Possible role for mRNA stability in the ammonium-controlled regulation of nitrate reductase expression
- PMID: 8110194
- PMCID: PMC1137870
- DOI: 10.1042/bj2970561
Possible role for mRNA stability in the ammonium-controlled regulation of nitrate reductase expression
Abstract
Ammonium, or a metabolite of ammonium, represses the expression of nitrate reductase (NR) in Chlorella vulgaris. The removal of ammonium and addition of nitrate (induction) resulted in a rapid (20 min) peaked synthesis of NR mRNA. Nitrate reductase protein and activity increased at a much lower rate, reaching their maxima by 8 h. Ammonium added to nitrate-grown cells resulted in a dramatic decrease in NR mRNA from a steady-state level to undetectable levels within 15 min of ammonium addition. Nitrate reductase activity and protein levels decreased to 20% and 40% of initial levels respectively over 8 h. The half-life for NR mRNA under these conditions was estimated to be less than 5 min, compared with 120 min for NR protein. Such rapid decreases in NR mRNA suggested a degradation and/or cessation in NR mRNA transcription. No apparent difference in NR mRNA-specific RNAase activity of crude cell extracts (NR-induced or repressed) was observed. However, a significant difference in the susceptibility to degradation of NR mRNA from long-term nitrate-grown cells compared with the NR mRNA isolated from short-term induced cells (20 min in nitrate) was observed. NR mRNA isolated from long-term-nitrate-grown cells was completely degraded by RNAases in cell extracts under conditions in which the NR mRNA isolated from short-term induced cells was resistant to degradation. These results suggest that mRNA stability may be an important factor in the metabolic regulation of assimilatory nitrate reductase in Chlorella.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
