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1.
We screened actinomycete strains for dinitrogen (N(2))-producing activity and discovered that Streptomyces antibioticus B-546 evolves N(2) and some nitrous oxide (N(2)O) from nitrate (NO(3)(-)). Most of the N(2) that evolved from the heavy isotope ([(15)N]NO(3)(-)) was (15)N(14)N, indicating that this nitrogen species consists of two atoms, one arising from NO(3)(-) and the other from different sources. This phenomenon is similar to codenitrification in fungi. The strain also evolved less, but significant, amounts of (15)N(15)N from [(15)N]NO(3)(-) in addition to (15)N(15)NO with concomitant cell growth. Prior to the production of N(2) and N(2)O, NO(3)(-) was rapidly reduced to nitrite (NO(2)(-)) accompanied by distinct cell growth, showing that the actinomycete strain is a facultative anaerobe that depends on denitrification and nitrate respiration for anoxic growth. The cell-free activities of denitrifying enzymes could be reconstituted, supporting the notion that the (15)N(15)N and (15)N(15)NO species are produced by denitrification from NO(3)(-) via NO(2)(-). We therefore demonstrated a unique system in an actinomycete that produces gaseous nitrogen (N(2) and N(2)O) through both denitrification and codenitrification. The predominance of codenitrification over denitrification along with oxygen tolerance is the key feature of nitrate metabolism in this actinomycete.  相似文献   

2.
1. Cells of Nitrosomonas europaea produced N(2)O during the oxidation of ammonia and hydroxylamine. 2. The end-product of ammonia oxidation, nitrite, was the predominant source of N(2)O in cells. 3. Cells also produced N(2)O, but not N(2) gas, by the reduction of nitrite under anaerobic conditions. 4. Hydroxylamine was oxidized by cell-free extracts to yield nitrite and N(2)O aerobically, but to yield N(2)O and NO anaerobically. 5. Cell extracts reduced nitrite both aerobically and anaerobically to NO and N(2)O with hydroxylamine as an electron donor. 6. The relative amounts of NO and N(2)O produced during hydroxylamine oxidation and/or nitrite reduction are dependent on the type of artificial electron acceptor utilized. 7. Partially purified hydroxylamine oxidase retained nitrite reductase activity but cytochrome oxidase was absent. 8. There is a close association of hydroxylamine oxidase and nitrite reductase activities in purified preparations.  相似文献   

3.
The reductive nitrosylation of ferric (met)hemoglobin is of considerable interest and remains incompletely explained. We have previously observed that at low NO concentrations the reaction with tetrameric hemoglobin occurs with an observed rate constant that is at least 5 times faster than that observed at higher concentrations. This was ascribed to a faster reaction of NO with a methemoglobin-nitrite complex. We now report detailed studies of this reaction of low NO with methemoglobin. Nitric oxide paradoxically reacts with ferric hemoglobin with faster observed rate constants at the lower NO concentration in a manner that is not affected by changes in nitrite concentration, suggesting that it is not a competition between NO and nitrite, as we previously hypothesized. By evaluation of the fast reaction in the presence of allosteric effectors and isolated β- and α-chains of hemoglobin, it appears that NO reacts with a subpopulation of β-subunit ferric hemes whose population is influenced by quaternary state, redox potential, and hemoglobin dimerization. To further characterize the role of nitrite, we developed a system that oxidizes nitrite to nitrate to eliminate nitrite contamination. Removal of nitrite does not alter reaction kinetics, but modulates reaction products, with a decrease in the formation of S-nitrosothiols. These results are consistent with the formation of NO(2)/N(2)O(3) in the presence of nitrite. The observed fast reductive nitrosylation observed at low NO concentrations may function to preserve NO bioactivity via primary oxidation of NO to form nitrite or in the presence of nitrite to form N(2)O(3) and S-nitrosothiols.  相似文献   

4.
Many methane-oxidizing bacteria (MOB) have been shown to aerobically oxidize ammonia and hydroxylamine (NH(2)OH) to produce nitrite and nitrous oxide (N(2)O). Genome sequences of alphaproteobacterial, gammaproteobacterial, and verrucomicrobial methanotrophs revealed the presence of haoAB, cytL, cytS, nirS or nirK, and norCB genes that may be responsible for N(2)O production, and additional haoAB genes were sequenced from two strains of Methylomicrobium album. The haoAB genes of M. album ATCC 33003 were inducible by ammonia and NH(2)OH, similar to haoAB induction by ammonia in Methylococcus capsulatus Bath. Increased expression of genes encoding nitric oxide reductase (cNOR; norCB) was measured upon exposure of M. capsulatus Bath to NaNO(2) and NO-releasing sodium nitroprusside. Only incubations of M. capsulatus Bath with methane, ammonia, and nitrite produced N(2)O. The data suggest a possible pathway of nitrite reduction to NO by reversely operating NH(2)OH oxidoreductase and NO reduction to N(2)O by cNOR independently or in conjunction with ammonia-induced enzymes (i.e. HAO or cytochrome c'-β). Results of this study show that MOB likely have diverse mechanisms for nitrogen oxide metabolism and detoxification of NH(2)OH that involve conventional and unconventional enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Nitrite and nitrous oxide production by Methylosinus trichosporium   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Conditions for the production of nitrite and nitrous oxide by an obligate methanotroph, Methylosinus trichosporium (OB 3b), were studied. The rate of nitrite production (V NO2-) was correlated with the concentration of ammonia up to 20 mM in the presence of sufficient amounts of oxygen and inversely correlated with the amounts of methane in the system. The rate of nitrous oxide (N2O) production (V N2O) was correlated positively with V NO2- and the amount of nitrite produced and inversely with the oxygen concentration in the system. Nitrite started to disappear when either oxygen or methane or both were depleted, but only a part of the loss could be accounted for by an increase in N2O. Maximum rates of nitrite and N2O production by Ms. trichosporium were 6.9 X 10(-16) and 2.2 X 10(-17) mol . cell-1 X day-1, respectively. These values are about 0.2 and 1.6% of the values for Nitrosomonas europaea. Therefore, production of nitrite and N2O by methanotrophs in aquatic environments may not be as significant as that of Nitrosomonas.  相似文献   

6.
Two denitrifying bacteria, Pseudomonas stutzeri and Achromobacter cycloclastes, were incubated with Na15NO2 and NaN3 under conditions that allowed catalysis of nitrosyl transfer from nitrite to azide. This transfer, which is presumed to be mediated by the heme- and copper-containing nitrite reductase of P. stutzeri and A. cycloclastes, respectively, leads to formation of isotopically mixed 14,15N2O, whereas denitrification leads to 15N2O. The conditions that emphasized nitrosyl transfer also partially inhibited the nitric oxide reductase system and led to accumulation of 15NO. Absorption of NO from the gas phase by acidic CrSO4 in a sidewell largely abolished nitrosyl transfer to azide. With these two organisms, which are thought to be representative of denitrifiers generally, catalysis of nitrosyl transfer seemed to depend on NO.  相似文献   

7.
Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DbetaH) is a copper-containing enzyme that uses molecular oxygen and ascorbate to catalyze the addition of a hydroxyl group on the beta-carbon of dopamine to form norepinephrine. While norepinephrine causes vasoconstriction following reflex sympathetic stimulation, nitric oxide (NO) formation results in vasodilatation via a guanylyl cyclase-dependent mechanism. In this report, we investigated the relationship between NO and DbetaH enzymatic activity. In the initial in vitro experiments, the activity of purified DbetaH was inhibited by the NO donor, diethylamine/NO (DEA/NO), with an IC(50) of 1 mm. The inclusion of either azide or GSH partially restored DbetaH activity, suggesting the involvement of the reactive nitrogen oxide species, N(2)O(3). Treatment of human neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-MC) with diethylamine/NO decreased cellular DbetaH activity without affecting their growth rate and was augmented by the depletion of intracellular GSH. Co-culture of the SK-N-MC cells with interferon-gamma and lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages, which release NO, also reduced the DbetaH activity in the neuroblastoma cells. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that nitrosative stress, mediated by N(2)O(3), can result in the inhibition of norepinephrine biosynthesis and may contribute to the regulation of neurotransmission and vasodilatation.  相似文献   

8.
Denitrification by fungi   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Many fungi in the centre of the group of Fusarium and its teleomorphs were shown to be capable of reducing nitrite anaerobically to form nitric oxide (NO), nitrous oxide (N2O), and/or dinitrogen (N2). Several strains could reduce nitrate as well. Nitrous oxide was the major product of the reduction of nitrate or nitrite. Several fungi could also form N2. When [15]nitrite was used as substrate for the N2-forming denitrification, 15N2O, 15NO, and 14N15N were obtained as the products. These results demonstrated that, unexpectedly, many fungi have denitrifying abilities. It was also shown that the fungal system contains a unique reaction, formation of a hybrid dinitrogen.  相似文献   

9.
Bacterial denitrification reverses nitrogen fixation in the global N-cycle by transforming nitrate or nitrite to dinitrogen. Both nitrite and nitric oxide (NO) are considered as the chemical species within the denitrification pathway, that precede nitrous oxide (N2O), the first recognized intermediate with N,N-bonds antecedent to N2. Molecular cloning of the structural genes for NO reductase from Pseudomonas stutzeri has allowed us to generate the first mutants defective in NO utilization (Nor- phenotype) by marker exchange of the norCB genes with a gene cassette for gentamicin resistance. Nitric oxide reductase was found to be an indispensable component for denitrification; its loss constituted a conditionally lethal mutation. NO as the sole product accumulated from nitrite by mutant cells induced for nitrite respiration (denitrification). The Nor- mutant lost the capability to reduce NO and did not grow anymore anaerobically on nitrate. A Nir-Nor- double mutation, that inactivated also the respiratory nitrite reductase cytochrome cd1 rendered the bacterium again viable under anaerobiosis. Our observations provide evidence for a denitrification pathway in vivo of NO2(-)----NO----N2O, and N,N-bond formation catalyzed by NO reductase and not by cytochrome cd1.  相似文献   

10.
The pathway of anaerobic reduction of nitrite to nitrogen gas (N2) by cell suspensions of the denitrifier, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, was studied using the techniques of gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. While release of nitrous oxide (N2O) is not normally detected during the reduction of nitrite to N2 by this organism, 15N from [15N]nitrite nevertheless can be trapped quantitatively as 15N2O in a pool of added N2O. In such experiments the abundance of 15N in N2O always exceeds that in product N2, consistent with the absence of a major reductive route from nitrite to N2 which by-passes N2O. During the reduction of a mixture of [15N]nitrite and nitric oxide (NO), 15NO produced at most only in trace amounts. The final products are chiefly 15N2 and 14N2 with only a small fraction of the scrambled product, 14N15N. Much of the 14N15N can be accounted for as an artifact caused by traces of molecular oxygen, which promote the conversion of NO to nitrite by autooxidation and thereby degrade slightly the isotopic purity of [15N]nitrite. Nitrous oxide shows all the properties of a free obligatory intermediate during the denitrification of nitrite to N2 by P. aeruginosa, whereas NO does not. The inability to trap 15NO in a pool of NO indicates that NO is not a free obligatory intermediate in the reduction of nitrite. The small mole fractions of 14N15N produced from a mixture of [15N]nitrite and NO require that the main reductive pathways for these nitrogen oxides cannot share any freely diffusible mono-nitrogen intermediate in common. The simplest interpretation is that nitrite and NO are denitrified by separate pathways, at least prior to the formation of the first bi-nitrogen compound.  相似文献   

11.
The mechanism by which Escherichia coli can catalyze the nitrite-dependent nitrosation of 2,3-diaminonaphthalene (DAN), with formation of the corresponding fluorescent triazole, was studied. The reaction was dependent on production of a gaseous compound which can nitrosylate DAN upon contact with air. This compound was identified as nitric oxide (NO), and the kinetics of NO and triazole production are reported. NO and triazole were produced proportionally in a stoichiometric ratio, NO/triazole, of 1.4 to 1.7. Given the requirement for air, nitrosation of DAN probably proceeds via formation of the well-known strong nitrosylating agents N2O3 and N2O4 from NO. The parallel inhibition of NO and triazole production by azide and nitrate served to reinforce the link between nitrosation and nitrate reductase that had been established previously by others on genetic grounds.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism by which Escherichia coli can catalyze the nitrite-dependent nitrosation of 2,3-diaminonaphthalene (DAN), with formation of the corresponding fluorescent triazole, was studied. The reaction was dependent on production of a gaseous compound which can nitrosylate DAN upon contact with air. This compound was identified as nitric oxide (NO), and the kinetics of NO and triazole production are reported. NO and triazole were produced proportionally in a stoichiometric ratio, NO/triazole, of 1.4 to 1.7. Given the requirement for air, nitrosation of DAN probably proceeds via formation of the well-known strong nitrosylating agents N2O3 and N2O4 from NO. The parallel inhibition of NO and triazole production by azide and nitrate served to reinforce the link between nitrosation and nitrate reductase that had been established previously by others on genetic grounds.  相似文献   

13.
Tn5 was used to generate mutants that were deficient in the dissimilatory reduction of nitrite for Pseudomonas sp. strain G-179, which contains a copper nitrite reductase. Three types of mutants were isolated. The first type showed a lack of growth on nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide. The second type grew on nitrate and nitrous oxide but not on nitrite (Nir-). The two mutants of this type accumulated nitrite, showed no nitrite reductase activity, and had no detectable nitrite reductase protein bands in a Western blot (immunoblot). Tn5 insertions in these two mutants were clustered in the same region and were within the structural gene for nitrite reductase. The third type of mutant grew on nitrate but not on nitrite or nitrous oxide (N2O). The mutant of this type accumulated significant amounts of nitrite, NO, and N2O during anaerobic growth on nitrate and showed a slower growth rate than the wild type. Diethyldithiocarbamic acid, which inhibited nitrite reductase activity in the wild type, did not affect NO reductase activity, indicating that nitrite reductase did not participate in NO reduction. NO reductase activity in Nir- mutants was lower than that in the wild type when the strains were grown on nitrate but was the same as that in the wild type when the strains were grown on nitrous oxide. These results suggest that the reduction of NO and N2O was carried out by two distinct processes and that mutations affecting nitrite reduction resulted in reduced NO reductase activity following anaerobic growth with nitrate.  相似文献   

14.
A gene that encodes a periplasmic copper-type nitrite reductase (NirK) was identified in Nitrosomonas europaea. Disruption of this gene resulted in the disappearance of Nir activity in cell extracts. The nitrite tolerance of NirK-deficient cells was lower than that of wild-type cells. Unexpectedly, NirK-deficient cells still produced nitric oxide (NO) and nitrous oxide (N(2)O), the latter in greater amounts than that of wild-type cells. This demonstrates that NirK is not essential for the production of NO and N(2)O by N. europaea. Inactivation of the putative fnr gene showed that Fnr is not essential for the expression of nirK.  相似文献   

15.
Dissimilatory reduction of NO(2) to N(2)O and NH(4) by a soil Citrobacter sp. was studied in an attempt to elucidate the physiological and ecological significance of N(2)O production by this mechanism. In batch cultures with defined media, NO(2) reduction to NH(4) was favored by high glucose and low NO(3) concentrations. Nitrous oxide production was greatest at high glucose and intermediate NO(3) concentrations. With succinate as the energy source, little or no NO(2) was reduced to NH(4) but N(2)O was produced. Resting cell suspensions reduced NO(2) simultaneously to N(2)O and free extracellular NH(4). Chloramphenicol prevented the induction of N(2)O-producing activity. The K(m) for NO(2) reduction to N(2)O was estimated to be 0.9 mM NO(2), yet the apparent K(m) for overall NO(2) reduction was considerably lower, no greater than 0.04 mM NO(2). Activities for N(2)O and NH(4) production increased markedly after depletion of NO(3) from the media. Amendment with NO(3) inhibited N(2)O and NH(4) production by molybdate-grown cells but not by tungstate-grown cells. Sulfite inhibited production of NH(4) but not of N(2)O. In a related experiment, three Escherichia coli mutants lacking NADH-dependent nitrite reductase produced N(2)O at rates equal to the wild type. These observations suggest that N(2)O is produced enzymatically but not by the same enzyme system responsible for dissimilatory reduction of NO(2) to NH(4).  相似文献   

16.
Under anaerobic conditions, Klebsiella pneumoniae reduced nitrite (NO2-), yielding nitrous oxide (N2O) and ammonium ions (NH4+) as products. Nitrous oxide formation accounted for about 5% of the total NO2- reduced, and NH4+ production accounted for the remainder. Glucose and pyruvate were the electron donors for NO2- reduction to N2O by whole cells, whereas glucose, NADH, and NADPH were found to be the electron donors when cell extracts were used. On the one hand, formate failed to serve as an electron donor for NO2- reduction to N2O and NH4+, whereas on the other hand, formate was the best electron donor for nitrate reduction in either whole cells or cell extracts. Mutants that are defective in the reduction of NO2- to NH4+ were isolated, and these strains were found to produce N2O at rates comparable to that of the parent strain. These results suggest that the nitrite reductase producing N2O is distinct from that producing NH4+. Nitrous oxide production from nitric oxide (NO) occurred in all mutants tested, at rates comparable to that of the parent strain. This result suggests that NO reduction to N2O, which also uses NADH as the electron donor, is independent of the protein(s) catalyzing the reduction of NO2- to N2O.  相似文献   

17.
Nitrite reacts with deoxyhemoglobin to form nitric oxide (NO) and methemoglobin. Though this reaction is experimentally associated with NO generation and vasodilation, kinetic analysis suggests that NO should not be able to escape inactivation in the erythrocyte. We have discovered that products of the nitrite-hemoglobin reaction generate dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3) via a novel reaction of NO and nitrite-bound methemoglobin. The oxygen-bound form of nitrite-methemoglobin shows a degree of ferrous nitrogen dioxide (Fe(II)-NO2*) character, so it may rapidly react with NO to form N2O3. N2O3 partitions in lipid, homolyzes to NO and readily nitrosates thiols, all of which are common pathways for NO escape from the erythrocyte. These results reveal a fundamental heme globin- and nitrite-catalyzed chemical reaction pathway to N2O3, NO and S-nitrosothiol that could form the basis of in vivo nitrite-dependent signaling. Because the reaction redox-cycles (that is, regenerates ferrous heme) and the nitrite-methemoglobin intermediate is not observable by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, this reaction has been 'invisible' to experimentalists over the last 100 years.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Chemolithoautotrophic AOB (ammonia-oxidizing bacteria) form a crucial component in microbial nitrogen cycling in both natural and engineered systems. Under specific conditions, including transitions from anoxic to oxic conditions and/or excessive ammonia loading, and the presence of high nitrite (NO??) concentrations, these bacteria are also documented to produce nitric oxide (NO) and nitrous oxide (N?O) gases. Essentially, ammonia oxidation in the presence of non-limiting substrate concentrations (ammonia and O?) is associated with N?O production. An exceptional scenario that leads to such conditions is the periodical switch between anoxic and oxic conditions, which is rather common in engineered nitrogen-removal systems. In particular, the recovery from, rather than imposition of, anoxic conditions has been demonstrated to result in N?O production. However, applied engineering perspectives, so far, have largely ignored the contribution of nitrification to N?O emissions in greenhouse gas inventories from wastewater-treatment plants. Recent field-scale measurements have revealed that nitrification-related N?O emissions are generally far higher than emissions assigned to heterotrophic denitrification. In the present paper, the metabolic pathways, which could potentially contribute to NO and N?O production by AOB have been conceptually reconstructed under conditions especially relevant to engineered nitrogen-removal systems. Taken together, the reconstructed pathways, field- and laboratory-scale results suggest that engineering designs that achieve low effluent aqueous nitrogen concentrations also minimize gaseous nitrogen emissions.  相似文献   

20.
The dissimilatory nitrite reductase (cytochrome c,d1) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was observed at pH 7.5 to catalyze nitrosyl transfer (nitrosation) between [15N]nitrite and several N-nucleophiles or H2 18O, with rate enhancement of the order of 10(8) relative to analogous chemical reactions. The reducing system (ascorbate, N,N,N',N'-tetramethylphenylenediamine) could reduce nitrite (but not NO) enzymatically and had essentially no direct chemical reactivity toward nitrite or NO. The N-nitrosations showed saturation kinetics with respect to the nucleophile and, while exhibiting Vmax values which varied by about 40-fold, nevertheless showed little or no dependence of Vmax on nucleophile pKa. The N-nitrosations and NO-2/H2O-18O exchange required the reducing system, whereas NO/H2O-18O exchange was inhibited by the reducing system. NO was not detected to serve as a nitrosyl donor to N-nucleophiles. These and other kinetic observations suggest that the enzymatic nitrosyl donor is an enzyme-bound species derived from reduced enzyme and one molecule of nitrite, possibly a heme-nitrosyl compound (E-FeII X NO+) for which there is precedence. Nitrosyl transfer to N-nucleophiles may occur within a ternary complex of enzyme, nitrite, and nucleophile. Catalysis of nitrosyl transfer by nitrite reductase represents a new class of enzymatic reactions and may present another example of electrophilic catalysis by a metal center. The nitrosyl donor trapped by these reactions is believed to represent an intermediate in the reduction of nitrite by cytochrome c,d1.  相似文献   

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