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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.6.5.3 (
complex I
)
8,901
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Propionic and methylmalonic acidemic patients have severe neurologic symptoms whose etiopathogeny is still obscure. Since increase of lactic acid is detected in the urine of these patients, especially during metabolic decompensation when high concentrations of methylmalonate (MMA) and propionate (PA) are produced, it is possible that cellular respiration may be impaired in these individuals. Therefore, we investigated the effects of MMA and PA (1, 2.5 and 5mM), the principal metabolites which accumulate in these conditions, on the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex activities succinate: 2,6-dichloroindophenol (DCIP) oxireductase (complex II); succinate: cytochrome c oxireductase (complexII+CoQ+III); NADH: cytochrome c oxireductase (complex I+CoQ+complex III); and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) (complex IV) from cerebral cortex homogenates of young rats. The effect of MMA on ubiquinol: cytochrome c oxireductase (complex III) and NADH: ubiquinone oxireductase (complex I) activities was also tested. Control groups did not contain MMA and PA in the incubation medium. MMA significantly inhibited complex I+III (32-46%),
complex I
(61-72%), and complex II+III (15-26%), without affecting significantly the activities of complexes II, III and IV. However, by using 1mM succinate in the assay instead of the usual 16mM concentration, MMA was able to significantly inhibit complex II activity in the brain homogenates. In contrast, PA did not affect any of these mitochondrial enzyme activities. The effect of MMA and PA on succinate: phenazine oxireductase (soluble succinate dehydrogenase (SDH)) was also measured in mitochondrial preparations. The results showed significant inhibition of the soluble SDH activity by MMA (11-27%) in purified mitochondrial fractions. Thus, if the in vitro inhibition of the oxidative phosphorylation system is also expressed under in vivo conditions, a deficit of brain energy production might explain some of the neurological abnormalities found in patients with
methylmalonic acidemia
(MMAemia) and be responsible for the lactic acidemia/aciduria identified in some of them.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complex activities in rat cerebral cortex by methylmalonic acid. 1190 Aug 54
Methylmalonic acidemia
is an inherited metabolic disorder biochemically characterized by tissue accumulation of methylmalonic acid (MMA) and clinically by progressive neurological deterioration and kidney failure, whose pathophysiology is so far poorly established. Previous studies have shown that MMA inhibits complex II of the respiratory chain in rat cerebral cortex, although no inhibition of complexes I-V was found in bovine heart. Therefore, in the present study we investigated the in vitro effect of 2.5mM MMA on the activity of complexes I-III, II, II-III and IV in striatum, hippocampus, heart, liver and kidney homogenates from young rats. We observed that MMA caused a significant inhibition of complex II activity in striatum and hippocampus (15-20%) at low concentrations of succinate in the medium, but not in the peripheral tissues. We also verified that the inhibitory property of MMA only occurred after exposing brain homogenates for at least 10 min with the acid, suggesting that this inhibition was mediated by indirect mechanisms. Simultaneous preincubation with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and catalase (CAT) plus superoxide dismutase (SOD) did not prevent MMA-induced inhibition of complex II, suggesting that common reactive oxygen (superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical) and nitric (nitric oxide) species were not involved in this effect. In addition, complex II-III (20-35%) was also inhibited by MMA in all tissues tested, and
complex I
-III only in the kidney (53%) and liver (38%). In contrast, complex IV activity was not changed by MMA in all tissues studied. These results indicate that MMA differentially affects the activity of the respiratory chain pending on the tissues studied, being striatum and hippocampus more vulnerable to its effect. In case our in vitro data are confirmed in vivo in tissues from methylmalonic acidemic patients, it is feasible that that the present findings may be related to the pathophysiology of the tissue damage characteristic of these patients.
...
PMID:Differential inhibitory effects of methylmalonic acid on respiratory chain complex activities in rat tissues. 1632 16
The heterogeneous group of 3-methylglutaconic aciduria type IV consists of patients with various organ involvement and mostly progressive neurological impairment in combination with 3-methylglutaconic aciduria and biochemical features of dysfunctional oxidative phosphorylation. Here we describe the clinical and biochemical phenotype in 18 children and define 4 clinical subgroups (encephalomyopathic, hepatocerebral, cardiomyopathic, myopathic). In the encephalomyopathic group with neurodegenerative symptoms and respiratory chain
complex I
deficiency, two of the children, presenting with mild
Methylmalonic aciduria
, Leigh-like encephalomyopathy, dystonia and deafness, harboured SUCLA2 mutations. In children with a hepatocerebral phenotype most patients presented with
complex I
deficiency and mtDNA-depletion, three of which carried POLG1-mutations. In the cardiomyopathic subgroup most patients had complex V deficiency and an overlapping phenotype with that previously described in isolated complex V deficiency, in three patients a TMEM70 mutation was confirmed. In one male with a pure myopathic form and severe combined respiratory chain disorder, based on the pathogenomic histology of central core disease, RYR1 mutations were detected. In our patient group the presence of the biochemical marker 3-methylglutaconic acid was indicative for nuclear coded respiratory chain disorders. By delineating patient-groups we elucidated the genetic defect in 10 out of 18 children. Depending on the clinical and biochemical phenotype we suggest POLG1, SUCLA2, TMEM70 and RYR1 sequence analysis and mtDNA-depletion studies in children with 3-methylglutaconic aciduria type IV.
...
PMID:Biochemical and genetic analysis of 3-methylglutaconic aciduria type IV: a diagnostic strategy. 1901 56
Dysfunction of proximal tubules resulting in tubulointerstitial nephritis and chronic renal failure is a frequent long-term complication of methylmalonic acidurias. However, the underlying pathomechanisms have not yet been extensively studied owing to the lack of suitable in vitro and in vivo models. Application of hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] has been shown to inhibit the metabolism of hydroxycobalamin and, thereby, to induce
methylmalonic aciduria
in rats, oligodendrocytes, and rat hepatocytes. Our study characterizes the biochemical and bioenergetic effects of long-term exposure of human proximal tubule cells to hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam], aiming to establish a novel in vitro model for the renal pathogenesis of methylmalonic acidurias. Incubation of human proximal tubule cells with hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] and propionic acid resulted in a strong, time-dependent intra- and extracellular accumulation of methylmalonic acid. Bioenergetic studies of respiratory chain enzyme complexes revealed an increase of complex II-IV activity after 2 weeks and an increase of
complex I
and IV activity as well as a decrease of complex II and III activity after 3 weeks of incubation. In addition, human proximal tubule cells displayed reduced glutathione content after the exposure to hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] and propionic acid.
...
PMID:Long-term exposure of human proximal tubule cells to hydroxycobalamin[c-lactam] as a possible model to study renal disease in methylmalonic acidurias. 1981 87