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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)
NADH dehydrogenase
[EC 1.6.99.3] in membranes of Bacillus caldotenax was solubilized with sodium N-lauroylsarcosinate and purified 50-fold from membranes to 75-80% homogeneity, as judged by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was considered to be located on the electron transport chain and to be an FAD-containing protein. The molecular weight of the subunit was estimated to be 44,000. The enzyme (or the enzyme bound to the B. caldotenax membrane lipids) follows a ping-pong mechanism. The enzyme can oxidize NADH, but not NADPH, with 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol, ferricyanide, menadione, and
cytochrome c
as electron acceptors. Membrane lipids or Triton X-100 stimulated the enzyme activity, except that with menadione. Lipids decreased the apparent affinity of electron acceptors and NADH to the enzyme, and increased the maximum velocity, except when menadione was used as the electron acceptor. Lipids partially protected the enzyme from thermal inactivation. The enzyme exhibited a continuous Arrhenius plot, while the lipids- or membrane-bound enzyme exhibited a discontinuous plot.
...
PMID:Effect of lipids on a membrane-bound NADH dehydrogenase from Bacillus caldotenax. 616 6
Whereas phagocytic cells from normal individuals have the capacity to kill ingested bacteria and parasites, those from patients with several uncommon genetic deficiency diseases are known to be defective in bactericidal activity. Studies on neutrophils of these patients have revealed fundamental defects in their ability to reduce molecular oxygen and metabolize it to superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and oxygen radicals. In the present experiments, we describe a clone of a continuous murine macrophage-like cell line, J774.16, that, upon appropriate stimulation, activates the hexose monophosphate shunt, and produces superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide. With nitroblue tetrazolium to select against cells capable of being stimulated by phorbol myristate acetate to reduce the dye to polymer--formazan--which is toxic fot cells, we have selected for variants that are defective in oxygen metabolism. Four of these subclones have been characterized and found to be lacking in the ability (a) to generate superoxide anion, as measured by
cytochrome c
reduction; (b) to produce hydrogen peroxide, as measured by the ability to form
complex I
with cytochrome c peroxidase; and (c) to be stimulated to oxidize glucose via the hexose monophosphate shunt. These variants appear to represent a useful model for studying the molecular basis for macrophage cytocidal activity.
...
PMID:Macrophage variants in oxygen metabolism. 625 74
Local anesthetics and alcohols were found to inhibit mitochondrial electron transport at several points along the chain. THe anesthetics employed were the tertiary amines procaine, tetracaine, dibucaine, and chlorpromazine, and the alcohols were n-butamol, n-pentanol, n-hexanol, and benzyl alcohol. Uncoupled sonic submitochondrial particles from beef heart and rat liver were studied. We report the following: (1) All of the anesthetics were found to inhibit each of the segments of the electron transport chain assayed; these included cytochrome c oxidase, durohydroquinone oxidase, succinate oxidase, NADH oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase, succinate-
cytochrome c
oxidoreductase, and NADH-
cytochrome c
oxidoreductase. (2) NADH oxidase and NADH-
cytochrome c
oxidoreductase required the lowest concentration of anesthetic for inhibition, and cytochrome c oxidase required the highest concentrations. (3) We conclude that there are several points along the chain at which inhibition occurs, the most sensitive being in the region of Complex I (
NADH dehydrogenase
). (4) Beef heart submitochondrial particles are less sensitive to inhibition than are rat liver particles. (5) Low concentrations of several of the anesthetics gave enhancement of electron transport activity, whereas higher concentrations of the same agents caused inhibition. (6) The concentrations of anesthetics (alcohol and tertiary amine) which gave 50% inhibition of NADH oxidase were lower than the reported concentrations required for blockage of frog sciatic nerve.
...
PMID:Multiple sites of inhibition of mitochondrial electron transport by local anesthetics. 626 99
Purified L-3-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase from pig brain mitochondria interacts with ubiquinone-10 and ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase (Complex III) from bovine heart mitochondria to reconstitute antimycin-sensitive L-3-glycerophosphate-
cytochrome c
oxidoreductase. This activity is completely dependent on the two enzymes and largely dependent on ubiquinone-10. Reconstitution requires that the two enzymes should be simultaneously present in the same membranous aggregate produced by removal of detergent from the enzymes. Reconstitution by removing detergent by dialysis or dilution is inefficient because of self-aggregation of the dehydrogenase. Highly efficient reconstitution can be achieved if the enzymes are co-precipitated by addition of ethanol. The rate with reconstituted enzyme approaches that expected from the turnover of the dehydrogenase with ubiquinone-1 as acceptor. The behaviour of the reconstituted system shows some of the characteristics expected for a stoicheiometric association of one molecule of dehydrogenase with one molecule of Complex III. On raising the phospholipid/protein ratio, the dehydrogenase and Complex III appear to operate as independent enzymes acting in sequence. These effects are very similar to those observed for the interaction of
NADH dehydrogenase
and Complex III and are explained in terms of the model proposed by Heron, Ragan & Trumpower [(1978) biochem. J. 174, 791-800].
...
PMID:The reconstitution of L-3-glycerophosphate-cytochrome c oxidoreductase from L-3-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, ubiquinone-10 and ubiquinol-cytochrome c oxidoreductase. 627 93
We have found that dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) inhibits both the succinate-
cytochrome c
and the ubiquinol-
cytochrome c
reductases in
cytochrome c
-depleted mitochondria. On the other hand the succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
is not decreased at the same levels of the inhibitor. The inhibition curve of DCCD results sigmoidal for succinate-cytochrome c reductase, whereas it is hyperbolic for the ubiquinol-1-cytochrome c reductase, with also a lower apparent KI. The inhibition appears dependent both on the time of preincubation and on the mitochondrial concentration. The apparent Km for ubiquinol-1 is increased and the maximal velocity of ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase is decreased by DCCD. The effects do not appear to be caused by unspecific modification of the physicochemical state of the bc1 region of the respiratory chain. The results therefore suggest the presence of a DCCD-sensitive electron transfer step in the redox pathways from ubiquinol to
cytochrome c
.
...
PMID:Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide inhibition of succinate- and ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase in beef heart mitochondria. 627 26
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
N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) induces a complex set of effects on the succinate-
cytochrome c
span of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. At concentrations below 1000 mol per mol of cytochrome c1, DCCD is able to block the proton-translocating activity associated to succinate or ubiquinol oxidation without inhibiting the steady-state redox activity of the b-c1 complex either in intact mitochondrial particles or in the isolated ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles. In parallel to this, DCCD modifies the redox responses of the endogenous cytochrome b, which becomes more rapidly reduced by succinate, and more slowly oxidized when previously reduced by substrates. At similar concentrations the inhibitor apparently stimulates the redox activity of the succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
. Moreover, DCCD, at concentrations about one order of magnitude higher than those blocking proton translocation, produces inactivation of the redox function of the b-c1 complex. The binding of [14C]DCCD to the isolated b-c1 complex has shown that under conditions leading to the inhibition of the proton-translocating activity of the enzyme, a subunit of about 9500 Da, namely Band VIII, is the most heavily labelled polypeptide of the complex. The possible correlations between the various effects of DCCD and its modification of the b-c1 complex are discussed.
...
PMID:Modification of the catalytic function of the mitochondrial cytochrome b-c1 complex by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. 631 61
An NADH-cytochrome c reductase (
complex I
-III) was isolated from Ascaris suum muscle mitochondria. The enzyme preparation catalyzed the reduction of 1.68 mumol
cytochrome c
min-1 mg-1 protein at 25 degrees C with NADH but not with NADPH, and retained its sensitivity to rotenone, piericidin A and 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide as with the submitochondrial particles. The isolated
complex I
-III, essentially free of succinate-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome c oxidase, consisted of fourteen polypeptides with apparent molecular weights ranging from 76 000 to 12 000. The
complex I
-III contained three cytochromes, b-559.5, b-563 and c1-550.5 and Pigment-558 at concentrations of 1.28, 0.211, 1.23 and 0.321 nmol mg-1 protein, respectively. Cytochrome b-558, a major constituent cytochrome of Ascaris mitochondria and previously suggested to participate in the fumarate reductase system, was not fractionated in the
complex I
-III. Localization of the cytochromes in Ascaris electron transfer complexes is discussed.
...
PMID:Electron transfer complexes of Ascaris suum muscle mitochondria: I. Characterization of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (complex I-III), with special reference to cytochrome localization. 651 90
Impairment of electron transport was studied in rat liver sonicated submitochondrial particles. The most susceptible portion was located from
NADH dehydrogenase
to coenzyme Q. Tetrachloroethylene increased the Michaelis constant (Km) and decreased the maximum velocity (Vmax) of
cytochrome c
reduction by NADH-cytochrome c reductase. The results suggest that tetrachloroethylene does not represent a specific inhibitor of the particular carrier but decreased the electron flow at the susceptible portion in the mitochondrial inner membrane.
...
PMID:Impairment of mitochondrial electron transport by tetrachloroethylene. 662 42
In isolated rat liver mitochondria, respiration was competitively inhibited by medium chain length (C8 to C13) dicarboxylic acids to different extents: the higher the number of carbon atoms up to C12, the greater the inhibition. In particular, experiments on submitochondrial particles showed that the competitive inhibition concerned the following enzymes:
NADH dehydrogenase
, succinic dehydrogenase and reduced ubiquinone:
cytochrome c
oxido-reductase. These results tend to confirm the suggestion that the melanocytotoxic effect of dicarboxylic acids, which are also competitive inhibitors of tyrosinase, may be primarily due to an antimitochondrial effect rather than being tyrosinase-dependent.
...
PMID:Antimitochondrial effect of saturated medium chain length (C8-C13) dicarboxylic acids. 670 36
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