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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)

A method was developed for urinary nitrate analysis utilizing an enzyme of Escherichia coli for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. The resulting nitrite was assayed by a standard diazotization procedure. Under the experimental conditions stoichiometric conversion of nitrate to nitrite was achieved. Crude enzyme present in bacterial suspensions was used without any initial purification and no prior treatment of the urine samples was necessary. The bacteria were cultured under conditions producing high nitrate reductase activity and used formate as an exogenous electron donor without demonstrating any nitrite reductase activity. The procedure was subsequently automated to produce rapid, simultaneous determination of urinary nitrate and nitrite at the rate of 45 analyses/hr.
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PMID:A rapid method for the assay of nitrate in urine using the nitrate reductase enzyme of Escherichia coli. 637 39

Seven known genes control Pseudomonas aeruginosa nitrate assimilation. Three of the genes, designated nas, are required for the synthesis of assimilatory nitrate reductase: nasC encodes a structural component of the enzyme; nasA and nasB encode products that participate in the biosynthesis of the molybdenum cofactor of the enzyme. A fourth gene (nis) is required for the synthesis of assimilatory nitrite reductase. The remaining three genes (ntmA, ntmB, and ntmC) control the assimilation of a number of nitrogen sources. The nas genes and two ntm genes have been located on the chromosome and are well separated from the known nar genes which encode synthesis of dissimilatory nitrate reductase. Our data support the previous conclusion that P. aeruginosa has two distinct nitrate reductase systems, one for the assimilation of nitrate and one for its dissimilation.
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PMID:Chromosomal location and function of genes affecting Pseudomonas aeruginosa nitrate assimilation. 642 Mar 93

Single-site mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa that lack the ability aerobically to assimilate nitrate and nitrite as sole sources of nitrogen have been isolated. Twenty-one of these have been subdivided into four groups by transductional analysis. Mutants in only one group, designated nis, lost assimilatory nitrite reductase activity. Mutants in the other three transductional groups, designated ntmA, ntmB, ntmC, display a pleiotropic phenotype: utilization of a number of nitrogen-containing compounds including nitrite as sole nitrogen sources is impaired. Assimilatory nitrite reductase was shown to be the major route by which hydroxylamine is reduced in aerobically-grown cells.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of mutant Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains unable to assimilate nitrate. 643 49

Experiments were performed to determine whether conditions which cause the rapid loss of nitrate reductase activity in Neurospora crassa mycelia were accompanied by the loss of antigenically detectable nitrate reductase protein. When mycelia with nitrate reductase activity were transferred to ammonia media, there was a rapid loss in the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-nitrate reductase activity plus the parallel loss of the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-diaphorase and the reduced methyl viologen-nitrate reductase activities associated with the nitrate reductase. In addition, there was the loss of cross-reacting material to anti-nitrate reductase antisera that was concomitant with the loss of nitrate reductase activity. When mycelia were exposed to either ammonia plus cycloheximide, nitrate plus cycloheximide, or nitrogen-free media, or to media which lacked an assimilable carbon source, the amount of cross-reacting material declined in concert with the nitrate reductase activity. The mutant nit-6, which lacks nitrite reductase activity, was exposed to ammonia or nitrate plus cycloheximide media. The nitrate reductase and the amount of cross-reacting material declined together as in the wild-type mycelia. We conclude that the loss of nitrate reductase activity was accompanied by the specific loss of this protein and that no pool of inactivated nitrate reductase molecules existed.
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PMID:Repression of nitrate reductase activity and loss of antigenically detectable protein in Neurospora crassa. 644 48

The isolation and characterization of mutants altered for nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa is described. The mutants isolated can be subdivided into five classes on the basis of growth test that correspond to the growth patterns of existing mutants at six distinct loci. Mutants with growth characteristics like those of nit-2, nit-3 and nit-6 are assigned to those loci on the basis of noncomplementation and lack of recombination. Mutants that, from their growth patterns, appear to lack the molybdenum-containing cofactor for both nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase subdivide into three loci (nit-y, nit-8 and nit-9), all of which are gentically distinct from nit-1. nit-9 is a complex locus consisting of three complementation groups and thus appears similar ao the cnxABC locus of Asperillus nidulans. Extensive complementational and recombinational analyses reveal that nit-4 and nit-5 are alleles of the same locus, and two new alleles of that locus have been isolated. The results indicate that, as in A. nidulans, nitrate assimilation in N. crassa requires at least four loci (nit-1, 7, 8 and 9) to produce the molybdenum co-factor for nitrate reductase (and xanthine dehydrogenase), one locus (nit-3) to code for the nitrate reductase apoprotein, one locus (nit-6) to code for the nitrite reductase approtein and only one lous (nit-4/5) for the regulation of induction of the pathway by nitrate and nitrite.
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PMID:The isolation and characterization of mutants defective in nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa. 644 99

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

A biochemical analysis of mutants altered for nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa is described. Mutant alleles at each of the nine nit (nitrate-nonutilizing) loci were assayed for nitrite reductase activity, for three partial activities of nitrate reductase, and for nitrite reductase activity. In each case, the enzyme deficiency was consistent with data obtained from growth tests and complementation tests in previous studies. The mutant strains at these nit loci were also examined for altered regulation of enzyme synthesis. Such experiments revealed that mutations which affect the structural integrity of the native nitrate reductase molecule can result in constitutive synthesis of this enzyme protein and of nitrite reductase. These results provide very strong evidence that, as in Aspergillus nidulans, nitrate reductase autogenously regulates the pathway of nitrate assimilation. However, only mutants at the nit-2 locus affect the regulation of this pathway by nitrogen metabolite repression.
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PMID:Biochemical analysis of mutants defective in nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa: evidence for autogenous control by nitrate reductase. 646 Jan 56

Nitrite reductase has been purified almost 3000-fold, in 35% yield, to a specific activity of 77 units (mg protein)-1 from wheat leaves using a multi-step procedure with affinity chromatography on ferredoxin-Sepharose as the final step. The purified enzyme, although not homogeneous, exhibited absorption maxima at 278, 390, 568 and 687 nm. Minor contaminants were removed by gel filtration in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate to yield a single polypeptide of Mr 60 500 as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Antibodies raised against this polypeptide were shown to cross-react with native nitrite reductase and were used to study the synthesis of nitrite reductase in vivo and in vitro. The increase in nitrite reductase activity following exposure of dark-grown plants to nitrate and light was shown by immunodecoration of Western blots to be due to synthesis de novo. Poly(A)-rich RNA isolated from plants actively synthesising nitrite reductase was shown to direct the synthesis in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate of a polypeptide of Mr 64000 which was immunoprecipitated by antibodies to nitrite reductase.
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PMID:Synthesis of wheat leaf nitrite reductase de novo following induction with nitrate and light. 654 2

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.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a dissimilatory nitrite reductase from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris. 667 Mar 57

Little is known about the role of nitrate in evolution of bacterial energy-generating mechanisms. Denitrifying bacteria are commonly regarded to have evolved from nitrate-respiring bacteria. Some researchers regard denitrification to be the precursor of aerobic respiration; others feel the opposite is true. Currently recognized denitrifying bacteria such as Hyphomicrobium, Paracoccus, Pseudomonas and Thiobacillus form a very diverse group. However, inadequate testing procedures and uncertain taxonomic identification of many isolates may have overstated the number of genera with species capable of denitrification. Nitrate reductases are structurally similar among denitrifying bacteria, but distinct from the enzymes in other nitrate-reducing organisms. Denitryfying bacteria have one of two types of nitrite reductase, either a copper-containing enzyme or an enzyme containing a cytochrome cd moiety. Both types are distinct from other nitrate reductases. Organisms capable of dissimilatory nitrate reduction are widely distributed among eubacterial groups defined by 16S ribosomal RNA phylogeny. Indeed, nitrate reduction is an almost universal property of actinomycetes and enteric organisms. However, denitrification is restricted to genera within the purple photosynthetic group. Denitrification within the genus Pseudomonas is distributed in accordance with DNA and RNA homology complexes. Denitrifiers seem to have evolved from a common ancestor within the purple photosynthetic bacterial group, but not from a nitrate-reducing organism such as those found today. Although denitrification seems to have arisen at the same time as aerobic respiration, the evolutionary relationship between the two cannot be determined at this time.
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PMID:Evolution of bacterial denitrification and denitrifier diversity. 676 49


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