Nitrite reductases (NiR) [1] catalyze the reduction of nitrite into ammonium,
the second step in the assimilation of nitrate. There are two types of NiR:
the higher plant chloroplastic form of NiR (EC 1.7.7.1) is a monomeric protein
that uses reduced ferredoxin as the electron donor; while fungal and bacterial
NiR (EC 1.7.1.4) are homodimeric proteins that uses NAD(P)H as the electron
donor. Both forms of NiR contain a siroheme-Fe and iron-sulfur centers.
Sulfite reductase (NADPH) (EC 1.8.1.2) (SIR) [2] is the bacterial enzyme
that catalyzes the reduction of sulfite to sulfide. SIR is an oligomeric
enzyme with a subunit composition of α(8)-β(4), the α component is
a flavoprotein (SIR-FP), while the β component is a siroheme, iron-sulfur
protein (SIR-HP).
Sulfite reductase (ferredoxin) (EC 1.8.7.1) [3] is a cyanobacterial and plant
monomeric enzyme that also catalyzes the reduction of sulfite to sulfide.
Anaerobic sulfite reductase (EC 1.8.1.-) (ASR) [4], a bacterial enzyme that
catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of sulfite to sulfide. ASR is an
oligomeric enzyme composed of three different subunits. The C component (gene
asrC) seems to be a siroheme, iron-sulfur protein.
These enzymes share a region of sequence similarity in their C-terminal half;
this region which spans about 80 amino acids includes four conserved cysteine
residues. Two of the Cys are grouped together at the beginning of the domain,
and the two others are grouped in the middle of the domain. The cysteines
are involved in the binding of the iron-sulfur center; the last one also binds
the siroheme group [2].
We have derived a signature pattern from the region around the second cluster
of cysteines.
April 2006 / Pattern revised.
PROSITE is copyright. It is produced by the Swiss Institute of
Bioinformatics (SIB). There are no restrictions on its use by non-profit
institutions as long as its content is in no way modified. Usage by and
for commercial entities requires a license agreement. For information
about the licensing scheme send an email to license@isb-sib.ch or
see: http://www.expasy.org/prosite/prosite_license.htm.