Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 spectrophotometric method has been developed that uses extracellular hemoglobin (Hb) to trap nitric oxide (NO) released during denitrification as nitrosyl hemoglobin (HbNO). The rate of complexation of NO with Hb is about at the diffusion controlled limit for protein molecules and the product, HbNO, is essentially stable. Hb was added to an anaerobic bacterial suspension and denitrification was initiated with either KNO2 or KNO3. HbNO formation was observed for six species of denitrifying bacteria and showed isosbestic points at 544, 568, and 586 nm. Cellular NO production, presumably by nitrite reductase, was kinetically distinct from the much slower chemical reaction of Hb with KNO2 to form methemoglobin and HbNO. The rate of HbNO formation was proportional to cell density, essentially independent of pH from 6.8 to 7.4, nearly zero order in [Hb] and, at least with Paracoccus denitrificans, strongly inhibited by rotenone and antimycin A. The Cu chelator, diethyldithiocarbamate, had no effect on HbNO formation by Pa. denitrificans, but abolished that by Achromobacter cycloclastes which uses a Cu-containing nitrite reductase known to be inactivated by the chelator. HbNO formation did not occur with non-denitrifying bacteria. The stoichiometry at high [Hb] for conversion of Hb to HbNO was 1.3-1.8 KNO2 per Hb for Pa. denitrificans, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and A. cycloclastes and about 3.4 for Pseudomonas stutzeri. The former range of values corresponds to a partition of about 2 N atoms in 3 toward trapping and 1 in 3 toward reduction on the pathway to N2. Nitrogen not trapped appeared largely as N2O in presence of acetylene. The results are consistent with a model in which NO is a freely diffusible intermediate between nitrite and N2O, providing that nitric oxide reductase is or nearly is a diffusion controlled enzyme.
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PMID:Trapping of nitric oxide produced during denitrification by extracellular hemoglobin. 333 13

We have developed a closed-flow system that continuously sweeps away gases evolved in enzyme assay mixtures into a commercially available oxides of nitrogen (NOx) analyzer for the quantitation of any nitric oxide present in these gases. The system enabled us to study both the stoichiometry and the kinetics of NO production by a copper-containing nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.99.3) purified from Achromobacter cycloclastes IAM 1013. In addition to its much greater sensitivity in comparison with standard gas chromatographic (GC) techniques, the method offers the advantage that NO, a very reactive free radical, is immediately swept away and quantitated, obviating the necessity for periodic manipulations and disturbances of the reaction mixture characteristic of other GC quantitations. The characteristics of the system are discussed and its utility in studies of the kinetics and stoichiometry of NO production from nitrite is confirmed by comparison with results obtained using manometric and GC techniques.
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PMID:Use of a chemiluminescence detector for quantitation of nitric oxide produced in assays of denitrifying enzymes. 367 5

1. The assimilatory nitrite reductase of the N(2)-fixing bacterium Azotobacter chroococcum was prepared in a soluble form from cells grown aerobically with nitrate as the nitrogen source, and some of its properties have been studied. 2. The enzyme is a FAD-dependent metalloprotein (mol.wt. about 67000), which stoicheiometrically catalyses the direct reduction of nitrite to NH(3) with NADH as the electron donor. 3. NADH-nitrite reductase can exist in two either active or inactive interconvertible forms. Inactivation in vitro can be achieved by preincubation with NADH. Nitrite can specifically protect the enzyme against this inactivation and reverse the process once it has occurred. 4. A. chroococcum nitrite reductase is an adaptive enzyme whose formation depends on the presence of either nitrate or nitrite in the nutrient solution. 5. Tungstate inhibits growth of the microorganism very efficiently, by competition with molybdate, when nitrate is the nitrogen source, but does not interfere when nitrite or NH(3) is substituted for nitrate. The addition of tungstate to the culture media results in the loss of nitrate reductase activity but does not affect nitrite reductase.
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PMID:Reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide-nitrite reductase from Azotobacter chroococcum. 414 87

Photoinactivation of ammonia oxidation in cells of Nitrosomonas was shown to follow first-order kinetics with a rate constant proportional to incident light intensity. The action spectrum for photoinactivation consisted of a broad peak in the ultraviolet range, where both hydroxylamine and ammonia oxidation were affected, and a shoulder at approximately 410 nm where only ammonia oxidation was affected. In photoinactivated cells, hydroxylamine but not ammonia was oxidized to nitrite and hydroxylamine but not ammonia caused reduction of cytochromes in vivo. The amount per cell of the following constituents was not measurably altered by photoinactivation: cytochromes b, c, a, and P460; ubiquinone; phospholipid; free amino acids; hydroxylamine-dependent nitrite synthetase; nitrite reductase; p-phenylenediamine oxidase; and cytochrome c oxidase. Malonaldehyde or lipid peroxides were not detected in photoinactivated cells. Photoinactivation was prevented (i) under anaerobic conditions, (ii) in the presence of methanol, allylthiourea, thiosemicarbazide, hydroxylamine, ethylxanthate, or CO at concentrations wich caused 100% inhibition of ammonia oxidation, and (iii) at concentrations of ammonia or hydroxylamine which gave a rapid rate of nitrite production. Recovery of ammonia oxidation activity in 90% inactivated cells took place in 6 h, required an energy and/or nitrogen source, and was inhibited by 400 mug of chloramphenicol per ml.
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PMID:Photoinactivation of ammonia oxidation in Nitrosomonas. 436 12

In L. minor grown in sterile culture, the primary enzymes of nitrate assimilation, nitrate reductase (NR), nitrite reductase (NiR) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) change in response to nitrogen source. NR and NiR levels are low when grown on amino acids (hydrolyzed casein) or ammonia; both enzymes are rapidly induced on addition of nitrate, while addition of nitrite induces NiR only. Ammonia represses the nitrate induced synthesis of both NR and NiR.NADH dependent GDH activity is low when grown on amino acids and high when grown on nitrate or ammonia, but the activities of NADPH dependent GDH and Alanine dehydro-genase (AIDH) are much less affected by nitrogen source. NADH-GDH and AIDH are induced by ammonia, and it is suggested that these enzymes are involved in primary nitrogen assimilation.
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PMID:Nitrogen metabolis of Lemna minor. II. Enzymes of nitrate assimilation and some aspects of their regulation. 579 47

The metabolism of inorganic nitrogen compounds was studied in extracts of Penicillium atrovenetum which had been grown under conditions in which beta-nitropropionic acid (BNP) synthesis varied from 0 to 12.5 mumoles per ml. None of the extracts was able to oxidize ammonium ion or nitrite. An enzyme was detected which catalyzed the oxidation of hydroxylamine with cytochrome c as the electron acceptor. The activity of this enzyme was not related to the ability of the organism to produce BNP. Nitrate and nitrite reductase activities were detected only in P. atrovenetum cultures grown on nitrate as a nitrogen source. These results indicated that BNP synthesis is probably not directly associated with the metabolism of inorganic nitrogen compounds and that an organic pathway for the formation of the nitro group is more likely. The activities of certain enzymes related to the metabolism of aspartic acid were investigated. Aspartate ammonia-lyase activity could not be detected in P. atrovenetum extracts. Aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities were found in the extracts but were highest in the cultures which did not produce BNP. beta-Nitroacrylic acid reductase activity was highest in extracts of cultures which were actively synthesizing BNP.
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PMID:Role of ammonium ion in the biosynthesis of beta-nitropropionic acid. 580 74

This report describes the isolation and characterization of a Neurospora crassa mutant with an impaired regulation of nitrate reductase. Glutamine, which prevents the induction of nitrate reductase in N. crassa, did so relatively ineffectively in this mutant. The mutation did not affect the regulation of all enzymes regulated by "nitrogen metabolite regulation"; it did affect the regulation of nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, histidase, and acetamidase, as well as that of thiourea sensitivity. The mutation was not allelic with nit-2, the gene controlling a general positive effector of nitrogen metabolite-regulated enzyme formation.
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PMID:Physiological characterization of a Neurospora crassa mutant with impaired regulation of nitrate reductase. 610 86

In Neurospora crassa, synthesis of the enzymes of nitrate assimilation, nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase, was repressed by the presence of ammonium, glutamate, or glutamine. This phenomenon was a manifestation of the regulatory process termed nitrogen metabolite repression whereby alternative pathways of nitrogen acquisition are not expressed in cells enjoying nitrogen sufficiency. However, the glutamine synthetase mutant gln-1b had derepressed levels of the nitrate assimilation enzymes. The inability of glutamine to achieve nitrogen metabolite repression in this mutant militated against its potential role as the direct effector of this regulation.
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PMID:Effect of the gln-1b mutation on nitrogen metabolite repression in Neurospora crassa. 610 13

Reduction of nitrite by NADH catalyzed by Pseudomonas aeruginosa nitrite reductase is inhibited by a high concentration of nitric oxide NO. Contrary to what is currently admitted, we find that the nitrite reduction proceeds to the nitrogen monoxide N2O stage. EPR spectra show that, during the catalytic cycle, the enzyme forms specific Fe2+-NO heminic complexes.
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PMID:[Nitrite reduction by NADH, catalyzed by the nitrite reductase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa]. 624 12

The e.p.r. spectra of reduced 14NO- and 15NO-bound Pseudomonas nitrite reductase have been investigated at pH 5.8 and 8.0 in four buffer systems. At pH 8.0, absorption spectra indicated that only the haem d1 was NO-bound, but, although quantification of the e.p.r. signals in all cases accounted for NO bound the the haem d1 in both subunits of the enzyme, the precise form of the signals varied with buffer and temperature. A rhombic species, with gx = 2.07, gz = 2.01 and gy = 1.96, represented in the low-temperature spectra seen in all the buffers was converted at high temperatures (approx. 200K) into a form showing a reduced anisotropy. Hyperfine splitting on the gz component of this rhombic signal indicated a nitrogen atom trans to NO and it is proposed that histidine provides the endogenous axial ligand for haem d1. At pH 5.8, absorption spectra indicated NO binding to both haems c and d1 and e.p.r. quantifications accounted for NO-bound haems c and d1 in both enzyme subunits. The e.p.r. spectra at pH 5.8 were generally similar to those at pH 8.0 with respect to g-values and hyperfine coupling constants, but were broader with less well defined hyperfine splittings. As at pH 8, rhombic signals present in spectra at low temperatures were converted to less anisotropic forms at high temperatures. The results are discussed in relation to work on model nitrosyl-protohaem complexes [Yoshimura, Ozaki, Shintani & Watanabe (1979) Arch. Biochem, Biophys. 193, 301-313]. No. e.p.r. signal was observed from oxidized NO-bound Pseudomonas nitrite reductase at pH 6.0, over the temperature range 6-100K.
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PMID:Electron paramagnetic resonance studies on Pseudomonas nitrosyl nitrite reductase. Evidence for multiple species in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of nitrosyl haemoproteins. 625 32


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