Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Ketoconazole is an imidazole oral antifungal agent with a broad spectrum of activity. Ketoconazole has been reported to cause liver damage, but the mechanism is unknown. However, ketoconazole and a related rug, miconazole, have been shown to have inhibitory effects on oxidative phosphorylation in fungi. Fluconazole, another orally administered antifungal azole, has also been reported to cause liver damage despite its supposedly low toxicity profile. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the metabolic integrity of adult rat liver mitochondria after exposure to ketoconazole, miconazole, fluconazole, and the deacetylated metabolite of ketoconazole by measuring ADP-dependent oxygen uptake polarographically and succinate dehydrogenase activity spectrophotometrically. Ketoconazole, N-deacetyl ketoconazole, and miconazole inhibited glutamate-malate oxidation in a dose-dependent manner such that the 50% inhibitory concentration (I50) was 32,300, and 110 microM, respectively. In addition, the effect of ketoconazole, miconazole, and fluconazole on phosphorylation coupled to the oxidation of pyruvate/malate, ornithine/malate, arginine/malate, and succinate was evaluated. The results demonstrated that ketoconazole and miconazole produced a dose-dependent inhibition of NADH oxidase in which ketoconazole was the most potent inhibitor. Fluconazole had minimal inhibitory effects on NADH oxidase and succinate dehydrogenase, whereas higher concentrations of ketoconazole were required to inhibit the activity of succinate dehydrogenase. N-deacetylated ketoconazole inhibited succinate dehydrogenase with an I50 of 350 microM. In addition, the reduction of ferricyanide by succinate catalyzed by succinate dehydrogenase demonstrated that ketoconazole caused a dose-dependent inhibition of succinate activity (I50 of 74 microM). In summary, ketoconazole appears to be the more potent mitochondrial inhibitor of the azoles studied; complex I of the respiratory chain is the apparent target of the drug's action.
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PMID:Inhibition of mitochondrial function in isolated rate liver mitochondria by azole antifungals. 902 71

Detailed respiration studies on isolated liver mitochondria from streptozotocin-induced diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats revealed a disease-associated decrease in the ADP/O ratio, a marker for mitochondrial ability to couple the consumption of oxygen to the phosphorylation of ADP. This decrease was observed following induction of respiration with glutamate/malate, succinate, or duroquinol, which enter the electron transport chain selectively at complexes I (NADH dehydrogenase), II (succinate dehydrogenase), or III (cytochrome bc1 complex), respectively. These data, coupled with studies using respiratory inhibitors (most importantly antimycin A and myxothiazol), localize at least a portion of this defect to a single site within the electron transport chain (center P in the Q-cycle portion of complex III). These results suggest that liver mitochondria from diabetic animals may generate increased levels of reactive oxygen species at the portion of the electron transport chain already established as the major site of mitochondrial free radical generation. The reduction in the ADP/O ratio occurred in mitochondria that do not have overt defects in the respiratory control ratio or in State 3 and State 4 respiration. The data in this paper suggest that defects in center P of the electron transport chain likely increase mitochondrial exposure to oxidants in the diabetic. This data may partially explain the evidence of altered exposure and/or response to reactive species in mitochondria from diabetics. This work thus provides further clues to the interaction between oxidative stress and diabetes-associated mitochondrial dysfunction.
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PMID:Defects at center P underlie diabetes-associated mitochondrial dysfunction. 911 51

Experiments were performed on eight subjects affected by peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) of the lower limbs. Each patient was submitted to Ecodoppler, angiography and the "Treadmill test". Two bioptic muscle of these patients. A sample was used for the spectrophotometric and spectrophotofluorimetric determinations of: glycogen, pyruvate, lactate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, malate, aspartate, glutamate, AMP, ADP, ATP and creatine phosphate (CP). The other bioptic sample was used to determine the following enzyme activities: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, total NADH cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase. Patients showed an increase in lactate dehydrogenase, total NADH cytochrome c reductase and succinate dehydrogenase activities, a decrease in glycogen, ATP and CP concentrations. Telethermographic data showed patient muscle thermic emission quantitatively different from control group. The telethermographic test can be used as an additional diagnostic tool to determine and monitor the efficiency of a muscle undergoing metabolic failure.
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PMID:Instrumental and metabolic evaluation of patients affected by peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) following surgical revascularization surgery. 928 78

Peroxynitrite anion, the reaction product of superoxide and nitric oxide, is a potent biological oxidant, which inactivates mammalian heart mitochondrial NADH-coenzyme Q reductase (complex I), succinate dehydrogenase (complex II), and ATPase, without affecting cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV). In this paper, we evaluated the effect of peroxynitrite on mitochondrial membrane integrity and permeability under low calcium concentration. Phosphate buffer was used in most of our experiments since Hepes, Tris, mannitol, and sucrose were found to inhibit the oxidative chemistry of peroxynitrite. Peroxynitrite (0.1-1.0 mM) caused a dose-dependent decrease in the ability of mitochondria to build up a membrane potential when N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine/ascorbate were used as substrate. Elimination of the membrane potential was accompanied by penetration of the osmotic support (KCl/NaCl) into the matrix as judged by the parallel occurrence of mitochondrial swelling. This swelling was partially inhibited by dithiothreitol (DTT) or butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) and was insensitive to ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, ADP, and cyclosporin A. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of solubilized membrane proteins indicated that alterations in membrane permeability were associated with the production of protein aggregates due to membrane protein thiol cross-linking. The protective effect of DTT on both mitochondrial swelling and protein polymerization suggests the involvement of disulfide bonds in the membrane permeabilization process. In addition, the increase in thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances and the partial inhibitory effect of BHT indicate the occurrence of lipid peroxidation. These results support the idea that under our experimental conditions peroxynitrite causes mitochondrial structural and functional alterations by Ca2+-independent mechanisms through lipid peroxidation and protein sulfhydryl oxidation.
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PMID:Ca2+-independent permeabilization of the inner mitochondrial membrane by peroxynitrite is mediated by membrane protein thiol cross-linking and lipid peroxidation. 930 96

The effect of the herbicide 4,6-dinitro-o-cresol (DNOC), a structural analogue of the classical protonophore 2,4-dinitrophenol, on the bioenergetics and inner membrane permeability of isolated rat liver mitochondria was studied. We observed that DNOC (10-50 microM) acts as a classical uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria, promoting both an increase in succinate-supported mitochondrial respiration in the presence or absence of ADP and a decrease in transmembrane potential. The protonophoric activity of DNOC was evidenced by the induction of mitochondrial swelling in hyposmotic K(+)-acetate medium, in the presence of valinomycin. At higher concentrations (> 50 microM), DNOC also induces an inhibition of succinate-supported respiration, and a decrease in the activity of the succinate dehydrogenase can be observed. The addition of uncoupling concentrations of DNOC to Ca(2+)-loaded mitochondria treated with Ruthenium Red results in non-specific membrane permeabilization, as evidenced by mitochondrial swelling in isosmotic sucrose medium. Cyclosporin A, which inhibits mitochondrial permeability transition, prevented DNOC-induced mitochondrial swelling in the presence of Ca2+, which was accompanied by a decrease in mitochondrial membrane protein thiol content, owing to protein thiol oxidation. Catalase partially inhibits mitochondrial swelling and protein thiol oxidation, indicating the participation of mitochondrial-generated reactive oxygen species in this process. It is concluded that DNOC is a potent potent protonophore acting as a classical uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria by dissipating the proton electrochemical gradient. Treatment of Ca(2+)-loaded mitochondria with uncoupling concentrations of DNOC results in mitochondrial permeability transition, associated with membrane protein thiol oxidation by reactive oxygen species.
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PMID:4,6-Dinitro-o-cresol uncouples oxidative phosphorylation and induces membrane permeability transition in rat liver mitochondria. 937 80

Several inhibitors of mitochondrial complex II cause neuronal death in vivo and in vitro. The goal of the present work was to characterize in vitro the effects of malonate (a competitive blocker of the complex) which induces neuronal death in a pattern similar to that seen in striatum in Huntington's disease. Exposure of striatal and cortical cultures from embryonic rat brain for 24 h to methylmalonate, a compound which produces malonate intracellularly, led to a dose-dependent cell death. Methylmalonate (10 mM) caused >90% mortality of neurons although cortical cells were unexpectedly more vulnerable. Cell death was attenuated in a medium containing antioxidants. Further characterization revealed that DNA laddering could be detected after 3 h of treatment. Morphological observations (videomicroscopy and Hoechst staining) showed that both necrotic and apoptotic cell death occurred in parallel; apoptosis was more prevalent. A decrease in the ATP/ADP ratio was observed after 3 h of treatment with 10 mM methylmalonate. In striatal cultures it occurred concomitantly with a decline in GABA and a rise in aspartate content and the aspartate/glutamate ratio. Changes in ion concentrations were measured in similar cortical cultures from mouse brain. Neuronal [Na+]i increased while [K+]i and membrane potential decreased after 20 min of continuous incubation in 10 mM methylmalonate. These changes progressed with time, and a rise in [Ca2+]i was also observed after 1 h. The results demonstrate that malonate collapses cellular ion gradients, restoration of which imposes an additional load on the already compromised ATP-generation machinery. An early elevation in [Ca2+]i may trigger an increase in activity of proteases, lipases and endonucleases and production of free radicals and DNA damage which, ultimately, leads to cells death. The data also suggest that maturational and/or extrinsic factors are likely to be critical for the increased vulnerability of striatal neurons to mitochondrial inhibition in vivo.
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PMID:Methylmalonate toxicity in primary neuronal cultures. 969 61

The effect of negative air ions (NAI) inhalation by rats on energy reactions of mitochondria in homogenates of liver and brain was studied. The influence of NAI was investigated under activation of animals by administration of physiological dose of adrenaline. Adrenaline administration induced hyperactivation of the rate of phosphorylating oxidation of succinic acid in liver and brain mitochondria which was accompanied by oxalacetate inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) as well as excessive Ca2+ accumulation in liver mitochondria. These changes connected with a decrease of coefficient of phosphorylation efficiency ADP/O and uncoupler stimulation of respiration evidenced decrease of energy control of respiration in mitochondria. NAI inhalation diminished the rate of hyperactivated respiration and abolished excessive Ca2+ accumulation. These changes together with ADP/O coefficient and DNP stimulation increase evidence improvement of energy control of respiration which provide more moderate function of the respiratory chain under activation by adrenaline. Animals were excited by adrenaline administration. This effect was abolished by NAI inhalation, animals relaxed, some fell asleep. The data evidence sensitivity of mitochondrial processes in internal organs to inhalation of NAI and show participation of mitochondria in realization of physiological effects of NAI.
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PMID:[Optimization of energy-dependent processes in mitochondria from rat liver and brain after inhalation of negative air ions]. 991 36

These serial clinical and experimental studies were designed to clarify the pathogenesis of postburn MODS. Both animal and clinical studies were performed. In animal experiments, 46 male cross-bred dogs were cannulated with Swan-Ganz catheters and 39 of them were inflicted with 50% TBSA third degree burns (7 were used as controls). The burned dogs were randomly divided into 4 groups: immediate infusion, delayed infusion, delayed fast infusion and delayed fast infusion combined with ginsenosides. All dogs were kept under constant barbiturate sedation during the whole study period. Hemodynamics, visceral MDA, mitochondrial respiratory control rate (RCR) and ADP/O ratio, ATP, succinic dehydrogenase (SDH), organ water content as well as light and electron microscopy of visceral tissues were determined. In the clinical study, 61 patients with extensive deep burns were chosen, of which 16 sustained MODS. Plasma TXB2/6-keto-PGF1alpha ratio, TNF, SOD, MDA, circulatory platelet aggregate ratio (CPAR), PGE2, interleukin-1, total organ water content and pathological observations of visceral tissues from patients who died of MODS were carried out. Results demonstrated that ischemic-reperfusion damage due to severe shock, sepsis and inhalation injury are three main causes of postburn death. All inflammatory mediators increased markedly in both animals and patients who sustained organ damage or MODS. SDH, RCR, ADP/O and ATP decreased significantly. These findings suggested that ischemic damage and systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) initiated by mediators or cytokines might be important in the pathogenesis of postburn MODS.
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PMID:Serial experimental and clinical studies on the pathogenesis of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) in severe burns. 991 70

To evaluate the potential role of mitochondrial lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) in tissue lactate clearance and oxidation in vivo, isolated rat liver, cardiac, and skeletal muscle mitochondria were incubated with lactate, pyruvate, glutamate, and succinate. As well, alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate (CINN), a known monocarboxylate transport inhibitor, and oxamate, a known LDH inhibitor were used. Mitochondria readily oxidized pyruvate and lactate, with similar state 3 and 4 respiratory rates, respiratory control (state 3/state 4), and ADP/O ratios. With lactate or pyruvate as substrates, alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate blocked the respiratory response to added ADP, but the block was bypassed by addition of glutamate (complex I-linked) and succinate (complex II-linked) substrates. Oxamate increased pyruvate (approximately 10-40%), but blocked lactate oxidation. Gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy indicated LDH isoenzyme distribution patterns to display tissue specificity, but the LDH isoenzyme patterns in isolated mitochondria were distinct from those in surrounding cell compartments. In heart, LDH-1 (H4) was concentrated in mitochondria whereas LDH-5 (M4) was present in both mitochondria and surrounding cytosol and organelles. LDH-5 predominated in liver but was more abundant in mitochondria than elsewhere. Because lactate exceeds cytosolic pyruvate concentration by an order of magnitude, we conclude that lactate is the predominant monocarboxylate oxidized by mitochondria in vivo. Mammalian liver and striated muscle mitochondria can oxidize exogenous lactate because of an internal LDH pool that facilitates lactate oxidation.
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PMID:Role of mitochondrial lactate dehydrogenase and lactate oxidation in the intracellular lactate shuttle. 992 5

The generation of H2O2 by isolated pea stem mitochondria, oxidizing either malate plus glutamate or succinate, was examined. The level of H2O2 was almost one order of magnitude higher when mitochondria were energized by succinate. The succinate-dependent H2O2 formation was abolished by malonate, but unaffected by rotenone. The lack of effect of the latter suggests that pea mitochondria were working with a proton motive force below the threshold value required for reverse electron transfer. The activation by pyruvate of the alternative oxidase was reflected in an inhibition of H2O2 formation. This effect was stronger when pea mitochondria oxidized malate plus glutamate. Succinate-dependent H2O2 formation was ca. four times lower in Arum sp. mitochondria (known to have a high alternative oxidase) than in pea mitochondria. An uncoupler (FCCP) completely prevented succinate-dependent H2O2 generation, while it only partially (40-50%) inhibited that linked to malate plus glutamate. ADP plus inorganic phosphate (transition from state 4 to state 3) also inhibited the succinate-dependent H2O2 formation. Conversely, that dependent on malate plus glutamate oxidation was unaffected by low and stimulated by high concentrations of ADP. These results show that the main bulk of H2O2 is formed during substrate oxidation at the level of complex II and that this generation may be prevented by either dissipation of the electrochemical proton gradient (uncoupling and transition state 4-state 3), or preventing its formation (alternative oxidase). Conversely, H2O2 production, dependent on oxidation of complex I substrate, is mainly lowered by the activation of the alternative oxidase.
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PMID:Hydrogen peroxide generation by higher plant mitochondria oxidizing complex I or complex II substrates. 1037 Dec 18


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