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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 Neurospora crassa assimilatory NAD(P)H-
nitrite reductase
complex has associated a NAD(P)H-
diaphorase
activity. 1. This NAD(P)H-
diaphorase
activity can use either mammalian cytochrome c, 2,6--dichlorophenol-indophenol, ferricyanide, or menadione as electron acceptor from the reduced pyridine nucleotides, and requires flavin adenine dinucleotide for maximal activity. 2. It is inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, 1 muM, and it is unaffected by cyanide, sulfite, or arsenite at concentrations which completely inhibit the NAD(P)H-
nitrite reductase
activity. 3. Flavin adenine dinucleotide specifically protects the NAD(P)H-
diaphorase
activities, but not the NAD(P)H-
nitrite reductase
activities, against thermal inactivation. 4. In vitro preincubation of the Neurospora crassa
nitrite reductase
complex with reduced pyridine nucleotides plus flavin adenine dinucleotide inactivates the NAD(P)H-
nitrite reductase
activities, but does not affect the NAD(P)H-
diaphorase
activities, indicating that this
nitrite reductase
inactivation occurs in the part of the enzyme that contain the nitrite reducing center.
...
PMID:A reduced pyridine nucleotides-diaphorase activity associated to the assimilatory nitrite reductase complex from Neurospora crassa. 13 35
Various mutants of Neurospora crassa were screened for light-stimulated conidiation which is a blue light effect and, at least in strain albino-band, is mediated by the flavoprotein nitrate reductase (NR). NR- mutants showed practically no photoconidiation under standard conditions. However, in fusion products of nit-1 (
diaphorase
activity present, terminal activity missing) plus nit-3 (terminal activity present,
diaphorase
activity missing), NR activities and photoconidiation were partially restored. Mutants with altered light sensitivities, such as white collar WC-1 and light-insensitive lis-2 and lis-3, had normal NR activities and their conidiation was promoted by light, whereas WC-2 and lis-1 responded only slightly. These two mutants showed low NR activities especially when grown on solid medium which might be the cause of their blindness. Experiments with NR- mutants indicated that
nitrite reductase
might also act as a blue light photoreceptor.
...
PMID:Photostimulation of conidiation in mutants of Neurospora crassa. 183 Aug 99
1. NADPH-dependent
nitrite reductase
from the leaves of higher plants was purified at least 70-fold and separated into two enzyme fractions. The first enzyme, a
diaphorase
with ferredoxin-NADP-reductase activity, is required only to transfer electrons from NADPH to a suitable electron acceptor, which then donates electrons to
nitrite reductase
proper. 2. Purified
nitrite reductase
accepted electrons from ferredoxin (the natural donor) or from reduced dyes. Ferredoxin was reduced by illuminated chloroplasts or dithionite, or by NADPH when
diaphorase
was present. The purified enzyme did not accept electrons directly from NADPH. 3. Ferredoxins purified from maize, spinach or Clostridium were interchangeable in the nitrite-reductase system. 4. Nitrite reductase had K(m) 0.15mm for nitrite. The pH optimum varied with plant and method of assay. The preparation had low sulphite-reductase activity. Ammonia was the product of nitrite reduction. 5. For some plants, the assay of crude preparations with NADPH was limited by
diaphorase
and the addition of
diaphorase
gave a better estimate of nitrite-reductase activity. A simple method of assay is described that uses dithionite with benzyl viologen as electron donor.
...
PMID:The purification and properties of nitrite reductase from higher plants, and its dependence on ferredoxin. 438 17
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
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.
...
PMID:Repression of nitrate reductase activity and loss of antigenically detectable protein in Neurospora crassa. 644 48
Severely Ca-deficient Triticum aestivum L. seedlings accumulated high levels of nitrite and moderate levels of nitrate and organic nitrogen, but contained unaltered levels of hydroxylamine. Nitrite accumulation was not related to molybdenum deficiency, or altered cellular pH. Nitrate reductase was decreased by Ca deficiency, apparently by repression of enzyme synthesis from accumulated nitrite and not by inhibition of enzyme activity. Nitrite reductase and NADP
diaphorase
activities were not affected by Ca deficiency, and Ca did not restore activity to
nitrite reductase
inactivated by cyanide. The results indicated that the role of Ca is in intracellular transport of nitrite and not in induction or activity of enzymes.
...
PMID:Evidence for a role of calcium in nitrate assimilation in wheat seedlings. 1665 39
A nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1)-inactivating factor has been isolated from 8-day-old wheat leaves. The purification schedule involved ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex G-100 filtration, DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and Sephadex G-150 filtration. No accurate assessment could be made as to the degree of purification relative to crude extract as the inactivating factor could not be detected in crude extract. However a 2,446-fold purification was achieved from the ammonium sulfate fraction to the pooled enzyme from the Sephadex G-150 step.The inactivating factor was heat-labile and had a molecular weight of 37,500. The inactivating factor was particularly sensitive to the divalent metal chelators, 1,10-phenanthroline and bathophenanthroline. Evidence indicated that Fe(2+) may be the functional metal. The trypsin inhibitors N-alpha-p-tosyl-l-lysine chloromethyl ketone and alpha-N-benzoyl-l-arginine were inhibitory. However, phenylmethyl sulfonyl fluoride, an inhibitor of serine peptide hydrolases, was not inhibitory. Neither casein nor hemoglobin nor a range of artificial substrates were hydrolyzed by the inactivating factor. Highly purified wheat leaf
nitrite reductase
(EC 1.7.99.3) and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase:oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) were not affected by the nitrate reductase-inactivating factor.The inactivating factor was more active toward the NADH-nitrate reductase compared to either of the component enzymic activities flavin adenine mononucleotide-nitrate reductase and methyl viologen-nitrate reductase. The NADH-ferricyanide reductase (
diaphorase
) component was the least sensitive.
...
PMID:In Vitro Stability of Nitrate Reductase from Wheat Leaves: III. Isolation and Partial Characterization of a Nitrate Reductase-inactivating Factor. 1666 Oct 24
The nitrite-reducing activity of the normal susceptible biotype of lambsquarters (Chenopodium album L.) was strongly inhibited by atrazine in the assay medium, both in the case of the in vivo assays of leaf discs in light, and in vitro photoreduction assays of crude extracts. In vitro assays of crude extracts with methylviologen or ferredoxin supplying the reducing potential were not inhibited by atrazine. In the resistant biotype, inhibition of nitrite reduction did not occur with any of the above assays. Thus, it appears that atrazine does not inhibit
nitrite reductase
itself, but rather the availability of photosynthetically supplied electrons for the reduction. Atrazine had no effect when added to the media for either in vivo or in vitro assays of nitrate reduction by either the susceptible or resistant biotype.Young lambsquarters plants were treated with atrazine by spraying the leaves at a rate which was lethal for susceptible plants after 5 or 6 days, but had little effect on the resistant biotype. Nitrite did not accumulate in either biotype, but remained present at the level of about 0.1 microgram nitrite N per gram fresh weight. The nitrate content of susceptible-type leaves did increase to two or three times the initial level, during the first four days after spraying. Usually the only visible effect on the plants during this time was a decreased growth rate. Twenty-four hours after spraying the following activities had fallen to 25% or less of the activities of solvent-sprayed control plants: in vivo
nitrite reductase
, in vivo nitrate reductase, in vitro NADH-nitrate reductase, in vitro reduced flavin mononucleotidenitrate reductase, and in vitro NADH-
diaphorase
. In these atrazine-treated plants, in vitro
nitrite reductase
activity with reducing potential supplied by methylviologen was not affected, nor were any of the above activities in leaves of atrazine-treated resistant plants. The abrupt fall in nitrate reductase represents an effect of atrazine not directly related to inhibition of photosynthesis.
...
PMID:Reduction of Nitrate and Nitrite in Lambsquarters (Chenopodium album) Biotypes Resistant and Susceptible to Atrazine Toxicity. 1666 20
The authors have studied indices of natriuretic peptide and oxidative stress in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). 52 male patients with postinfarction cardiosclerosis (PICS) who have developed CHF have been observed. The age of the patients varied from 38 till 60. It was established that CHF patients with progression of the disease had worsening of their clinical condition together with an increase of oxidative stress which was characterized through decrease of NO metabolites, NADPH--
diaphorase
(eNOS), increase of
nitrite reductase
(iNOS) and peroxinitrite (ONOO), correlative increase the level of brain natriuretic peptide in blood plazma. Reliable connection between considerable increase of oxidative stress and the level of NT-pro BNP was noted in CHF patients, which demands necessity of correction of observed disorders.
...
PMID:[Assessment of natriuretic peptide indices and oxidative stress in patients with chronic heart failure]. 2060 27
Plastids from roots of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings were isolated by discontinuous Percoll-gradient centrifugation. Coinciding with the peak of
nitrite reductase
(NiR; EC 1.7.7.1, a marker enzyme for plastids) in the gradients was a peak of a glucose-6-phosphate (Glc6P) and NADP(+)-linked nitrite-reductase system. High activities of phosphohexose isomerase (EC 5.3.1.9) and phosphoglucomutase (EC 2.7.5.1) as well as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Glc6PDH; EC 1.1.1.49) and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH; EC 1.1.1.44) were also present in the isolated plastids. Thus, the plastids contained an overall electron-transport system from NADPH coupled with Glc6PDH and 6PGDH to nitrite, from which ammonium is formed stoichiometrically. However, NADPH alone did not serve as an electron donor for nitrite reduction, although NADPH with Glc6P added was effective. Benzyl and methyl viologens were enzymatically reduced by plastid extract in the presence of Glc6P+ NADP(+). When the plastids were incubated with dithionite, nitrite reduction took place, and ammonium was formed stoichiometrically. The results indicate that both an electron carrier and a
diaphorase
having ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase activity are involved in the electron-transport system of root plastids from NADPH, coupled with Glc6PDH and 6PGDH, to nitrite.
...
PMID:Nitrite reduction in barley-root plastids: Dependence on NADPH coupled with glucose-6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenases, and possible involvement of an electron carrier and a diaphorase. 2424 Sep 61
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