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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)
Beef heart mitochondria were incubated with ADM and NADH. An adriamycin semiquinone radical was detected using
ESR
spectroscopy. The semiquinone radical production rate is decreased upon addition of a scavenger (AD 20) in the reaction medium. NMRI mice were treated with AD 20 (70 mg/kg, i.p.) 15 min prior ADM injection (20 mg/kg, i.p.) or with ADM alone. Heart mitochondria were isolated 48 hr later. The enzymatic activities of
complex I
-III and complex IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain were strongly depressed in animals receiving ADM alone, whereas these activities were almost completely restored in animals receiving AD 20 and ADM. Fluorescence depolarization measurements indicated that only mice treated with ADM alone presented a decreased fluidity of their cardiac mitochondrial membrane.
...
PMID:A new class of free radical scavengers reducing adriamycin mitochondrial toxicity. 284 51
In the accompanying paper (Davies, K. J. A., and Doroshow, J. A. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3060-3067), we have demonstrated that anthracycline antibiotics are reduced to the semiquinone form at Complex I of the mitochondrial electron transport chain. In the experiments presented in this study we examined the effects of doxorubicin (Adriamycin), daunorubicin, and related quinonoid anticancer agents on superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical production by preparations of beef heart submitochondrial particles. Superoxide anion formation was stimulated from (mean +/- S.E.) 1.6 +/- 0.2 to 69.6 +/- 2.7 or 32.1 +/- 1.5 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 by the addition of 90 microM doxorubicin or daunorubicin, respectively. However, the anthracycline 5-iminodaunorubicin, in which an imine group has been substituted in the C ring quinone moiety, did not increase superoxide production over control levels. In the presence of rotenone, initial rates of oxygen consumption and superoxide formation were identical under comparable experimental conditions. Furthermore, H2O2 production increased from undetectable control levels to 2.2 +/- 0.3 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 after treatment of submitochondrial particles with doxorubicin (200 microM). The hydroxyl radical, or a related chemical oxidant, was also detected after the addition of an anthracycline to this system by both
ESR
spectroscopy using the spin trap 5,5-dimethylpyrroline-N-oxide and by gas chromatographic quantitation of CH4 produced from dimethyl sulfoxide. Hydroxyl radical production, which was iron-dependent in this system, occurred in a nonlinear fashion with an initial lag phase due to a requirement for H2O2 accumulation. We also found that two quinonoid anti-cancer agents which produce less cardiotoxicity than the anthracyclines, mitomycin C, and mitoxantrone, stimulated significantly less or no hydroxyl radical production by submitochondrial particles. These experiments suggest that injury to cardiac mitochondria which is produced by anthracycline antibiotics may result from the generation of the hydroxyl radical during anthracycline metabolism by
NADH dehydrogenase
.
...
PMID:Redox cycling of anthracyclines by cardiac mitochondria. II. Formation of superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical. 300 79
In the present study we have used beef heart submitochondrial preparations (BH-SMP) to demonstrate that a component of mitochondrial Complex I, probably the
NADH dehydrogenase
flavin, is the mitochondrial site of anthracycline reduction. During forward electron transport, the anthracyclines doxorubicin (Adriamycin) and daunorubicin acted as one-electron acceptors for BH-SMP (i.e. were reduced to semiquinone radical species) only when NADH was used as substrate; succinate and ascorbate were without effect. Inhibitor experiments (rotenone, amytal, piericidin A) indicated that the anthracycline reduction site lies on the substrate side of ubiquinone. Doxorubicin and daunorubicin semiquinone radicals were readily detected by
ESR
spectroscopy. Doxorubicin and daunorubicin semiquinone radicals (g congruent to 2.004, signal width congruent to 4.5 G) reacted avidly with molecular oxygen, presumably to produce O2-, to complete the redox cycle. The identification of Complex I as the site of anthracycline reduction was confirmed by studies of ATP-energized reverse electron transport using succinate or ascorbate as substrates, in the presence of antimycin A or KCN respiratory blocks. Doxorubicin and daunorubicin inhibited the reduction of NAD+ to NADH during reverse electron transport. Furthermore, during reverse electron transport in the absence of added NAD+, doxorubicin and daunorubicin addition caused oxygen consumption due to reduction of molecular oxygen (to O2-) by the anthracycline semiquinone radicals. With succinate as electron source both thenoyltrifluoroacetone (an inhibitor of Complex II) and rotenone blocked oxygen consumption, but with ascorbate as electron source only rotenone was an effective inhibitor. NADH oxidation by doxorubicin during BH-SMP forward electron transport had a KM of 99 microM and a Vmax of 30 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 (at pH 7.4 and 23 degrees C); values for daunorubicin were 71 microM and 37 nmol X min-1 X mg-1. Oxygen consumption at pH 7.2 and 37 degrees C exhibited KM values of 65 microM for doxorubicin and 47 microM for daunorubicin, and Vmax values of 116 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 for doxorubicin and 114 nmol X min-1 X mg-1 for daunorubicin. In marked contrast with these results, 5-iminodaunodrubicin (a new anthracycline with diminished cardiotoxic potential) exhibited little or no tendency to undergo reduction, or to redox cycle with BH-SMP. Redox cycling of anthracyclines by mitochondrial
NADH dehydrogenase
is shown, in the accompanying paper (Doroshow, J. H., and Davies, K. J. A. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 3068-3074), to generate O2-, H2O2, and OH which may underlie the cardiotoxicity of these antitumor agents.
...
PMID:Redox cycling of anthracyclines by cardiac mitochondria. I. Anthracycline radical formation by NADH dehydrogenase. 345 45
Iron-sulfur clusters present in rat liver submitochondrial particles were characterized by
ESR
at temperatures between 30 and 5.5 K combined with potentiometric titrations. The spectral and thermodynamic characteristics of the iron-sulfur clusters were generally similar to those previously reported for pigeon or bovine heart submitochondrial particles. Clusters N-1a, N-1b, N-2, N-3 and N-4 of
NADH dehydrogenase
had midpoint oxidation-reduction potentials at pH 7.5 of -425, -265, -85, -240 and -260 mV, respectively. Clusters S-1 and S-3 of succinate dehydrogenase had midpoint potentials of 0 and +65 mV, respectively. The iron-sulfur cluster of electron-transferring flavo-protein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase exhibited the gz signal at g = 2.08 and had a midpoint potential of +30 mV. This signal was relatively prominent in rat liver compared to pigeon or bovine heart. Submitochondrial particles from rats chronically treated with ethanol (36% of total calories, 40 days) showed decreases of 20-30+% in amplitudes of signals due to clusters N-2, N-3 and N-4 compared to those from pair-fed control rats. Signals from clusters N-1b, S-1, S-3 and electron-transferring flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase were unaffected. Microwave power-saturation behavior was similar for both submitochondrial particle preparations, suggesting that the lower signal amplitudes reflected a lower content of these particular clusters.
NADH dehydrogenase
activity was significantly decreased (46%), whilst succinate dehydrogenase activity was elevated (25%), following chronic ethanol consumption. The results indicate that chronic ethanol treatment leads to an alteration of the structure and function of the
NADH dehydrogenase
segment of the electron transfer chain. This alteration is one of the factors contributing to the lower respiration rates observed following chronic ethanol administration.
...
PMID:Characterization of iron-sulfur clusters in rat liver submitochondrial particles by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Alterations produced by chronic ethanol consumption. 624 7
Mitochondrial
NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(Complex I) is a lipoprotein enzyme containing phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and cardiolipin. Enzyme preparations containing endogenous cardiolipin and a range of either soyabean PC or dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) concentrations have been made. Using a spin-labelled fatty acid, two probe environments differing in mobility have been shown to be present. The fatty acid probe has a relative binding constant (or partition coefficient between lipid and protein) of unity. The boundary layer or lipid annulus reported by the probe has a value of approx. 300 lipid molecules per molecule of enzyme FMN in preparations containing soyabean PC, or DMPC above the phase transition temperature of the latter. In soyabean PC-replaced enzyme the apparent size of the boundary layer is independent of temperature between 30 degrees C and 14 degrees C but shows a modest increase to about 400 lipid molecules per molecule of FMN between 14 degrees C and 2 degrees C. Complex I replaced with high concentrations of DMPC gives non-linear Arrhenius plots of
NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase
activity. The results of the
ESR
experiments show that both boundary layer and bulk lipid must be motionally restricted for this to occur. Thus, the change in activity is probably not caused by an effect exerted directly on the catalytic activity of the enzyme but is more likely due to restriction of free diffusion of ubiquinone to its site of reduction.
...
PMID:A spin label study of the lipid boundary layer of mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase. 629 75
NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(Complex I) can be recombined with ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (Complex III) to reconstitute NADH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase. Two modes of interaction have been found. In one, the Complexes interact stoichiometrically in one to one molar ratios to give a binary Complex I-III unit. In the other, the kinetics of NADH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase are characteristic of 'Q-pool' behaviour seen in intact mitochondria and submitochondrial particles in which the Complexes need not interact directly but can do so via a pool of mobile ubiquinone. Stoichiometric behaviour is found when only boundary layer or annular lipid is present or the lipid is in the gel phase. The lipid is immobile on the
ESR
time scale and protein rotational diffusion, measured by saturation transfer
ESR
, is very slow. Q-pool behaviour is found when mobile extra-annular lipid phase is also present. Protein rotational diffusion is rapid and characteristic of a fully disaggregated state. We have also used freeze-fracture electron microscopy of reconstituted NADH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase to monitor protein aggregation and lateral phase separation of lipids and proteins under various conditions. We discuss our findings in relation to models for lateral interactions between respiratory chain enzymes.
...
PMID:The effects of lipid fluidity on the rotational diffusion of complex I and complex III in reconstituted NADH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase. 629 76
The interaction between ubiquinones and vitamin E was studied in the inner membranes of rat liver mitochondria, liposomes and human erythrocyte plasma membranes. Free radicals were produced by addition of exogenous oxidants, and their reaction with chromanols and ubiquinone was followed by
ESR
and HPLC. Membranes were made deficient in ubiquinone but sufficient in alpha-tocopherol and were reconstituted with added ubiquinone. With these membrane preparations it was shown that (i) in the inner mitochondrial membranes there is a requirements for ubiquinone in the enzymatic recycling of vitamin E; (ii) succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
incorporated in liposomes cannot protect vitamin E in the absence of ubiquinone and (iii) in human erythrocyte plasma membranes protection against the loss of vitamin E can be provided by NADH-cytochrome-b5-dependent enzymatic recycling. We conclude that ubiquinonols (ubisemiquinones) reduce vitamin E through electron transport.
...
PMID:Interactions between ubiquinones and vitamins in membranes and cells. 775 45
The molecular basis of the adriamycin (AQ)-dependent development of cardiotoxicity is still far from being clear. In contrast to our incomplete understanding of the organ-specific mechanism mitochondria are unequivocally accepted as the locus where the molecular disorder is triggered. A growing number of reports intimate the establishment of unbalanced oxygen activation through heart mitochondria in the presence of anthraquinones. In fact, in contrast to liver mitochondria, isolated heart mitochondria have been unequivocally shown to shuttle single electrons to AQ, giving rise to O2.- formation by autoxidizing AQ. semiquinones. Earlier we have demonstrated the involvement of the exogenous
NADH dehydrogenase
in this deleterious electron deviation from the respiratory chain. This enzyme that is associated with
complex I
of the respiratory chain catalyzes the oxidation of cytosolic NADH. AQ activation through isolated heart mitochondria was reported to require the external addition of NADH, suggesting a flux of reducing equivalents from NADH to AQ in the cytosol. Unlike heart mitochondria, intact liver mitochondria, which are lacking this NADH-related pathway of reducing equivalents from the cytosol to the respiratory chain, cannot be made to activate AQ to semiquinones by NADH or any other substrate of respiration. It appears, therefore, that the exogenous
NADH dehydrogenase
of heart mitochondria exerts a key function in the myocardial toxicogenesis of anthraquinones via oxygen activation through semireduced AQ. Assessing the toxicological significance of the exogenous
NADH dehydrogenase
in AQ-related heart injury requires analysis of reaction products and their impact on vital bioenergetic functions, such as energy gain from the oxidation of respiratory substrates. We have applied
ESR
technique to analyze the identity and possible interactions of radical species emerging from NADH-respiring heart mitochondria in the presence of AQ. The following metabolic steps occur causing depression of energy metabolism in the cardiac tissue. After one-electron transfer to the parent hydrophilic anthraquinone molecule destabilization of the radical formed causes cleavage of the sugar residue. Accumulation of the lipophilic aglycone metabolite in the inner mitochondrial membrane diverts electrons from the regular pathway to electron acceptors out of sequence such as H2O2. HO. radicals are formed and affect the functional integrity of energy-linked respiration. The key and possibly initiating role of the exogenous
NADH dehydrogenase
of cardiac mitochondria in this reaction pathway provides a rationale to explain the selective cardiotoxic potency of the cytostatic anthraquinone glycosides.
...
PMID:Analyses of the molecular mechanism of adriamycin-induced cardiotoxicity. 929 55
Chenopodium ambrosioides have been used for centuries in the Americas as a popular remedy for parasitic diseases. The essential oil of this plant possesses anthelmintic activity and is still used in some regions to treat parasitosis and leishmaniasis. However, the Chenopodium oil caused also some fatalities, leading to its commercial disuse. In this work, we studied the mechanism of toxicity of the essential oil and its major pure ingredients (carvacrol, caryophyllene oxide, and ascaridole, which was synthesized from alpha-terpinene) with respect to mammalian cells and mitochondria. We observed that all products, but especially caryophyllene oxide, inhibited the mitochondrial electron transport chain. This effect for carvacrol and caryophyllene oxide was mediated via direct
complex I
inhibition. Without Fe2+, ascaridole was less toxic to mammalian mitochondria than other major ingredients. However, evidence on the formation of carbon-centered radicals in the presence of Fe2+ was obtained by
ESR
spin-trapping. Furthermore, it was shown that Fe2+ potentiated the toxicity of ascaridole on oxidative phosphorylation of rat liver mitochondria. The increase of the alpha-tocopherol quinone/alpha-tocopherol ratio under these conditions indicated the initiation of lipid peroxidation by Fe2+-mediated ascaridole cleavage. Further
ESR
spin-trapping experiments demonstrated that in addition to Fe2+, reduced hemin, but not mitochondrial cytochrome c can activate ascaridole, explaining why ascaridole in peritoneal macrophages from BALB/c mice exhibited a higher toxicity than in isolated mitochondria.
...
PMID:Toxic effects of carvacrol, caryophyllene oxide, and ascaridole from essential oil of Chenopodium ambrosioides on mitochondria. 1966 43