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1.
Summary The assimilatory nitrate reductase of the N2-fixing bacterium Azotobacter chroococcum has been prepared in a soluble form from cells grown with nitrate as the nitrogen source, and some of its properties (electron donors and cofactors, K mvalues for substrates, molecular weight, inhibitors, activators, etc.) have been studied. The enzyme is of an inducible nature and can exist in two interconvertible forms, either active or inactive.Tungstate very efficiently inhibits growth of the microorganism in media with nitrate. When either nitrite or ammonia are substituted for nitrate as the nitrogen source, growth is unaffected by tungstate concentrations which otherwise completely suppress growth on nitrate. Tungstate interferes by decreasing the cellular level of nitrate reductase activity, preventing, as a consequence, utilization of nitrate.  相似文献   

2.
Silene alba cells grown on nitrate, usually develop NADH-nitrate reductase activity only at the beginning of their growth cycle. Immunodiffusion assays, with a specific nitrate reductase antiserum, revealed the presence of cross-reacting material in cells harvested at any time during their culture. Cells grown on ammonium lacked NADH-nitrate reductase activity but contained cross-reacting material. It is suggested that S. alba cells contain an enzymically inactive, antigenic form of nitrate reductase regardless of the nitrogen source.  相似文献   

3.
Tungstate prevented the formation of active nitrate reductase in growing rumen bacteria capable of nitrate reduction, but did not directly inhibit the enzyme activity of all strains tested.  相似文献   

4.
1. The assimilatory nitrite reductase of the N(2)-fixing bacterium Azotobacter chroococcum was prepared in a soluble form from cells grown aerobically with nitrate as the nitrogen source, and some of its properties have been studied. 2. The enzyme is a FAD-dependent metalloprotein (mol.wt. about 67000), which stoicheiometrically catalyses the direct reduction of nitrite to NH(3) with NADH as the electron donor. 3. NADH-nitrite reductase can exist in two either active or inactive interconvertible forms. Inactivation in vitro can be achieved by preincubation with NADH. Nitrite can specifically protect the enzyme against this inactivation and reverse the process once it has occurred. 4. A. chroococcum nitrite reductase is an adaptive enzyme whose formation depends on the presence of either nitrate or nitrite in the nutrient solution. 5. Tungstate inhibits growth of the microorganism very efficiently, by competition with molybdate, when nitrate is the nitrogen source, but does not interfere when nitrite or NH(3) is substituted for nitrate. The addition of tungstate to the culture media results in the loss of nitrate reductase activity but does not affect nitrite reductase.  相似文献   

5.
The growth of suspension cultured cells of Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco) was inhibited completely by 100 M tungstate. Even though molybdate reversed the tungstate inactivation of nitrate reductase activity, the growth inhibition was not reversed. The growth inhibition of N. tabacum, Daucus carota, Glycine max and Solanum tuberosum suspension cultured cells by tungstate was similar in media with or without amino acids as a source of reduced nitrogen. Only in the case of G. max was a slight reversal caused by the amino acids. Tungstate was slightly less inhibitory to the growth of a nitrate reductase-lacking mutant N. tabacum line (nia-63) than to the line with nitrate reductase. These results indicate that tungstate must inhibit the cell growth of the four species used, predominantly, in some way other than by inhibiting nitrate reductase activity. Similar studies with molybdate, a sulfate analog which apparently competes with sulfate at the ATP sulfury-lase enzyme, showed that 1 mM concentrations were completely inhibitory to cell growth. The addition of sulfate or cysteine, as a source of reduced sulfur, and amino acids, as a source of reduced nitrogen, in most cases did not reverse the molybdate inhibition appreciably. Some reversal was seen only by sulfate with D. carota cells and by cysteine plus amino acids with D. carota and G. max. These results indicate that selection for tungstate or molybdate resistance will in general not select for higher levels or other alterations in the activity of nitrate reductase or ATP sulfurylase, respectively, since these ions do not inhibit growth by primarily affecting these enzymatic steps in cultured cells of the four species studied.  相似文献   

6.
Nitrate Reductase and Chlorate Toxicity in Chlorella vulgaris Beijerinck   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0  
A study of the growth-inhibiting effect of chlorate on the Berlin strain of Chlorella vulgaris Beijerinck provided complete confirmation of the theory of chlorate toxicity first proposed by Åberg in 1947. Chlorate was toxic to the cells growing on nitrate, and relatively nontoxic to the cells growing on ammonium. The latter cells contained only 0.01 as much NADH-nitrate reductase as the nitrate-grown cells. Chlorate could substitute for nitrate as a substrate of the purified nitrate reductase with Km = 1.2 mm, and Vmax = 0.9Vmax for nitrate. Bromate, and to a much smaller extent, iodate, also served as alternate substrates. Nitrate is a reversible competitive inhibitor of chlorate reduction, which accounts for the partial reversal, by high nitrate concentrations, of the observed inhibition of cell growth by chlorate. During the reduction of chlorate by NADH in the presence of purified nitrate reductase, there was a progressive, irreversible inhibition of the enzyme activity, presumably brought about by the reduction product, chlorite. Both the NADH-nitrate reductase activity and the associated NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity were inactivated to the same extent by added chlorite. The spectral properties of the cytochrome b557 associated with the purified enzyme were not affected by chlorite. The inactivation of the nitrate reductase by chlorite could account for the toxicity of chlorate to cells grown on nitrate, though the destruction of other cell components by chlorite or its decomposition products cannot be excluded.  相似文献   

7.
Role of molybdenum in nitrate reduction by chlorella   总被引:11,自引:4,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Molybdenum is absolutely required for the nitrate-reducing activity of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide nitrate reductase complex isolated from Chlorella fusca. The whole enzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide nitrate reductase is formed by cells grown in the absence of added molybdate, but only its first activity (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase) is functional. The second activity of the complex, which subsequently participates also in the enzymatic transfer of electrons from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to nitrate (FNH2-nitrate reductase), depends on the presence of molybdenum. Neither molybdate nor nitrate is required for nitrate reductase synthesis de novo, but ammonia acts as a nutritional repressor of the complete enzyme complex. Under conditions which exclude de novo synthesis of nitrate reductase, the addition of molybdate to molybdenum-deficient cells clearly increases the activity level of this enzyme, thus suggesting in vivo incorporation of the trace metal into the pre-existing inactive apoenzyme.  相似文献   

8.
The level of endogenous sugars was inversely related to nitrate availability in young cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) plants, with high nitrate causing a greater decline in sugar content of roots than of shoots. High nitrate (low sugar) plants also displayed relatively more shoot growth and less root growth than low nitrate (high sugar) plants. These data are consistent with the theory that roots are poor competitors for sugar, and that sugar supply is a major factor limiting root growth in vivo.

The effects of endogenous sugar level on root growth and on nitrate reductase activity in the root were different. When root sugar level was experimentally controlled by varying nitrate concentration in the nutrient solution, root growth was less sensitive than nitrate reductase activity to sugar deficiency. Also, in sterile root tips cultured on media containing a wide range of sucrose concentrations, growth rate was considerably less sensitive to endogenous sugar deficiency than was nitrate assimilation rate. Similarly, in plants which were detopped or girdled, nitrate reductase activity in the roots declined more rapidly than did root sugars, especially glucose and fructose. These results suggest that when sugar is deficient, cotton roots preferentially use it for growth at the expense of nitrate reduction.

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9.
Strain 21gr from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a cryptic mutant defective in the Nit5 gene related to the biosynthesis of molybdenum cofactor (MoCo). In spite of this mutation, this strain has active MoCo and can grow on nitrate media. In genetic crosses, the Nit5 mutation cosegregated with a phenotype of resistance to high concentrations of molybdate and tungstate. Molybdate/tungstate toxicity was much higher in nitrate than in ammonium media. Strain 21gr showed lower amounts of MoCo activity than the wild type both when grown in nitrate and after growth in ammonium and nitrate induction. However, nitrate reductase (NR) specific activity was similar in wild type and 21gr cells. Tungstate, either at nanomolar concentrations in nitrate media or at micromolar concentrations during growth in ammonium and nitrate induction, strongly decreased MoCo and NR amounts in wild‐type cells but had a slight effect in 21gr cells. Molybdate uptake activity of ammonium‐grown cells from both the wild‐type and 21gr strains was small and blocked by sulphate 0·3 mM . However, cells from nitrate medium showed a molybdate uptake activity insensitive to sulphate. This uptake activity was much higher and more sensitive to inhibition by tungstate in the wild type than in strain 21gr. These results suggest that strain 21gr has a high affinity and low capacity molybdate transport system able to discriminate efficiently tungstate, and lacks a high capacity molybdate/tungstate transport system, which operates in wild‐type cells upon nitrate induction. This high capacity molybdate transport system would account for both the stimulating effect of molybdate on MoCo amounts and the toxic effects of tungstate and molybdate when present at high concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
Mutants H-14 and H-18 of Staphylococcus aureus require hemin for growth on glycerol and other nonfermentable substrates. H-14 also responds to delta-aminolevulinate. Heme-deficient cells grown in the presence of nitrate do not have lactate-nitrate reductase activity but gain this activity when incubated with hemin in buffer and glucose. Lactate-nitrate reductase activity is also restored to the membrane fraction from such cells by incubation with hemin and dithiothreitol; addition of adenosine 5'-triphosphate has no effect upon the restoration. Cells grown with nitrate in the absence of hemin have two to five times more reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activity than do those grown with hemin. The activity increases throughout the growth period in the absence of hemin, but with hemin present enzyme formation ceases before the end of growth. There was no evidence of enzyme destruction. The distribution of nitrate reductase activity between membrane and cytoplasm was similar in cells grown with and without hemin; 70 to 90% was in the cytoplasm. It is concluded that heme-deficient staphylococci form apo-cytochrome b, which readily combines in vitro with its prosthetic group to restore normal function. The avaliability of the heme prosthetic group influences the formation of nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Induced wildtype cells ofA. nidulans rapidly lost NADPH — linked nitrate reductase activity when subjected to carbon and or nitrogen starvation. A constitutive mutant at the regulatory gene for nitrate reductase,nirA c1, rapidly lost nitrate reductase activity upon carbon starvation. This loss of activity is thought to be due to a decrease in the NADPH concentration in the cells. Cell free extracts from wild-type cells grown in the presence of nitrate, rapidly lost their nitrate reductase activity when incubated at 25° C. NADPH prevented this loss of activity. Wildtype cells grown in the presence of nitrate and urea have a higher initial NADPH: NADP+ ratio and cell free extracts from such cells lost their nitrate reductase activity slower than extracts of cells grown with nitrate alone.The Pentose Phosphate Pathway mutant,pppB-1, had a lower NADPH concentration compared with the wildtype grown under the same conditions and cell free extracts lost their nitrate reductase activity more rapidly than the wildtype. Cell free extracts ofnirA c-1 and a non-inducible mutant for nitrate reductase,nirA --14, upon incubation lost little of their nitrate reductase activity.  相似文献   

12.
Certain amino acids inhibit growth of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. var. xanthi), tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) carrot (Daucus carota), and soybean (Glycerine max L. co. Mandarin) cell cultures when nitrate or urea are the nitrogen sources but not when ammonia is the nitrogen source. These amino acids also inhibit development of nitrate reductase activity (NADH:nitrate oxidoreductase EC 1.6.6.1) in tobacco and tomato cultures. Threonine, the most inhibitory amino acid, also inhibits nitrate uptake in tobacco cells. Arginine, and some other amino acids, abolish the inhibition effects caused by other amino acids. We suggest that amino acids inhibit assimilation of intracellular ammonium into amino acids in cells grown on nitrate or urea.  相似文献   

13.
A barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutant, nar1a (formerly Az12), deficient in NADH nitrate reductase activity is, nevertheless, capable of growth with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source. In an attempt to identify the mechanism(s) of nitrate reduction in the mutant, nitrate reductase from nar1a was characterized to determine whether the residual activity is due to a leaky mutation or to the presence of a second nitrate reductase. The results obtained indicate that the nitrate reductase in nar1a differs from the wild-type enzyme in several important aspects. The pH optima for both the NADH and the NADPH nitrate reductase activities from nar1a were approximately pH 7.7, which is slightly greater than the pH 7.5 optimum for the NADH activity and considerably greater than the pH 6.0 to 6.5 optimum for the NADPH activity of the wild-type enzyme. The nitrate reductase from nar1a exhibits greater NADPH than NADH activity and has apparent Km values for nitrate and NADH that are approximately 10 times greater than those of the wild-type enzyme. The nar1a nitrate reductase has apparent Km values of 170 micromolar for NADPH and 110 micromolar for NADH. NADPH, but not NADH, inhibited the enzyme at concentrations greater than 50 micromolar.  相似文献   

14.
  1. The disappearance of nitrate from suspensions of intact, washed cells of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata strain N22DNAR+ was measured with an ion selective electrode. In samples taken from phototrophic cultures grown to late exponential phase, nitrate disappearance was partially inhibited by light but was not affected by the presence of ammonium. Nitrate disappearance from samples from low density cultures in the early exponential phase of growth was first inhibited and later stimulated by light. In these cells ammonium ions inhibited the light-dependent but not the dark disappearance of nitrate. It is concluded that cells in the early exponential phase of growth possess both an ammonium-sensitive, assimilatory pathway for nitrate reduction (NRI) and an ammonium-insensitive pathway for nitrate reduction (NRII) which is linked to respiratory electron flow and energy conservation. In cells harvested in late exponential phase only the respiratory pathway for pitrate reduction is detectable.
  2. Nitrate reduction, as judged by the oxidation of reduced methyl viologen by anaerobic cell suspensions, was measured at high rates in those strains of R. capsulata (AD2, BK5, N22DNAR+) which are believed to possess NRII activity but not in those strains (Kbl, R3, N22) which only manifest the ammonium-sensitive NRI pathway. On this basis we have used nitrate-dependent oxidation of reduced methyl viologen as a diagnostic test for the nitrate reductase of NRII in cells harvested from cultures of R. capsulata strain AD2. The activity was readily detectable in cells from cultures grown aerobically in the dark with ammonium nitrate as source of nitrogen. When the oxygen supply to the culture was withdrawn, the level of methyl viologen-dependent nitrate reductase increased considerably and nitrite accumulated in the culture medium. Upon reconnecting the oxygen supply, methyl viologen-dependent nitrate reductase activity decreased and the reduction of nitrate to nitrite in the culture was inhibited. It is concluded that the respiratory nitrate reductase activity is regulated by the availability of electron transport pathways that are linked to the generation of a proton electrochemical gradient.
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15.
(1) Under anaerobic conditions the respiratory chain in cells of Paracoccus denitrificans, from late exponential cultures grown anaerobically with nitrate as electron acceptor and succinate as carbon source, has been shown to reduce added nitrate via nitrite and nitrous oxide to nitrogen without any accumulation of these intermediates. (2) Addition of nitrous oxide to cells reducing nitrate strongly inhibited the latter reaction. The inhibition was reversed by preventing electron flow to nitrous oxide with either antimycin or acetylene. Electron flow to nitrous oxide thus resembles electron flow to oxygen in its inhibitory effect on nitrate reduction. In contrast, addition of nitrite to an anaerobic suspension of cells reducing nitrate resulted in a stimulation of nitrate reductase activity. Usually, addition of nitrite also partially overcame the inhibitory effect of nitrous oxide on nitrate reduction. The reason why added nitrous oxide, but not nitrite, inhibits nitrate reduction is suggested to be related to the higher reductase activity of the cells for nitrous oxide compared with nitrite. Explanations for the unexpected stimulation of nitrate reduction by nitrite in the presence or absence of added nitrous oxide are considered. (3) Nitrous oxide reductase was shown to be a periplasmic protein that competed with nitrite reductase for electrons from reduced cytochrome c. Added nitrous oxide strongly inhibited the reduction of added nitrite. (4) Nitrite reductase activity of cells was strongly inhibited by oxygen in the presence of physiological reductants, but nitrite reduction did occur in the presence of oxygen when isoascorbate plus N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine was the reductant. It is concluded that competition for available electrons by two oxidases, cytochrome aa3 and cytochrome o, severely restricted electron flow to the nitrite reductase (cytochrome cd). For this reason it is unlikely that the oxidase activity of this cytochrome is ever functional in cells. (5) The mechanism by which electron flow to oxygen or nitrous oxide inhibits nitrate reduction in cells has been investigated. It is argued that relatively small changes in the extent of reduction of ubiquinone, or of another component of the respiratory chain with similar redox potential, critically determine the capacity for reducing nitrate. The argument is based on: (i) the response of an anthroyloxystearic acid fluorescent probe that is sensitive to changes in the oxidation state of ubiquinone; (ii) consideration of the total rates of electron flow through ubiquinone both in the presence of oxygen and in the presence of nitrate under anaerobic conditions; (iii) use of relative extents of oxidation of b-type cytochromes as an indicator of ubiquinone redox state, especially the finding that b-type cytochrome of the antimycin-sensitive part of the respiratory chain is more oxidised in the presence of added nitrous oxide, which inhibits nitrate reduction, than in the presence of added nitrite which does not inhibit. Arguments against b- or c-type cytochromes themselves controlling nitrate reduction are given. (6) In principle, control on nitrate reduction could be exerted either upon electron flow or upon the movement of nitrate to the active site of its reductase. The observations that inverted membrane vesicles and detergent-treated cells reduced nitrate and oxygen simultaneously at a range of total rates of electron flow are taken to support the latter mechanism. The failure of an additional reductant, durohydroquinone, to activate nitrate reduction under aerobic conditions in the presence of succinate is also evidence that it is not an inadequate supply of electrons that prevents the functioning of nitrate reductase under aerobic conditions. (7) In inverted membrane vesicles the division of electron flow between nitrate and oxygen is determined by a competition mechanism, in contrast to cells. This change in behaviour upon converting cells to vesicles cannot be attributed to loss of cytochrome c, and therefore of oxidase activity, from the vesicles because a similar change in behaviour was seen with vesicles prepared from cells of a cytochrome c-deficient mutant.  相似文献   

16.
Significant nitrate reductase activity was detected in mutants of Salmonella typhimurium which mapped at or near chlC and which were incapable of growth with nitrate as electron acceptor. The same mutants were sensitive to chlorate and performed sufficient nitrate reduction to permit anaerobic growth with nitrate as the sole nitrogen source in media containing glucose. The mutant nitrate-reducing protein did not migrate with the wild-type nitrate reductase in polyacrylamide electrophoretic gels. Studies of the electrophoretic mobility in gels of different polyacrylamide concentration revealed that the wild-type and mutant nitrate reductases differed significantly in both size and charge. The second enzyme also differed from the wild-type major enzyme in its response to repression by low pH and its lack of response to repression by glucose. The same mutants were found to be derepressed for nitrite reductase and for a cytochrome with a maximal reduced absorbance at 555 nm at 25°C. This cytochrome was not detected in preparations of the wild type grown under the same conditions. Extracts of these mutants contained normal amounts of the b-type cytochromes which, in the wild type, were associated with nitrate reductase and formate dehydrogenase, respectively, although they could not mediate the oxidation of these cytochromes with nitrate. They were capable of oxidizing the derepressed 555-nm peak cytochrome with nitrate. It is suggested that these mutants synthesize a nitrate-reducing enzyme which is distinct from the chlC gene product and which is repressed in the wild type during anaerobic growth with nitrate.  相似文献   

17.
Supply of 100 μM spermidine (Spd) in the nutrient solution containing 10 mM nitrate as the sole nitrogen source, increased growth of roots and shoots, total nitrogen content andin vivo orin vitro nitrate reductase (NR) activity of leaves of 10-d oldLeucaena leucocephala seedlings. Spd and the cytokinins benzyladenine or kinetin also increased growth, total nitrogen andin vivo NR activity of isolated cotyledons. The synergistic effects of nitrate, kinetin and Spd in increasing NR activity, indicate that the Spd acted at different level than the nitrate or cytokinin.  相似文献   

18.
Under conditions of controlled pH, nitrate and ammonium are equally effective in supporting the growth of young soybean (Glycine max var. Bansei) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L. var., Mammoth Russian) plans. Soybean contains an active nitrate reductase in roots and leaves, but the low specific activity of this enzyme in sunflower leaves indicates a dependency upon the roots for nitrate reduction. Suppression of nitrate reductase activity in sunflower leaves may be due to high concentrations of ammonia received from the roots. Nitrate reductase activity in leaves of nitrate-supplied soybean and sunflower follows closely the distribution of nitrate reductase. For the roots of both species, glutamic acid dehydrogenase activity was greater with ammonium than with nitrate. The glutamic acid dehydrogenase of ammonium roots is wholly NADH-dependent, whereas that of nitrate roots is active with NADH and NADPH. In leaves, an NADPH-dependent glutamic acid dehydrogenase appears to be responsible for the assimilation of translocated ammonia and ammonia formed by nitrate reduction.  相似文献   

19.
In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants defective at the structural locus for nitrate reductase (nit-1) or at loci for biosynthesis of the molybdopterin cofactor (nit-3, nit-4, or nit-5 and nit-6), both nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities were repressed in ammonium-grown cells and expressed at high amounts in nitrogen-free media or in media containing nitrate or nitrite. In contrast, wild-type cells required nitrate induction for expression of high levels of both activities. In mutants defective at the regulatory locus for nitrate reductase (nit-2), very low levels of nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities were expressed even in the presence of nitrate or nitrite. Both restoration of nitrate reductase activity in mutants defective at nit-1, nit-3, and nit-4 by isolating diploid strains among them and transformation of a structural mutant upon integration of the wild-type nit-1 gene gave rise to the wild-type expression pattern for nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities. Conversely, inactivation of nitrate reductase by tungstate treatment in nitrate, nitrite, or nitrogen-free media made wild-type cells respond like nitrate reductase-deficient mutants with respect to the expression of nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities. Our results indicate that nit-2 is a regulatory locus for both the nitrite uptake system and nitrite reductase, and that the nitrate reductase enzyme plays an important role in the regulation of the expression of both enzyme activities.  相似文献   

20.
《Plant science》1988,57(2):119-125
Nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1) catalyzes the pyridine nucleotide-linked reduction of nitrate to nitrite in higher plants. We have shown that in squash (Cucurbita maxima Duchesne var. Buttercup), exogenous nitrate increases nitrate reductase activity by increasing steady-state levels of nitrate reductase protein, while glutamine diminishes nitrate reductase activity both by decreasing steady-state levels of nitrate reductase protein and by decreasing cellular nitrate concentrations in plant cells. Other amino acids affect nitrate reductase similarly to glutamine; other metabolites tested including nitrate did not cause major perturbations in the synthesis of other cellular proteins. Thus, it appears that the effects of nitrate and reduced nitrogen compounds on enzymes of the nitrate assimilatory pathway are highly specific for these enzymes, and have little effect on other cellular proteins.  相似文献   

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