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1.
Nitrate reductase of Neurospora crassa is a complex multi-redox protein composed of two identical subunits, each of which contains three distinct domains, an amino-terminal domain that contains a molybdopterin cofactor, a central heme-containing domain, and a carboxy-terminal domain which binds a flavin and a pyridine nucleotide cofactor. The flavin domain of nitrate reductase appears to have structural and functional similarity to ferredoxin NADPH reductase (FNR). Using the crystal structure of FNR and amino acid identities in numerous nitrate reductases as guides, site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace specific amino acids suspected to be involved in the binding of the flavin or pyridine nucleotide cofactors and thus important for the catalytic function of the flavin domain. Each mutant flavin domain protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and analyzed for NADPH: ferricyanide reductase activity. The effect of each amino acid substitution upon the activity of the complete nitrate reductase reaction was also examined by transforming each manipulated gene into a nit-3 ? null mutant of N. crassa. Our results identify amino acid residues which are critical for function of the flavin domain of nitrate reductase and appear to be important for the binding of the flavin or the pyridine nucleotide cofactors.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrate reductase of Neurospora crassa is a dimeric protein composed of two identical subunits, each possessing three separate domains, with flavin, heme, and molybdenum-containing cofactors. A number of mutants of nit-3, the structural gene that encodes Neurospora nitrate reductase, have been characterized at the molecular level. Amber nonsense mutants of nit-3 were found to possess a truncated protein detected by a specific antibody, whereas Ssu-1-suppressed nonsense mutants showed restoration of the wild-type, full-length nitrate reductase monomer. The mutants show constitutive expression of the truncated nitrate reductase protein; however normal control, which requires nitrate induction, was restored in the suppressed mutant strains. Three conventional nit-3 mutants were isolated by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced; two of these mutants were due to the deletion of a single base in the coding region for the flavin domain, the third mutant was a nonsense mutation within the amino-terminal molybdenum-containing domain. Homologous recombination was shown to occur when a deleted nit-3 gene was introduced by transformation into a host strain with a single point mutation in the resident nit-3 gene. New, severely damaged, null nit-3 mutants were created by repeat-induced point mutation and demonstrated to be useful as host strains for transformation experiments.  相似文献   

3.
Nitrate reductase (NR) from the fungus Neurospora crassa is a complex homodimeric metallo-flavoenzyme, where each protomer contains three distinct domains; the catalytically active terminal molybdopterin cofactor, a central heme-containing domain, and an FAD domain which binds with the natural electron donor NADPH. Here, we demonstrate the catalytic voltammetry of variants of N. crassa NRs on a modified Au electrode with the electrochemically reduced forms of benzyl viologen (BV2+) and anthraquinone sulfonate (AQS?) acting as artificial electron donors. The biopolymer chitosan used to entrap NR on the electrode non-covalently and the enzyme film was both stable and highly active. Electrochemistry was conducted on two distinct forms; one lacking the FAD cofactor and the other lacking both the FAD and heme cofactors. While both enzymes showed catalytic nitrate reductase activity, removal of the heme cofactor resulted in a more significant effect on the rate of nitrate reduction. Electrochemical simulation was carried out to enable kinetic characterisation of both the NR:nitrate and NR:mediator reactions.  相似文献   

4.
The enzyme nitrate reductase, which catalyzes the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, is a multi-redox center homodimeric protein. Each polypeptide subunit is approximately 100 kDa in size and contains three separate domains, one each for a flavin, a heme-iron, and a molybdopterin cofactor. The heme-iron domain of nitrate reductase has homology with the simple redox protein, cytochrome b5, whose crystal structure was used to predict a three-dimensional structure for the heme domain. Two histidine residues have been identified that appear to coordinate the iron of the heme moiety, while other residues may be important in the folding or the function of the heme pocket. Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to obtain mutants that encode nitrate reductase derivatives with eight different single amino acid substitutions within the heme domain, including the two central histidine residues. Replacement of one of these histidines by alanine resulted in a completely nonfunctional enzyme whereas replacement of the other histidine resulted in a stable and functional enzyme with a lower affinity for heme. Certain amino acid substitutions appeared to cause a rapid turnover of the heme domain, whereas other substitutions were tolerated and yielded a stable and fully active enzyme. Three different single amino acid replacements within the heme domain led to a dramatic change in regulation of nitrate reductase synthesis, with significant expression of the enzyme even in the absence of nitrate induction.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The structure of phthalate dioxygenase reductase (PDR), a monomeric iron-sulfur flavoprotein that delivers electrons from NADH to phthalate dioxygenase, is compared to ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR) and ferredoxin, the proteins that reduce NADP+ in the final reaction of photosystem I. The folding patterns of the domains that bind flavin, NAD(P), and [2Fe-2S] are very similar in the two systems. Alignment of the X-ray structures of PDR and FNR substantiates the assignment of features that characterize a family of flavoprotein reductases whose members include cytochrome P-450 reductase, sulfite and nitrate reductases, and nitric oxide synthase. Hallmarks of this subfamily of flavoproteins, here termed the FNR family, are an antiparallel β-barrel that binds the flavin prosthetic group, and a characteristic variant of the classic pyridine nucleotide-binding fold. Despite the similarities between FNR and PDR, attempts to model the structure of a dissociable FNR:ferredoxin complex by analogy with PDR reveal features that are at odds with chemical crosslinking studies (Zanetti, G., Morelli, D., Ronchi, S., Negri, A., Aliverti, A., & Curti, B., 1988, Biochemistry 27, 3753–3759). Differences in the binding sites for flavin and pyridine nucleotides determine the nucleotide specificities of FNR and PDR. The specificity of FNR for NADP+ arises primarily from substitutions in FNR that favor interactions with the 2′ phosphate of NADP+. Variations in the conformation and sequences of the loop adjoining the flavin phosphate affect the selectivity for FAD versus FMN. The midpoint potentials for reduction of the flavin and [2Fe–2S] groups in PDR are higher than their counterparts in FNR and spinach ferredoxin, by about 120 mV and 260 mV, respectively. Comparisons of the structure of PDR with spinach FNR and with ferredoxin from Anabaena 7120, along with calculations of electrostatic potentials, suggest that local interactions, including hydrogen bonds, are the dominant contributors to these differences in potential.  相似文献   

7.
Nitrate reductase of Neurospora crassa is a dimeric protein composed of two identical subunits, each possessing three separate domains, with flavin, heme, and molybdenum-containing cofactors. A number of mutants of nit-3, the structural gene that encodes Neurospora nitrate reductase, have been characterized at the molecular level. Amber nonsense mutants of nit-3 were found to possess a truncated protein detected by a specific antibody, whereas Ssu-1-suppressed nonsense mutants showed restoration of the wild-type, full-length nitrate reductase monomer. The mutants show constitutive expression of the truncated nitrate reductase protein; however normal control, which requires nitrate induction, was restored in the suppressed mutant strains. Three conventional nit-3 mutants were isolated by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced; two of these mutants were due to the deletion of a single base in the coding region for the flavin domain, the third mutant was a nonsense mutation within the amino-terminal molybdenum-containing domain. Homologous recombination was shown to occur when a deleted nit-3 gene was introduced by transformation into a host strain with a single point mutation in the resident nit-3 gene. New, severely damaged, null nit-3 mutants were created by repeat-induced point mutation and demonstrated to be useful as host strains for transformation experiments.  相似文献   

8.
The enzyme nitrate reductase, which catalyzes the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, is a multi-redox center homodimeric protein. Each polypeptide subunit is approximately 100 kDa in size and contains three separate domains, one each for a flavin, a heme-iron, and a molybdopterin cofactor. The heme-iron domain of nitrate reductase has homology with the simple redox protein, cytochrome b5, whose crystal structure was used to predict a three-dimensional structure for the heme domain. Two histidine residues have been identified that appear to coordinate the iron of the heme moiety, while other residues may be important in the folding or the function of the heme pocket. Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to obtain mutants that encode nitrate reductase derivatives with eight different single amino acid substitutions within the heme domain, including the two central histidine residues. Replacement of one of these histidines by alanine resulted in a completely nonfunctional enzyme whereas replacement of the other histidine resulted in a stable and functional enzyme with a lower affinity for heme. Certain amino acid substitutions appeared to cause a rapid turnover of the heme domain, whereas other substitutions were tolerated and yielded a stable and fully active enzyme. Three different single amino acid replacements within the heme domain led to a dramatic change in regulation of nitrate reductase synthesis, with significant expression of the enzyme even in the absence of nitrate induction.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The nit-3 gene of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa encodes the enzyme nitrate reductase, which catalyzes the first reductive step in the highly regulated nitrate assimilatory pathway. The nucleotide sequence of nit-3 was determined and translates to a protein of 982 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of approximately 108 kDa. Comparison of the deduced nit-3 protein sequence with the nitrate reductase protein sequences of other fungi and higher plants revealed that a significant amount of homology exists, particularly within the three cofactor-binding domains for molybdenum, heme and FAD. The synthesis and turnover of the nit-3 mRNA were also examined and found to occur rapidly and efficiently under changing metabolic conditions.  相似文献   

10.
The complete nucleotide sequence of the petH gene encoding ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 has been determined. The encoded polypeptide is 136 amino acids longer than the enzyme obtained after purification to homogeneity. The extended N-terminal domain consists of 80 amino acids which shows homology to the CpcD phycobilisome linker polypeptide, through which FNR might be anchored to the thylakoid-bound phycobilisomes. A 56 amino acid interdomain fragment is found which could be a target for proteolysis.  相似文献   

11.
Nucleotide sequences were determined for cDNA clones for squash NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.6.1), which is one of the most completely characterized forms of this higher plant enzyme. An open reading frame of 2754 nucleotides began at the first ATG. The deduced amino acid sequence contains 918 residues, with a predicted Mr = 103,376. The amino acid sequence is very similar to sequences deduced for other higher plant nitrate reductases. The squash sequence has significant similarity to the amino acid sequences of sulfite oxidase, cytochrome b5, and NADH:cytochrome b5 reductase. Alignment of these sequences with that of squash defines domains of nitrate reductase that appear to bind its 3 prosthetic groups (molybdopterin, heme-iron, and FAD). The amino acid sequence of the FAD domain of squash nitrate reductase was aligned with FAD domain sequences of other NADH:nitrate reductases, NADH:cytochrome b5 reductases, NADPH:nitrate reductases, ferredoxin:NADP+ reductases, NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductases, NADPH:sulfite reductase flavoproteins, and Bacillus megaterium cytochrome P-450BM-3. In this multiple alignment, 14 amino acid residues are invariant, which suggests these proteins are members of a family of flavoenzymes. Secondary structure elements of the structural model of spinach ferredoxin:NADP+ reductase were used to predict the secondary structure of squash nitrate reductase and the other related flavoenzymes in this family. We suggest that this family of flavoenzymes, nearly all of which reduce a hemoprotein, be called "flavoprotein pyridine nucleotide cytochrome reductases."  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Thioredoxin reductase is a flavoprotein which catalyzes the reduction of the small protein thioredoxin by NADPH. It contains a redox active disulfide and an FAD in each subunit of its dimeric structure. Each subunit is further divided into two domains, the FAD and the pyridine nucleotide binding domains. The orientation of the two domains determined from the crystal structure and the flow of electrons determined from mechanistic studies suggest that thioredoxin reductase requires a large conformational change to carry out catalysis (Williams CH Jr, 1995, FASEB J 9:1267-1276). The constituent amino acids of an ion pair, E48/R130, between the FAD and pyridine nucleotide binding domains, were mutagenized to cysteines to form E48C,R130C (CC mutant). Formation of a stable bridge between these cysteines was expected to restrict the enzyme largely in the conformation observed in the crystal structure. Crosslinking with the bifunctional reagent N,N,1,2 phenylenedimaleimide, spanning 4-9 A, resulted in a >95 % decrease in thioredoxin reductase and transhydrogenase activity. SDS-PAGE confirmed that the crosslink in the CC-mutant was intramolecular. Dithionite titration showed an uptake of electrons as in wild-type enzyme, but anaerobic reduction of the flavin with NADPH was found to be impaired. This indicates that the crosslinked enzyme is in the conformation where the flavin and the active site disulfide are in close proximity but the flavin and pyridinium rings are too far apart for effective electron transfer. The evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that thioredoxin reductase requires a conformational change to complete catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Cell-free extracts of Proteus mirabilis were able to reconstitute NADPH-dependent assimilatory nitrate reductase in crude extracts of the Neurospora crassa mutant strain nit-1, lacking molybdenum cofactor. Molybdenum cofactor was formed in the cytoplasm of the bacterium even in the presence of oxygen during growth though under these conditions no molybdo enzymes are formed. As a consequence no cofactor could be released by acid treatment from membranes of cells grown aerobically. The amount of cofactor released from membranes of cells grown anaerobically under various conditions was proportional to the amount of molybdo enzymes formed. During growth in the presence of tungstate a cofactor, which lacks molybdenum, was found in the cytoplasm. For detection of this so-called demolybdo cofactor the presence of molybdate during reconstitution was essential. Moreover, the cytoplasmic cofactor pool in cells grown in the presence of tungstate appeared to be two to three times higher than in cells grown under similar conditions without tungstate. After anaerobic growth in the presence of tungstate, the inactive demolybdo reductases were shown to contain partly no cofactor and partly a demolybdo cofactor. The P. mirabilis chlorate resistant mutant S 556 did not contain molybdenum cofactor. In two other chl-mutants the cofactor activity was the same as in the wild type.  相似文献   

15.
The NADPH‐cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CYPOR) enzyme is a membrane‐bound protein and contains both FAD and FMN cofactors. The enzyme transfers two electrons, one at a time, from NADPH to cytochrome P450 enzymes to function in the enzymatic reactions. We previously expressed in Escherichia coli the membrane‐bound CYPOR (flAnCYPOR) from Anopheles minimus mosquito. We demonstrated the ability of flAnCYPOR to support the An. minimus CYP6AA3 enzyme activity in deltamethrin degradation in vitro. The present study revealed that the flAnCYPOR purified enzyme, analyzed by a fluorometric method, readily lost its flavin cofactors. When supplemented with exogenous flavin cofactors, the activity of flAnCYPOR‐mediated cytochrome c reduction was increased. Mutant enzymes containing phenylalanine substitutions at leucine residues 86 and 219 were constructed and found to increase retention of FMN cofactor in the flAnCYPOR enzymes. Kinetic study by measuring cytochrome c–reducing activity indicated that the wild‐type and mutant flAnCYPORs followed a non‐classical two‐site Ping‐Pong mechanism, similar to rat CYPOR. The single mutant (L86F or L219F) and double mutant (L86F/L219F) flAnCYPOR enzymes, upon reconstitution with the An. minimus cytochrome P450 CYP6AA3 and a NADPH‐regenerating system, increased CYP6AA3‐mediated deltamethrin degradation compared to the wild‐type flAnCYPOR enzyme. The increased enzyme activity could illustrate a more efficient electron transfer of AnCYPOR to CYP6AA3 cytochrome P450 enzyme. Addition of extra flavin cofactors could increase CYP6AA3‐mediated activity supported by wild‐type and mutant flAnCYPOR enzymes. Thus, both leucine to phenylalanine substitutions are essential for flAnCYPOR enzyme in supporting CYP6AA3‐mediated metabolism. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The molybdenum cofactor of the barley mutant R9401 is not able to reconstitute NADPH nitrate reductase activity from extracts of the N. crassa nit-1 mutant nor is it able to effect dimerisation of the nitrate reductase subunits present in the R9401 mutant. Unphysiologically high levels of molybdate cannot restore nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase activity to mutant R9401 in vivo nor reactivate the Mo-co factor in vitro. The results indicate that the defect in mutant R9401 lies in the pathway leading to the formation of a functional molybdopterin moiety and that the same nuclear gene is involved in the synthesis of both shoot and root molybdenum cofactor.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumen - GSH glutathione (reduced) - NEM N-ethylmaleimide  相似文献   

17.
A novel nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent carbonyl reductase, 3-quinuclidinone reductase, was isolated from Rhodotorula rubra JCM3782. The enzyme catalyzes the asymmetric reduction of 3-quinuclidinone to (R)-3-quinuclidinol. The gene encoding the enzyme was also cloned and sequenced. A 819-bp nucleotide fragment was confirmed to be the gene encoding the 3-quinuclidinone reductase by agreement of the internal amino acid sequences of the purified enzyme. The gene encodes a total of 272 amino acid residues, and the deduced amino acid sequence shows similarity to those of several short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family proteins. An expression vector, pWKLQ, which contains the full length 3-quinuclidinone reductase gene was constructed. Using Escherichia coli cells coexpressing the 3-quinuclidinone reductase and glucose dehydrogenase (cofactor regeneration enzyme) genes, 618 mM 3-quinuclidinone was almost stiochiometrically converted to (R)-3-quinuclidinol with an >99.9% enantiomeric excess within 21 h of reaction.  相似文献   

18.
Electrostatic properties on the protein surface were examined on the basis of the crystal structure of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase refined to a crystallographic R factor of 0.223 at 2.1 Å resolution and of the other three flavin-dependent reductases. A structural comparison of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase with the other flavin-dependent reductases, ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, phthalate dioxygenase reductase, and nitrate reductase, showed that the α/β structure is the common motif for binding pyridine nucleotide. Although the amino acid residues associated with pyridine nucleotide-binding are not conserved, the electrostatic properties and the location of the pyridine nucleotide-binding pockets of NADH-requiring reductases were similar to each other. The electrostatic potential of the surface near the flavin-protruding side (dimethylbenzene end of the flavin ring) of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase was positive over a wide area while that of the surface near the heme-binding site of cytochrome b5 was negative. This implied that the flavin-protruding side of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase is suitable for interacting with its electron-transfer partner, cytochrome b5. This positive potential area is conserved among four flavin-dependent reductases. A comparison of the electron-transfer partners of four flavin-dependent reductases showed that there are significant differences in the distribution of electrostatic potential between inter-molecular and inter-domain electron-transfer reactions. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
From Bacillus subtilis cell extracts, ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR) was purified to homogeneity and found to be the yumC gene product by N-terminal amino acid sequencing. YumC is a 94-kDa homodimeric protein with one molecule of non-covalently bound FAD per subunit. In a diaphorase assay with 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol as electron acceptor, the affinity for NADPH was much higher than that for NADH, with Km values of 0.57 M vs >200 M. Kcat values of YumC with NADPH were 22.7 s–1 and 35.4 s–1 in diaphorase and in a ferredoxin-dependent NADPH-cytochrome c reduction assay, respectively. The cell extracts contained another diaphorase-active enzyme, the yfkO gene product, but its affinity for ferredoxin was very low. The deduced YumC amino acid sequence has high identity to that of the recently identified Chlorobium tepidum FNR. A genomic database search indicated that there are more than 20 genes encoding proteins that share a high level of amino acid sequence identity with YumC and which have been annotated variously as NADH oxidase, thioredoxin reductase, thioredoxin reductase-like protein, etc. These genes are found notably in gram-positive bacteria, except Clostridia, and less frequently in archaea and proteobacteria. We propose that YumC and C. tepidum FNR constitute a new group of FNR that should be added to the already established plant-type, bacteria-type, and mitochondria-type FNR groups.  相似文献   

20.
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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