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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)
Components I and II of cytochrome cd1 which had different spectral features were purified from the aerobic photosynthetic bacterium, Erythrobacter sp. strain OCh 114. Component I showed an absorption maxima at 700 and 406 nm in the oxidized form, and at 621, 552.5, 548 and 416 nm in the reduced form. Component II showed an absorption maxima at 635 and 410 nm in the oxidized form and at 628, 552.5, 548 and 417 nm in the reduced form. The relative molecular mass, Mr, of both cytochromes was determined to be 135,000 with two identical subunits. Components I and II showed pI values of 7.6 and 6.8, respectively. The redox potential of hemes ranged from +234 mV to +242 mV, except for the heme d1 of component I (Em7 = +134 mV). Components I and II showed both cytochrome c oxidase and
nitrite reductase
activities.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity was strongly inhibited by a low concentration of nitrite and cyanide. Erythrobacter cytochromes c-551 and c-552 were utilized as electron donors for the cytochrome c oxidase reaction. The high affinity of cytochrome c-552 to component II (Km = 1.27 microM) suggested a physiological significance for this cytochrome. Erythrobacter cytochromes cd1 are unique in their presence in cells grown under aerobic conditions as compared to other bacterial cytochromes cd1 which are formed only under denitrifying conditions.
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PMID:Two types of cytochrome cd1 in the aerobic photosynthetic bacterium, Erythrobacter sp. OCh 114. 255 95
The enzyme cytochrome c nitrite reductase catalyses the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia as one of the key steps in the biological nitrogen cycle, where it participates in the anaerobic energy metabolism of dissimilatory nitrate ammonification. Here we report on the crystal structure of this enzyme from the microorganism Sulfurospirillum deleyianum, which we solved by multiwavelength anomalous dispersion methods. We propose a reaction scheme for the transformation of nitrite based on structural and spectroscopic information.
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
is a functional dimer, with 10 close-packed haem groups of type c and an unusual lysine-coordinated high-spin haem at the active site. By comparing the haem arrangement of this
nitrite reductase
with that of other multihaem cytochromes, we have been able to identify a family of proteins in which the orientation of haem groups is conserved whereas structure and function are not.
...
PMID:Structure of cytochrome c nitrite reductase. 1044 Mar 80
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
catalyzes the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia as a key step within the biological nitrogen cycle. Most recently, the crystal structure of the soluble enzyme from Sulfurospirillum deleyianum could be solved to 1.9 A resolution. This set the basis for new experiments on structural and functional aspects of the pentaheme protein which carries a Ca(2+) ion close to the active site heme. In the crystal, the protein was a homodimer with ten hemes in very close packing. The strong interaction between the
nitrite reductase
monomers also occurred in solution according to the dependence of the activity on the protein concentration. Addition of Ca(2+) to the enzyme as isolated had a stimulating effect on the activity. Ca(2+) could be removed from the enzyme by treatment with chelating agents such as EGTA or EDTA which led to a decrease in activity. In addition to nitrite, the enzyme converted NO, hydroxylamine and O-methyl hydroxylamine to ammonia at considerable rates. With N2O the activity was much lower; most likely dinitrogen was the product in this case.
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
exhibited a remarkably high sulfite reductase activity, with hydrogen sulfide as the product. A paramagnetic Fe(II)-NO, S = 1/2 adduct was identified by rapid freeze EPR spectroscopy under turnover conditions with nitrite. This potential reaction intermediate of the reduction of nitrite to ammonia was also observed with PAPA NONOate and Spermine NONOate.
...
PMID:Bacterial cytochrome c nitrite reductase: new structural and functional aspects. 1083 Aug 92
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
catalyzes the 6-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia. This second part of the respiratory pathway of nitrate ammonification is a key step in the biological nitrogen cycle. The x-ray structure of the enzyme from the epsilon-proteobacterium Wolinella succinogenes has been solved to a resolution of 1.6 A. It is a pentaheme c-type cytochrome whose heme groups are packed in characteristic motifs that also occur in other multiheme cytochromes. Structures of W. succinogenes
nitrite reductase
have been obtained with water bound to the active site heme iron as well as complexes with two inhibitors, sulfate and azide, whose binding modes and inhibitory functions differ significantly.
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
is part of a highly optimized respiratory system found in a wide range of Gram-negative bacteria. It reduces both anionic and neutral substrates at the distal side of a lysine-coordinated high-spin heme group, which is accessible through two different channels, allowing for a guided flow of reaction educt and product. Based on sequence comparison and secondary structure prediction, we have demonstrated that cytochrome c nitrite reductases constitute a protein family of high structural similarity.
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PMID:Cytochrome c nitrite reductase from Wolinella succinogenes. Structure at 1.6 A resolution, inhibitor binding, and heme-packing motifs. 1098 87
Paracoccus denitrificans strains with mutations in the genes encoding the cytochrome c(550), c(552), or c(1) and in combinations of these genes were constructed, and their growth characteristics were determined. Each mutant was able to grow heterotrophically with succinate as the carbon and free-energy source, although their specific growth rates and maximum cell numbers fell variably behind those of the wild type. Maximum cell numbers and rates of growth were also reduced when these strains were grown with methylamine as the sole free-energy source, with the triple cytochrome c mutant failing to grow on this substrate. Under anaerobic conditions in the presence of nitrate, none of the mutant strains lacking the cytochrome bc(1) complex reduced nitrite, which is cytotoxic and accumulated in the medium. The cytochrome c(550)-deficient mutant did denitrify provided copper was present. The cytochrome c(552) mutation had no apparent effect on the denitrifying potential of the mutant cells. The studies show that the cytochromes c have multiple tasks in electron transfer. The cytochrome bc(1) complex is the electron acceptor of the Q-pool and of amicyanin. It is also the electron donor to cytochromes c(550) and c(552) and to the cbb(3)-type oxidase.
Cytochrome c
(552) is an electron acceptor both of the cytochrome bc(1) complex and of amicyanin, as well as a dedicated electron donor to the aa(3)-type oxidase.
Cytochrome c
(550) can accept electrons from the cytochrome bc(1) complex and from amicyanin, whereas it is also the electron donor to both cytochrome c oxidases and to at least the
nitrite reductase
during denitrification. Deletion of the c-type cytochromes also affected the concentrations of remaining cytochromes c, suggesting that the organism is plastic in that it adjusts its infrastructure in response to signals derived from changed electron transfer routes.
...
PMID:Cytochromes c(550), c(552), and c(1) in the electron transport network of Paracoccus denitrificans: redundant or subtly different in function? 1171 58
Cytochrome c
(551) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a monomeric redox protein of 82 amino-acid residues, involved in dissimilative denitrification as the physiological electron donor of cd(1)
nitrite reductase
. The distribution of charged residues on the surface of c(551) is very anisotropic: one side is richer in acidic residues whereas the other shows a ring of positive side chains, mainly lysines, located at the border of an hydrophobic patch which surrounds the heme crevice. In order to map in cytochrome c(551) the surface involved in electron transfer, we have introduced specific mutations in three residues belonging to the hydrophobic patch, namely Val23-->Asp, Pro58-->Ala and Ile59-->Glu. The effect of these mutations was analyzed studying both the self-exchange rate and the electron-transfer activity towards P. aeruginosa cd(1)
nitrite reductase
, the physiological partner and P. aeruginosa azurin, a copper protein often used as a model redox partner in vitro. Our results show that introduction of a negative charge in the hydrophobic patch severely hampers both homonuclear and heteronuclear electron transfer.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas aeruginosa cytochrome C(551): probing the role of the hydrophobic patch in electron transfer. 1189 50
The cytochrome c nitrite reductases perform a key step in the biological nitrogen cycle by catalyzing the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonium. Graphite electrodes painted with Escherichia coli cytochrome c nitrite reductase and placed in solutions containing nitrite (pH 7) exhibit large catalytic reduction currents during cyclic voltammetry at potentials below 0 V. These catalytic currents were not observed in the absence of cytochrome c nitrite reductase and were shown to originate from an enzyme film engaged in direct electron exchange with the electrode. The catalytic current-potential profiles observed on progression from substrate-limited to enzyme-limited nitrite reduction revealed a fingerprint of catalytic behavior distinct from that observed during hydroxylamine reduction, the latter being an alternative substrate for the enzyme that is reduced to ammonium in a two electron process.
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
clearly interacts differently with these two substrates. However, similar features underlie the development of the voltammetric response with increasing nitrite or hydroxylamine concentration. These features are consistent with coordinated two-electron reduction of the active site and suggest that the mechanisms for reduction of both substrates are underpinned by common rate-defining processes.
...
PMID:Protein film voltammetry reveals distinctive fingerprints of nitrite and hydroxylamine reduction by a cytochrome C nitrite reductase. 1197 Sep 51
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
catalyzes the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia without the release of potential reaction intermediates, such as NO or hydroxylamine. On the basis of the crystallographic observation of reaction intermediates and of density functional calculations, we present a working hypothesis for the reaction mechanism of this multiheme enzyme which carries a novel lysine-coordinated heme group (Fe-Lys). It is proposed that nitrite reduction starts with a heterolytic cleavage of the N-O bond which is facilitated by a pronounced back-bonding interaction of nitrite coordinated through nitrogen to the reduced (Fe(II)) but not the oxidized (Fe(III)) active site iron. This step leads to the formation of an [FeNO](6) species and a water molecule and is further facilitated by a hydrogen bonding network that induces an electronic asymmetry in the nitrite molecule that weakens one N-O bond and strengthens the other. Subsequently, two rapid one-electron reductions lead to an [FeNO](8) form and, by protonation, to an Fe(II)-HNO adduct. Hereafter, hydroxylamine will be formed by a consecutive two-electron two-proton step which is dehydrated in the final two-electron reduction step to give ammonia and an additional water molecule. A single electron reduction of the active site closes the catalytic cycle.
...
PMID:Mechanism of the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia by cytochrome c nitrite reductase. 1229 41
Cytochrome c
' (cyt c ') is found in the periplasmic space of denitrifying bacteria where it is thought to mediate the transfer of NO between the nitrogen-cycle enzymes dissimilatory
nitrite reductase
and nitric oxide reductase. It contains a 5-coordinate (5c) His-ligated haem that shares spectroscopic and ligand-binding properties with the haem group in the sensory domain of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC). The latter is an extremely important enzyme involved in the control of vasodilation and blood clotting. Curiously, the enzyme is activated up to 200-fold by the binding of NO to the haem, whereas the binding of CO gives rise to only a mild stimulation of activity. Through X-ray crystallography we have studied NO and CO binding to cyt c '. CO binds to the distal face to give a 6-coordinate (6c) adduct. By contrast, NO binding gives rise to a 5c adduct through the displacement of the proximal His, to give a novel and unexpected proximal binding mode for NO. These results are also supported by a range of spectroscopies. In the absence of a crystal structure for sGC we propose that cyt c ' provides a structural model for the haem domain of this enzyme and thereby helps to explain the differential effects of NO and CO on its activity.
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PMID:A two-faced molecule offers NO explanation: the proximal binding of nitric oxide to haem. 1277 55
Cytochrome c
nitrite reductase
is a dimeric decaheme-containing enzyme that catalyzes the reduction of nitrite to ammonium. The contrasting effects of two inhibitors on the activity of this enzyme have been revealed, and defined, by protein film voltammetry (PFV). Azide inhibition is rapid and reversible. Variation of the catalytic current magnitude describes mixed inhibition in which azide binds to the Michaelis complex (approximately 40 mM) with a lower affinity than to the enzyme alone (approximately 15 mM) and leads to complete inhibition of enzyme activity. The position of the catalytic wave reports tighter binding of azide when the active site is oxidized (approximately 39 microM) than when it is reduced. By contrast, binding and release of cyanide are sluggish. The higher affinity of cyanide for reduced versus oxidized forms of
nitrite reductase
is immediately revealed, as is the presence of two sites for cyanide binding and inhibition of the enzyme. Formation of the monocyano complex by reduction of the enzyme followed by a "rapid" scan to high potentials captures the activity-potential profile of this enzyme form and shows it to be distinct from that of the uninhibited enzyme. The biscyano complex is inactive. These studies demonstrate the complexity that can be associated with inhibitor binding to redox enzymes and illustrate how PFV readily captures and deconvolves this complexity through its impact on the catalytic properties of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Resolving complexity in the interactions of redox enzymes and their inhibitors: contrasting mechanisms for the inhibition of a cytochrome c nitrite reductase revealed by protein film voltammetry. 1555 16
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