Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The interaction of purified succinate dehydrogenase and succinate--ubiquinone reductase (complex II) with lipids was explored by using two (arylazido)phospholipids, one with the reactive nitrene in the head-group region of the bilayer [1-palmitoyl-2-(2-azido-4-nitrobenzoyl)-sn-glycero-3-[3H]phosphocholine (PLII)] and one with the nitrene on the methyl terminus of one of the fatty acid chains [1-myristoyl-2-[12-[(2-azido-4-nitrophenyl)amino]lauroyl]-sn-glycero-3-[14C]phosphocholine (PLI)]. Protein was reacted with vesicles of egg lecithin containing radioactive (arylazido)-phospholipids and the covalent cross-linking of lipid and protein induced by irradiation under UV light. Purified succinate dehydrogenase was found to bind to lipid vesicles through both subunits as both were labeled by PLII. The smaller subunit was inserted into the interior of the bilayer and labeled by PLI. Complex II was found to interact with lipid vesicles, with the smaller subunit of succinate dehydrogenase, CII-3, and CII-4 all inserted into the interior of the bilayer. The large subunit of succinate dehydrogenase was found to be held above the bilayer in complex II and not labeled by either probe. Results are used to derive a picture of the arrangement of subunits in complex II and to evaluate the utility of (arylazido)-phospholipids in membrane studies.
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PMID:Interaction of succinate--ubiquinone reductase (complex II) with (arylazido)phospholipids. 747 Apr 67

The role of complex II in the cellular protection against oxidative stress was investigated in freshly isolated rat renal proximal tubular cells (PTC) with the use of the nephrotoxin S-(1,2-dichlorovinyl)-L-cysteine (DCVC). DCVC caused oxidative stress in PTC as determined by flow cytometry with dihydrorhodamine-123; this fluorescent probe is readily oxidized by primary hydroperoxides such as those formed during lipid peroxidation. The oxidative stress could be prevented by inhibition of the beta-lyase-mediated formation and covalent binding to cellular macromolecules of reactive DCVC metabolites, with amino oxyacetic acid (AOA), or by the antioxidant N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine. Both AOA and DPPD also prevented cell death. The DCVC-induced oxidative stress was associated with a decrease in the succinate:ubiquinone reductase (SQR) activity of complex II, whereas NADH:ubiquinone reductase activity of complex I remained unaffected. AOA prevented the effect on SQR activity, whereas N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine did not. Inhibition of SQR activity with thenoyl trifluoracetone (TTFA) potentiated the DCVC-induced oxidative cell injury, suggesting the involvement of SQR activity in an antioxidant pathway. To investigate this in greater detail, PTC were treated with an inhibitor of cytochrome-c-oxidase, KCN, in a buffer containing glycine, which prevents cell death by KCN. Glycine did not affect cell death by DCVC. KCN prevented the DCVC-induced oxidative stress and cell death. KCN cytoprotection could be prevented by inhibition of SQR activity with oxaloacetate or TTFA, whereas inhibition of either complex I or III with rotenone and antimycin, respectively, did not prevent it. The effect of DCVC on complex II was associated with a decrease in the cellular amount of reduced ubiquinone (QH2); the KCN-mediated cytoprotection was related to a 60% increase of cellular QH2. Rotenone almost completely inhibited ubiquinone reduction even in the presence of KCN, whereas oxaloacetate in combination with KCN resulted in QH2 levels comparable to control. This suggests that the SQR activity by complex II rather than the cellular content of reduced ubiquinone (QH2) is important as a part of the cellular antioxidant machinery in the cyto-protection against oxidative stress.
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PMID:Inhibition of succinate:ubiquinone reductase and decrease of ubiquinol in nephrotoxic cysteine S-conjugate-induced oxidative cell injury. 747 24

The axial ligands of low potential cytochrome b560 in the five subunit bovine heart succinate-ubiquinone reductase complex and in the isolated quinone binding proteins have been investigated using EPR and near-infrared magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopies. The results are consistent with bis-histidine ligation with near-perpendicular imidazole rings for cytochrome b560 in the four-subunit complex. The pronounced changes in EPR properties that accompany isolation of the cytochrome-b560 containing quinone binding proteins, are attributed to perturbation of the orientation of the imidazole rings of the heme bis-histidine ligands, rather than a change in axial ligation.
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PMID:Spectroscopic identification of the axial ligands of cytochrome b560 in bovine heart succinate-ubiquinone reductase. 760 Dec 75

Bovine leukemia virus-transformed lamb embryo fibroblasts (line FLK) possess activity of DT-diaphorase of ca. 260 U/mg protein and similar levels of other NADP(H)-oxidizing enzymes: NADH:oxidase, 359 U/mg; NADPH:oxidase, 43 U/mg; NADH:cytochrome-c reductase, 141 U/mg; NADPH:cytochrome-c reductase, 43 U/mg. In general, the toxicity of aromatic nitrocompounds towards FLK cells increases on increase of single-electron reduction potentials (E1(1)) of nitrocompounds or the log of their reduction rate constants by single-electron-transferring enzymes, microsomal NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductase (EC 1.6.2.4) and mitochondrial NADH:ubiquinone reductase (EC 1.6.99.3). No correlation between the toxicity and reduction rate of nitrocompounds by rat liver DT-diaphorase (EC 1.6.99.2) was observed. The toxicity is not significantly affected by dicumarol, an inhibitor of DT-diaphorase. Nitrocompounds examined were poor substrates for DT-diaphorase, being 10(4) times less active than menadione. Their poor reactivity is most probably determined by their preferential binding to a NADPH binding site, but not to menadione binding site of diaphorase. These data indicate that at comparable activities of DT-diaphorase and single-electron-transferring NAD(P)H dehydrogenases in the cell, the toxicity of nitrocompounds will be determined mainly by their single-electron reduction reactions.
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PMID:The toxicity of aromatic nitrocompounds to bovine leukemia virus-transformed fibroblasts: the role of single-electron reduction. 766 3

Trp-142 is a highly conserved residue of the cytochrome b subunit in the bc1 complexes. To study the importance of this residue in the quinol oxidation catalyzed by the bc1 complex, we characterized four yeast mutants with arginine, lysine, threonine, and serine at position 142. The mutant W142R was isolated previously as a respiration-deficient mutant unable to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources (Lemesle-Meunier, D., Brivet-Chevillotte, P., di Rago, J.-P, Slonimski, P.P., Bruel, C., Tron, T., and Forget, N. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 15626-15632). The mutants W142K, W142T, and W142S were obtained here as respiration-sufficient revertants from mutant W142R. Mutant W142R exhibited a decreased complex II turnover both in the presence and absence of antimycin A; this suggests that the structural effect of W142R in the bc1 complex probably interferes with the correct assembly of the succinate-ubiquinone reductase complex. The mutations resulted in a parallel decrease in turnover number and apparent Km, with the result that there was no significant change in the second-order rate constant for ubiquinol oxidation. Mutants W142K and W142T exhibited some resistance toward myxothiazol, whereas mutant W142R showed increased sensitivity. The cytochrome cc1 reduction kinetics were found to be severely affected in mutants W142R, W142K, and W142T. The respiratory activities and the amounts of reduced cytochrome b measured during steady state suggest that the W142S mutation also modified the quinol-cytochrome c1 electron transfer pathway. The cytochrome b reduction kinetics through center P were affected when Trp-142 was replaced with arginine or lysine, but not when it was replaced with threonine or serine. Of the four amino acids tested at position 142, only arginine resulted in a decrease in cytochrome b reduction through center N. These findings are discussed in terms of the structure and function of the quinol oxidation site and seem to indicate that Trp-142 is not critical to the kinetic interaction of ubiquinol with the reductase, but plays an important role in the electron transfer reactions that intervene between ubiquinol oxidation and cytochrome c1 reduction.
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PMID:Role of the evolutionarily conserved cytochrome b tryptophan 142 in the ubiquinol oxidation catalyzed by the bc1 complex in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 767 15

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.
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PMID:Interactions between ubiquinones and vitamins in membranes and cells. 775 45

Two mutant alleles of the gene encoding electron transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase were identified and characterized in fibroblasts from a patient with glutaric acidemia type II. One of these alleles is a C-T transition in the donor site of an intron that causes skipping of a 222 bp exon. Included in the missing 74 amino acids is C561, which is predicted to be one of the four cysteine ligands of the 4Fe4S cluster. This mutant allele does not encode a stable ETF-QO in human fibroblasts but, when expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mutant ETF-QO is relatively stable and properly targeted to and processed by mitochondria. The mutant protein lacks ubiquinone reductase activity, but does accept electrons from ETF in the catalyzed disproportionation of ETF semiquinone. These data suggest that in the normal protein the flavin center accepts electrons from ETF and that the 4Fe4S cluster reduces ubiquinone. Deleting the 74 amino acids also alters the association between the protein and membrane such that the mutant ETF-QO cannot be extracted from the membrane using the same conditions used for wild type ETF-QO. A site directed mutant that contains only the single amino acid substitution, C561A, exhibits the same catalytic behavior as the deletion mutant, supporting the hypothesis regarding the specific functions of the two redox centers. It is, however, solubilized by the same conditions as wild type ETF-QO.
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PMID:Characterization of a mutation that abolishes quinone reduction by electron transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase. 775 62

An azidoubiquinone derivative, 3-azido-2-methyl-5-methoxy [3H]-6-decyl-1,4-benzoquinone ([3H]azido-Q), was used to study the ubiquinone-protein interaction and to identify ubiquinone-binding proteins in bovine heart mitochondrial succinate-ubiquinone reductase. When the reductase was incubated with [3H]azido-Q and illuminated with long wavelength UV light, the decrease in the enzymatic activity correlated with the amount of azido-Q incorporated into the protein. When the illuminated, [3H]azido-Q-treated reductase was extracted with organic solvent and subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, radioactivity was found primarily in the QPs1 subunit. The [3H]azido-Q-labeled QPs1 was purified from labeled reductase by a procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, dialysis, organic solvent extraction, lyophilization, preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and cold acetone precipitation. The purified, [3H]azido-Q-labeled QPs1 protein was subjected to reductive carboxymethylation prior to digestion by trypsin. One azido-Q-linked peptide, with a retention time of 66.9 min, was obtained by high performance liquid chromatographic separation. The partial amino-terminal sequence of this peptide is GLTISQL-, indicating that this tryptic peptide comprises amino acid residues 113-140 of the revised amino acid sequence of QPs1. The Q-binding domain, using the proposed structure of QPs1, is probably located in the stretch connecting transmembrane helices 2 and 3 that extrude from the surface of the M side of the inner membrane.
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PMID:Identification of the ubiquinone-binding domain in QPs1 of succinate-ubiquinone reductase. 789 Jul 54

Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a maternally inherited disease associated with point mutations in mitochondrial DNA. The most frequent of these mutations is the G-to-A substitution at nucleotide position 11,778 which changes an evolutionarily conserved arginine with a histidine at position 340 in subunit ND4 of NADH:ubiquinone reductase (respiratory complex I). We report that this amino acid substitution alters the affinity of complex I for the ubiquinone substrate and induces resistance towards its potent inhibitor rotenone in mitochondria of LHON patients. Such changes could reflect a substantial loss in the energy conserving function of NADH:ubiquinone reductase and thus explain the pathological effect of the ND4/11,778 mutation.
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PMID:Functional alterations of the mitochondrially encoded ND4 subunit associated with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy. 792 4

We studied mitochondrial respiratory chain function in skeletal muscle taken from 27 patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD; 21 Dopa-treated PD patients and 6 de novo patients), 5 patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA) and from 43 age-matched controls in order to determine the occurrence of mitochondrial respiratory chain abnormalities in parkinsonian syndromes. In our control subjects, we found a significant age-related decrease in the activity of respiratory chain complex I. As compared to carefully age-matched control subjects, activity of complex (NADH:ubiquinone reductase) was significantly lower in muscle mitochondria from patients with PD and MSA and a mean remaining activity < 30% of controls was observed. Mean activities of complexes III (ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase) and IV (cytochrome c oxidase) were also lower in PD patients than controls, but a low activity (remaining activity < 30% of controls) was observed in only 5 PD patients for complex I and III or I and IV. No deficit in complex II activity (succinate:ubiquinone reductase) was observed. Our results support the hypothesis of a wide-spread mitochondrial complex I deficiency in PD and MSA as compared to age-matched controls, who showed age-related deficiency. This deficit can be found in de novo PD patients as well as in treated patients. The observed respiratory enzyme chain deficiency could not be explained by the dose and duration of L-Dopa or dopaminergic agonist treatment, the severity of the disease, anxiety or depression since no significant correlation was found between these parameters and enzyme complexes activities.
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PMID:Mitochondrial respiratory failure in skeletal muscle from patients with Parkinson's disease and multiple system atrophy. 796 95


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