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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (NQO1)
6,196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ubiquinone (UQ) reductase activity which reduces UQ to ubiquinol (UQH2) in rat tissues was roughly proportional to the UQH2/total UQ ratio in respective tissues. The highest activity was found in the liver, showing the highest UQH2/total UQ ratio. A greater part of liver UQ reductase activity was located in the cytosol. Within a week, the liver UQ reductase activity decreased by 80% even at -20 degrees C. The DT-diaphorase activity was stable. UQ reductase required NADPH as the hydrogen donor and was not inhibited by a less than 1 microM concentration of dicoumarol. There was no stimulation of UQ reductase in the presence of bovine serum albumin nor in Triton X-100. Yet, both stimulated DT-diaphorase. As a result, UQ reductase appeared to be a novel NADPH-UQ oxidoreductase and responsible for the UQ redox state in liver.
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PMID:A novel ubiquinone reductase activity in rat cytosol. 146 65

Sulfide-dependent partial electron-transport reactions were studied in thylakoids isolated from cells of the cyanobacterium Oscillatoria limnetica, which had been induced to perform sulfide-driven anoxygenic photosynthesis. It was found that these thylakoids have the capacity to catalyze electron transfer, from sulfide to externally added quinones, in the dark. Assay conditions were developed to measure the reaction either as quinone-dependent sulfide oxidation (colorimetrically) or as sulfide-dependent quinone reduction (by UV dual-wavelength spectrophotometry). The main features of this reaction are as follows. (i) It is exclusively catalyzed by thylakoids of sulfide-induced cells. Noninduced thylakoids lack this reaction. (ii) Plastoquinone-1 or -2 are equally good substrates. Ubiquinone-1 and duroquinone yield somewhat slower rates. (iii) The apparent Km for plastoquinone-1 was 32 microM and for sulfide about 4 microM. Maximal rates (at 25 degrees C) were about 75 mumol of quinone reduced per mg of chlorophyll.h. (iv) The reaction was not affected by extensive washes of the membranes. (v) Unlike sulfide-dependent NADP photoreduction activity of these thylakoids, which is sensitive to all the specific inhibitors of the cytochrome b6f complex, the new dark reaction exhibited differential sensitivity to these inhibitors. 2-n-Nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide was the most potent inhibitor of both light and dark reactions, working at submicromolar concentrations. 5-n-Undecyl-6-hydroxy-4,7-dioxobenzothiazole also inhibited the two reactions to a similar extent, but at 10 times higher concentrations than 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide. 2,5-Dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, 2-iodo-6-isopropyl-3-methyl-2',4,4'-trinitrodiphenyl ether, and stigmatellin had no effect on the dark reaction at concentrations sufficient to fully inhibit the light reaction from sulfide. We propose that the sulfide-induced factor which enables the use of sulfide as the electron donor for anoxygenic photosynthesis in Oscillatria limnetica is a membrane-bound sulfide-quinone reductase. Its site of interaction is suggested to be either the cytochrome b6 (at the Qc quinone binding site or the bH site) or the plastoquinone pool. The analogy to other anoxygenic photosynthetic systems is discussed.
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PMID:Sulfide-induced sulfide-quinone reductase activity in thylakoids of Oscillatoria limnetica. 189 23

Dopamine (DA) is rapidly oxidized by Mn3(+)-pyrophosphate to its cyclized o-quinone (cDAoQ), a reaction which can be prevented by NADH, reduced glutathione (GSH) or ascorbic acid. The oxidation of DA by Mn3+, which appears to be irreversible, results in a decrease in the level of DA, but not in a formation of reactive oxygen species, since oxygen is neither consumed nor required in this reaction. The formation of cDAoQ can initiate the generation of superoxide radicals (O2-.) by reduction-oxidation cycling, i.e. one-electron reduction of the quinone by various NADH- or NADPH-dependent flavoproteins to the semiquinone (QH.), which is readily reoxidized by O2 with the concomitant formation of O2-.. This mechanism is believed to underly the cytotoxicity of many quinones. Two-electron reduction of cDAoQ to the hydroquinone can be catalyzed by the flavoprotein DT diaphorase (NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase). This enzyme efficiently maintains DA quinone in its fully reduced state, although some reoxidation of the hydroquinone (QH2) is observed (QH2 + O2----QH. + O2-. + H+; QH. + O2----Q + O2-.). In the presence of Mn3+, generated from Mn2+ by O2-. (Mn2+ + 2H+ + O2-.----Mn3+ + H2O2) formed during the autoxidation of DA hydroquinone, the rate of autoxidation is increased dramatically as is the formation of H2O2. Furthermore, cDAoQ is no longer fully reduced and the steady-state ratio between the hydroquinone and the quinone is dependent on the amount of DT diaphorase present. The generation of Mn3+ is inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD), which catalyzes the disproportionation of O2-. to H2O2 and O2. It is noteworthy that addition of SOD does not only result in a decrease in the amount of H2O2 formed during the regeneration of Mn3+, but, in fact, prevents H2O2 formation. Furthermore, in the presence of this enzyme the consumption of O2 is low, as is the oxidation of NADH, due to autoxidation of the hydroquinone, and the cyclized DA o-quinone is found to be fully reduced. These observations can be explained by the newly-discovered role of SOD as a superoxide:semiquinone (QH.) oxidoreductase catalyzing the following reaction: O2-. + QH. + 2H+----QH2 + O2. Thus, the combination of DT diaphorase and SOD is an efficient system for maintaining cDAoQ in its fully reduced state, a prerequisite for detoxication of the quinone by conjugation with sulfate or glucuronic acid. In addition, only minute amounts of reactive oxygen species will be formed, i.e. by the generation of O2-., which through disproportionation to H2O2 and further reduction by ferrous ions can be converted to the hydroxyl radical (OH.). Absence or low levels of these enzymes may create an oxidative stress on the cell and thereby initiate events leading to cell death.
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PMID:On the mechanism of the Mn3(+)-induced neurotoxicity of dopamine:prevention of quinone-derived oxygen toxicity by DT diaphorase and superoxide dismutase. 255 82

The respiratory chain of a marine bacterium, Vibrio alginolyticus, required Na+ for maximum activity, and the site of Na+ -dependent activation was localized on the NADH-quinone reductase segment. The Na+ -dependent NADH-quinone reductase extruded Na+ as a direct result of redox reaction. It was composed of three subunits, alpha, beta, and gamma, with apparent Mr of 52, 46, and 32 KDa, respectively. The reduction of ubiquinone-1 to ubiquinol proceeded via ubisemiquinone radicals. The former reaction was catalyzed by the FAD-containing beta subunit. This reaction showed no specific requirement for Na+. For the formation of ubiquinol, the presence of the gamma subunit and the FMN-containing alpha subunit was essential. The latter reaction specifically required Na+ for activity and was strongly inhibited by 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide. It was assigned to the coupling site for Na+ transport. The mode of energy coupling of redox-driven Na+ pump was compared with those of decarboxylase- and ATP-driven Na+ pumps found in other bacteria.
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PMID:Sodium-transport NADH-quinone reductase of a marine Vibrio alginolyticus. 268 59

This paper will address two aspects regarding the antioxidative role of coenzyme Q (CoQ): (1) Is the antioxidant function of CoQ primary or secondary (coincidental), i.e. was this molecule selected during evolution to function primarily as an essential functional component of the mitochondrial electron transfer chain and oxidative phosphorylation processes, is its antioxidative capability merely a coincidence of its hydroquinone structure, or was its synthetic enzyme sequence selected on the basis of the advantage to the evolving organism of both functions of CoQ? (2) What is the mechanism whereby the hydroquinone (antioxidant) form of CoQ (CoQH2) is maintained in high proportion in the various and many membranes in which it resides, and in which an obvious electron transfer mechanism to reduce it is not present? The essentiality of the antioxidative role of CoQH2 will be explored and compared to other primary and secondary antioxidants. Recent evidence implicating the two-electron quinone reductase, DT-diaphorase, in the maintenance of the reduced, antioxidant state of CoQ during the oxidative stress of exhaustive exercise will be presented, and a hypothesis concerning the evolutionary significance of DT-diaphorase will be offered.
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PMID:The relative essentiality of the antioxidative function of coenzyme Q--the interactive role of DT-diaphorase. 753 23

Rat liver homogenates reduced ubiquinone (UQ)-10 to ubiquinol (UQH2)-10 in the presence of NADPH rather than NADH. This NADPH-dependent UQ reductase (NADPH-UQ reductase) activity that was not inhibited by antimycin A and rotenone, was located mainly in the cytosol fraction and its activity accounted for 68% of that of the homogenates. Furthermore, the NADPH-UQ reductase from rat liver cytosol efficiently reduced both UQ-10 incorporated into egg yolk lecithin liposomes, and native UQ-9 residing in rat microsomes, to the respective UQH2 form in the presence of NADPH. The gross redox ratios of UQH2-9/(UQ-9 + UQH2-9) in individual tissues of rat correlated positively with the log of their respective cytosolic NADPH-UQ reductase activities, while the redox ratios in every intracellular fraction from liver were at about the same level, irrespective of NADPH-UQ reductase activities in the respective fractions. The combined addition of rat liver cytosol and NADPH inhibited to a great extent 2,2'-azobis(2,4-dimethyl-valeronitrile)-induced lipid peroxidation of UQ-10-fortified lecithin liposomes and completely inhibited such peroxidation in the liposomes in which UQH2-10 replaced UQ-10. The NADPH-UQ reductase activity was clearly separated from DT-diaphorase (EC 1.6.99.2) activity by means of Cibacron Blue-immobilized Bio-Gel A-5m chromatography. In conclusion, the NADPH-UQ reductase in cytosol, which is a novel enzyme to our knowledge, was presumed to be responsible for maintaining the steady-state redox levels of intracellular UQ and thereby to act as an endogenous antioxidant in protecting intracellular membranes from lipid peroxidation that is inevitably induced in aerobic metabolism.
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PMID:Reduction of ubiquinone in membrane lipids by rat liver cytosol and its involvement in the cellular defence system against lipid peroxidation. 763 6

The cytochrome b subunit of the ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (the bc1 complex) contains two heme prosthetic groups, cytochrome bL and cytochrome bH. In addition, this subunit also provides major elements of the quinol oxidation site (Qo) and a separate quinone reductase site (Qi), which are thought to be located on opposite sides of the membrane. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to explore the role(s) of specific amino acid residues in this subunit from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Previous work identified five residues, Gly48 (Gly33), Ala52 (Gly37), His217 (His202), Lys251 (Lys228), and Asp252 (Asp229), as being either at or near the quinone reductase site (the residue numbers in parentheses designate the equivalent positions in the yeast mitochondrial enzyme). These residues are predicted to be near the cytoplasmic boundaries of transmembrane helices: helix A (G48, A52), helix D (H217), or helix E (K251, D252). In the current work, the importance of two additional highly conserved residues, which are also predicted to be near the cytoplasmic boundaries of transmembrane helices, is explored by site-directed mutagenesis. R114 (helix B) has been substituted with K, Q, and A, and W129 (helix C) has been changed to A and F. The results suggest that a positively charged residue at position 114 is important. The R114K mutation causes only subtle effects, which appear to be localized to cytochrome bH and the quinone reductase site. In contrast, R114Q is not assembled, and R114A, although partially assembled, is nonfunctional and appears to have a very low amount of cytochrome b associated with the complex. Both mutants at position 129 (W129A and W129F) are able to support the photosynthetic growth of the organism, but show abnormal characteristics. The defects associated with the W129A mutation appear to be primarily associated with the quinone reductase site and cytochrome bH, whereas the W129F mutation appears to result in more global defects that also perturb the cytochrome bL locus. The results are consistent with the placement of residues R114 and W129 near the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, but suggest that these residues are important for the assembly and overall stability of the complex.
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of arginine-114 and tryptophan-129 in the cytochrome b subunit of the bc1 complex of Rhodobacter sphaeroides: two highly conserved residues predicted to be near the cytoplasmic surface of putative transmembrane helices B and C. 794 7

The respiratory chain of marine and moderately halophilic bacteria requires Na+ for maximum activity, and the site of Na(+)-dependent activation is located in the NADH-quinone reductase segment. The Na(+)-dependent NADH-quinone reductase purified from marine bacterium Vibrio alginolyticus is composed of three subunits, alpha, beta, and gamma, with apparent M(r) of 52, 46, and 32 kDa, respectively. The FAD-containing beta-subunit reacts with NADH and reduces ubiquinone-1 (Q-1) by a one-electron transfer pathway to produce ubisemiquinones. In the presence of the FMN-containing alpha-subunit and the gamma-subunit, Q-1 is converted to ubiquinol-1 without the accumulation of free radicals. The reaction catalyzed by the alpha-subunit is strictly dependent on Na+ and is strongly inhibited by 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide (HQNO), which is tightly coupled to the electrogenic extrusion of Na+. A similar type of Na(+)-translocating NADH-quinone reductase is widely distributed among marine and moderately halophilic bacteria. The respiratory chain of V. alginolyticus contains another NADH-quinone reductase which is Na+ independent and has no energy-transducing capacity. These two types of NADH-quinone reductase are quite different with respect to their mode of quinone reduction and their sensitivity toward NADH preincubation.
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PMID:Na(+)-translocating NADH-quinone reductase of marine and halophilic bacteria. 822 20

A simple system for aerobic assay of the quinol-fumarate reductase reaction catalyzed by purified soluble bovine heart succinate-ubiquinone reductase in the presence of NADH, NAD(P)H-quinone reductase (DT-diaphorase) and an appropriate quinone is described. The reaction is inhibited by carboxin, suggesting that the same quinone/quinol binding site is involved in electron transfer from succinate to ubiquinone and from ubiquinol to fumarate. The kinetic properties of the reaction in both directions and comparative affinities of the substrate binding sites of the enzyme to substrates (products) and competitive inhibitors are reported. Considerable difference in affinity of the substrates binding site to oxaloacetate was demonstrated when the enzyme was assayed in the direct and reverse directions. These results were taken to indicate that the oxidized dicarboxylate-free enzyme is an intermediate during the steady-state succinate-ubiquinone reductase reaction, whereas the reduced dicarboxylate-free enzyme is an intermediate of the steady-state ubiquinol-fumarate reductase reaction. No difference in the reactivity of the substrate-protected cysteine and arginine residues was found when the pseudo-first-order rate constants for N-ethylmaleimide and phenylglyoxal inhibition were determined for oxidized and quinol-reduced enzyme. Quinol-fumarate reductase activity was reconstituted from the soluble succinate dehydrogenase and low-molecular-mass ubiquinone reactivity conferring protein(s). No reduction of cytochrome b was observed in the presence of quinol generating system, whereas S-3 low temperature EPR-detectable iron-sulfur center was completely reduced by quinol under equilibrium (without fumarate) or steady-state (in the presence of fumarate). No significant reduction of ferredoxin type iron-sulfur centers was detected during the steady-state quinol-fumarate oxidoreductase reaction. The data obtained eliminate participation of cytochrome b in the quinol-fumarate reductase reaction and show that the rate limiting step of the overall reaction lies between iron-sulfur center S-3 and lower midpoint potential redox components of the enzyme.
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PMID:Fumarate reductase activity of bovine heart succinate-ubiquinone reductase. New assay system and overall properties of the reaction. 841 79

The activity of purified DT-diaphorase in the reduction of ubiquinone homologues of different side-chain length incorporated in uni- and multilamellar vesicles was determined. The direct relationship between the reduced state of ubiquinones and the inhibition of lipid autoxidation induced by thermolabile azocompounds was also demonstrated. Results demonstrate that DT-diaphorase is able to generate and to maintain the reduced, antioxidant form of ubiquinones in both types of vesicles. Furthermore, the results reported herein show that, in the presence of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and DT-diaphorase, ubiquinol-containing multilamellar vesicles exposed to a lipophilic azocompound did not undergo lipid peroxidation, whereas in vesicles lacking either NADH or DT-diaphorase, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) formation occurred. It is suggested that DT-diaphorase may be responsible for maintaining the reduced state of ubiquinones in various nonmitochondrial cellular membranes.
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PMID:DT-Diaphorase maintains the reduced state of ubiquinones in lipid vesicles thereby promoting their antioxidant function. 895 58


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