scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Nitrite

About: Nitrite is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 15425 publications have been published within this topic receiving 484581 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the electrochemical reduction of nitrate on tin cathode at very high cathodic potentials was studied in 0.206mmolmin −1 ǫ cm −2 ) and a high selectivity (% S ) of nitrogen (92%) was obtained at −2.9

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using "crystal harvesting" and substrate-soaking techniques, atomic resolution structures of four forms of the green Cu-nitrite reductase, from the soil bacterium Achromobacter cycloclastes are determined and provide incisive insights into the initial binding of substrate, its repositioning before catalysis, bond breakage (O-NO), and the formation of a stable NO adduct.
Abstract: Copper-containing nitrite reductases catalyze the reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide (NO), a key step in denitrification that results in the loss of terrestrial nitrogen to the atmosphere. They are found in a wide variety of denitrifying bacteria and fungi of different physiology from a range of soil and aquatic ecosystems. Structural analysis of potential intermediates in the catalytic cycle is an important goal in understanding enzyme mechanism. Using "crystal harvesting" and substrate-soaking techniques, we have determined atomic resolution structures of four forms of the green Cu-nitrite reductase, from the soil bacterium Achromobacter cycloclastes. These structures are the resting state of the enzyme at 0.9 A, two species exhibiting different conformations of nitrite bound at the catalytic type 2 Cu, one of which is stable and also has NO present, at 1.10 A and 1.15 A, and a stable form with the product NO bound side-on to the catalytic type 2 Cu, at 1.12 A resolution. These structures provide incisive insights into the initial binding of substrate, its repositioning before catalysis, bond breakage (O-NO), and the formation of a stable NO adduct.

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the feasibility of removing nitrogen from highly nitrogenous wastewater by blocking the nitrification process at the intermediary nitrite level through the action of free ammonia and subsequently reducing the nitrite to nitrogen gas was demonstrated.
Abstract: The objective of this long-term research project was to demonstrate the feasibility of removing nitrogen from highly nitrogenous wastewater by (a) blocking the nitrification process at the intermediary nitrite level through the action of free ammonia and (b) subsequently reducing the nitrite to nitrogen gas. The success of such a process could lead to substantial reductions in nitrogen removal costs.Two identical bench-scale activated sludge systems were operated for 147 days, in the initial phase. Each system was composed of four equal-sized, completely mixed cells in series. The free ammonia concentration was highest in the first cell of each system. It averaged 2 mg NH3-N/L in the first system and 5 mg NH3-N/L in the second. Nitrite buildup, in excess of 80% of the oxidized nitrogen present, was induced and sustained for around 2 months in all cells of the second system, after which time a steady decline occurred. Nitrite buildup could not be sustained in the first system. Average chemical oxygen deman...

156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that the catabolic pathway involves an initial dioxygenase attack on nitrobenzene with the release of nitrite and formation of catechol, which is subsequently degraded by a meta cleavage pathway.
Abstract: Previous studies have shown that the biodegradation of nitrobenzene by Pseudomonas pseudoalcaligenes JS45 proceeds by the reduction of nitrobenzene through nitrosobenzene and hydroxylaminobenzene, followed by rearrangement to 2-aminophenol, which then undergoes meta ring cleavage. We report here the isolation of a Comamonas sp. that uses an oxidative pathway for the complete mineralization of nitrobenzene. The isolate, designated strain JS765, uses nitrobenzene as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy. Nitrobenzene-grown cells oxidized nitrobenzene, with the stoichiometric release of nitrite. Extracts of nitrobenzene-grown JS765 showed high levels of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase activity that were not abolished by heating the cell extracts to 60(deg)C for 10 min. The ring cleavage product had an absorbance maximum at 375 nm, consistent with that of 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde. Both NAD-dependent dehydrogenase and NAD-independent hydrolase activities towards 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde were induced in extracts of nitrobenzene-grown cells. Catechol accumulated in the reaction mixture when cells preincubated with 3-chlorocatechol were incubated with nitrobenzene. Conversion of nitrobenzene to catechol by induced cells in the presence of 3-chlorocatechol and (sup18)O(inf2) demonstrated the simultaneous incorporation of two atoms of oxygen, which indicated that the initial reaction was dioxygenation. The results indicate that the catabolic pathway involves an initial dioxygenase attack on nitrobenzene with the release of nitrite and formation of catechol, which is subsequently degraded by a meta cleavage pathway.

155 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Differences in intermediate nitrite accumulation are proposed to be caused by differences in electron flow to nitrate and nitrite reductases during oxidation of either acetate or butyrate.
Abstract: Intermediate nitrite accumulation during denitrification by Pseudomonas stutzeri isolated from a denitrifying fluidized bed reactor was examined in the presence of different volatile fatty acids. Nitrite accumulated when acetate or propionate served as the carbon and electron source but did not accumulate in the presence of butyrate, valerate, or caproate. Nitrite accumulation in the presence of acetate was caused by differences in the rates of nitrate and nitrite reduction and, in addition, by competition between nitrate and nitrite reduction pathways for electrons. Incubation of the cells with butyrate resulted in a slower nitrate reduction rate and a faster nitrite reduction rate than incubation with acetate. Whereas nitrate inhibited the nitrite reduction rate in the presence of acetate, no such inhibition was found in butyrate-supplemented cells. Cytochromes b and c were found to mediate electron transport during nitrate reduction by the cells. Cytochrome c was reduced via a different pathway when nitrite-reducing cells were incubated with acetate than when they were incubated with butyrate. Furthermore, addition of antimycin A to nitrite-reducing cells resulted in partial inhibition of electron transport to cytochrome c in acetate-supplemented cells but not in butyrate-supplemented cells. On the basis of these findings, we propose that differences in intermediate nitrite accumulation are caused by differences in electron flow to nitrate and nitrite reductases during oxidation of either acetate or butyrate.

155 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Glutathione
42.5K papers, 1.8M citations
85% related
Reactive oxygen species
36.6K papers, 2M citations
84% related
Amino acid
124.9K papers, 4M citations
82% related
Fatty acid
74.5K papers, 2.2M citations
82% related
Ascorbic acid
93.5K papers, 2.5M citations
81% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023606
20221,333
2021475
2020459
2019467
2018509