Two activities causing nitrite disappearance are found in extracts of Neurospora; one, inducible by nitrate or nitrite and present only in nitrite-utilizing strains, catalyze the stoichiometric reduction of nitrite to ammonia; the other, present in all strains under all conditions, causes the disappearance of nitrite to something other than ammonia. The latter activity has a molecular weight of about 600 and may contain an oligopeptide, a metal, and an SH group(s). It has no known physiological function.
Results with strain am-la, a glutamate dehydrogenaseless mutant, showed that ammonium ions must first be metabolized in order to repress nitrite reductase in Neurospora.
The distribution of the multiple molecular forms of rat liver and mammary gland glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was determined by electrophoresis on 5% polyacrylamide gels. In both of these organs, changes in the distribution of enzyme activity among the several forms was slight even when approximately 20- to 40-fold changes in enzyme specific activity were achieved by fasting-refeeding experiments (for liver) or during pregnancy and lactation (for mammary gland). It was concluded that the induction of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in these two organs occurs without any major redistribution among the multiple molecular forms of this enzyme.
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