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Literature summary extracted from

  • Wang, H.; Tseng, C.P.; Gunsalus, R.P.
    The napF and narG nitrate reductase operons in Escherichia coli are differentially expressed in response to submicromolar concentrations of nitrate but not nitrite (1999), J. Bacteriol., 181, 5303-5308.
    View publication on PubMedView publication on EuropePMC

Localization

EC Number Localization Comment Organism GeneOntology No. Textmining
1.9.6.1 periplasm
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Escherichia coli
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Natural Substrates/ Products (Substrates)

EC Number Natural Substrates Organism Comment (Nat. Sub.) Natural Products Comment (Nat. Pro.) Rev. Reac.
1.9.6.1 nitrate + ferrocytochrome Escherichia coli the periplasmic cytochrome c-linked nitrate reductase is encoded by the napFDAGHBC operon. The napF operon apparently encodes a low-substrate-induced reductase that is maximally expressed only at low levels of nitrate. Expression is suppressed under high-nitrate conditions. In contrast, the narGHJI operon is only weakly expressed at low nitrate levels but is maximally expressed when nitrate is elevated. The narGHJI operon is therefore a high-substrate-induced operon that somehow provides a second and distinct role in nitrate metabolism by the cell. Nitrite, the end product of each enzyme, has only a minor effect on the expression of either operon. Finally, nitrate, but not nitrite, is essential for repression of napF gene expression. These studies reveal that nitrate rather than nitrite is the primary signal that controls the expression of these two nitrate reductase operons in a differential and complementary fashion nitrite + ferricytochrome + H2O
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Organism

EC Number Organism UniProt Comment Textmining
1.9.6.1 Escherichia coli
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Substrates and Products (Substrate)

EC Number Substrates Comment Substrates Organism Products Comment (Products) Rev. Reac.
1.9.6.1 nitrate + ferrocytochrome the periplasmic cytochrome c-linked nitrate reductase is encoded by the napFDAGHBC operon. The napF operon apparently encodes a low-substrate-induced reductase that is maximally expressed only at low levels of nitrate. Expression is suppressed under high-nitrate conditions. In contrast, the narGHJI operon is only weakly expressed at low nitrate levels but is maximally expressed when nitrate is elevated. The narGHJI operon is therefore a high-substrate-induced operon that somehow provides a second and distinct role in nitrate metabolism by the cell. Nitrite, the end product of each enzyme, has only a minor effect on the expression of either operon. Finally, nitrate, but not nitrite, is essential for repression of napF gene expression. These studies reveal that nitrate rather than nitrite is the primary signal that controls the expression of these two nitrate reductase operons in a differential and complementary fashion Escherichia coli nitrite + ferricytochrome + H2O
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