Sc. Huber et Jl. Huber, METABOLIC ACTIVATORS OF SPINACH LEAF NITRATE REDUCTASE - EFFECTS ON ENZYMATIC-ACTIVITY AND DEPHOSPHORYLATION BY ENDOGENOUS PHOSPHATASES, Planta, 196(1), 1995, pp. 180-189
Nitrate reductase (NR; EC 1.6.6.1) in spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) l
eaves was inactivated in the dark and reactivated by light in vivo. Wh
en extracted from dark leaves, NR activity was lower and more strongly
inhibited by Mg2+ relative to the enzyme extracted from leaves harves
ted in the light. When dark extracts were desalted at pH 6.5 and prein
cubated at 25 degrees C prior to assay, enzyme activity (assayed eithe
r in the presence or absence of Mg2+) remained essentially constant, i
.e. there was no spontaneous reactivation in vitro. However, addition
of certain metabolites resulted in a time- and concentration-dependent
activation of NR in vitro. Effective activators included inorganic ph
osphate (Pi), 5'-AMP, and certain of its derivatives such as FAD and p
yridine nucleotides (both oxidized and reduced forms). All of the acti
vators increased NR activity as assayed in the absence of Mg2+, wherea
s some activators (e.g. Pi, 5'-AMP and FAD) also reduced Mg2+ inhibiti
on. The reduction of Mg2+ inhibition was also time-dependent and was a
lmost completely prevented by a combination of okadaic acid plus KF, s
uggesting the involvement of dephosphorylation catalyzed by endogenous
phosphatase(s). In contrast, the activation of NR (assayed minus Mg2) was relatively insensitive to phosphatase inhibitors, indicating a d
ifferent mechanism was involved. Compounds that were not effective act
ivators of NR included sulfate, ribose-5-phosphate, adenosine 5'-monos
ulfate, coenzyme A, ADP and ATP. We postulate that NR can exist in at
least two states that differ in enzymatic activity. The activators app
ear to interact with the NR molecule at a site distinct from the NADH
active site, and induce a slow conformational change (hysteresis) that
increases NR activity (assayed in the absence of Mg2+). Possibly as a
result of the conformational change caused by certain activators, the
regulatory phospho-seryl groups are more readily dephosphorylated by
endogenous phosphatases, thereby reducing sensitivity to Mg2+ inhibiti
on. Preliminary results suggest that light/dark transitions in vivo ma
y alter the distribution of NR molecules between the low- and high-act
ivity forms.