Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (succinate dehydrogenase)
8,177 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 32D cl 3 hematopoietic progenitor cells, the overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD, SOD2), the enzyme normally found in mitochondria, protects against the damaging effects of ionizing radiation. In the presence of a nitric oxide donor, which exacerbates the damage, inhibition of mitochondrial function can be demonstrated to be associated with respiratory complexes I (NADH dehydrogenase) and III (cytochrome c reductase), but not II (succinate dehydrogenase), IV (cytochrome c oxidase), or V (ATP synthase). The same pattern of inhibition is observed in the case of isolated bovine heart mitochondria exposed to ionizing radiation and the nitric oxide donor. The addition of authentic peroxynitrite (ONO2(-)) to isolated mitochondria also results in damage to complexes I and III (but not II, IV, and V), as shown by assays of electron-transfer activities and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic measurements, suggesting ONO2(-) to be responsible for most of the observed radiation damage in both the cultured cell lines and isolated mitochondria. It is argued that, in general, production of ONO2(-) is an important contributor to radiation damage in biological systems and the implications of these findings in relation to possible mechanisms of oxidant-linked apoptosis are briefly considered.
Nitric Oxide 2001 Apr
PMID:Identification of respiratory complexes I and III as mitochondrial sites of damage following exposure to ionizing radiation and nitric oxide. 1129 62

The effects of peroxynitrite and nitric oxide on the iron-sulfur clusters in complex II (succinate dehydrogenase) isolated from bovine heart have been studied primarily by EPR spectroscopy and no measurable damage to the constitutive 2Fe-2S, 3Fe-4S, or 4Fe-4S clusters was observed. The enzyme can be repeatedly oxidized with a slight excess of peroxynitrite and then quantitatively re-reduced with succinate. When added in large excess, peroxynitrite reacted with at least one tyrosine in each subunit of complex II to form 3-nitrotyrosines, but activity was barely compromised. Examination of rat-heart pericardium subjected to conditions leading to peroxynitrite production showed a small inhibition of complex II (16%) and a greater inhibition of aconitase (77%). In addition, experiments performed with excesses of sodium citrate and sodium succinate on rat-heart pericardium indicated that the "g approximately 2.01" EPR signal observed immediately following the beginning of conditions modeling oxidative/nitrosative stress, could be a consequence of both reversible oxidation of the constitutive 3Fe-4S cluster in complex II and degradation of the 4Fe-4S cluster in aconitase. However, the net signal envelope, which becomes apparent in less than 1min following the start of oxidative/nitrosative conditions, is dominated by the component arising from complex II. Taking into account the findings of a previous study concerning complexes I and III (L.L. Pearce, A.J. Kanai, M.W. Epperly, J. Peterson, Nitrosative stress results in irreversible inhibition of purified mitochondrial complexes I and III without modification of cofactors, Nitric Oxide 13 (2005) 254-263) it is now apparent that, with the exception of the cofactor in aconitase, mammalian (mitochondrial) iron-sulfur clusters are surprisingly resistant to degradation stemming from oxidative/nitrosative stress.
Nitric Oxide 2009 May
PMID:The resistance of electron-transport chain Fe-S clusters to oxidative damage during the reaction of peroxynitrite with mitochondrial complex II and rat-heart pericardium. 1911 36