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)

A large-scale preparation of the two-subunit protein complex (QPs) that converts succinate dehydrogenase into succinate-ubiquinone reductase from cytochrome b-c1 particles is achieved by a procedure involving Triton X-100 solubilization and calcium phosphate column chromatography at different pH values. The isolated two-subunit QPs contains 25 nmol of cytochrome b560/mg of protein and is able to reconstitute with soluble succinate dehydrogenase to form a TTFA-sensitive succinate-ubiquinone reductase. The maximum reconstitutive activity is 100 mumol of succinate oxidized per min per mg of QPs protein at 23 degrees C. Although cytochrome b560 in isolated QPs is not succinate reducible and its dithionite reduced form is reactive to carbon monoxide, cytochrome b560 is shown to be physically associated with succinate dehydrogenase by the following observations. The dithionite reduced form of cytochrome b560 in isolated QPs has a symmetrical alpha-absorption peak, which upon reconstitution with succinate dehydrogenase becomes slightly broadened and shows a shoulder at around 553 nm, identical to that of cytochrome b560 in succinate-ubiquinone reductase. Upon addition of succinate dehydrogenase to QPs, about 50% of the reduced form of cytochrome b560 in the QPs becomes insensitive to carbon monoxide treatment. The redox potential of cytochrome b560 in QPs is -144 mV which is higher than that of cytochrome b560 in succinate-ubiquinone reductase (-185 mV). Upon addition of succinate dehydrogenase, the redox potential of about 46% of the cytochrome b560 in QPs preparation becomes identical to that of cytochrome b560 in succinate-ubiquinone reductase. Cytochrome b560 in the QPs preparation shows two epr signals, g = 3.07 and g = 2.92, whereas cytochrome b560 in succinate-ubiquinone reductase exhibits only one epr signal at g = 3.46. When QPs is reconstituted with succinate dehydrogenase to form succinate-ubiquinone reductase, the g = 3.46 epr signal reappears at the expense of the g = 3.07 signal. Based on epr measurement at liquid helium temperature, about 18% of the total cytochrome b in the isolated active succinate-cytochrome c reductase is cytochrome b560, indicating that cytochrome b560 is indeed a unique cytochrome b and not a denatured product of cytochrome b562 or b565.
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PMID:Properties of bovine heart mitochondrial cytochrome b560. 302 80

The respiratory systems of the mother cells and forespores of Bacillus cereus were compared throughout the maturation stages (III to VI) of sporulation. The results indicated that both cell compartments contain the same assortment of oxidoreductases and cytochromes. However membrane fractions from young forespores were clearly distinct from those of the mother cell, i.e., lower content of cytochrome aa3, lower cytochrome c oxidase activity, higher concentration of cytochrome o, and a lower sensitivity of the respiration to the inhibiting effect of cyanide. This suggests that the cyanide-resistant pathway contributes more importantly to forespore respiratory activity than to activity in the mother cell compartment. During the maturation stages, the forespore NADH oxidase activity declined faster than in the mother cells. Other activities studied decreased steadily in both cell compartments. These findings together with the analysis of the kinetics of NADH-dependent reduction of cytochromes in the mature spore membranes indicated an impairment of electron flow between NADH dehydrogenase and cytochrome b. This impairment could be overcome by the addition of menadione.
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PMID:Respiratory systems of the Bacillus cereus mother cell and forespore. 309 18

The respiratory systems of the Bacillus cereus mother cell, forespore, and dormant and germinated spore were studied. The results indicated that the electron transfer capacity during sporulation, dormancy, and germination is related to the menaquinone levels in the membrane. During the maturation stages of sporulation (stages III to VI), forespore NADH oxidase activity underwent inactivation concomitant with a sevenfold decrease in the content of menaquinone and without major changes in the content of cytochromes and segment transfer activities. During the same period, NADH oxidase and menaquinone levels in the mother cell compartment steadily decreased to about 50% at the end of stage VI. Dormant spore membranes contained high levels of NADH dehydrogenase and cytochromes, but in the presence of NADH, they exhibited very low levels of O2 uptake and cytochrome reduction. Addition of menadione to dormant spore membranes restored NADH-dependent respiration and cytochrome reduction. During early germination, NADH-dependent respiration and cytochrome reduction were restored simultaneously with a fourfold increase in the menaquinone content; during germination, no significant changes in cytochrome levels or segment electron transfer activities of the respiratory system took place.
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PMID:Role of menaquinone in inactivation and activation of the Bacillus cereus forespore respiratory system. 314 61

Growth of Mycobacterium phlei under low oxygen tension resulted in specific activities two to twenty times lower for formate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, lactate oxidase and NADH dehydrogenase than when cultures were grown under high aeration. An increase in fumarate reductase and succinate dehydrogenase occurred with M. phlei grown under low oxygen tension. Malate: vitamin K dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity were not significantly affected by the oxygen tension used to grow the bacteria, and neither culture contained a lactate dehydrogenase. With growth of M. phlei in conditions of low oxygen tension, cytochrome a was not detected, but cytochrome b was prominent in membranes and cytochrome c was present in the soluble fraction.
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PMID:Influence of oxygen tension on the respiratory activity of Mycobacterium phlei. 318 14

The yeast Candida parapsilosis possesses two routes of electron transfer from exogenous NAD(P)H to oxygen. Electrons are transferred either to the classical cytochrome pathway at the level of ubiquinone through an NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, or to an alternative pathway at the level of cytochrome c through another NAD(P)H dehydrogenase which is insensitive to antimycin A. Analyses of mitoplasts obtained by digitonin/osmotic shock treatment of mitochondria purified on a sucrose gradient indicated that the NADH and NADPH dehydrogenases serving the alternative route were located on the mitochondrial inner membrane. The dehydrogenases could be differentiated by their pH optima and their sensitivity to amytal, butanedione and mersalyl. No transhydrogenase activity occurred between the dehydrogenases, although NADH oxidation was inhibited by NADP+ and butanedione. Studies of the effect of NADP+ on NADH oxidation showed that the NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase had Michaelis-Menten kinetics and was inhibited by NADP+, whereas the alternative NADH dehydrogenase had allosteric properties (NADH is a negative effector and is displaced from its regulatory site by NAD+ or NADP+).
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PMID:The alternative respiratory pathway of the yeast Candida parapsilosis: oxidation of exogenous NAD(P)H. 326 91

The involvement of the carboxyl groups in the membrane-anchoring protein (QPs) in reconstitution of succinate dehydrogenase to form succinate-ubiquinone reductase is studied by using a carboxyl group modifying reagent, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). Inactivation of QPs by DCCD is found to be dependent on the temperature, pH, detergent, and DCCD concentration used. When QPs is treated with 300 molar excess DCCD at room temperature for 10 min, about 90% of the original reconstitutive activity is lost. When intact or reconstituted succinate-ubiquinone reductase formed from reconstitutively active succinate dehydrogenase and QPs is treated with DCCD under the same conditions, no loss of succinate-ubiquinone reductase activity is observed. However, when a mixture of reconstitutively inactive succinate dehydrogenase and QPs is treated with DCCD before being reconstituted with active succinate dehydrogenase, an inactivation behavior similar to that with QPs alone is observed. These results indicate that DCCD modifies the carboxyl groups of QPs which are essential for the interaction with succinate dehydrogenase to form succinate-ubiquinone reductase. Inactivation of QPs by DCCD parallels the incorporation of DCCD into QPs. About two carboxyl groups per molecule of QPs are essential for the interaction with succinate dehydrogenase. These essential carboxyl groups are located in the smaller subunit (Mr 13,000) of QPs. Modification of QPs by DCCD also alters the heme environment of cytochrome b560.
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PMID:Involvement of a carboxyl group in the interaction between succinate dehydrogenase and its membrane-anchoring protein (QPs) fraction. 342 98

A succinate-coenzyme Q reductase (complex II) was isolated in highly purified form from Ascaris muscle mitochondria by detergent solubilization, ammonium sulfate fractionation and gel filtration on a Sephadex G-200 column. The enzyme preparation catalyzes electron transfer from succinate to coenzyme Q1 with a specific activity of 1.2 mumol coenzyme Q1 reduced per min per mg protein at 25 degrees C. The isolated complex II is essentially free of NADH-ferricyanide reductase, reduced CoQ2-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and consists of four major polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 66 000, 27 000, 12 000 and 11 000 and two minor ones with Mr of 36 000 and 16 000. The complex II contained cytochrome b-558, a major constituent cytochrome of Ascaris mitochondria, at a concentration of 3.6 nmol per mg protein, but neither other cytochromes nor quinone. The cytochrome b-558 in the complex II was reduced with succinate. In the presence of Ascaris NADH-cytochrome c reductase (complex I-III) (Takamiya, S., Furushima, R. and Oya, H. (1984) Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 13, 121-134), the cytochrome b-558 in complex II was also reduced with NADH and reoxidized with fumarate. These results suggest the cytochrome b-558 to function as an electron carrier between NADH dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase in the Ascaris NADH-fumarate reductase system.
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PMID:Electron-transfer complexes of Ascaris suum muscle mitochondria. II. Succinate-coenzyme Q reductase (complex II) associated with substrate-reducible cytochrome b-558. 375 51

Submitochondrial particles prepared from liver and skeletal muscle of control and iron-deficient rats were examined for cytochrome content and for both energy-independent and energy-conserving functions. Liver submitochondrial particles appear quite resistant to iron deficiency with cytochrome content and electron-transferring or energy-conserving functions maintained at a level of 85% or better of normal. Iron-deficient skeletal muscle submitochondrial particles, in contrast, have decreased cytochrome content and only 15-20% of the normal capacity for oxidation through either complex I (NADH dehydrogenase) or complex II (succinate dehydrogenase). Energy-linked reactions which involve substrate oxidation/reduction (succinate----NAD+ reversed electron flow and succinate-driven energy-dependent transhydrogenation) are likewise markedly decreased, while ATP-driven energy-dependent transhydrogenation and mitochondrial ATPase are normal. Our data support the concept that iron deficiency leads to decreased electron-carrying capacity of iron-containing mitochondrial enzymes, with skeletal muscle being much more susceptible than liver, but that the mitochondria are otherwise normal with regard to energy conservation.
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PMID:Effect of iron deficiency on energy conservation in rat liver and skeletal muscle submitochondrial particles. 405 63

Membranes isolated from Bacillus cereus ATCC 4342 during vegetative growth and during sporulation contained cytochromes b, c and a + a(3) as well as flavoprotein as determined from reduced-minus-oxidized difference spectra. Although there appeared to be no qualitative change in the cytochromes, there was a significant increase in the amount of cytochromes associated with membranes isolated from sporulating cells. Succinate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (reduced form) (NADH) reduced the same cytochromes indicating similar pathways of electron transport. The electron transport inhibitors-cyanide, azide, 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, dicumarol and atebrine-were examined for their effect on succinate oxidase (succinate: [O(2)] oxidoreductase) and NADH oxidase (NADH: [O(2)] oxidoreductase). NADH oxidase associated with vegetative cell membranes was less sensitive to certain inhibitors than was succinate oxidase, suggesting a branched electron transport pathway for NADH oxidation. In addition to electrons being passed to O(2) through a quinone-cytochrome chain, it appears that these intermediate carriers can be bypassed such that O(2) is reduced by electrons mediated by NADH dehydrogenase. Both oxidases associated with sporulating cell membranes were inhibited to a lesser degree than were the oxidases associated with vegetative cell membranes.
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PMID:Electron transport system associated with membranes of Bacillus cereus during vegetative growth and sporulation. 412 46

1. The mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase (EC 1.6.99.3) of Candida utilis exhibited altered properties when the organism was grown under iron-limited conditions. No suitable acceptor was found for assay of this enzyme from iron-limited cells. 2. Mitochondrial membrane proteins from C. utilis were analysed by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Compared with glycerol-limited cells, iron limitation resulted in the loss of at least two polypeptides from the mitochondrial membrane. 3. Neither of the polypeptides affected by iron limitation was part of a cytochrome, although one of them was part of the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase. 4. Non-haem iron of mitochondrial membranes was released in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate, and electrophoresis in solutions of this detergent cannot be used directly to identify iron-sulphur proteins. Non-ionic detergents do not release non-haem iron but nor do they provide a satisfactory system for electrophoretic separation.
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PMID:The effects of iron-limited growth on the reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase activity and the membrane proteins of Candida utilis mitochondria. 415 Jun 49


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