Abstract

A study of the growth-inhibiting effect of chlorate on the Berlin strain of Chlorella vulgaris Beijerinck provided complete confirmation of the theory of chlorate toxicity first proposed by Aberg in 1947. Chlorate was toxic to the cells growing on nitrate, and relatively nontoxic to the cells growing on ammonium. The latter cells contained only 0.01 as much NADH-nitrate reductase as the nitrate-grown cells. Chlorate could substitute for nitrate as a substrate of the purified nitrate reductase with Km = 1.2 mm, and V(max) = 0.9V(max) for nitrate. Bromate, and to a much smaller extent, iodate, also served as alternate substrates. Nitrate is a reversible competitive inhibitor of chlorate reduction, which accounts for the partial reversal, by high nitrate concentrations, of the observed inhibition of cell growth by chlorate. During the reduction of chlorate by NADH in the presence of purified nitrate reductase, there was a progressive, irreversible inhibition of the enzyme activity, presumably brought about by the reduction product, chlorite. Both the NADH-nitrate reductase activity and the associated NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity were inactivated to the same extent by added chlorite. The spectral properties of the cytochrome b(557) associated with the purified enzyme were not affected by chlorite. The inactivation of the nitrate reductase by chlorite could account for the toxicity of chlorate to cells grown on nitrate, though the destruction of other cell components by chlorite or its decomposition products cannot be excluded.

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