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1.
Summary Six mutant strains (301, 102, 203, 104, 305, and 307) affected in their nitrate assimilation capability and their corresponding parental wild-type strains (6145c and 21gr) from Chlamydomonas reinhardii have been studied on different nitrogen sources with respect to NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase and its associated activities (NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase) and to nitrite reductase activity. The mutant strains lack NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase activity in all the nitrogen sources. Mutants 301, 102, 104, and 307 have only NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase activity whereas mutant 305 solely has reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activity. Both activities are repressible by ammonia but, in contrast to the nitrate reductase complex of wild-type strains, require neither nitrate nor nitrite for their induction. Moreover, the enzyme from mutant 305 is always obtained in active form whereas nitrate reductase from wild-types needs to be reactivated previously with ferricyanide to be fully detected. Wild-type strains and mutants 301, 102, 104, and 307, when properly induced, exhibit an NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase distinguishable electrophoretically from contitutive diaphorases as a rapidly migrating band. Nitrite reductase from wild-type and mutant strains is also repressible by ammonia and does not require nitrate or nitrite for its synthesis. These facts are explained in terms of a regulation of nitrate reductase synthesis by the enzyme itself.  相似文献   

2.
The NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase complex (overall-NR) of Chlamydomonas reinhardii exhibits two partial activities: NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase (diaphorase) and reduced benzyl viologen-NR (terminal-NR). Mild tryptic digestion of the enzyme complex resulted in the loss of both overall and terminal-NR activities, whereas diaphorase activity remained unaltered. The diaphorase activity of mutant 104 and the terminal-NR activity of mutant 305 of C. reinhardii, which are the sole activities related to NR present in these mutants, responded to tryptic treatment to the same extent as the corresponding activities of the wild enzyme complex. Trypsin disassembled the 220-kd NR native complex by destroying the aggregation capability of the diaphorase subunits without affecting their activity nor molecular size (45 kd). A 67-kd thermostable protein, containing molybdenum co-factor, was also released from trypsin-treated NR. This protein lacked diaphorase and NR activities but was able to reconstitute the overall-NR complex by complementation with untreated diaphorase subunit of mutant 104. Our results support a tetrameric structure for the C. reinhardii NR complex, containing two kinds of subunits.  相似文献   

3.
In vitro complementation of the soluble assimilatory NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase (NAD(P)H:nitrate oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.6.2) was attained by mixing cell-free preparations of Chlamydomonas reinhardii mutant 104, uniquely possessing nitrate-inducible NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase, and mutant 305 which possesses solely the nitrate-inducible FMNH2- and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activities. Full activity and integrity of NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase from mutant 104 and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase from mutant 305 are needed for the complementation to take place. A constitutive and heat-labile molybdenum-containing cofactor, that reconstitutes the NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase activity of nit-1 Neurospora crassa but is incapable of complementing with 104 from C. reinhardii, is present in the wild type and 305 algal strains. The complemented NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase has been purified 100-fold and was found to be similar to the wild enzyme in sucrose density sedimentation, molecular size, pH optimum, kinetic parameters, substrate affinity and sensitivity to inhibitors and temperature. From previous data and data presented in this article on 104 and 305 mutant activities, it is concluded that C. reinhardii NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase is a heteromultimeric complex consisting of, at least, two types of subunits separately responsible for the NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and the reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activities.  相似文献   

4.
NADH- and NAD(P)H-Nitrate Reductases in Rice Seedlings   总被引:7,自引:4,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
By use of affinity chromatography on blue dextran-Sepharose, two nitrate reductases from rice (Oryza sativa L.) seedlings, specifically, NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.6.1) and NAD(P)-H:nitrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.6.2), have been partially separated. Nitrate-induced seedlings contained more NADH-nitrate reductase than NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase, whereas chloramphenicol-induced seedlings contained primarily NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase. NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase was shown to utilize NADPH directly as reductant. This enzyme has a preference for NADPH, but reacts about half as well with NADH.  相似文献   

5.
J. Diez  A. Chaparro  J. M. Vega  A. Relimpio 《Planta》1977,137(3):231-234
In the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii, all the activities associated with the nitrate reductase complex (i.e., NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase, NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and FMNH2-or MVH-nitrate reductase) are nutritionally repressed by ammonia or methylamine. Besides, ammonia or methylamine promote in vivo the reversible inactivation of nitrate reductase, but not of NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase. Subsequent removal of the inactivating agent from the medium causes reactivation of the inactive enzyme. Menadione has a striking stimulation on the in vivo reactivation of the inactive enzyme. The nitrate reductase activities, but not the diaphorase activity, can be inactivated in vitro by preincubating a partially purified enzyme preparation with NADH or NADPH. ADP, in the presence of Mg2+, presents a cooperative effect with NADH in the in vitro inactivation of nitrate reductase. This effect appears to be maximum at a concentration of ADP equimolecular with that of NADH.Abbreviations ADP Adenosine-5-diphosphate - AMP Adenosine-5-monophosphate - ATP Adenosine-5-triphosphate - FAD Flavin adenine dinucleotide - FMNH2 Flavin adenine mononucleotide, reduced form - GDP Guanosine-5-diphosphate - MVH Methyl viologen, reduced form - NADH Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced form - NADPH Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, reduced form  相似文献   

6.
Summary Four allelic putative cnx (molybdenum-cofactor defective) cell lines (O42, P12, P31 and P47) of Nicotiana tabacum var. Xanthi, biochemically and genetically distinct from N. tabacum var. Gatersleben cnxA mutants, were examined further. Their molybdenum-cofactor could efficiently reconstitute NADPH-nitrate reductase activity from Neurospora crassa mutant nit-1 extract only in the presence of exogenous molybdenum unlike that of the wild-type cofactor which could reconstitute NADPH-nitrate reductase activity in either the absence or presence of exogenous molybdenum. Loss of cofactor activity in vivo was not due to a defect in molybdenum uptake into the cells. In vitro nitrate reductase complementation between extracts of each of these four lines and a nia mutant showed that they possessed a functional nitrate reductase haemoflavoprotein subunit. Both constitutive molybdenum cofactor and NADH cytochrome c reductase activity were derepressed in the four cell lines. These results show that the four cell lines are indeed altered at a cnx locus, called cnxB, that the defect is probably in molybdenum processing and that there is a link between synthesis of functional molybdenum cofactor and nitrate reductase aporprotein.  相似文献   

7.
The regulation of the development of nitrate reductase (NR) activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardii has been compared in a wild-type strain and in a mutant (nit-A) which possesses a modified nitrate reductase enzyme that is non-functional in vivo. The modified enzyme cannot use NAD(P)H as an electron donor for nitrate reduction and it differs from wild-type enzyme in that NR activity is not inactivated in vitro by incubation with NAD(P)H and small quantities of cyanide; it is inactivated when reduced benzyl viologen or flavin mononucleotide is present. After short periods of nitrogen starvation mutant organisms contain much higher levels of terminal-NR activity than do similarly treated wild-type ones. Despite the inability of the mutant to utilize nitrate, no nitrate or nitrite was found in nitrogen-starved cultures; it is therefore concluded that the appearance of NR activity is not a consequence of nitrification. After prolonged nitrogen starvation (22 h) the NR level in the mutant is low. It increases rapidly if nitrate is then added and this increase in activity does not occur in the presence of ammonium, tungstate or cycloheximide. Disappearance of preformed NR activity is stimulated by addition of tungstate and even more by addition of ammonium. The results are interpreted as evidence for a continuous turnover of NR in cells of the mutant with ammonium both stimulating NR breakdown and stopping NR synthesis. Nitrate protects the enzyme from breakdown. Reversible inactivation of NR activity is thought to play an insignificant rôle in the mutant.Abbreviations NR nitrate reductase - BV benzyl viologen  相似文献   

8.
E. Fernández  J. Cárdenas 《Planta》1981,153(3):254-257
Wild-type Chlamydomonas reinhardii cells have xanthine dehydrogenase activity when grown with nitrate, nitrite, urea, or amino acid media. Mutant strains 102, 104, and 307 of Chlamydomonas, lacking both xanthine dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase activities, were incapable of restoring the NADPH-nitrate reductase activity of the mutant nit-1 of Neurospora crassa, whereas wild type cells and mutants 203 and 305 had xanthine dehydrogenase and were able to reconstitute the nitrate reductase activity of nit-1 of Neurospora. Therefore, it is concluded that in Chlamydomonas a common cofactor is shared by xanthine dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase. Xanthine dehydrogenase is repressed by ammonia and seems to be inessential for growth of Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Two new nitrate reductase-deficient mutants from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have been genetically and biochemically characterized. Both H1 and F23 mutants carry single recessive allelic mutations that map at a new locus designated nit-7. This locus is unlinked to the other six nit loci related to the nitrate assimilation pathway in C. reinhardtii. Both mutant alleles H1 and F23 lack an active molybdopterin cofactor, the activity of which is restored neither in vitro nor in vivo by high concentrations of molybdate. Nitrate reductase subunits in these mutants seem to assemble, although not in a stable form, in a high molecular weight complex and, as in other molybdenum cofactor-defective mutants of C. reinhardtii, they cannot reconstitute nitrate reductase activity with an active molybdenum cofactor source from extracts of ammonium-grown cells. The results suggest that nit-7 mutants are defective in molybdopterin biosynthesis. They do produce some precursor(s) that are capable of binding to nitrate reductase subunits.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrate reductase-deficient barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutants were assayed for the presence of a functional molybdenum cofactor determined from the activity of the molybdoenzyme, xanthine dehydrogenase, and for nitrate reductase-associated activities. Rocket immunoelectrophoresis was used to detect nitrate reductase cross-reacting material in the mutants. The cross-reacting material levels of the mutants ranged from 8 to 136% of the wild type and were correlated with their nitrate reductase-associated activities, except for nar 1c, which lacked all associated nitrate reductase activities but had 38% of the wild-type cross-reacting material. The cross-reacting material of two nar 1 mutants, as well as nar 2a, Xno 18, Xno 19, and Xno 29, exhibited rocket immunoprecipitates that were similar to the wild-type enzyme indicating structural homology between the mutant and wild-type nitrate reductase proteins. The cross-reacting materials of the seven remaining nar 1 alleles formed rockets only in the presence of purified wild-type nitrate reductase, suggesting structural modifications of the mutant cross-reacting materials. All nar 1 alleles and Xno 29 had xanthine dehydrogenase activity indicating the presence of functional molybdenum cofactors. These results suggest that nar 1 is the structural gene for nitrate reductase. Mutants nar 2a, Xno 18, and Xno 19 lacked xanthine dehydrogenase activity and are considered to be molybdenum cofactor deficient mutants. Cross-reacting material was not detected in uninduced wild-type or mutant extracts, suggesting that nitrate reductase is synthesized de novo in response to nitrate.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Nicotiana tabacum mutant cell cultures lacking nitrate reductase activity were assayed for the presence of the molybdenum-cofactor using its ability to restore NADPH-nitrate reductase activity in extracts of Neurospora crassa nit-1 mycelia. The molybdenum-cofactor of the tobacco wild-type line was shown to complement efficiently the N. crassa nit-1 mutant in vitro. The molybdenum-cofactor seems to exist in a bound form, as acid-treatment was required for release of cofactor activity. Molybdate (5–10 mM), ascorbic acid, and anaerobic conditions greatly increased the activity of the cofactor, demonstrating its high lability and sensitivity to oxygen. Similar results were obtained with two tobacco nia mutants, which are defective in the apoprotein of nitrate reductase. The four cnx mutants studied were shown to contain exclusively an inactive form of the molybdenum-cofactor. This inactive cofactor could be reactivated in vitro and in vivo by unphysiologically high concentrations of molybdate (1–10 mM), thereby converting the cnx cells into highly active cofactor sources in vitro, and restoring nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase in vivo to partial acitivity. Thus the defect of the cnx mutants resides in a lack of molybdenum as a catalytically active ligand metal for the cofactor, while the structural moiety of the cofactor seems not to be impaired by the mutation. The subunit assembly of the nitrate reductase was found to be independent of the molybdenum content of the cofactor.  相似文献   

13.
Chlorate-resistant mutants are pleiotropically defective in molybdoenzyme activities. The inactive derivative of the molybdoenzyme, respiratory nitrate reductase (nitrite: (acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.7.99.4), which is present in cell-free extracts of chlA mutants can be activated by addition of purified protein PA, the presumed active product of the chlA+ locus, but the activity of the purified protein PA is low, since comparatively large amounts of protein PA are required for the activation. Addition of 10 mM tungstate to the growth medium of a chlBchlC double mutant leads to inactivation of both the molybdenum cofactor and protein PA. Protein PA prepared from such cells was unable to potentiate the in vitro activation of nitrate reductase present in the soluble fraction of a chlA mutant. Quantitation of inactive protein PA was determined immunologically using protein PA-specific antiserum. When a heat-treated extract of a wild-type strain was added to purified protein PA or to the supernatant fraction of a chlBchlC double mutant grown with tungstate, a large stimulation in the ability of these preparations to activate chlA nitrate reductase was found. We equate the activator of protein PA with molybdenum cofactor because: (1) both are absent from heated extracts of tungstate-grown chlBchlC double mutant and cofactor defective chlA and chlE mutants; (2) both are present in heated extracts of wild-type strain; and (3) they behave identically on molecular-sieve columns.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The chlorate-resistant (chlR) mutants are pleiotropically defective in molybdoenzyme activity. The inactive derivative of the molybdoenzyme, respiratory nitrate reductase, present in the cell-free extract of a chlB mutant, can be activated by the addition of protein FA, the probable active product of the chlB locus. Protein FA addition, however, cannot bring about the activation if 10 mM sodium tungstate is included in the culture medium for the chlB strain. The inclusion of a heat-treated preparation of a wild-type or chlB strain prepared after growth in the absence of tungstate, restores the protein-FA-dependent activation of nitrate reductase. All attempts to activate nitrate reductase in extracts prepared from tungstate-grown wild-type Escherichia coli strains failed. It appears that during growth with tungstate, the possession of the active chlB gene product leads to the synthesis of a nitrate reductase derivative which is distinct from that present in the tungstate-grown chlB mutant. Heat-treated preparations from chlA and chlE mutants which do not possess molybdenum cofactor activity fail to restore the activation. Fractionation by gel filtration of the heat-treated preparation from a wild-type strain produced two active peaks in the eluate of approximate Mr 12000 and less than or equal to 1500. The active material in the heat-treated extract was resistant to exposure to proteinases, but after such treatment the active component, previously of approximate Mr 12000, eluted from the gel filtration column with the material of Mr less than or equal to 1500. The active material is therefore of low molecular mass and can exist either in a protein-bound form or in an apparently free state. Molybdenum cofactor activity, assayed by the complementation of the apoprotein of NADPH:nitrate oxidoreductase in an extract of the nit-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa, gave a profile following gel filtration similar to that of the ability to restore respiratory nitrate reductase activity to the tungstate-grown chlB mutant soluble fraction. This was the case even after proteinase treatment of the heat-stable fraction. Analysis of the chlC (narC) mutant, defective in the structural gene for nitrate reductase, revealed that heat treatment is not necessary for the expression of the active component. Furthermore both the active component and molybdenum cofactor activity are present in corresponding bound and free fractions in the non-heat-treated soluble subcellular fraction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
The soluble subcellular fraction of a chlB mutant contains an inactive precursor form of the molybdoenzyme nitrate reductase, which can be activated by the addition to the soluble fraction of protein FA, which is thought to be the active product of the chlB locus. Dialysis or desalting of the chlB soluble fraction leads to the loss of nitrate reductase activation, indicating that some low-molecular-weight material is required for the activation. The protein FA-dependent activation of nitrate reductase can be restored to the desalted chlB soluble fraction by the addition of a clarified extract obtained after heating the chlB soluble fraction at 100 degrees C for 8 min. The heat-stable substance present in this preparation has a molecular weight of approximately 1,000. This substance is distinct from the active molybdenum cofactor since its activity is unimpaired in heat-treated extracts prepared from the organism grown in the presence of tungstate, which leads to loss of cofactor activity. Mutations at the chlA or chlE locus, which are required for molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis, similarly do not affect the activity of the heat-treated extract in the in vitro activation process. Moreover, the active material can be separated from the molybdenum cofactor activity by gel filtration. None of the other known pleiotropic chlorate resistance loci (chlD, chlG) are required for the expression of its activity. Magnesium ATP appears to have a role in the formation of the active substance. We conclude that a low-molecular-weight substance, distinct from the active molybdenum cofactor, is required to bestow activity on the molybdoenzyme nitrate reductase during its biosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Two nitrate reductase (NaR)-deficient mutants of pea (Pisum sativum L.), E1 and A300, both disturbed in the molybdenum cofactor function and isolated, respectively, from cv Rondo and cv Juneau, were tested for allelism and were compared in biochemical and growth characteristics. The F1 plants of the cross E1 × A300 possessed NaR and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) activities comparable to those of the wild types, indicating that these mutants belong to different complementation groups, representing two different loci. Therefore, mutant E1 represents, besides mutant A300 and the allelic mutants A317 and A334, a third locus governing NaR and is assigned the gene destignation nar 3. In comparison with the wild types, cytochrome c reductase activity was increased in both mutants. The mutants had different cytochrome c reductase distribution patterns, indicating that mutant A300 could be disturbed in the ability to dimerize NaR apoprotein monomers, and mutant E1 in the catalytic function of the molybdenum cofactor. In growth characteristics studied, A300 did not differ from the wild types, whereas fully grown leaves of mutant E1 became necrotic in soil and in liquid media containing nitrate.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Complementation of a nitrate reductase deficient variant of Hyoscyamus muticus (MA-2) and nitrate reductase apoenzyme (nia-115) and cofactor mutants (cnx-68) of Nicotiana tabacum was studied by protoplast fusion. Selection of prototrophic intergeneric somatic hybrids was achieved in combination of MA-2 with the apoenzyme mutant nia-115 of N. tabacum. The H. muticus MA-2 line was therefore classified to be a cnx type variant possessing an altered molybdenum cofactor of the nitrate reductase enzyme complex but unaffected in the apoprotein of nitrate reductase. The nitrate reductase deficient and chlorate resistant characters of MA-2 were functionally coupled recessive traits. Nitrate reductase activity accompanied by chlorate sensitivity could be detected only under inductive conditions in the somatic hybrids. The inductive expression of nitrate reductase in the somatic hybrids arising from the combination of cells harbouring either the inductive or constitutive type nitrate reductase is discussed.Abbreviations DTT 1,4-Dithio-DL-threitol - Mo-co molybdenum containing cofactor - PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

19.
Summary In vitro complementation of the nitrate reductase-deficient barley mutant nar2a extracts with molybdenum cofactor from commercial xanthine oxidase resulted in reactivation of NADH: nitrate reductase activity. Maximum reactivation was achieved with 7.5 g/ml xanthine oxidase (final concentration), 10 mM glutathione (final concentration) and incubation for 30 min at room temperature (ca. 25°C). This in vitro complementation assay was used to determine the presence of functional apoprotein and molybdenum cofactor in 12 nitrate reductase-deficient barley mutants. Extracts of all nar1 alleles contained functional molybdenum cofactor (complemented with nar2a) but they lacked functional apoprotein (did not complement with molybdenum cofactor from xanthine oxidase). The nar2a, nar3a and nar3b extracts were able to donate functional apoprotein, but were poor sources of functional molybdenum cofactor. These data are in agreement with our previous assignment of nar1 to the barley NADH: nitrate reductase structural locus and nar2 and nar3 to molybdenum cofactor functions. Wild type cv. Steptoe barley seedlings grown in the absence of nitrate and lacking nitrate reductase activity contained low levels of molybdenum cofactor. Nitrate induction resulted in a several-fold increase in the measurable molybdenum cofactor levels that was correlated with the increase in nitrate reductase activity.Scientific Paper No. 6839. College of Agriculture Research Center, Washington State University, Pullman. Project Nos. 0430 and 0233. This work was supported in part by National Science Foundation Grant PCM 81-19096 and USDA Competitive Research Grant 82-CRCR-1-1112  相似文献   

20.
Summary NADH-specific and NAD(P)H bispecific nitrate reductases are present in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Wild-type leaves have only the NADH-specific enzyme while mutants with defects in the NADH nitrate reductase structural gene (nar1) have the NAD(P)H bispecific enzyme. A mutant deficient in the NAD(P)H nitrate reductase was isolated in a line (nar1a) deficient in the NADH nitrate reductase structural gene. The double mutant (nar1a;nar7w) lacks NAD(P)H nitrate reductase activity and has xanthine dehydrogenase and nitrite reductase activities similar to nar1a. NAD(P)H nitrate reductase activity in this mutant is controlled by a single codominant gene designated nar7. The nar7 locus appears to be the NAD(P)H nitrate reductase structural gene and is not closely linked to nar1. From segregating progeny of a cross between the wild type and nar1a;nar7w, a line was obtained which has the same NADH nitrate reductase activity as the wild type in both the roots and leaves but lacks NADPH nitrate reductase activity in the roots. This line is assumed to have the genotype Nar1Nar1nar7nar7. Roots of wild type seedlings have both nitrate reductases as shown by differential inactivation of the NADH and NAD(P)H nitrate reductases by a monospecific NADH-nitrate reductase antiserum. Thus, nar7 controls the NAD(P)H nitrate reductase in roots and in leaves of barley.Scientific Paper No. 7617, College of Agriculture Research Center and Home Economics, Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA. Project Nos. 0233 and 0745  相似文献   

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