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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)
One allele at each of the five nit loci in Neurospora crassa together with the wild type strain have been compared on various nitrogen sources with regard to (i) their growth characteristics (ii) the level of nitrate reductase and its associated activities (reduced benzyl viologen nitrate reductase and cytochrome c reductase) (iii) the level of nitrate reductase and (iv) their ability to take up nitrite from the surrounding medium. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that nit-3 is the structural gene for nitrate reductase, nit-1 specifies in part of
molybdenum
containing moiety which is responsible for the nit-3 gene product dimerising to form nitrate reductase, nit-4 and nit-5 are regulator genes whose products are involved in the induction of both nitrate reductase and
nitrite reductase
and nit-2 codes for a generalised ammonium activated repressor protein. Studies on the induction of nitrate reductase (and its associated activities) and
nitrite reductase
in wild type, nit-1 and nit-3 in the presence of either nitrate or nitrite suggest that each enzyme may be regulated independently of the other and that nitrite could be true co-inducer of the assimilatory pathway. Nitrite uptake experiments with nit-2, nit-4 and nit-5 strains show that whereas nit-4 and nit-5 are freely permeable to this molecule, it is unable to enter the nit-2 mycelium.
...
PMID:Biochemical studies on the nit mutants of Neurospora crassa. 13 3
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 regulation of the expression of the A. nidulans niiA and niaD genes (encoding
nitrite reductase
and nitrate reductase activities, respectively) was investigated by Northern blotting. It was demonstrated that expression of the niiA and niaD genes is controlled at the level of mRNA accumulation and that mutations within the nirA and areA regulatory genes, as well as certain mutations within niaD itself or cnxE (for its
molybdenum
cofactor), markedly affect niiA and niaD transcript levels.
...
PMID:Nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase transcript levels in various mutants of Aspergillus nidulans: confirmation of autogenous regulation. 153 1
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
The nitrate assimilatory pathway in Neurospora crassa is composed of two enzymes, nitrate reductase and
nitrite reductase
. Both are alpha 2 type homodimers. Enzyme-bound prosthetic groups mediate the electron transfer reactions which reduce inorganic nitrate to an organically utilizable form, ammonium. One, a
molybdenum
-containing cofactor, is required by nitrate reductase for both enzyme activity and holoenzyme assembly. Three modes of regulation are imposed on the expression of nitrate assimilation, namely: nitrogen metabolite repression, nitrate induction and autogenous regulation by nitrate reductase. In this study, nitrocellulose blots of sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) resolved proteins from crude extracts of the wild type and specific nitrate-nonutilizing (nit) mutants were examined for material cross-reactive with antibodies against nitrate reductase and
nitrite reductase
. The polyclonal antibody preparations used were rendered monospecific by reverse affinity chromatography. Growth conditions which alter the regulatory response of the organism were selected such that new insight could be made into the complex nature of the regulation imposed on this pathway. The results indicate that although nitrate reductase and
nitrite reductase
are coordinately expressed under specific nutritional conditions, the enzymes are differentially responsive to the regulatory signals.
...
PMID:Nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa: enzymatic and immunoblot analysis of wild-type and nit mutant protein products in nitrate-induced and glutamine-repressed cultures. 296 44
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.
...
PMID:Chromosomal location and function of genes affecting Pseudomonas aeruginosa nitrate assimilation. 642 Mar 93
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.
...
PMID:The isolation and characterization of mutants defective in nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa. 644 99
The nitrate reductase gene (niaD) and
nitrite reductase
gene (niiA) of Aspergillus parasiticus are clustered and are divergently transcribed from a 1.6-kb intergenic region (niaD-niiA). The deduced aminoacid sequence of the A. parasiticus nitrate reductase demonstrated a high degree of homology to those of other Aspergillus species, as well as to Leptosphaeria maculans, Fusarium oxysporum, Gibberella fujikuroi and Neurospora crassa, particularly in the cofactor-binding domains for
molybdenum
, heme and FAD. A portion of the deduced
nitrite reductase
sequence was homologous to those of A. nidulans and N. crassa. The nucleotide sequences in niaD-niiA of A. parasiticus and of A. oryzae were 95% identical, indicating that these two species are closely related. Several GATA motifs, the recognition sites for the N. crassa positive-acting global regulatory protein NIT2 in nitrogen metabolism, were found in A. parasiticus niaD-niiA. Two copies of the palindrome TCCGCGGA and other partial palindromic sequences similar to the target sites for the pathway specific regulatory proteins, N. crassa NIT4 and A. nidulans NirA, in nitrate assimilation, were also identified. A recombinant protein containing the A. nidulans AreA (the NIT2 equivalent) zinc finger and an adjacent basic region was able to bind to segments of niaD-niiA encompassing the GATA motifs. These results suggest that the catalytic and regulatory mechanisms of nitrate assimilation are well conserved in Aspergillus.
...
PMID:Characterization of the Aspergillus parasiticus niaD and niiA gene cluster. 866 12
Nitrate is a significant nitrogen source for plants and microorganisms. Recent molecular genetic analyses of representative bacterial species have revealed structural and regulatory genes responsible for the nitrate-assimilation phenotype. Together with results from physiological and biochemical studies, this information has unveiled fundamental aspects of bacterial nitrate assimilation and provides the foundation for further investigations. Well-studied genera are: the cyanobacteria, including the unicellular Synechococcus and the filamentous Anabaena; the gamma-proteobacteria Klebsiella and Azotobacter; and a Gram-positive bacterium, Bacillus. Nitrate uptake in most of these groups seems to involve a periplasmic binding protein-dependent system that presumably is energized by ATP hydrolysis (ATP-binding cassette transporters). However, Bacillus may, like fungi and plants, utilize electrogenic uptake through a representative of the major facilitator superfamily of transport proteins. Nitrate reductase contains both
molybdenum
cofactor and an iron-sulfur cluster. Electron donors for the enzymes from cyanobacteria and Azotobacter are ferredoxin and flavodoxin, respectively, whereas the Klebsiella and Bacillus enzymes apparently accept electrons from a specific NAD(P)H-reducing subunit. These subunits share sequence similarity with the reductase components of bacterial aromatic ring-hydroxylating dehydrogenases such as toluene dioxygenase. Nitrite reductase contains sirohaem and an iron-sulfur cluster. The enzymes from cyanobacteria and plants use ferredoxin as the electron donor, whereas the larger enzymes from other bacteria and fungi contain FAD and NAD(P)H binding sites. Nevertheless, the two forms of
nitrite reductase
share recognizable sequence and structural similarity. Synthesis of nitrate assimilation enzymes and uptake systems is controlled by nitrogen limitation in all bacteria examined, but the relevant regulatory proteins exhibit considerable structural and mechanistic diversity in different bacterial groups. A second level of control, pathway-specific induction by nitrate and nitrite in Klebsiella, involves transcription antitermination. Several issues await further experimentation, including the mechanism and energetics of nitrate uptake, the pathway(s) for nitrite uptake, the nature of electron flow during nitrate reduction, and the action of transcriptional regulatory circuits. Fundamental knowledge of nitrate assimilation physiology should also enhance the study of nitrate metabolism in soil, water and other natural environments, a challenging topic of considerable interest and importance.
...
PMID:Nitrate assimilation by bacteria. 932 45
Nitrate reduction in the dissimilatory iron-reducing bacterium Geobacter metallireducens was investigated. Nitrate reductase and
nitrite reductase
activities in nitrate-grown cells were detected only in the membrane fraction. The apparent K(m )values for nitrate and nitrite were determined to be 32 and 10 microM, respectively. Growth on nitrate was not inhibited by either tungstate or molybdate at concentrations of 1 mM or less, but was inhibited by both at 10 and 20 mM. Nitrate and
nitrite reductase
activity in the membrane fraction was not, however, affected by dialysis with 20 mM tungstate. An enzyme complex that exhibited both nitrate and
nitrite reductase
activity was solubilized from membrane fractions with CHAPS and was partially purified by preparative gel electrophoresis. It was found to be composed of four different polypeptides with molecular masses of 62, 52, 36, and 16 kDa. The 62-kDa polypeptide [a low-midpoint potential (-207 mV), multiheme cytochrome c] exhibited
nitrite reductase
activity under denaturing conditions. No
molybdenum
was detected in the complex by plasma-emission mass spectrometry.
...
PMID:A heme-C-containing enzyme complex that exhibits nitrate and nitrite reductase activity from the dissimilatory iron-reducing bacterium Geobacter metallireducens. 1055 Apr 73
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