyls adjacent to the sulfur to sterically prevent dimerization. All of the gem-dimethyl derivatized complexes are monomeric and, with the exception of [Ni(II)(S(Me2)N4(tren)]+, are isostructural and adopt a tetragonally distorted trigonal bipyramidal geometry favored by ligand constraints. The nickel complex uniquely adopts an approximately ideal square pyramidal geometry and resembles the active site of Ni-
superoxide dismutase
(Ni-SOD). Even in coordinating solvents such as MeCN, only five-coordinate structures are observed. The MII-S thiolate bonds systematically decrease in length across the series (Mn-S > Fe-S > Co-S > Ni-S approximately Cu-S < Zn-S) with exceptions occurring upon the occupation of sigma* orbitals. The copper complex, [Cu(II)(S(Me2)N4(tren)]+, represents a rare example of a stable CuII-thiolate, and models the perturbed "green" copper site of
nitrite reductase
. In contrast to the intensely colored, low-spin Fe(III)-thiolates, the M(II)-thiolates described herein are colorless to moderately colored and high-spin (in cases where more than one spin-state is possible), reflecting the poorer energy match between the metal d- and sulfur orbitals upon reduction of the metal ion. As the d-orbitals drop in energy proceeding across the across the series M(2+) (M= Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu), the sulfur-to-metal charge-transfer transition moves into the visible region, and the redox potentials cathodically shift. The reduced M(+1) oxidation state is only accessible with copper, and the more oxidized M(+4) oxidation state is only accessible for manganese.
...
PMID:Periodic trends within a series of five-coordinate thiolate-ligated [MII(SMe2N4(tren))]+ (M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn) complexes, including a rare example of a stable CuII-thiolate. 1786 86
Type-2 Cu sites are found in all the major branches of life and are often involved in the catalysis of oxygen species. Four type-2 Cu protein families are selected as model systems for review: amine oxidases, Cu monooxygenases,
nitrite reductase
/multicopper oxidase, and CuZn
superoxide dismutase
. For each model protein, the availability of multiple crystal structures and detailed enzymological studies provides a detailed molecular view of the type-2 Cu site and delineation of the mechanistic role of the Cu in biological function. Comparison of these model proteins leads to the identification of common properties of the Cu sites and insight into the evolution of the trinuclear active site found in multicopper oxidases.
...
PMID:Type-2 copper-containing enzymes. 1787 15
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