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Query: UNIPROT:P39060 (
endostatin
)
2,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. The magnitude of the protonmotive force in phosphorylating membrane vesicles from Paracoccus denitrificans was estimated. The membrane potential component was determined from the uptake of S(14)CN(-), and the transmembrane pH gradient component from the uptake of [(14)C]methylamine. In each case a flow-dialysis technique was used to monitor uptake. 2. With
NADH
as substrate, the membrane potential was about 145mV and the pH gradient was below 0.5 pH unit. The membrane potential was decreased by approx. 15mV during ATP synthesis, and was abolished on addition of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone. In the presence of KCl plus valinomycin the membrane potential was replaced by a pH gradient of 1.5 units. 3. Succinate oxidation generated a membrane potential of approx. 125mV and the pH gradient was below 0.5 pH unit. Oxidation of ascorbate (in the presence of antimycin) with either 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine or NNN'N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine as electron mediator usually generated a membrane potential of approx. 90mV. On occasion, ascorbate oxidation did not generate a membrane potential, suggesting that the presence of a third energy-coupling site in P. denitrificans vesicles is variable. 4. With
NADH
or succinate as substrate, the phosphorylation potential (DeltaG(p)=DeltaG(0)'+RTln[ATP]/ [ADP][P(i)]) was approx. 53.6kJ/mol (12.8kcal/mol). Comparison of this value with the protonmotive force indicates that more than 3 protons need to be translocated via the adenosine triphosphatase of P. denitrificans for each molecule of ATP synthesized by a chemiosmotic mechanism. In the presence of 10mm-
KNO
(3) the protonmotive force was not detectable (<60mV) but DeltaG(p) was not altered. This result may indicate either that there is no relationship between the protonmotive force and DeltaG(p), or that for an unidentified reason the equilibration of SCN(-) or methylamine with the membrane potential and the pH gradient is prevented by NO(3) (-) in this system.
...
PMID:The protonmotive force in phosphorylating membrane vesicles from Paracoccus denitrificans. Magnitude, sites of generation and comparison with the phosphorylation potential. 21 22
The respiratory metabolism of Schizosaccharomyces pombe 972h(-), a fission, haplontic, "petite negative" yeast, was studied. Glucose and glycerol are good growth substrates and are oxidized under appropriate conditions. l-Lactate, ethanol, malate, and succinate are oxidized but are poor substrates for growth. d-Lactate and pyruvate are neither oxidized nor used for growth. Limited growth was observed under anaerobic conditions. The addition of 0.3%
KNO
(3) to a rich medium relieves the oxygen requirement. A continuous increase of cell respiration during growth on repressive concentration of glucose was observed, suggesting the presence of glucose repression of respiration. Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (
NADH
), succinate, alpha-glycerophosphate, and ascorbate plus tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine are oxidized by a mitochondrial fraction.
NADH
and succinate oxidations are inhibited by antimycin A and NaCN but not by rotenone, suggesting the absence of the phosphorylation site I and the presence of sites II and III. The effects of several mitochondrial inhibitors on growth and respiration indicate that the requirement of an oxidant for growth is related neither to the functioning of the respiratory electron transport chain nor to the formation of respiratory energy. The previously suggested correlations between the nonviability of vegetative "petites" mutants, the absence of repression of respiration by glucose, and the incapacity to grow under anaerobic conditions are thus not strictly valid for S. pombe.
...
PMID:Respiratory metabolism of a "petite negative"yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe 972h-. 439
Isosteviol lactone (LAC), a lactone derivative of the diterpenic acid isosteviol (ISO) was evaluated for its effect on the oxidative metabolism of mitochondria isolated from rat liver. In this model, LAC (1 mM) depressed the phosphorylation efficiency, as shown by the decreased respiratory control coefficient (RCC) and ADP/O ratio. LAC (1 mM) inhibited
NADH
oxidase (45%), succinate oxidase (34%) and promoted low-level inhibitions on succinate dehydrogenase (13%), succinate-cytochrome c oxide-reductase (23%), cytochrome c oxidase (10%), and NADH dehydrogenase (13%). Glutamate dehydrogenase was also a target for LAC, as it was 85% inhibited by 1 mM LAC. Cyclic voltammetry data showed that LAC, as well as ISO, does not undergo redox reactions under current experimental conditions. LAC (0.05-0.75 mM) inhibited the swelling dependent on the glutamate oxidation, 50% of the effect occurring at 0.5 mM LAC. Swelling supported by
KNO
(3) and valinomycin was also inhibited over all concentrations used of LAC and ISO, the effect being of a lower intensity for LAC, suggesting that the modification of the structure of ISO by lactonization diminished its interaction with the membrane. This could contribute to attenuation of the toxic effects described for ISO on mitochondrial function, such as those on respiratory chain enzymatic complexes and phosphorylating activity.
...
PMID:Activity of isosteviol lactone on mitochondrial metabolism. 1269 84
An in vivo assay of nitrate reductase activity was developed by vacuum infiltration of leaf discs or sections with a solution of 0.2 m
KNO
(3) (with or without phosphate buffer, pH 7.5) and incubation of the infiltrated tissue and medium under essentially anaerobic conditions in the dark. Nitrite production, for computing enzyme activity, was determined on aliquots of the incubation media, removed at intervals.By adding, separately, various metabolites of the glycolytic, pentose phosphate, and citric acid pathways to the infiltrating media, it was possible to use the in vivo assay to determine the prime source of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (
NADH
) required by the cytoplasmically located
NADH
-specific nitrate reductase. It was concluded that sugars that migrate from the chloroplast to the cytoplasm were the prime source of energy and that the oxidation of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate was ultimately the in vivo source of
NADH
for nitrate reduction.THIS CONCLUSION WAS SUPPORTED BY EXPERIMENTS THAT INCLUDED: inhibition studies with iodoacetate; in vitro studies that established the presence and functionality of the requisite enzymes; and studies showing the effect of light (photosynthate) and exogenous carbohydrate on loss of endogenous nitrate from plant tissue.The level of nitrate reductase activity obtained with the in vitro assay is higher (2.5- to 20-fold) than with the in vivo assay for most plant species. The work done to date would indicate that the in vivo assays are proportional to the in vitro assays with respect to ranking genotypes for nitrate-reducing potential of a given species. The in vivo assay is especially useful in studying nitrate assimilation in species like giant ragweed from which only traces of active nitrate reductase can be extracted.
...
PMID:Generation of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide for nitrate reduction in green leaves. 1665 41
A NADH-nitrate reductase inhibitor has been isolated from young soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. Var. Amsoy) leaves that had been in the dark for 54 hours. The presence of the inhibitor was first suggested by the absence of nitrate reductase activity in the homogenate until the inhibitor was removed by diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography. The inhibitor inactivated the enzyme in homogenates of leaves harvested in the light. Nitrate reductases in single whole cells isolated through a sucrose gradient were equally active from leaves grown in light or darkness, but were inhibited by addition of the active inhibitor.The NADH-nitrate reductase inhibitor was purified 2,500-fold to an electrophoretic homogeneous protein by a procedure involving DEAE- cellulose chromatography, Sephadex G-100 filtration, and ammonium sulfate precipitation followed by dialysis. The assay was based on nitrate reductase inhibition. A rapid partial isolation procedure was also developed to separate nitrate reductase from the inhibitor by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and elution with
KNO
(3). The inhibitor was a heat-labile protein of about 31,000 molecular weight with two identical subunits. After electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel two adjacent bands of protein were present; an active form and an inactive form that developed on standing. The active factor inhibited leaf NADH-nitrate reductase but not NADPH-nitrate reductase, the bacterial nitrate reductase or other enzymes tested. The site of inhibition was probably at the reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide-NR reaction, since it did not block the partial reaction of
NADH
-cytochrome c reductase. The inhibitor did not appear to be a protease. Some form of association of the active inhibitor with nitrate reductase was indicated by a change of inhibitor mobility through Sephadex G-75 in the presence of the enzyme. The inhibition of nitrate reductase was noncompetitive with nitrate but caused a decrease in V(max).The isolated inhibitor was inactivated in the light, but after 24 hours in the dark full inhibitory activity returned. Equal amounts of inhibitor were present in leaves harvested from light or darkness, except that the inhibitor was at first inactive when rapidly isolated from leaves in light. Photoinactivation of yellow impure inhibitor required no additional components, but inactivation of the purified colorless inhibitor required the addition of flavin.Preliminary evidence and a procedure are given for partial isolation of a component by DEAE-cellulose chromatography that stimulated nitrate reductase. The data suggest that light-dark changes in nitrate reductase activity are regulated by specific protein inhibitors and stimulators.
...
PMID:NADH-Nitrate Reductase Inhibitor from Soybean Leaves. 1666 Apr 85
l-Canavanine inhibits the appearance of nitrate reductase (
NADH
-nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.1) in both root tips and mature root sections of corn (Zea mays L.). Ten-fold more canavanine was required to cause a 50% reduction in the level of nitrate reductase activity (NRA) in root tips than in mature root sections. For example with one particular batch of seeds 500 mum canavanine was effective in root tips whereas only 50 mum was required in mature root sections. In root tips arginine (1 mm) completely reversed the effect of 1 mm canavanine. In mature root sections higher concentrations of arginine (approximately 5 mm) were required for a complete reversal of the canavanine effect. Additions of canavanine to roots after a period of 3 hours with 5 mm
KNO
(3) resulted in a loss of NRA. NO(3) (-) protected nitrate reductase from this inactivation in both root tip and mature root sections.
...
PMID:Effect of l-Canavanine on Nitrate Reductase in Corn Roots. 1666 May 86
The cotyledons of soybean begin to develop photosynthetic capacity shortly after emergence. The cotyledons develop nitrate reductase (NR) activity in parallel with an increase in chlorophyll and a decrease in protein. In crude extracts of 5- to 8-day-old cotyledons, NR activity is greatest with
NADH
as electron donor. In extracts of older cotyledons, NR activity is greatest with NADPH. Blue-Sepharose was used to purify and separate the NR activities into two fractions. When the blue-Sepharose was eluted with NADPH, NR activity was obtained which was most active with NADPH as electron donor. Assays of the NADPH-eluted NR with different concentrations of nitrate revealed that the highest activity was obtained in 80 millimolar
KNO
(3). Thus, this fraction has properties similar to the low nitrate affinity NAD(P)H:NR of soybean leaves. When 5- to 8-day-old cotyledons were extracted and purified, further elution of the blue-Sepharose with
KNO
(3), subsequent to the NADPH elution, yielded an NR fraction most active with
NADH
. Assays of this fraction with different nitrate concentrations revealed that this NR had a higher nitrate affinity and was similar to the
NADH
:NR of soybean leaves. The
KNO
(3)-eluted NR fraction which was purified from the extracts of 9- to 14-day-old cotyledons, was most active with NADPH. The analysis of these fractions prepared from the extracts of older cotyledons indicated that residual NAD(P)H:NR contaminated the
NADH
:NR. Despite this complication, the pattern of development of the purified NR fractions was consistent with the changes observed in the crude extract NR activities. It was concluded that
NADH
:NR was most active in young cotyledons and that as the cotyledons aged the NAD(P)H:NR became more active.
...
PMID:Development of NAD(P)H: and NADH:Nitrate Reductase Activities in Soybean Cotyledons. 1666 Dec 45
The primary leaves from corn seedlings grown for 6 days were harvested, frozen with liquid N(2) and extracted in a Tris buffer (pH 8.5, 250 millimolar) containing 1 millimolar dithiothreitol, 10 millimolar cysteine, 1 millimolar EDTA, 20 micromolar flavin adenine dinucleotide and 10% (v/v) glycerol. Nitrate reductase (NR) in the crude extract was stable for several days at 0 degrees C and for several months at -80 degrees C. The enzyme was purified using (NH(4))(2)SO(4) fractionation, brushite-hydroxyl-apatite chromatography and blue-sepharose affinity chromatography. The enzyme was eluted from the blue-sepharose column with a linear gradient of
NADH
(0-100 micromolar) or with 0.3 molar
KNO
(3). About 10% of the original activity was recovered with
NADH
(
NADH
-NR). It had a specific activity of about 60 to 70 units (micromoles NO(2) (-) per minute per milligram protein). A sequential elution with
NADH
followed by
KNO
(3) (0.3 molar) or KCl (0.3 molar) yielded 2 peaks. Rechromatography of each peak gave two peaks again. These results indicate that we are dealing with two forms of the same enzyme rather than two different NR proteins. The two NRs had different molecular weights as judged by chromatography on Toyopearl. The
NADH
-NR was more sensitive than the NO(3) (-)-NR to antibody prepared against barley leaf NR. In Ouchterlony assays a single precipitin line, with completely fused boundaries, was observed.
...
PMID:Characterization of Nitrate Reductase from Corn Leaves (Zea mays cv W64A x W182E) : Two Molecular Forms of the Enzyme. 1666 12
Corn (Zea mays L. cv Trojan T929) coleoptile membranes were fractionated on isopycnic sucrose density gradients. Two peaks of ATP-driven H(+)-transport activity, corresponding to the previously characterized tonoplast (1.07 grams per cubic centimeter) and Golgi (1.13 grams per cubic centimeter) fractions (Chanson and Taiz, Plant Physiol 1985 78: 232-240) were localized. Coincident with these were two peaks of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi)-driven H(+)-transport. At saturating (3 millimolar) concentrations of Mg(2+):ATP, the rate of proton transport was further enhanced by the addition of 3 millimolar PPi, and the stimulation was additive, i.e. equal to the sum of the two added separately. The specific PPi analog, imidodiphosphate, antagonized PPi-driven H(+)-transport, but had no effect on ATP-driven transport. Moreover, PPi-dependent proton transport in both tonoplast-enriched and Golgi-enriched fractions was strongly promoted by 50 millimolar
KNO
(3), unlike the ATP-dependent H(+)-pumps of the same membranes. Taken together, the results indicate that PPi-driven proton transport is mediated by specific membrane-bound H(+)-translocating pyrophosphatases. Both potassium and a permanent anion (NO(3) (-) > Cl(-)), were required for maximum activity. The PPi-driven proton pumps were totally inhibited by N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, but were insensitive to 100 millimolar vanadate. The PPi concentration in coleoptile extracts was determined using an
NADH
oxidation assay system coupled to purified pyrophosphate:fructose 6-phosphate 1-phosphotransferase (EC 2.7.1.90). The total pyrophosphate content of corn coleoptiles was 20 nanomoles/gram fresh weight. Assuming a cytoplasmic location, the calculated PPi concentration is sufficient to drive proton transport at 20% of the maximum rate measured in vitro for the tonoplast-enriched fraction, and 10% of the maximum rate for the Golgi-enriched fraction.
...
PMID:Pyrophosphate-driven proton transport by microsomal membranes of corn coleoptiles. 1666 62
Two methods were developed for the detection of altered ureide metabolism in legume nodules. Both techniques are based on the positive correlation between the presence of high xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) specific activity in nodules and the ability of those nodules to produce the ureides, allantoin and allantoic acid. In the first method, nodulated legumes are treated for 2 weeks with a soil drench of allopurinol. After allopurinol treatment, leaves of N(2)-fed, ureide-producing legumes, soybean, cowpea, and lima bean, became very chlorotic. Leaves of
KNO
(3) (-) or NH(4)Cl-fed ureide-producing legumes were unaffected by the allopurinol treatment. Leaves of the amide-producing legumes, alfalfa, clover, peak, and lupin, were unaffected by the allopurinol treatment with N(2),
KNO
(3), or NH(4)Cl as nitrogen source. These experiments showed that long-term allopurinol treatments are useful in differentiating between ureide- and amide-producing legumes when effectively nodulated. A second method was developed for the rapid, qualitative estimation of xanthine dehydrogenase activity in legume nodules. This method utilizes pterin, an alternate substrate for xanthine dehydrogenase. Xanthine dehydrogenase hydroxylates pterin in the presence of NAD(+) to produce isoxanthopterin. When exposed to long wave ultraviolet light (365 nanometers), isoxanthopterin emits blue fluorescence. When nodules of ureide-producing legumes were sliced in half and placed in microtiter plate wells containing NAD(+) and pterin, isoxanthopterin was observed after 6 hours of incubation at room temperature. Allopurinol prevented isoxanthopterin production. When slices of amide-producing legume nodules were placed in wells with pterin and NAD(+), no blue fluorescence was observed. The production of
NADH
by xanthine dehydrogenase does not interfere with the fluorescence of isoxanthopterin. These observations agree with the high specific activity of xanthine dehydrogenase in nodules of ureide-producing legumes and the low activity measured in amide-producing nodules. The wild soybean, Glycine soja Sieb. and Zucc., was examined for ureide synthesis. Stems of wild soybean plants had a high ureide abundance with N(2) as sole nitrogen source when nodulated with either Rhizobium fredii or Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Ureide abundance declined when nitrate or ammonium was added to the nutrient solution. Nodule slices of these plants produced isoxanthopterin when incubated with pterin. Nodule crude extracts of G. soja had high levels of xanthine dehydrogenase activity. Both Glycine max and G. soja plants were found to produce ureides when plants were inoculated with fast-growing R. fredii. The two methods described here can be used to discriminate ureide producers from amide producers as well as detect nitrogen-fixing legumes which have altered ureide metabolism. A nodulated legume that lacks xanthine dehydrogenase activity as demonstrated by the pterin assay cannot produce ureides since ureide synthesis has been shown to require xanthine dehydrogenase activity both in vivo and in vitro. A nodulated legume that remains green during allopurinol treatment also lacks ureide synthesis since the leaves of ureide-producing legumes are very chlorotic following allopurinol treatment.
...
PMID:Two indirect methods for detecting ureide synthesis by nodulated legumes. 1666 57
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