Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.7.1.4 (nitrite reductase)
1,847 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Determinations of iron content and dry-weight measurements on samples of Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase were coupled with sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel-electrophoresis studies of both the native protein and covalently cross-linked oligomers in order to estimate the enzyme's molecular weight and spectral absorption coefficients. A value of epsilon(ox.) (410)=282x10(3) litre.mol(-1).cm(-1) was calculated for a dimeric protein molecule having a total molecular weight of 122000 (based on iron analysis). Steady-state kinetic observations of the enzyme-catalysed oxidation of reduced azurin by nitrite indicated a marked increase in enzyme inactivation as the pH was raised from 5.7 to 7.2. Since NO, a product of the nitrite reductase activity of Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase, is known to bind to the enzyme, a study was undertaken to try to assess the potential of NO as a product inhibitor. Investigations showed that samples of the oxidized protein at pH values 4, 5 and 6 bound NO to both haem c and d(1) components, but oxidized enzyme samples at pH7 and above formed their reduced ligand-bound forms when placed under an atmosphere of the gas. Ascorbate-reduced enzyme samples at pH4, 5, 6 and 7 were also found to bind NO at both haem components, although at pH7 the rate of haem c binding was very slow. At pH8 and 9 only the ferrohaem d(1) bound NO. Titration experiments on the reduced protein over the pH range 5-7, with nitrite as a precursor of NO, showed that the haem d(1) had a much higher affinity than the haem c: experiments at pH5.2 and 5.9 with NO-equilibrated solutions revealed the same pattern of behaviour with the oxidized enzyme.
...
PMID:A re-evaluation of some basic structural and functional properties of Pseudomonas cytochrome oxidase. 4 92

The Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrite reductase (EC 1.6.6.4) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of nitrite to ammonia, a 6-electron transfer reaction. Highly purified preparations of this enzyme exhibit absorption spectra which suggest the presence of a heme component (wavelength maxima for oxidized senzyme: 390 and 578 nm). There is a close correspondence between nitrite reductase activity and absorbance at 400 nm when partially purified nitrite reductase preparations are subjected to sucrose gradient centrifugation. In addition, a role for an iron component in the formation of active nitrite reductase is indicated by the fact that nitrate-induced production of nitrite reductase activity in Neurospora mycelia in vivo requires the presence of iron in the induction medium. The heme chromophore present in Neurospora nitrite reductase preparations is reducible by NADPH. Complete reduction, however, requires the presence of added FAD. The NADPH-nitrite reductase activity of the enzyme is also dependent upon addition of FAD. A spectrally unique complex is formed between the heme chromophore and nitrite (or a reduction product thereof) when nitrite is added to NADPH-reducted enzyme. Carbon monoxide forms a complex with the heme chromophore of nitrite reductase with an intense alpha-band maximum at 590 nm and a beta-band of lower intensity at 550 nm. CO is an inhibitor of NADPH-nitrite reductase activity. Spectrophotometrically detectable CO complex formation and Co inhibition of enzyme activity share the following properties...
...
PMID:Siroheme: a prosthetic group of the Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrite reductase. 12 95

Low-temperature e.p.r. spectra are presented of nitrite reductase purified from leaves of vegetable marrow (Cucurbita pepo). The oxidized enzyme showed a spectrum at g=6.86, 4.98 and 1.95 corresponding to high-spin Fe(3+) in sirohaem, which disappeared slowly on treatment with nitrite. The midpoint potential of the sirohaem was estimated to be -120mV. On reduction with Na(2)S(2)O(4) or Na(2)S(2)O(4)+Methyl Viologen a spectrum at g=2.038, 1.944 and 1.922 was observed, due to a reduced iron-sulphur centre. The midpoint potential of this centre was very low, about -570mV at pH8.1, decreasing with increasing pH. On addition of cyanide, which binds to haem, and Na(2)S(2)O(4), the iron-sulphur centre became further reduced. We think that this is due to an increased midpoint potential of the iron-sulphur centre. Other ligands to haem, such as CO and the reaction product NH(3), had similar but less pronounced effects, and also changed the lineshape of the iron-sulphur signal. Samples were prepared of the enzyme frozen during the reaction with nitrite, Methyl Viologen and Na(2)S(2)O(4) in various proportions. Signals were interpreted as due to the reduced iron-sulphur centre (with slightly different g values), a haem-NO complex and reduced Methyl Viologen. In the presence of an excess of nitrite, the haem-NO spectrum was more intense, whereas in the presence of an excess of Na(2)S(2)O(4) it was weaker, and disappeared at the end of the reaction. A reaction sequence is proposed for the enzyme, in which the haem-NO complex is an intermediate, followed by other e.p.r.-silent states, leading to the production of NH(4) (+).
...
PMID:Electron-paramagnetic-resonance studies of the mechanism of leaf nitrite reductase. Signals from the iron-sulphur centre and haem under turnover conditions. 20 5

EPR spectroscopic and chemical analyses of spinach nitrite reductase show that the enzyme contains one reducible iron-sulfur center, and one site for binding either cyanide or nitrite, per siroheme. The heme is nearly all in the high spin ferric state in the enzyme as isolated. The extinction coefficient of the enzyme has been revised to E386 = 7.6 X 10(4) cm-1 (M heme)-1. The iron-sulfur center is reduced with difficulty by agents such as reduced methyl viologen (equilibrated with 1 atm of H2 at pH 7.7 in the presence of hydrogenase) or dithionite. Complexation of the enzyme with CO (a known ligand for nitrite reductase heme) markedly increases the reducibility of the iron-sulfur center. New chemical analyses and reinterpretation of previous data show that the enzyme contains 6 mol of iron and 4 mol of acid-labile S2-/mol of siroheme. The EPR spectrum of reduced nitrite reductase in 80% dimethyl sulfoxide establishes clearly that the enzyme contains a tetranuclear iron-sulfur (Fe4S4) center. The ferriheme and Fe4S4 centers are reduced at similar rates (k = 3 to 4 s-1) by dithionite. The dithionite-reduced Fe4S4 center is rapidly (k = 100 s-1) reoxidized by nitrite. These results indicate a role for the Fe4S4 center in catalysis.
...
PMID:Identification of the iron-sulfur center of spinach ferredoxin-nitrite reductase as a tetranuclear center, and preliminary EPR studies of mechanism. 21 90

Desulphoviridin in the oxidized state showed EPR signals around g = 6, consistent with the sirohaem being in the high-spin ferric state. This was unreactive with sulphite, sulphide or cyanide; but readily reduced by methyl viologen. When the enzyme was treated with Na2S2O4 the sirohaem was slowly reduced and a spectrum of a reduced iron-sulphur cluster at g = 2.07, 1.93, 1.91 appeared over the course of an hour. An intermediate in this reaction was indicated by a free radical signal which appeared within seconds and then gradually disappeared. On treatment with nitrite and reduced methyl viologen, the enzyme gave a spectrum of a nitroxide derivative similar to that seen with plant nitrite reductase. The midpoint reduction potential of the haem was estimated to be -310 mV or less. The iron-sulphur cluster has a very low potential, being only reduced in the presence of free Na2S2O4 around -560 mV. Desulphoviridin can be classed with sirohaem-containing iron-sulphur proteins.
...
PMID:EPR spectroscopy of the iron-sulphur cluster and sirohaem in the dissimilatory sulphite reductase (desulphoviridin) from Desulphovibrio gigas. 22 47

Ferredoxin-nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1.) from spinach has been purified to homogeneity with a specific activity of 110 units/mg of protein. The enzyme, Mr = 61,000 has 3 iron atoms (of which one is in siroheme) and 2 labile sulfides, i.e. 1 (Fe2-S2) per molecule, with absorption maxima at 276, 386 (Soret), 573 (alpha), and 690 nm, with an E386 of 3.97 X 10(4) M-1-cm-1, and A276/A386 absorptivity ratio of 1.8. Anaerobic addition of dithionite results in the loss of the 690 nm peak and the splitting of the 573 nm absorption band into two broad peaks at 545 and 585 nm. Reduction by dithionite is enhanced by cyanide (Fig. 7) and requires about 3 electron eq per mol of enzyme. With nitrite or hydroxylamine (substrates of the enzyme), cyanide (a competitive inhibitor with respect to nitrite), or sulfite, the 690 nm absorption band of substrate-free enzyme disappears and the absorbance in the Soret and alpha region are altered. The high spin EPR signals disappear (J. M. Vega, H. Kamin, N. R. Orme-Johnson, and W. H. Orme-Johnson, unpublished observations). Titration permits calculation of 1 mol of nitrite bound/mol of enzyme with a Kdiss of 3.2 X 10(-6) M. Dithionite-reduced enzyme also forms complexes with added nitrite, hydroxylamine, or cyanide, characterized by marked alterations in the 573 (alpha) absorption band. THus, substrates or competitive inhibitors can be bound to the oxidized or reduced enzyme forms. CO inhibits nitrite reductase and forms a complex with reduced enzyme (epsilonmax at 395, 543, and 585 nm). Formation or dissociation of the spectrophotometrically detectable CO complex correlates with inhibition or inhibition-reversal of nitrite reduction catalysis. During steady state turnover with dithionite and nitrite, the enzyme forms a complex with added nitrite with absorption difference maxima at 445, 538, and 580 nm with respect to reduced enzyme. When nearly all substrate is depleted the spectrum of a new species appears, indicating that nitrite reductase may form complexes with nitrogen compounds of more than one oxidation state. Nitrite is stoichiometrically reduced to ammonia without detectable free nitrogen compounds of intermediate reduction state. p-Chloromercuribenzoate (pCMB) inhibits nitrite reductase activity and nitrite partially protects against this inhibition. Titration of native enzyme with the mercurial shows that 6 mol of pCMB can be bound/mol or nitrite reductase. The Soret absorption band of the native nitrite reductase is altered and partially bleached in the pCMB-treated enzyme, and the 573 (alpha) band disappears.
...
PMID:Spinach nitrite reductase. Purification and properties of a siroheme-containing iron-sulfur enzyme. 83 4

The roles of molybdenum and iron in the enzymes of the assimilatory nitrate-reducing system from Azotobacter chroococcum have been investigated. 1. By adding 99 Mo-molybdate to a cell culture of A. chrocococcum with nitrate as the nitrogen source, it has been possible to incroporate the radioactive metal into a purified preparation of the enzyme nitrate reductase. 2. When 185 W-tungstate was supplied to a culture medium lacking added molybdate, a 185 W-labelled nitrate reductase preparation with negligible activity could be obtained. This in vivo incorporation of tungsten was competitively hindered by molybdenum. 3. The cellular level of nitrite reductase activity gradually increased in response to the addition of increasing amounts of iron to the culture medium. Under the same conditions, of the level of nitrate reductase activity was not affected.
...
PMID:Molybdenum and iron as functional consitituents of the enzymes of the nitrate-reducing system of Azotobacter chroococcum. 111 63

The inhibitory effects of nitrate (NO3-) and nitrite (NO2-) on dissimilatory iron (FE3+) reduction were examined in a series of electron acceptor competition experiments using Shewanella putrefaciens 200 as a model iron-reducing microorganism. S. putrefaciens 200 was found to express low-rate nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, and ferrireductase activity after growth under highly aerobic conditions and greatly elevated rates of each reductase activity after growth under microaerobic conditions. The effects of NO3- and NO2- on the Fe3+ reduction activity of both aerobically and microaerobically grown cells appeared to follow a consistent pattern; in the presence of Fe3+ and either NO3- or NO2-, dissimilatory Fe3+ and nitrogen oxide reduction occurred simultaneously. Nitrogen oxide reduction was not affected by the presence of Fe3+, suggesting that S. putrefaciens 200 expressed a set of at least three physiologically distinct terminal reductases that served as electron donors to NO3-, NO2-, and Fe3+. However, Fe3+ reduction was partially inhibited by the presence of either NO3- or NO2-. An in situ ferrozine assay was used to distinguish the biological and chemical components of the observed inhibitory effects. Rate data indicated that neither NO3- nor NO2- acted as a chemical oxidant of bacterially produced Fe2+. In addition, the decrease in Fe3+ reduction activity observed in the presence of both NO3- and NO2- was identical to the decrease observed in the presence of NO2- alone. These results suggest that bacterially produced NO2- is responsible for inhibiting electron transport to Fe3+.
...
PMID:Effects of nitrate and nitrite on dissimilatory iron reduction by Shewanella putrefaciens 200. 154 35

Ligand binding reactions and the relation between redox state and ligand binding in the hexa-heme nitrite reductase of Wolinella succinogenes have been studied using laser flash photolysis. On a picosecond time scale, a rapid excursion was observed corresponding to the breaking and reforming of an iron histidine bond. With the CO derivative, a geminate reaction was observed with a rate of 3 ns-1. On a nanosecond time scale, no slower geminate reactions were observed. For the cyanide derivative, no geminate reactions were observed at either time scale. The second order reaction of CO with the enzyme had a time course consisting of two distinct components. This time course changed in form as the enzyme came to equilibrium with CO, and the slower rebinding component was replaced by a faster rebinding component. It is suggested that CO binding enhances reduction of a heme with an unusually low redox potential and opens the structure of the active site to allow a faster second order reaction of CO. The proportion of the geminate CO reaction was unchanged, consistent with changes relatively remote from the ligand binding site. The second order reactions of cyanide also showed that redox effects influence its rebinding reaction. Adding cyanide to the CO complex of nitrite reductase showed that the two ligands have distinct heme binding sites.
...
PMID:The relation of ligand binding to redox state in the hexa-heme nitrite reductase of Wolinella succinogenes. 159 37

Under anaerobic circumstances in the presence of nitrate Paracoccus denitrificans is able to denitrify. The properties of the reductases involved in nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, nitric oxide reductase, and nitrous oxide reductase are described. For that purpose not only the properties of the enzymes of P. denitrificans are considered but also those from Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Pseudomonas stutzeri. Nitrate reductase consists of three subunits: the alpha subunit contains the molybdenum cofactor, the beta subunit contains the iron sulfur clusters, and the gamma subunit is a special cytochrome b. Nitrate is reduced at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane and evidence for the presence of a nitrate-nitrite antiporter is presented. Electron flow is from ubiquinol via the specific cytochrome b to the nitrate reductase. Nitrite reductase (which is identical to cytochrome cd1) and nitrous oxide reductase are periplasmic proteins. Nitric oxide reductase is a membrane-bound enzyme. The bc1 complex is involved in electron flow to these reductases and the whole reaction takes place at the periplasmic side of the membrane. It is now firmly established that NO is an obligatory intermediate between nitrite and nitrous oxide. Nitrous oxide reductase is a multi-copper protein. A large number of genes is involved in the acquisition of molybdenum and copper, the formation of the molybdenum cofactor, and the insertion of the metals. It is estimated that at least 40 genes are involved in the process of denitrification. The control of the expression of these genes in P. denitrificans is totally unknown. As an example of such complex regulatory systems the function of the fnr, narX, and narL gene products in the expression of nitrate reductase in E. coli is described. The control of the effects of oxygen on the reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide are discussed. Oxygen inhibits reduction of nitrate by prevention of nitrate uptake in the cell. In the case of nitrite and nitrous oxide a competition between reductases and oxidases for a limited supply of electrons from primary dehydrogenases seems to play an important role. Under some circumstances NO formed from nitrite may inhibit oxidases, resulting in a redistribution of electron flow from oxygen to nitrite. P. denitrificans contains three main oxidases: cytochrome aa3, cytochrome o, and cytochrome co. Cytochrome o is proton translocating and receives its electrons from ubiquinol. Some properties of cytochrome co, which receives its electrons from cytochrome c, are reported.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Metabolic regulation including anaerobic metabolism in Paracoccus denitrificans. 205 Jun 53


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>