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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)
Nitrite reductase has been separated from cell-free extracts of Nitrosomonas and partially purified from hydroxylamine oxidase by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. In its oxidized state the enzyme, which did not contain haem, had an extinction maximum at 590nm, which was abolished on reduction. Sodium diethyldithiocarbamate was a potent inhibitor of
nitrite reductase
. Enzyme activity was stimulated 2.5-fold when remixed with hydroxylamine oxidase, but was unaffected by mammalian
cytochrome c
. The enzyme also exhibited a low hydroxylamine-dependent
nitrite reductase
activity. The results suggest that this enzyme is similar to the copper-containing ;denitrifying enzyme' of Pseudomonas denitrificans. A dithionite-reduced, 465nm-absorbing haemoprotein was associated with homogeneous preparations of hydroxylamine oxidase. The band at 465nm maximum was not reduced during the oxidation of hydroxylamine although the extinction was abolished on addition of hydroxylamine, NO(2) (-) or CO. These last-named compounds when added to the oxidized enzyme precluded the appearance of the 465nm-absorption band on addition of dithionite. Several properties of 465nm-absorbing haemoprotein are described.
...
PMID:The partial characterization of purified nitrite reductase and hydroxylamine oxidase from Nitrosomonas europaea. 415 45
The composition of the membrane-bound electron transport system of Haemophilus parainfluenzae underwent modification in response to the terminal electron acceptor in the growth medium. H. parainfluenzae was able to grow with O(2), nitrate, fumarate, pyruvate, and substrate amounts of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) as electron acceptors. When O(2) served as the electron acceptor and its concentration was lowered below 20 mum, the bacteria formed more cytochromes b, c, a(1), a(2), and o than were present in the cells grown at 150 to 200 mum O(2). Nitrate and
nitrite reductase
activities also appeared during growth at the low O(2) concentrations in the absence of added nitrate. Cytochrome levels in cells grown anaerobically with fumarate, pyruvate, or NAD as terminal acceptors were similar to those formed in cells grown at low O(2) concentrations. Cells grown with nitrate had higher levels of cytochromes c, b, and o, and of nitrate and nitrite reductases, than did cells grown with the other acceptors. The formation of cytochrome oxidase a(2) was repressed by the presence of nitrate in the growth medium. The critical O(2) concentration (the O(2) concentration at which the rate of O(2) uptake becomes demonstrably dependent on the O(2) concentration) was about 100 mum in cells grown with nitrate and about 15 mum in cells grown with the other acceptors. A mutant of H. parainfluenzae was found to make about 10% as much
cytochrome c
as the wild type, and its formation of cytochrome a(2) was not repressed by nitrate. The critical O(2) concentration of the mutant was high when it was grown with nitrate, suggesting that the high levels of
cytochrome c
and the absence of cytochrome a(2) from the wild type are not responsible for the high critical O(2) concentration. The modifications of the respiratory system induced by changing the terminal electron acceptor were inhibited by the presence of chloramphenicol, which suggests that protein synthesis is involved.
...
PMID:Effect of nitrate, fumarate, and oxygen on the formation of the membrane-bound electron transport system of Haemophilus parainfluenzae. 431 51
1. In Aspergillus nidulans nitrate and nitrite induce nitrate reductase,
nitrite reductase
and hydroxylamine reductase, and ammonium represses the three enzymes. 2. Nitrate reductase can donate electrons to a wide variety of acceptors in addition to nitrate. These artificial acceptors include benzyl viologen, 2-(p-iodophenyl)-3-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyltetrazolium chloride,
cytochrome c
and potassium ferricyanide. Similarly
nitrite reductase
and hydroxylamine reductase (which are possibly a single enzyme in A. nidulans) can donate electrons to these same artificial acceptors in addition to the substrates nitrite and hydroxylamine. 3. Nitrate reductase can accept electrons from reduced benzyl viologen in place of the natural donor NADPH. The NADPH-nitrate-reductase activity is about twice that of reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase under comparable conditions. 4. Mutants at six gene loci are known that cannot utilize nitrate and lack nitrate-reductase activity. Most mutants in these loci are constitutive for
nitrite reductase
, hydroxylamine reductase and all the nitrate-induced NADPH-diaphorase activities. It is argued that mutants that lack nitrate-reductase activity are constitutive for the enzymes of the nitrate-reduction pathway because the functional nitrate-reductase molecule is a component of the regulatory system of the pathway. 5. Mutants are known at two gene loci, niiA and niiB, that cannot utilize nitrite and lack nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. 6. Mutants at the niiA locus possess inducible nitrate reductase and lack nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. It is suggested that a single enzyme protein is responsible for the reduction of nitrite to ammonium in A. nidulans and that the niiA locus is the structural gene for this enzyme. 7. Mutants at the niiB locus lack nitrate-reductase, nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. It is argued that the niiB gene is a regulator gene whose product is necessary for the induction of the nitrate-utilization pathway. The niiB mutants either lack or produce an incorrect product and consequently cannot be induced. 8. Mutants at the niiribo locus cannot utilize nitrate or nitrite unless provided with a flavine supplement. When grown in the absence of a flavine supplement the activities of some of the nitrate-induced enzymes are subnormal. 9. The growth and enzyme characteristics of a total of 123 mutants involving nine different genes indicate that nitrate is reduced to ammonium. Only two possible structural genes for enzymes concerned with nitrate utilization are known. This suggests that only two enzymes, one for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, the other for the reduction of nitrite to ammonium, are involved in this pathway.
...
PMID:Genetic and biochemical studies of nitrate reduction in Aspergillus nidulans. 438 27
The metabolism of inorganic nitrogen compounds was studied in extracts of Penicillium atrovenetum which had been grown under conditions in which beta-nitropropionic acid (BNP) synthesis varied from 0 to 12.5 mumoles per ml. None of the extracts was able to oxidize ammonium ion or nitrite. An enzyme was detected which catalyzed the oxidation of hydroxylamine with
cytochrome c
as the electron acceptor. The activity of this enzyme was not related to the ability of the organism to produce BNP. Nitrate and
nitrite reductase
activities were detected only in P. atrovenetum cultures grown on nitrate as a nitrogen source. These results indicated that BNP synthesis is probably not directly associated with the metabolism of inorganic nitrogen compounds and that an organic pathway for the formation of the nitro group is more likely. The activities of certain enzymes related to the metabolism of aspartic acid were investigated. Aspartate ammonia-lyase activity could not be detected in P. atrovenetum extracts. Aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities were found in the extracts but were highest in the cultures which did not produce BNP. beta-Nitroacrylic acid reductase activity was highest in extracts of cultures which were actively synthesizing BNP.
...
PMID:Role of ammonium ion in the biosynthesis of beta-nitropropionic acid. 580 74
The EPR spectra of the NO complexes of frozen solutions of ascorbic acid-reduced cytochrome oxidase (
nitrite reductase
) purified from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, of its heme d1-depleted form, and of heme d1 in solutions containing various nitrogenous bases are quite similar to each other as well as to several heme (iron protoporphyrin IX)-containing proteins. The NO complexes of heme d1 (an iron-chlorin) in the presence of nitrogenous bases belong to spectral type C according to Kon's classification and, thus, the energy levels of the iron are closely related to thorse of heme complexes recorded under similar conditions. Comparison of these spectra with those of complexes of known structure suggests that both heme c and heme d1 are linked with Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase by means of a nitrogenous ligand. The EPR spectrum of the NO complex of the native enzyme exhibits a lack of resolution of the high field (gy) resonance which can be characterized in terms of a spectral contribution from both the heme c and heme d1 moieties. The similarity between the EPR spectra of the NO complexes of horse heart
cytochrome c
and the heme d1-depleted Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase before and after interaction with urea suggests structural similarities involving the heme irons. The changes caused by urea are likely to be a breaking or distortion of the bond between the iron and the protein-donated nitrogenous ligand and are similar to alterations seen with NO complexes of hemoglobin under a variety of conditions.
...
PMID:EPR study of heme x NO complexes of ascorbic acid-reduced Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase and corresponding model complexes. 625 Oct 57
Campylobacter sputorum subspecies bubulus contains a membrane-bound
nitrite reductase
which catalyses the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. Formate and L-lactate are used as hydrogen donors. Cells of C. sputorum grown with nitrate or nitrite contain cytochromes of the b- and c-type and a carbon monoxide-binding
cytochrome c
. In addition, a special membrane-bound carbon monoxide-binding pigment is found. Nitrite reduction with formate or L-lactate as a hydrogen donor is strongly inhibited by 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO). Nitrite reduction by bacterial suspensions with lactate as a hydrogen donor is strongly inhibited by carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) whereas nitrite reduction with formate as a hydrogen donor is not inhibited at all. Leads to H+/O values and leads to H+/NO-2 values were measured with ascorbate + N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD), formate (in the absence and presence of carbonic anhydrase) and L-lactate as a hydrogen donor. The results are summarized in a scheme for electron transport from formate or lactate to oxygen or nitrite which shows a periplasmic orientation of formate dehydrogenase and
nitrite reductase
and a cytoplasmic orientation of lactate dehydrogenase and oxygen reduction, and which shows proton translocation with a leads to H+/2e value of 2.0. The leads to H+/O and leads to H+/NO-2 values predicted by this scheme are in good agreement with the experimental values.
...
PMID:Electron transport-linked proton translocation at nitrite reduction in Campylobacter sputorum subspecies bubulus. 628 Jun 34
The kinetic characteristics of the diaphorase activities associated with the NADH-dependent
nitrite reductase
(EC 1.6.6.4) from Escherichia coli have been determined. The values of the apparent maximum velocity are similar for the reduction of Fe(CN)6(3)-and mammalian
cytochrome c
by NADH. These reactions may therefore have the same rate-limiting step. NAD+ activates NADH-dependent reduction of
cytochrome c
, and the apparent maximum velocity for this substrate increases more sharply with the concentration of NAD+ than for hydroxylamine. The simplest explanation is that NAD+ activation of hydroxylamine reduction derives solely from activation of steps involved in the reduction of
cytochrome c
, a flavin-mediated reaction, but these steps are only partly rate-limiting for the reduction of hydroxylamine. At 0.5 mM-NAD+, the apparent maximum velocity was 2.3 times higher for 0.1 mM-
cytochrome c
as substrate than for 100 mM-hydroxylamine, suggesting that the rate-limiting step during hydroxylamine reduction is a step that is not involved in
cytochrome c
reduction. A scheme is proposed that can account for the pattern of variation with [NAD+] of the Michaelis-Menten parameters for hydroxylamine and for NADH with hydroxylamine or
cytochrome c
as oxidized substrate.
...
PMID:The steady state kinetics of the NADH-dependent nitrite reductase from Escherichia coli K12. The reduction of single-electron acceptors. 628 3
The dissimilatory
nitrite reductase
(
cytochrome c
,d1) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was observed at pH 7.5 to catalyze nitrosyl transfer (nitrosation) between [15N]nitrite and several N-nucleophiles or H2 18O, with rate enhancement of the order of 10(8) relative to analogous chemical reactions. The reducing system (ascorbate, N,N,N',N'-tetramethylphenylenediamine) could reduce nitrite (but not NO) enzymatically and had essentially no direct chemical reactivity toward nitrite or NO. The N-nitrosations showed saturation kinetics with respect to the nucleophile and, while exhibiting Vmax values which varied by about 40-fold, nevertheless showed little or no dependence of Vmax on nucleophile pKa. The N-nitrosations and NO-2/H2O-18O exchange required the reducing system, whereas NO/H2O-18O exchange was inhibited by the reducing system. NO was not detected to serve as a nitrosyl donor to N-nucleophiles. These and other kinetic observations suggest that the enzymatic nitrosyl donor is an enzyme-bound species derived from reduced enzyme and one molecule of nitrite, possibly a heme-nitrosyl compound (E-FeII X NO+) for which there is precedence. Nitrosyl transfer to N-nucleophiles may occur within a ternary complex of enzyme, nitrite, and nucleophile. Catalysis of nitrosyl transfer by
nitrite reductase
represents a new class of enzymatic reactions and may present another example of electrophilic catalysis by a metal center. The nitrosyl donor trapped by these reactions is believed to represent an intermediate in the reduction of nitrite by
cytochrome c
,d1.
...
PMID:Catalysis of nitrosyl transfer reactions by a dissimilatory nitrite reductase (cytochrome c,d1). 632 58
A dissimilatory
nitrite reductase
from the facultatively phototrophic bacterium, Rhodopseudomonas palustris strain 1a1 was studied. A basic level of the enzyme (10-50 mU/mg protein) was measured in dark, aerated and anaerobic, photosynthetic cultures. A marked derepression of enzyme synthesis occurred under conditions of oxygen limitation (200-300 mU/mg protein). The addition of nitrite (or nitrate) to the culture medium had only a slight effect on the maximal
nitrite reductase
titer of cells. The enzyme was purified from photosynthetically grown cells by precipitation with ammonium sulfate, gel filtration through Sepharose 6B and repeated chromatography on DE 52-cellulose. As estimated by gel filtration, the
nitrite reductase
had a molecular weight of about 120 000 +/- 12 000 and yielded only one band (mol. wt. of about 68 000 +/- 7000) in SDS-gel electrophoresis. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was at pH 5.1. Nitric oxide (NO) was identified as the reaction product of nitrite reduction. The enzyme also exhibited
cytochrome c
-oxidase activity and was active with chemically reduced viologen dyes, FMN and
cytochrome c
as electron donors. Highly purified
nitrite reductase
preparations contained 10 mol% of a c-type cytochrome. Trace metal analyses indicated the presence of Cu in the enzyme. Consistent with the detection of Cu was the finding that the Cu-chelator, diethyldithiocarbamate, strongly inhibited the
nitrite reductase
.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a dissimilatory nitrite reductase from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. 667 Mar 57
Nitrogen-15 nuclear magnetic resonance (15N NMR) spectroscopy at 30.4 MHz was employed to determine the interaction of the substrate nitrite (97.2% enriched) with bacterial
nitrite reductase
, denoted cytochrome cd1, from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The addition of ferric enzyme to nitrite did not alter the chemical shift of the bulk nitrite resonance, nor was it possible to observe a new resonance from a hypothetical bound form. However, the spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) was lowered from 13.2 to 2.7 s, and the spin-spin relaxation time (T2) was halved. Values of T1 were measured by progressive saturation and values of T2 by line widths. Control experiments involving ferric
cytochrome c
and metmyoglobin demonstrated that the perturbations did not arise from the bulk paramagnetic properties of the protein solutions. Variable enzyme/substrate ratios were measured to assess the strength of interaction. The most reasonable model consistent with the data proposes a weak association between nitrite and ferric reductase with a value of 1.3 M-1 for the association constant.
...
PMID:Nitrogen-15 nuclear magnetic resonance investigation of nitrite reductase-substrate interaction. 681 79
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