Abstract

Extracts from ammonium-grown phototrophic cultures of Phormidium uncinatum exhibited a catalytic and stoichiometric formation of nitrite and ammonia from hydrogen peroxide and hydroxylamine. This reaction was due to a novel enzyme (referred to as hydroxylamine dismutase), which was bound to the heavier thylakoid membranes. The enzyme was solubilized from the membranes by detergent treatment and further purified by ion-exchange chromatography. On the basis of inhibitor studies, the involvement of metal ions and sulfhydryl groups in the characteristic reaction is suggested.

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