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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)
The effects of tetragalloylglucose (1,2,3,6-tetra-O-galloyl-beta-D-glucose) on purified
complex II
(succinate-
ubiquinone
oxidoreductase) of the mitochondrial electron transport system of Ascaris muscle were studied. Both succinate-
ubiquinone
-1 (Q1) oxidoreductase, and
succinate dehydrogenase
measured with 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)- 2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) in the presence of phenazine methosulfate (PMS) were inhibited by tetragalloylglucose. The inhibitions of both reductase activities of
complex II
were of competitive type, and the inhibitor constant (Ki) for Ascaris
complex II
(148 nM) was lower than that for rat liver
complex II
(1.5 microM). Thus, Ascaris
complex II
is much more sensitive to this inhibitor than the mammalian counterpart.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effects of tetragalloylglucose on the complex II of mitochondrial respiratory chain of Ascaris muscle. 260 4
Complex II (
succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
) is an important component of both the tricarboxylic acid cycle and of the aerobic respiratory chains of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. The enzyme has been purified from numerous sources and appears to be highly conserved from considerations of both the amino acid sequences of the catalytic subunits and from the prosthetic groups associated with the enzyme. The sdh operon has been cloned and sequenced from Escherichia coli, but the enzyme from this source has, so far, resisted attempts at biochemical purification. In this work, a one-step purification of the enzyme is described which yields a stable four-subunit enzyme which has a high specific activity. This purification takes advantage of a strain which overproduces the enzyme by 10-fold due to the presence of a multicopy plasmid containing the cloned sdh operon. The purified
complex II
has one FAD, eight non-heme irons, seven acid-labile sulfides, and one protoheme IX per molecule. The enzyme has been reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles and demonstrated to reduce
ubiquinone
-8, the natural electron acceptor, at a high rate.
...
PMID:One-step purification from Escherichia coli of complex II (succinate: ubiquinone oxidoreductase) associated with succinate-reducible cytochrome b556. 264 69
Trypanosoma brucei procyclic trypomastigotes were made permeable by using digitonin (0-70 micrograms/mg of protein). This procedure allowed exposure of coupled mitochondria to different substrates. Only succinate and glycerol phosphate (but not NADH-dependent substrates) were capable of stimulating oxygen consumption. Fluorescence studies on intact cells indicated that addition of succinate stimulates NAD(P)H oxidation, contrary to what happens in mammalian mitochondria. Addition of malonate, an inhibitor of
succinate dehydrogenase
, stimulated NAD(P)H reduction. Malonate also inhibited intact-cell respiration and motility, both of which were restored by further addition of succinate. Experiments carried out with isolated mitochondrial membranes showed that, although the electron transfer from succinate to cytochrome c was inhibitable by antimycin, NADH-cytochrome c reductase was antimycin-insensitive. We postulate that the NADH-
ubiquinone
segment of the respiratory chain is replaced by NADH-fumarate reductase, which reoxidizes the mitochondrial NADH and in turn generates succinate for the respiratory chain. This hypothesis is further supported by the inhibitory effect on cell growth and respiration of 3-methoxyphenylacetic acid, an inhibitor of the NADH-fumarate reductase of T. brucei.
...
PMID:The role of succinate in the respiratory chain of Trypanosoma brucei procyclic trypomastigotes. 271 53
Myeloperoxidase, a granule-associated enzyme of neutrophils and monocytes, combines with H2O2 and chloride to form a potent microbicidal system that contributes to phagocyte antimicrobial activity. The nature of the lesion or lesions induced by the myeloperoxidase system which are responsible for the loss of microbial replicative activity (viability) remains unknown. Using Escherichia coli grown to late log or stationary phase under conditions of low aeration with succinate as the sole carbon source, we found that myeloperoxidase-induced loss of microbial viability could be correlated with a decrease in succinate-dependent respiration (succinate oxidase activity). Succinate dehydrogenase activity fell rapidly to undetectable levels during incubation with the myeloperoxidase system, suggesting that damage to the dehydrogenase was a major factor in the loss of oxidase activity. Other components of the succinate oxidase system were resistant to the actions of myeloperoxidase. The
ubiquinone
-8 and cytochrome components of the respiratory chain remained nearly constant in amount despite reduction of respiration to undetectable levels. However, as expected from the loss of
succinate dehydrogenase
activity, succinate-ubiquinone reductase and succinate-cytochrome reductase activities were markedly impaired. We propose that the loss of E. coli viability induced by the myeloperoxidase-H2O2-chloride system is due in part to the loss of electron transport function consequent to the oxidation of critical catalytic centers in susceptible dehydrogenases.
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase-mediated damage to the succinate oxidase system of Escherichia coli. Evidence for selective inactivation of the dehydrogenase component. 282 9
The interaction of the exogenous quinones, duroquinone (DQ) and the decyl analogue of
ubiquinone
(DB) with the mitochondrial respiratory chain was studied in both wild-type and a
ubiquinone
-deficient mutant of yeast. DQ can be reduced directly by NADH dehydrogenase, but cannot be reduced by
succinate dehydrogenase
in the absence of endogenous
ubiquinone
. The succinate-driven reduction of DQ can be stimulated by DB in a reaction inhibited 50% by antimycin and 70-80% by the combined use of antimycin and myxothiazol, suggesting that electron transfer occurs via the cytochrome b-c1 complex. Both DQ and DB can effectively mediate the reduction of cytochrome b by the primary dehydrogenases through center o, but their ability to mediate the reduction of cytochrome b through center i is negligible. Two reaction sites for ubiquinol seem to be present at center o: one is independent of endogenous Q6 with a high reaction rate and a high Km; the other is affected by endogenous Q6 and has a low reaction rate and a low Km. By contrast, only one ubiquinol reaction site was observed at center i, where DB appears to compete with endogenous Q6. DB can oxidize most of the pre-reduced cytochrome b, while DQ can oxidize only 50%. On the basis of these data, the possible binding patterns of DB on different Q-reaction sites and the requirement for
ubiquinone
in the continuous oxidation of DQH are discussed.
...
PMID:The interaction of quinone analogues with wild-type and ubiquinone-deficient yeast mitochondria. 284 Jan 17
Complex II of the anaerobic respiratory chain in Ascaris muscle mitochondria showed a high fumarate reductase activity when reduced methyl viologen was used as the electron donor. The maximum activity was 49 mumol/min per mg protein, which is much higher than that of the mammalian counterpart. The mitochondria of Ascaris-fertilized eggs, which require oxygen for its development, also showed fumarate reductase activity with a specific activity intermediate between those of adult Ascaris and mammals. Antibody against the Ascaris flavoprotein subunit reacted with the mammalian counterparts, whereas those against the Ascaris iron-sulfur protein subunit did not crossreact, although the amino acid compositions of the subunits in Ascaris and bovine heart were quite similar. Cytochrome b-558 of Ascaris
complex II
was separated from flavoprotein and iron-sulphur protein subunits by high performance liquid chromatography with a gel permeation system in the presence of Sarkosyl. Isolated cytochrome b-558 is composed of two hydrophobic polypeptides with molecular masses of 17.2 and 12.5 kDa determined by gradient gel, which correspond to the two small subunits of
complex II
. Amino acid compositions of these small subunits showed little similarity with those of cytochrome b-560 of bovine heart
complex II
. NADH-fumarate reductase, which is the final enzyme complex in the anaerobic respiratory chain in Ascaris, was reconstituted with bovine heart complex I, Ascaris
complex II
and phospholipids. The maximum activity was 430 nmol/min per mg protein of
complex II
. Rhodoquinone was essential for this reconstitution, whereas
ubiquinone
showed no effect. The results clearly indicate the unique role of Ascaris
complex II
as fumarate reductase and the indispensability of rhodoquinone as the low-potential electron carrier in the NADH-fumarate reductase system.
...
PMID:Electron-transfer complexes of Ascaris suum muscle mitochondria. III. Composition and fumarate reductase activity of complex II. 284 27
Bovine heart submitochondrial particles were incubated for 2-6 h at 37 degrees C with various concentrations of tetradecanoic acid, and the effects on the activities, the total acid-labile sulphide content and EPR spectra of the electron transfer system were studied. Two distinct time-dependent processes of the slow irreversible inactivation of the electron-transfer system were found. They differ in the concentration of tetradecanoic acid required. The more specific effect, induced by 100-400 nmol tetradecanoic acid per mg protein, consists of a selective blockage of electron transfer between the Fe-S clusters of the NADH dehydrogenase and
ubiquinone
, without damage to any of the Fe-S clusters. Higher concentrations of tetradecanoic acid caused gradual destruction of all Fe-S clusters of NADH dehydrogenase and of the 3-Fe cluster of
succinate dehydrogenase
, leading to complete inactivation of both NADH and succinate oxidation.
...
PMID:Two modes of irreversible inactivation of the mitochondrial electron-transfer system by tetradecanoic acid. 298 61
A simple procedure for preparation of highly purified soluble succinate-ubiquinone reductase from bovine heart mitochondrial particles is described. The enzyme exhibits four major bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis and contains (nmol per mg protein): covalently bound flavin, 6; non-heme iron, 53; acid-labile sulfur, 50; cytochrome b-560 heme, 1.2. The enzyme catalyzes thenoyltrifluoroacetone, or carboxin-sensitive (pure non-competitive with Q2) reduction of Q2 by succinate with a turnover number close to that in parent submitochondrial particles. The succinate reduced enzyme exhibits ferredoxin-type iron-sulfur center EPR-signal (g = 1.94 species) and a semiquinone signal (g = 2.00). An oxidized preparation shows a symmetric signal centered around g = 2.01. An unusual dissociation of the enzyme in the absence of a detergent is described. When added to the assay mixture from a concentrated protein-detergent solution, the enzyme does not reduce Q2 being highly reactive towards ferricyanide ('low Km ferricyanide reactive site'; Vinogradov, A.D., Gavrikova, E.V. and Goloveshkina, V.G. (1975) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 65, 1264-1269). The ubiquinone reductase, not the ferricyanide reductase was observed when the enzyme was added to the assay mixture from the diluted protein-detergent solutions. Thus the dissociation of
succinate dehydrogenase
from the complex occurs in the absence of a detergent dependent on the concentration of the protein-detergent complex in the stock preparation where the samples for the assay are taken from. An active antimycin-sensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase was reconstituted by admixing of the soluble succinate-ubiquinone reductase and the cytochrome b-c1 complex, i.e., from the complexes which both contain the
ubiquinone
reactivity conferring protein (QPs). Cytochrome c reductase was also reconstituted from the succinate-ubiquinone reductase and succinate-cytochrome c reductase containing inactivated
succinate dehydrogenase
. The reconstitution experiments suggest that there exists a specific protein-protein (or lipid) interaction between QPs and a certain component(s) of the b-c1 complex.
...
PMID:Studies on the succinate dehydrogenating system. Isolation and properties of the mitochondrial succinate-ubiquinone reductase. 299 19
Procedures are described for the estimation of the
succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
and succinate:phenazine methosulfate oxidoreductase activities in post-nuclear supernatants of human skeletal muscle homogenates using 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol as the terminal electron acceptor. The influence of ionic strength and of sucrose upon these assays and upon the succinate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity has been investigated. Sucrose markedly interferes with the activation of the
succinate dehydrogenase
complex. Succinate:cytochrome c oxidoreductase activity and succinate:phenazine methosulfate oxidoreductase activity are inhibited by increasing concentrations of ions and of sucrose. Our results lead us to propose the existence of a single acceptor site for phenazine methosulfate at the
succinate dehydrogenase
complex, not involved in the physiological electron flux across
ubiquinone
. Estimation of the enzymatic activities mentioned above allows differential investigation of the functional integrity of a large part of the respiratory chain in patients suspected of suffering from a neuromuscular disorder.
...
PMID:Differential investigation of the capacity of succinate oxidation in human skeletal muscle. 300 Jun 47
The rate of reduction of ferricyanide in the presence and absence of antimycin and
ubiquinone
-1 was measured using liver mitochondria from control and glucagon treated rats. Glucagon treatment was shown to increase electron flow from both NADH and succinate to
ubiquinone
, and from
ubiquinone
to cytochrome c. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) was shown to inhibit the oxidation of glutamate + malate to a much greater extent than that of succinate or duroquinol. Spectral and kinetic studies confirmed that electron flow between NADH and
ubiquinone
was the primary site of action but that the interaction of the
ubiquinone
pool with complex 3 was also affected. The effects of various respiratory chain inhibitors on the rate of uncoupled oxidation of succinate and glutamate + malate by control and glucagon treated mitochondria were studied. The stimulation of respiration seen in the mitochondria from glucagon treated rats was maintained or increased as respiration was progressively inhibited with DCMU, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-n-oxide (HQNO) and colletotrichin, but greatly reduced when inhibition was produced with malonate or antimycin. These data were also shown to support the conclusion that glucagon treatment may cause some stimulation of electron flow through NADH dehydrogenase,
succinate dehydrogenase
and through the bc1 complex, probably at the point of interaction of the complexes with the
ubiquinone
pool. The effects of glucagon treatment on duroquinol oxidation and the inhibitor titrations could not be mimicked by increasing the matrix volume, nor totally reversed by aging of mitochondria. These are both processes that have been suggested as the means by which glucagon exerts its effects on the respiratory chain (Armston, A.E., Halestrap, A.P. and Scott, R.D., 1982, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 681, 429-439). It is concluded that an additional mechanism for regulating electron flow must exist and a change in lipid peroxidation of the inner mitochondrial membrane is suggested.
...
PMID:Glucagon treatment of rats activates the respiratory chain of liver mitochondria at more than one site. 302 93
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