Publication | Open Access
Biochemical Characterization of Soybean Mutants Lacking Constitutive NADH:Nitrate Reductase
19
Citations
7
References
1986
Year
Low Nitrate ReductaseVivo Nr MicroassaysBotanyBiochemistryNatural SciencesGeneticsReactive Nitrogen SpecieBiotechnologyPlant BiochemistryMetabolismMedicineRedox BiologyNitrosative StressPlant PhysiologyNitrate ReductasePlant Metabolism
Two nitrate reductase (NR) mutants were selected for low nitrate reductase (LNR) activity by in vivo NR microassays of M(2) seedlings derived from nitrosomethylurea-mutagenized soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Williams) seeds. The mutants (LNR-5 and LNR-6) appeared to have normal nitrate-inducible NR activity. Both mutants, however, showed decreased NR activity in vivo and in vitro compared with the wild-type. In vitro FMNH(2)-dependent nitrate reduction and Cyt c reductase activity of nitrate-grown plants, and nitrogenous gas evolution during in vivo NR assays of urea-grown plants, were also decreased in the mutants. The latter observation was due to insufficient generation of nitrite substrate, rather than some inherent difference in enzyme between mutant and wild-type plants. When grown on urea, crude extracts of LNR-5 and LNR-6 lines had similar NADPH:NR activities to that of the wild type, but both mutants had very little NADH:NR activity, relative to the wild type. Blue Sepharose columns loaded with NR extract of urea-grown mutants and sequentially eluted with NADPH and NADH yielded a NADPH:NR peak only, while the wild-type yielded both NADPH: and NADH:NR peaks. Activity profiles confirmed the lack of constitutive NADH:NR in the mutants throughout development. The results provide additional support to our claim that wild-type soybean contains three NR isozymes, namely, constitutive NADPH:NR (c(1)NR), constitutive NADH:NR (c(2)NR), and nitrate-inducible NR (iNR).
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