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Three nitrate reductase mutants were independently isolated and characterized in the colonial alga, Eudorina elegans Ehrenberg. nar-1 is a leaky mutant, deficient in the production of nitrate reductase. nar-2 and nar-3 both lack the ability to produce nitrate reductase. However, nar-2 grows and nar-3 does not grow when hypoxanthine is the sole nitrogen source. The specific activity of the next enzyme, in the pathway, nitrite reductase is increased in nar-3 when compared to wild-type, nar-1 and nar-2.  相似文献   

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Summary Three plants, R9201 and R11301 (from cv. Maris Mink) and R12202 (from cv. Golden Promise), were selected by screening M2 populations of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings (mutagenised with azide in the M1) for resistance to 10 mM potassium chlorate. Selections R9201 and R11301 were crossed with the wild-type cv. Maris Mink and analysis of the F2 progeny showed that one quarter lacked shoot nitrate reductase activity. These F2 plants also withered and died in the continuous presence of nitrate as sole nitrogen source. Loss of nitrate reductase activity and withering and death were due in each case to a recessive mutation in a single nuclear gene. All F1 progeny derived from selfing selection R12202 lacked shoot nitrate reductase activity and also withered and subsequently died when maintained in the continuous presence of nitrate as sole nitrogen source. All homozygous mutant plants lacked not only shoot nitrate reductase activity but also shoot xanthine dehydrogenase activity. The plants took up nitrate, and possessed wild-type or higher levels of shoot nitrite reductase activity and NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity when treated with nitrate for 18 h. We conclude that loss of shoot nitrate reductase activity, xanthine dehydrogenase activity and withering and death, in the three mutants R9201, R11301 and R12202 is due to a mutation affecting the formation of a functional molybdenum cofactor. The mutants possessed wild-type levels of molybdenum and growth in the presence of unphysiologically high levels of molybdate did not restore shoot nitrate reductase or xanthine dehydrogenase activity. The shoot molybdenum cofactor of R9201 and of R12202 is unable to reconstitute NADPH nitrate reductase activity from extracts of the Neurospora crassa nit-1 mutant and dimerise the nitrate reductase subunits present in the respective barley mutant. The shoot molybdenum cofactor of R11301 is able to effect dimerisation of the R11301 nitrate reductase subunits and can reconstitute NADPH-nitrate reductase activity up to 40% of the wild-type molybdenum cofactor levels. The molybdenum cofactor of the roots of R9201 and R11301 is also defective. Genetic analysis demonstrated that R9201, but not R11301, is allelic to R9401 and Az34 (nar-2a), two mutants previously shown to be defective in synthesis of molybdenum cofactor. The mutations in R9401 and R9201 gave partial complementation of the nar-2a gene such that heterozygotes had higher levels of extractable nitrate reductase activity than the homozygous mutants.We conclude that: (a) the nar-2 gene locus encodes a step in molybdopterin biosynthesis; (b) the mutant R11301 represents a further locus involved in the synthesis of a functional molybdenum cofactor; (c) mutant Rl2202 is also defective in molybdopterin biosynthesis; and (d) the nar-2 gene locus and the gene locus defined by R11301 govern molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis in both shoot and root.  相似文献   

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Summary Eighteen mutant strains of the unicellular cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans R2 that are unable to assimilate nitrate have been isolated after transposon Tn901 mutagenesis. Characterization of phenotypes and transformation tests have allowed the distinction of five different mutant types. The mutants exhibiting a nitrate reductase-less phenotype were identified as being affected in previously defined loci, as they could be transformed to the wild type by one of the plasmids pNR12, pNR63 or pNR193, which contain cloned genes of A. nidulans R2 involved in nitrate reduction. The mutations in strains FM2 and FM16 appear to affect two other genes involved in nitrate assimilation. Strain FM2 apparently bears a single mutation which results in both lack of nitrite reductase activity and loss of ammonium-promoted repression of nitrate reductase synthesis. FM16 has a low but significant level of nitrate reductase that is also freed from repression by ammonium, and an increased level of nitrite reductase activity. FM16 exhibited properties which indicate that this mutant strain might also be affected in the transport of nitrate into the cell.Abbreviations EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - MTA mixed alkyltrimethylammonium bromide - TES N-tris (hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-aminoethane sulfonic acid - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis (hydroxymethyl)ethyl]-glycine - Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

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A set of YEp Saccharomyces cerevisiae-based, integrative Hansenula polymorpha plasmids was constructed to express lacZ gene under yeast gene promoters. The HpLEU2 and HpURA3 genes were used both as markers and to target the integration of plasmids into the corresponding H. polymorpha genome locus. The frequency of transformation reached with these plasmids linearised either in HpLEU2 or HpURA3 was around 100 transformants per microgram of plasmid DNA; in all transformants checked by Southern blotting the plasmid was integrated into the genome locus corresponding to the gene plasmid marker. PCR showed that about 50% of the transformants contained more than one plasmid copy per genome. Experiments carried out using the developed plasmids to determine the strength of the gene promoters involved in nitrate assimilation in H. polymorpha revealed that, in the presence of nitrate, the nitrate reductase gene promoter (YNR1) was the strongest, followed by nitrite reductase (YNI1) and nitrate transporter (YNT1). Received: 5 February 1999 / Received revision: 31 May 1999 / Accepted: 4 June 1999  相似文献   

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Nitrate transport system in Neurospora crassa   总被引:12,自引:4,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Nitrate uptake in Neurospora crassa has been investigated under various conditions of nitrogen nutrition by measuring the rate of disappearance of nitrate from the medium and by determining mycelial nitrate accumulation. The nitrate transport system is induced by either nitrate or nitrite, but is not present in mycelia grown on ammonia or Casamino Acids. The appearance of nitrate uptake activity is prevented by cycloheximide, puromycin, or 6-methyl purine. The induced nitrate transport system displays a Km for nitrate of 0.25 mM. Nitrate uptake is inhibited by metabolic poisons such as 2,4-dinitrophenol, cyanide, and antimycin A. Furthermore, mycelia can concentrate nitrate 50-fold. Ammonia and nitrite are non-competitive inhibitors with respect to nitrate, with Ki values of 0.13 and 0.17 mM, respectively. Ammonia does not repress the formation of the nitrate transport system. In contrast, the nitrate uptake system is repressed by Casamino Acids. All amino acids individually prevent nitrate accumulation, with the exception of methionine, glutamine, and alanine. The influence of nitrate reduction and the nitrate reductase protein on nitrate transport was investigated in wild-type Neurospora lacking a functional nitrate reductase and in nitrate non-utilizing mutants, nit-1, nit-2, and nit-3. These mycelia contain an inducible nitrate transport system which displays the same characteristics as those found in the wild-type mycelia having the functional nitrate reductase. These findings suggest that nitrate transport is not dependent upon nitrate reduction and that these two processes are separate events in the assimilation of nitrate.  相似文献   

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Summary 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 nitrite 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 a 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.  相似文献   

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Two new loci have been found to be clustered with five other genes for the nitrate assimilation pathway in the Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genome. One gene, located close to the 3′-end of the high-affinity nitrate transporter (HANT) gene Nrt2;2, corresponds to the nitrite reductase (NiR) structural gene Nii1. This is supported by a number of experimental findings: (i) NiR-deficient mutants have lost Nii1 gene expression; (ii) Nii1 mRNA accumulation is co-regulated with the expression of other structural genes of the nitrate assimilation pathway; (iii) nitrite (nitrate) utilization ability is recovered in the NiR mutants by functional complementation with a wild-type Nii1 gene; (iv) the elucidated NII1 amino acid sequence is highly similar to that of the cyanobacterial and higher-plant enzyme, and contains the predicted domains for plastidic ferredoxin-NiRs. Thus, the mutant phenotype and the mRNA sequence and expression of the Nii1 gene have been unequivocally related. Accumulation of mRNA for the second locus identified, Lde1 (light-dependent expression), was not regulated by nitrogen, but like nitrate-assimilation clustered genes, its expression was down-regulated in the dark. Received: 27 November 1997 / Accepted: 19 January 1998  相似文献   

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The expression of the structural genes nit-3 and nit-6, which encode the nitrate assimilatory enzymes nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase, respectively, is highly regulated by the global-acting NIT2 regulatory protein. These structural genes are also controlled by nitrogen catabolite repression and by specific induction via nitrate. A pathway-specific regulatory protein, NIT4, appears to mediate nitrate induction of nit-3 and of nit-6. The NIT4 protein, composed of 1090 amino acids, contains a putative GAL4-like Cys-6 zinc cluster DNA-binding motif, which is joined by a short segment to a stretch of amino acids that appear to constitute a coiled-coil dimerization domain. Chemical crosslinking studies demonstrated that a truncated form of NIT4 forms homodimers. Mobility-shift and DNA-footprinting experiments have identified two NIT4-binding sites of significantly different strengths in the promoter region of the nit-3 gene. The stronger binding site contains a symmetrical octameric sequence, TCCGCGGA, whereas the weaker site has a related sequence. Sequences related to this palindromic element can be found upstream of the nit-6 gene.  相似文献   

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GENETIC STUDIES OF NITRATE ASSIMILATION IN ASPERGILLUS NIDULANS   总被引:29,自引:0,他引:29  
(1) In Aspergillus nidulans, at least 16 genes can mutate to affect the reduction of nitrate to ammonium, a process requiring two enzymes, nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. (2) niaD is the only gene whose effects on enzyme structure are confined to nitrate reductase alone. It specifies a core polypeptide, one or more of which form the basic subunit of nitrate reductase, molecular weight 50000. (3) At least five cnx genes together specify a molybdenum co-factor, necessary for the activity of nitrate reductase, and of xanthine dehydrogenases I and II. The cnxH gene specifies a polypeptide component of this co-factor, and the cnxE and F gene products are involved in co-factor elaboration, The role of the remaining cnx genes is at present unknown. (4) Functional nitrate reductase has a molecular weight of 200000 and is likely to consist of four subunits, together with one or more molecules of the cnx-specified co-factor. (5) The co-factor plays a catalytic role in the aggregation of nitrate-reductase subunits. (6) The niiA gene is the structural gene for nitrite reductase. (7) Other genes affecting nitrate assimilation are either regulatory or bring about their effects indirectly. (8) Of the genes affecting nitrate assimilation, close linkage is found only between the niiA and niaD genes. (9) Nitrate and nitrite reductases are subject to control by nitrate induction and ammonium repression. (10) Nitrate induction is mediated by the nirA gene whose product must be active for the niiA and niaD genes to be expressed. Since most niaD mutants produce nitrite reductase constitutively, it is likely that the nirA gene product is normally inactivated by nitrate reductase, but only when the latter is not complexed with nitrate, (11) Ammonium repression is mediated by the areA gene, whose product must be active for the expression of the niiA and niaD genes, and which is inactive in the presence of ammonium. (12) The tamA gene may function similarly to the areA gene, both gene products being necessary for the expression of the niiA and niaD genes. (13) Although the niiA and niiD genes are probably contiguous, they are not likely to be organized into a structure equivalent to a bacterial operon. (14) Whereas the areA and nirA genes regulate the synthesis of nitrate and nitrite reductases, it is probable that at least nitrate reductase is also subject to post-translational control, the presence of active enzyme being correlated with high levels of NADPH. (15) The regulation of the pentose-phosphate pathway, of mannitol-I-phosphate dehydrogenase and of certain activities required for the catabolism of some nitrogen-containing compounds appears to be connected with that of nitrate assimilation. In all cases, it is probable that the nirA gene and nitrate reductase itself are involved.  相似文献   

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The Escherichia coli mob locus is required for synthesis of active molybdenum cofactor, molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide. The mobB gene is not essential for molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis because a deletion of both mob genes can be fully complemented by just mobA. Inactive nitrate reductase, purified from a mob strain, can be activated in vitro by incubation with protein FA (the mobA gene product), GTP, MgCl2, and a further protein fraction, factor X. Factor X activity is present in strains that lack MobB, indicating that it is not an essential component of factor X, but over-expression of MobB increases the level of factor X. MobB, therefore, can participate in nitrate reductase activation. The narJ protein is not a component of mature nitrate reductase but narJ mutants cannot express active nitrate reductase A. Extracts from narJ strains are unable to support the in vitro activation of purified mob nitrate reductase: they lack factor X activity. Although the mob gene products are necessary for the biosynthesis of all E. coli molybdoenzymes as a result of their requirement for molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide, NarJ action is specific for nitrate reductase A. The inactive nitrate reductase A derivative in a narJ strain can be activated in vitro following incubation with cell extracts containing the narJ protein. NarJ acts to activate nitrate reductase after molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis is complete.  相似文献   

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Nitrate is a major nitrogen (N) source for most crops. Nitrate uptake by root cells is a key step of nitrogen metabolism and has been widely studied at the physiological and molecular levels. Understanding how nitrate uptake is regulated will help us engineer crops with improved nitrate uptake efficiency. The present study investigated the regulation of the high-affinity nitrate transport system (HATS) by exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) and glutamine (Gin) in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) roots. Wheat seedlings grown in nutrient solution containing 2 mmol/L nitrate as the only nitrogen source for 2weeks were deprived of N for 4d and were then transferred to nutrient solution containing 50 μmol/L ABA, and 1 mmol/L Gin in the presence or absence of 2 mmol/L nitrate for 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 8 h. Treated wheat plants were then divided into two groups. One group of plants was used to investigate the mRNA levels of the HATS components NRT2 and NAR2 genes in roots through semi-quantitative RT-PCR approach, and the other set of plants were used to measure high-affinity nitrate influx rates in a nutrient solution containing 0.2 mmol/L ^15N-labeled nitrate. The results showed that exogenous ABA induced the expression of the TaNRT2.1, TaNRT2.2, TaNRT2.3, TaNAR2.1, and TaNAR2.2 genes in roots when nitrate was not present in the nutrient solution, but did not further enhance the induction of these genes by nitrate. Glutamine, which has been shown to inhibit the expression of NRT2 genes when nitrate is present in the growth media, did not inhibit this induction. When Gin was supplied to a nitrate-free nutrient solution, the expression of these five genes in roots was induced. These results imply that the inhibition by Gin of NRT2 expression occurs only when nitrate is present in the growth media. Although exogenous ABA and Gin induced HATS genes in the roots of wheat, they did not induce nitrate influx.  相似文献   

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Summary The nrtA gene, which has been proposed to be involved in nitrate transport of Synechococcus sp. PCC7942 (Anacystis nidulans R2), was mapped at 3.9 kb upstream of the nitrate reductase gene, narB. Three closely linked genes (designated nrtB, nrtC, and nrtD), which encode proteins of 279, 659, and 274 amino acids, respectively, were found between the nrtA and narB genes. NrtB is a hydrophobic protein having structural similarity to the integral membrane components of bacterial transport systems that are dependent on periplasmic substrate-binding proteins. The N-terminal portion of NrtC (amino acid residues 1–254) and NrtD are 58% identical to each other in their amino acid sequences, and resemble the ATP-binding components of binding protein-dependent transport systems. The C-terminal portion of NrtC is 30% identical to NrtA. Mutants constructed by interrupting each of nrtB and nrtC were unable to grow on nitrate, and the nrtD mutant required high concentration of nitrate for growth. The rate of nitrate-dependent O2 evolution (photosynthetic O2 evolution coupled to nitrate reduction) in wild-type cells measured in the presence of l-methionine d,l-sulfoximine and glycolaldehyde showed a dual-phase relationship with nitrate concentration. It followed saturation kinetics up to 10 mM nitrate (the concentration required for half-saturation = 1 M), and the reaction rate then increased above the saturation level of the first phase as the nitrate concentration increased. The high-affinity phase of nitrate-dependent O2 evolution was absent in the nrtD mutant. The results suggest that there are two independent mechanisms of nitrate uptake and that the nrtB-nrtC-nrtD cluster encodes a high-affinity nitrate transport system.  相似文献   

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Summary Three genes of Volvox carteri f. nagariensis have been identified which affect nitrogen assimilation. Mutants in two unlinked genes, nitA and nitC, were isolated as chlorate resistant and they exhibit no measureable nitrate reductase activity. The mutant in the nitB gene which is linked to nitA has slightly reduced levels of nitrate reductase activity and grows poorly on the nitrate concentration in standard medium but grows normally if the level of nitrate is increased. All of the mutants utilize ammonia, urea or nitrite for growth.Deseased  相似文献   

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Mutant plants defective in the assimilation of nitrate can be selected by their resistance to the herbicide chlorate. In Arabidopsis thaliana, mutations at any one of nine distinct loci confer chlorate resistance. Only one of the CHL genes, CHL3, has been shown genetically to be a nitrate reductase (NR) structural gene (NIA2) even though two NR genes (NIA1 and NIA2) have been cloned from the Arabidopsis genome. Plants in which the NIA2 gene has been deleted retain only 10% of the wildtype shoot NR activity and grow normally with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source. Using mutagenized seeds from the NIA2 deletion mutant and a modified chlorate selection protocol, we have identified the first mutation in the NIA1 NR structural gene. nia1, nia2 double mutants have only 0.5% of wild-type shoot NR activity and display very poor growth on media with nitrate as the only form of nitrogen. The nial-1 mutation is a single nucleotide substitution that converts an alanine to a threonine in a highly conserved region of the molybdenum cofactor-binding domain of the NR protein. These results show that the NIA1 gene encodes a functional NR protein that contributes to the assimilation of nitrate in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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