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Query: UMLS:C0519030 (
Klebsiella
)
21,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The primary steps of N2, ammonia and
nitrate
metabolism in
Klebsiella
pneumoniae grown in a continuous culture are regulated by the kind and supply of the nitrogenous compound. Cultures growing on N2 as the only nitrogen source have high activities of nitrogenase, unadenylated glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase and low levels of glutamate dehydrogenase. If small amounts of ammonium salts are added continuously, initially only part of it is absorbed by the organisms. After 2-3 h complete absorption of ammonia against an ammonium gradient coinciding with an increased growth rate of the bacteria is observed. The change in the extracellular ammonium level is paralleled by the intracellular glutamine concentration which in turn regulates the glutamine synthesis and an induction of glutamate dehydrogenase synthesis. Upon deadenylation these events are reversed.--Addition of dinitrophenol causes transient leakage of intracellular ammonium into the medium.
...
PMID:Ammonium uptake and metabolism by mitrogen fixing bacteria. II. Klebsiella pneumoniae. 1 59
The intracellular levels of glutamine synthetase (GS) in Anacystis nidulans grown under different conditions were determined using a whole-cell assay.
Nitrate
-grown cells have 64% more GS than cells grown in ammonium sulfate. Nitrogen starvation does not affect GS levels appreciably. Incubation of
nitrate
-grown cells with ammonium sulfate does not change the ratio of gamma-glutamyl transferase activities stimulated by Mg2+ and Mn2+ ions. An in vitro test of adenylylation indicates that algae do not have an endogenous adenylyl transferase (ATase) and that algal GS is not adenylylatable by the
Klebsiella
aerogenes ATase. Some characteristics of the GS-membrane complex were determined by centrifugation of the complex under varying conditions of pH and ionic strength. In this way, it was shown that acid pH (4.5) stabilizes the complex and high ionic strength tends to solubilize the enzyme. A simple partial purification of GS (89-fold) was developed based on the sedimentation properties of GS.
...
PMID:Distinctive properties of glutamine synthetase from the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans. 3 92
The cyanobacterium Plectonema boryanum (IU 594-UTEX 594) fixes N2 only in the absence of combined N and of O2. We induced nitrogenase by transfer to anaerobic N-free medium and studied the effect of Mo starvation on nitrogenase activity and synthesis. Activity was first detected within 3 h after transfer by the acetylene reduction assay in controls, increasing for at least 25 h. Cells grown on
nitrate
and Mo and then transferred to N-free, Mo-free medium produced 8% of the control nitrogenase activity. Addition of W to the Mo-free medium reduced the activity to 0.5%. Under both Mo starvation conditions, nitrogenase protein components were synthesized. Component II of the cyanobacterial enzyme was detected by in vitro complementation with Mo-containing component I from
Klebsiella
pneumoniae or Azotobacter vinelandii but not Clostridium pasteurianum. Component I activity was restored by addition of Mo to cultures in which new enzyme synthesis was blocked by chloramphenicol. Acidified extracts of Plectonema induced in Mo-containing medium contained the Fe-Mo cofactor required to activate extracts of the Azotobacter mutant UW45 in vitro, but they did not activate extracts of Mo-starved Plectonema. Analysis of 35SO4(2-)-labeled proteins by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis suggested that Mo is required for the conversion of a high-molecular-weight precursor to component I in Plectonema.
...
PMID:Molybdenum independence of nitrogenase component synthesis in the non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Plectonema. 9 92
1. Respiratory nitrate reductase of Bacillus licheniformis was extracted from the bacterial membranes by treatment with deoxycholate and purified to a homogeneous state by means of gel chromatography and anion-exchange chromatography. 2. The enzyme (Mr = 193,000, s20, w = 8.6) consists of two subunits, having apparent molecular weight of 150,000 (alpha subunit) and 57,000 (beta subunit), which are present in an equimolar ratio. It does not contain carbohydrate. Ageing of the enzyme appears to result in splitting of the polypeptide chains at specific sites followed by dissociation and reassociation of the digestion products in various combinations. 3. In contrast to
Klebsiella
aerogenes repiratory nitrate reductase, which is isolated in a tetrameric form that can be reversibly dissociated into a monomeric form by detergents, B. licheniformis nitrate reductase, after isolation, is always present in a monomeric form. This property is related to the difference in membrane localization of the enzyme in the two organisms. 4. B licheniformis nitrate reductase contains 6.9 atoms of non-heme iron, 6.7 atoms of acid-labile sulfide and 0.93 atoms of molybdenum per molecule of enzyme. The molybdenum seems to be part of a low-molecular weight peptide Mo-cofactor) to which it may be bound by interaction with thiol-groups. 5. Antiserum against the native enzyme contains antibodies against both subunits as well as the Mo-cofactor. The Mo-cofactor does not have any antigenic determininants in common with either the alpha or the beta subunit. Also neither subunit cross-reacts with antiserum against the other subunit. Whereas the respiratory
nitrate
reductases from K. aerogenes and Escherichia coli are immunologically related, the native enzyme from B. licheniformis does not show any cross-reaction with antiserum prepared against either the K. aerogenes or the E. coli enzyme.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the respiratory nitrate reductase of Bacillus licheniformis. 10 96
A molybdenum cofactor (Mo-co) from xanthine oxidase (xanthine:oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.2.3.2) can be isolated from the enzyme by a technique that has been used to isolate an iron-molybdenum cofactor (FeMo-co) from component I of nitrogenase. N-Methylformamide is used for the extraction of these molybdenum cofactors. Mo-co from xanthine oxidase activates nitrate reductase (NADPH:
nitrate
oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) in an extract from Neurospora crassa mutant strain Nit-1; however, FeMo-co is unable to activate nitrate reductase in strain Nit-1. Mo-co from xanthine oxidase is unable to activate nitrogenase in an extract of Azotobacter vinelandii mutant strain UW45. Inactive component I in this extract can be activated by FeMo-co. These results indicate that nitrate reductase and xanthine oxidase share a common molybdenum cofactor, but this cofactor is different from the molybdenum cofactor in nitrogenase.A. vinelandii synthesizes both Mo-co and FeMo-co. Mo-co is produced when the cells fix N(2) and also when they are repressed for nitrogenase synthesis by growth in a medium containing excess ammonium. However, FeMo-co is not produced when cells are grown in an ammonium-containing medium. Partially purified preparations of component I from A. vinelandii and
Klebsiella
pneumoniae contain both FeMo-co and Mo-co. The presence of both FeMo-co and Mo-co activities in partially purified preparations of component I explains previous reports of activation of inactive nitrate reductase in strain Nit-1 by acid-treated component I of nitrogenase. The Mo-co can be separated from FeMo-co in these preparations by chromatography on Sephadex G-100 in N-methylformamide. Both FeMo-co and Mo-co are sensitive to oxygen.
...
PMID:Molybdenum cofactors from molybdoenzymes and in vitro reconstitution of nitrogenase and nitrate reductase. 14 98
1. In respiratory nitrate reductase I of
Klebsiella
aerogenes, 0.24 atom of molybdenum, eight iron-sulfur groups and four tightly bound, non-heme iron atoms per molecule of enzyme (Mr 260 000) are found. 2. EPR spectra at 83 degrees K of oxidized and reduced nitrate reductase I show complex lines at g = 2.02 and g = 1.98, which are more intense in the reduced than in the oxidized enzyme. The resonances, the shape and intensity of which are rather temperature insensitive, are attributed to two species of paramagnetic molybdenum. In dithionite-reduced enzyme all these lines are saturated at the same microwave power of 15 mW. This is not the case in oxidized enzyme, where the resonance at g = 2.02 is hard to saturate. Addition of
nitrate
to dithionite-reduced reductase I decreases the intensity of the EPR lines to about that of oxidized enzyme. The participation of molybdenum in the electron transfer process has been discussed. 3. At 18 degrees K the oxidized enzyme exhibits an axial-symmetrical signal with g parallel = 2.10 and g = 2.03, and a signal with unknown symmetry at g = 2.015. Upon reduction by dithionite, a ferredoxin type of signal is observed with g values at 2.05, 1.95 and 1.88, while the g = 2.015 signal disappears. Reoxidation by
nitrate
causes a concomitant disappearance of the ferredoxin type of signal and reappearance of the g = 2.015 signal; hence iron-sulfur centres participate in the transfer of electrons to
nitrate
. 4. Nitrate reductase II, containing only two (Mr 117 000 and 57 000) of the three subunits found in nitrate reductase I and lacking the tightly bound iron, does not exhibit the axial-symmetrical signal (g = 2.10 and 2.03). Thus, it suggested that this signal in nitrate reductase I stems from an iron centre in the low-molecular weight subunit (Mr 52 000). 5. Inhibition studies confirm the participation of metals in the transfer of electrons from reduced benzylviologen to
nitrate
and show that the binding sites for these substrates are different.
...
PMID:Characterization of the respiratory nitrate reductase of Klebsiella aerogenes as a molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur enzyme. 17 Sep 83
1. The respiratory nitrate reductase of
Klebsiella
aerogenes was solubilized from the bacterial membranes by deoxycholate and purified further by means of gel chromatography in the presence of deoxycholate, and anion-exchange chromatography. 2. Dependent on the isolation procedure two different homogeneous forms of the enzyme, having different subunit compositions, can be obtained. These forms are designated nitrate reductase I and nitrate reductase II. Both enzyme preparations are isolated as tetramers having sedimentation constants (s20,w) of 22.1 S and 21.7 S for nitrate reductase I and II, respectively. The nitrate reductase I tetramer has a molecular weight of about 106. 3. In the presence of deoxycholate both enzyme preparations dissociate reversibly into their respective monomeric forms. The monomeric form of nitrate reductase I has a molecular weight of about 260 000 and a sedimentation constant of 9.8 S. For nitrate reductase II these values are 180 000 and 8.5 S, respectively. 4. Nitrate reductase I consists of three different subunits, having molecular weights of 117 000; 57 000 and 52 000, which are present in a 1:1:2 molar ratio, respectively. Nitrate reductase II contains only the subunits with a molecular weight of 117 000 and 57 000 in a equimolar ratio. 5. Treatment at pH 9.5 in the presence of deoxycholate and 0.05 M NaCl or ageing removes the 52 000 Mr subunit from nitrate reductase I. This smallest subunit, in contrast to the other subunits, is a basic protein. 6. The 52 000 Mr subunit has no catalytic function in the intramolecular electron transfer from reduced benzylviologen to
nitrate
. However, it appears to have a structural function since nitrate reductase II, which lacks this subunit, is much more labile than nitrate reductase I. Inactivation of nitrate reductase II can be prevented by the presence of deoxycholate. 7. The spectrum of the enzyme resembles that of iron-sulfur proteins. No cytochromes or contaminating enzyme activities are present in the purified enzyme. Only reduced benzylviologen was found to be capable of acting as an electron donor. 8. p-Chlormercuribenzoate enhances the enzymatic activity at concentrations of 0.1 mM and lower. At higher p-chlormercuribenzoate concentrations the enzymatic activity is inhibited non-competitively with either
nitrate
or benzylviologen as a substrate. The inhibition is not counteracted by cysteine.
...
PMID:Purification, structure and properties of the respiratory nitrate reductase of Klebsiella aerogenes. 23 57
Nitrate reductase (nar) A, B and E mutants of Escherichia coli with plasmids carrying
Klebsiella
pneumoniae nitrogen fixation (nif) genes reduced acetylene independently of added molybdate, but nar D mutants showed pleiotropic dependence on the concentration of added molybdate for expression of both nar and nif. No complementation of nar mutations by nif occurred; nitrite but not
nitrate
repressed nif in nar hosts. Derepression of nif occurred in molybdenum-deficient nar D (nif) strains since nitrogenase peptides were present. nifB mutants, thought to have a lesion in the pathway of molybdenum to nitrogenase, as well as nif deletion mutants, had normal nitrate reductase activity.
...
PMID:Expression of Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogen fixation genes in nitrate reductase mutants of Escherichia coli. 32 14
Tests of the PathoTec system intended for express bacteriological diagnosis were checked in comparative experiments with the common biochemical methods. Cultures of the following microbes were used: Schigella, Salmonella, Escherichia, Citrobacter,
Klebsiella
, Enterobacter, Proteus, Providencia, Pseudomonas, Bordetella, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus. In a number of tests, such as determination of cytochromoxidase,
nitrate
reduciase, phenylalaninedeaminase, indol, acetoin (for the differentiation of enterobacteria), detection of plasmocoagulation and mannite fermentation (for staphylococci) there was revealed a complete coincidence of the results. However, discrepancies were revealed with three of the reagents tested (for lysine decarboxylase, urease, citrate utilization) with regard to some groups of enterobacteria. The advantages of the PathoTec system consisted in more rapid results, simplicity of procedures, economy of media and ware.
...
PMID:[Checking the reliability of the PathoTec biochemical test system for bacterial identification]. 32 64
At growth temperatures above 37 degrees C,
Klebsiella
pneumoniae does not grow in a medium containing N2 or
NO3
- as nitrogen sources. However, both the growth in the presence of other nitrogen sources as well as the in vitro nitrogenase activity are not affected at this temperature. The inability to fix N2 at high temperature is due to the failure of the cells to synthesize nitrogenase and other nitrogen fixation (nif) gene encoded proteins. When cells grown under nitrogen fixing conditions at 30 degrees C were shifted to 39 degrees C, there was a rapid decrease of the rate of de novo biosynthesis of nitrogenase (component 1), nitrogenase reductase (component 2), and the nifJ gene product. There was no degradation of nitrogenase at the elevated temperature since preformed enzyme remained stable over a period of at least 3 h at 39 degrees C. Thus, temperature seems to represent a third control system, besides NH4+ and O2, governing the expression of nif genes of K. pneumoniae.
...
PMID:Temperature control of nitrogen fixation in Klebsiella pneumoniae. 39 99
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