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Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (
succinate dehydrogenase
)
8,177
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two psychrotrophic strains of Rhizobium, DDSS69, a non-cold acclimated strain, and ATR1, a cold acclimated strain, were subjected to cold stress. A 4-fold increase in the specific activity of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was characteristic for cold stressed cells of DDSS69, whereas ATR1 showed a higher LDH activity in general, which increased 1.5-fold under cold stress. Cold sensitive mutants of DDSS69 which could not grow below 15 degrees C, in contrast to the wild type which could grow at 5 degrees C, were isolated using Tn5-tagged mutagenesis. These mutants showed a 40% lower LDH activity than the wild type grown at 5 degrees C that was comparable to the wild type grown at 15 degrees C. High specific activity of
succinic dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) at 28 degrees C in both strains and mutants indicated that aerobic respiration via the citrate cycle is the normal mode of saccharide utilization. Shifts to lower temperatures decreased the specific activity of
SDH
. However, alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity remained very low in both the strains and the mutants at low temperatures indicating that a shift from aerobic saccharide metabolism to anaerobic one under cold stress involves lactate glycolysis rather than alcohol fermentation. There was an increase in
membrane-bound
ATPase activity under cold stress which is correlated to higher LDH activity. These data show that, in psychrotrophic Rhizobium strains, cold stress induces a switchover of respiratory metabolism from aerobic to anaerobic pathway, especially lactate glycolysis.
...
PMID:Cold stress induces switchover of respiratory pathway to lactate glycolysis in psychrotrophic Rhizobium strains. 1127 29
Light-harvesting
complex II
(LHCII) prepared from isolated thylakoids of either broken or intact chloroplasts by three independent methods, exhibits proteolytic activity against LHCII. This activity is readily detectable upon incubation of these preparations at 37 degrees C (without addition of any chemicals or prior pre-treatment), and can be monitored either by the LHCII immunostain reduction on Western blots or by the Coomassie blue stain reduction in substrate-containing "activity gels". Upon SDS-sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation of SDS-solubilized thylakoids, a method which succeeds in the separation of the pigment-protein complexes in their trimeric and monomeric forms, the protease activity copurifies with the LHCII trimer, its monomer exhibiting no activity. This LHCII trimer, apart from being "self-digested", also degrades the Photosystem II (PSII) core proteins (D1, D2) when added to an isolated PSII core protein preparation containing the D1/D2 heterodimer. Under our experimental conditions, 50% of LHCII or the D1, D2 proteins are degraded by the LHCII-protease complex within 30 min at 37 degrees C and specific degradation products are observed. The protease is light-inducible during chloroplast biogenesis, stable in low concentrations of SDS, activated by Mg(2+), and inhibited by Zn(2+), Cd(2+), EDTA and p-hydroxy-mercury benzoate (pOHMB), suggesting that it may belong to the cysteine family of proteases. Upon electrophoresis of the LHCII trimer on substrate-containing "activity gels" or normal Laemmli gels, the protease is released from the complex and runs in the upper part of the gel, above the LHCII trimer. A polypeptide of 140 kDa that exhibits proteolytic activity against LHCII, D1 and D2 has been identified as the protease. We believe that this
membrane-bound
protease is closely associated to the LHCII complex in vivo, as an LHCII-protease complex, its function being the regulation of the PSII unit assembly and/or adaptation.
...
PMID:Proteolytic activity against the light-harvesting complex and the D1/D2 core proteins of Photosystem II in close association to the light-harvesting complex II trimer. 1235 Dec 18
Redox-controlled, reversible phosphorylation of the thylakoid light harvesting
complex II
(LHCII) regulates its association with photosystems (PS) I or II and thus, energy distribution between the two photosystems (state transition). Illumination of solubilized LHCII enhances exposure of the phosphorylation site at its N-terminal domain to protein kinase(s) and tryptic cleavage in vitro [Zer et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 8277-8282]. Here we report that short illumination (5-10 min, 15-30 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) enhances the accessibility of LHCII phosphorylation site to kinase(s) activity also in isolated thylakoids. However, prolonged illumination or higher light intensities (30 min, 80-800 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) prevent phosphorylation of LHCII in the isolated membranes as well as in vivo, although redox-dependent protein kinase activity persists in the illuminated thylakoids toward exogenous solubilized LHCII. This phenomenon, ascribed to light-induced inaccessibility of the phosphorylation site to the protein kinase(s), affects in a similar way the accessibility of thylakoid LHCII N-terminal domain to tryptic cleavage. The illumination effect is not redox related, decreases linearly with temperature from 25 to 5 degrees C and may be ascribed to light-induced conformational changes in the complex causing lateral aggregation of dephosphorylated LHCII bound to and/or dissociated from PSII. The later state occurs under conditions allowing turnover of the phospho-LHCII phosphate. The light-induced inaccessibility of LHCII to the
membrane-bound
protein kinase reverses readily in darkness only if induced under LHCII-phosphate turnover conditions. Thus, phosphorylation prevents irreversible light-induced conformational changes in LHCII allowing lateral migration of the complex and the related state transition process.
...
PMID:Light affects the accessibility of the thylakoid light harvesting complex II (LHCII) phosphorylation site to the membrane protein kinase(s). 1253 85
The
membrane-bound
respiratory
complex II
,
succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(SQR) from Escherichia coli, has been anaerobically expressed, then purified and crystallized. The initial crystals obtained were small and diffracted poorly. In order to facilitate structure determination, rational screening and sample-quality analysis using electron microscopy was implemented. The crystals of SQR from E. coli belong to the trigonal space group R32, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 138.7, c = 521.9 A, and diffract to 2.6 A resolution. The optimization strategy used for obtaining well diffracting SQR crystals is applicable to a wide range of membrane proteins.
...
PMID:Using rational screening and electron microscopy to optimize the crystallization of succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase from Escherichia coli. 1259 38
The anaerobically expressed fumarate reductase and aerobically expressed
succinate dehydrogenase
from Escherichia coli comprise two different classes of succinate:quinone oxidoreductases (SQR), often termed respiratory
complex II
. The X-ray structures of both
membrane-bound
complexes have revealed that while the catalytic/soluble domains are structurally similar the quinone binding domains of the enzyme complexes are significantly different. These results suggest that the anaerobic and aerobic forms of
complex II
have evolved different mechanisms for electron and proton transfer in their respective membrane domains.
...
PMID:Variation in proton donor/acceptor pathways in succinate:quinone oxidoreductases. 1278 89
Light-induced phosphorylation of light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b
complex II
(LHCII) proteins in plant thylakoid membranes requires an activation of the LHCII kinase via binding of plastoquinol to cytochrome b(6)f complex. However, a gradual down-regulation of LHCII protein phosphorylation occurs in higher plant leaves in vivo with increasing light intensity. This inhibition is likely to be mediated by increasing concentration of thiol reductants in the chloroplast. Here, we have determined the components involved in thiol redox regulation of the LHCII kinase by studying the restoration of LHCII protein phosphorylation in thylakoid membranes isolated from high-light-illuminated leaves of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo), spinach (Spinacia oleracea), and Arabidopsis. We demonstrate an experimental separation of two dynamic activities associated with isolated thylakoid membranes and involved in thiol regulation of the LHCII kinase. First, a thioredoxin-like compound, responsible for inhibition of the LHCII kinase, became tightly associated and/or activated within thylakoid membranes upon illumination of leaves at high light intensities. This reducing activity was completely missing from membranes isolated from leaves with active LHCII protein phosphorylation, such as dark-treated and low-light-illuminated leaves. Second, hydrogen peroxide was shown to serve as an oxidant that restored the catalytic activity of the LHCII kinase in thylakoids isolated from leaves with inhibited LHCII kinase. We propose a dynamic mechanism by which counteracting oxidizing and reducing activities exert a stimulatory and inhibitory effect, respectively, on the phosphorylation of LHCII proteins in vivo via a novel
membrane-bound
thiol component, which itself is controlled by the thiol redox potential in chloroplast stroma.
...
PMID:Dithiol oxidant and disulfide reductant dynamically regulate the phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II proteins in thylakoid membranes. 1297 Apr 73
Complex II is the only
membrane-bound
component of the Krebs cycle and in addition functions as a member of the electron transport chain in mitochondria and in many bacteria. A recent X-ray structural solution of members of the
complex II
family of proteins has provided important insights into their function. One feature of the
complex II
structures is a linear electron transport chain that extends from the flavin and iron-sulfur redox cofactors in the membrane extrinsic domain to the quinone and b heme cofactors in the membrane domain. Exciting recent developments in relation to disease in humans and the formation of reactive oxygen species by
complex II
point to its overall importance in cellular physiology.
...
PMID:Function and structure of complex II of the respiratory chain. 1452 21
The transfer of electrons and protons between
membrane-bound
respiratory complexes is facilitated by lipid-soluble redox-active quinone molecules (Q). This work presents a structural analysis of the quinone-binding site (Q-site) identified in
succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(SQR) from Escherichia coli. SQR, often referred to as Complex II or
succinate dehydrogenase
, is a functional member of the Krebs cycle and the aerobic respiratory chain and couples the oxidation of succinate to fumarate with the reduction of quinone to quinol (QH(2)). The interaction between ubiquinone and the Q-site of the protein appears to be mediated solely by hydrogen bonding between the O1 carbonyl group of the quinone and the side chain of a conserved tyrosine residue. In this work, SQR was co-crystallized with the ubiquinone binding-site inhibitor Atpenin A5 (AA5) to confirm the binding position of the inhibitor and reveal additional structural details of the Q-site. The electron density for AA5 was located within the same hydrophobic pocket as ubiquinone at, however, a different position within the pocket. AA5 was bound deeper into the site prompting further assessment using protein-ligand docking experiments in silico. The initial interpretation of the Q-site was re-evaluated in the light of the new SQR-AA5 structure and protein-ligand docking data. Two binding positions, the Q(1)-site and Q(2)-site, are proposed for the E. coli SQR quinone-binding site to explain these data. At the Q(2)-site, the side chains of a serine and histidine residue are suitably positioned to provide hydrogen bonding partners to the O4 carbonyl and methoxy groups of ubiquinone, respectively. This allows us to propose a mechanism for the reduction of ubiquinone during the catalytic turnover of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Structural and computational analysis of the quinone-binding site of complex II (succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase): a mechanism of electron transfer and proton conduction during ubiquinone reduction. 1640 91
Holt, Stanley C. (Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, N.H.), S. F. Conti, and R. C. Fuller. Photosynthetic apparatus in the green bacterium Chloro-pseudomonas ethylicum. J. Bacteriol. 91:311-323. 1966.-When cells of Chloro-pseudomonas ethylicum were broken by ballistic disruption and examined by electron microscopy, vesicles 1,300 to 1,500 A long and 300 to 500 A wide were found to rim the periphery of the cell. Examination of these vesicles obtained by disruption with a French pressure cell and purified by density gradient centrifugation revealed inter-connections between the vesicles. During sonic and Mickle disruption of the cells, chlorophyll was released at a lower rate than soluble cytoplasmic components, but faster than the
membrane-bound
enzyme
succinic dehydrogenase
. Unlike the situation that exists in the purple photosynthetic bacteria, it appears that the chlorophyll in the green bacteria is contained as part of a structure which may be differentiated both structurally and functionally from the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane.
...
PMID:Photosynthetic Apparatus in the Green Bacterium Chloropseudomonas ethylicum. 1656 3
Mitochondria isolated from hypocotyls of five-day-old bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. ;Black Valentine') seedlings rapidly oxidized succinate, malate, and NADH. Oxidation rates, respiratory control, and ADP:O ratios obtained with saturating concentrations of all three substrates indicated that the mitochondria were tightly coupled. The mitochondrial preparation was then employed to investigate the respiration-inhibiting effects of butanedioic acid mono (2,2-dimethyl-hydrazide) (daminozide) a plant growth retardant having structural similarity to an endogenous respiratory substrate (succinate). Daminozide markedly inhibited the activity of
membrane-bound
succinate dehydrogenase
. Inhibition was of the competitive type (apparent K(i), 20.2 millimolar) with respect to succinate. Although not excluding other hypotheses, the results support an active role for daminozide in the suppression of respiration as an important metabolic site of its action as a plant growth regulator.
...
PMID:Effect of butanedioic Acid mono (2,2-dimethylhydrazide) on the activity of membrane-bound succinate dehydrogenase. 1666 93
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