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  • Protein kinase  (4)
  • INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY  (3)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Enzyme modulation ; Nitrate reductase ; Protein kinase ; Protein phosphorylation ; Protein purification ; Spinacia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Using a three-step purification procedure, two protein fractions which catalyzed the ATP-dependent in-activation of nitrate reductase (NR) were obtained from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf extracts. Purification involved ammonium-sulfate fractionation, anion-exchange chromatography and size-exclusion chromatography. The capacity of the fractions to inactivate NR by preincubation with ATP was examined by using as target either a crude NR-ammonium sulfate precipitate or partially purified NR (ppNR). The fractions were also examined for protein-kinase activity by measuring the phosphorylation of histone III S (or casein) with γ-[32P]ATP as substrate, and subsequent SDS-PAGE, autoradiography and liquid scintillation counting of cut-off histone bands. The two proteins had apparent molecular weights in the 67-kDa and 100-kDa region (termed P67 and P100, respectively). Neither P67 nor P100 alone was able to inactivate ppNR by preincubation with ATP. However, when P100 and P67 were added together to ppNR, ATP-dependent inactivation was observed, with a half-time of about 10 min. The P67, but not P100 had histone-kinase activity (casein was not phosphorylated). Using the partially purified system, various compounds were examined as possible effectors of NR inactivation. Sugar phosphates had little effect on the inactivation of NR. Addition of AMP at very high concentrations (5 mM), and removal of Mg2+ by excess EDTA also prevented the inactivation.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Inhibitor protein ; Nitrate reductase ; Protein kinase ; Protein phosphatase ; Protein turnover
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Nitrate reductase activity and NR protein levels in various leaf tissues were drastically decreased (〈3.5% of normal activity) either by keeping detached leaves in continuous darkness for up to 6 d (spinach), or by growing plants (pea, squash) hydroponically on ammonium as the sole N-source, or by germinating and growing etiolated seedlings in complete darkness (squash). The presence of nitrate reductase protein kinase (NRPK), nitrate reductase protein phosphatase (NRPP) and inhibitor protein (IP) was examined by measuring the ability of NR-free desalted extracts to inactivate (ATP-dependent) and reactivate (5′-AMP/EDTA-dependent) added purified spinach NR in vitro. Extracts from low-NR plants (ammonium-grown pea and squash) were also prepared from leaves harvested at the end of a normal light or dark phase, or after treating leaves with anaerobiosis, uncouplers or mannose, conditions which usually activate NR in nitrategrown normal plants. Without exception, extracts from NR-deficient plant tissues were able to inactivate and reactivate purified spinach NR with normal velocity, irrespective of pretreatment or time of harvest. Considerable NRPK, NRPP and IP activities were also found in extracts from almost NR-free ripe fruits (cucumber and tomato). Activities were totally absent, however, in extracts from isolated spinach chloroplasts. The NRPK and IP fractions were partially purified with normal yields from NR-deficient squash or spinach leaves, following the purification protocol worked out for nitrate-grown spinach. The Ca2+/Mg2+-dependent kinase fraction from NR-deficient squash or spinach phosphorylated added purified spinach NR with γ-[32P]ATP and inactivated the enzyme after addition of IP. It is suggested (i) that the auxiliary proteins (NRPK, IP, NRPP) which modulate NR are rather species- or organ-unspecific, (ii) that they do not turn over as rapidly as does NR, (iii) that they are probably expressed independently of NR, and (iiii) that they are not covalently modulated, but under control of metabolic and/or physical signals which are removed by desalting.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Enzyme modulation ; Nitrate reductase ; Protein kinase ; Protein phosphorylation ; Protein purification ; Spinacia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Using a three-step purification procedure, two protein fractions which catalyzed the ATP-dependent in-activation of nitrate reductase (NR) were obtained from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf extracts. Purification involved ammonium-sulfate fractionation, anion-exchange chromatography and size-exclusion chromatography. The capacity of the fractions to inactivate NR by preincubation with ATP was examined by using as target either a crude NR-ammonium sulfate precipitate or partially purified NR (ppNR). The fractions were also examined for protein-kinase activity by measuring the phosphorylation of histone III S (or casein) withγ-[32P]ATP as substrate, and subsequent SDS-PAGE, autoradiography and liquid scintillation counting of cut-off histone bands. The two proteins had apparent molecular weights in the 67-kDa and 100-kDa region (termed P67 and P100, respectively). Neither P67 nor P100 alone was able to inactivate ppNR by preincubation with ATP. However, when P100 and P67 were added together to ppNR, ATP-dependent inactivation was observed, with a half-time of about 10 min. The P67, but not P100 had histone-kinase activity (casein was not phosphorylated). Using the partially purified system, various compounds were examined as possible effectors of NR inactivation. Sugar phosphates had little effect on the inactivation of NR. Addition of AMP at very high concentrations (5 mM), and removal of Mg2+ by excess EDTA also prevented the inactivation.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Inhibitor protein ; Nitrate reductase ; Protein phosphorylation ; Protein kinase ; Spinacia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The function of two proteins (P67 and P100) required for the MgATP-dependent inactivation of nitrate reductase (NR) from spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea L.) was studied. When NR was incubated with γ-[32P]ATP and P67, NR-protein was phosphorylated, but without a change in NR activity. Protein P100 by itself was neither able to phosphorylate nor to inactivate NR, and when added together with P67 it did not change the extent of NR phosphorylation. However, when NR was first phosphorylated with MgATP and P67, subsequent addition of P100 after removal of unreacted ATP caused an immediate NR inactivation. In presence of both P67 and P100 the time-course of ATP-dependent NR phosphorylation paralleled the time course of inactivation. The extent of NR phosphorylation and of NR inactivation (in the presence of P67 plus P100) was similarly affected by metabolites or high salt concentrations. Magnesium (Mg2+) played a dual role in the inactivation process: the phosphorylation of NR by P67 was strictly Mg2+-dependent. Further, phospho-NR (+P100) was inactive only in the presence of Mg2+, but active in the presence of excess EDTA. Dephospho-NR appeared to be Mg2+-insensitive. The observations suggest that phosphorylation of NR by P67 is obligatory, but not sufficient for inactivation. In addition to protein phosphorylation, inactivation requires “binding” of an inhibitor protein (P100) to phospho-NR.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2006-02-14
    Description: Bolometers are still the detectors of choice for low background infrared observations at wavelengths longer than 200 microns. In the low background limit, bolometers become more sensitive as their operating temperature decreases, due to fundamental thermodynamic laws. The adiabatic demagnetization technique was evaluated by building a bolometer detection system operating at a wavelength of 1 millimeter for use at a ground based telescope. The system was fit checked at the telescope and is expected to take its first data in November, 1985.
    Keywords: INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
    Type: Proceedings of the Second Infrared Detector Technology Workshop; 3 p
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The Infrared Array Camera (IRAC), Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIP), and the Infrared Spectrometer (IRS) of the Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) are described. The configuration and capabilities of the SIRTF are discussed. The small silicon array module, the germanium array module, and bolometer module of MIP, which is designed to provide sensitivity limited only by natural background and telescope emissions over the 3-200 micron spectral range, and allow diffraction limited imaging, super resolution techniques, mapping, and surveying, are examined. The objectives and design of the IRAC, which is constructed for two-dimensional photometry and imaging over a wavelength region from 2-30 microns and to perform extragalactic, galactic and solar system astronomy, are studied. The use of the IRS to study the dynamical and physical phenomena of the universe in the 2.5-200 micron range is analyzed.
    Keywords: INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
    Type: AIAA PAPER 86-0373
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The aim was to obtain practical experience, including observational experience, with bolometers suitable for the long wave infrared and with the filters necessary to define the spectral regions of interest. The techniques used in fabricating and testing bolometers and filters are described, and the results which were obtained to date are discussed.
    Keywords: INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
    Type: NASA-CR-144818
    Format: application/pdf
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