Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.6.5.3 (
complex I
)
8,901
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Treatment of Arabidopsis cell culture for 16 h with H2O2, menadione or antimycin A induced an oxidative stress decreasing growth rate and increasing DCF fluorescence and lipid peroxidation products. Treated cells remained viable and maintained significant respiratory rates. Mitochondrial integrity was maintained, but accumulation of alternative oxidase and decreased abundance of lipoic acid-containing components during several of the treatments indicated oxidative stress. Analysis of the treatments was undertaken by IEF/
SDS
-PAGE, comparison of protein spot abundances and tandem mass spectrometry. A set of 25 protein spots increased >3-fold in H2O2/menadione treatments, a subset of these increased in antimycin A-treated samples. A set of 10 protein spots decreased significantly during stress treatments. A specific set of mitochondrial proteins were degraded by stress treatments. These damaged components included subunits of ATP synthase,
complex I
, succinyl CoA ligase, aconitase, and pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes. Nine increased proteins represented products of different genes not found in control mitochondria. One is directly involved in antioxidant defense, a mitochondrial thioredoxin-dependent peroxidase, while another, a thioredoxin reductase-dependent protein disulphide isomerase, is required for protein disulfide redox homeostasis. Several others are generally considered to be extramitochondrial but are clearly present in a highly purified mitochondrial fraction used in this study and are known to play roles in stress response. Using H2O2 as a model stress, further work revealed that this treatment induced a protease activity in isolated mitochondria, putatively responsible for the degradation of oxidatively damaged mitochondrial proteins and that O2 consumption by mitochondria was significantly decreased by H2O2 treatment.
...
PMID:The impact of oxidative stress on Arabidopsis mitochondria. 1249 32
Fenpyroximate is a potent inhibitor of the mitochondrial proton-translocating NADH-quinone oxidoreductase (complex I). We synthesized its photoaffinity analogue [(3)H](trifluoromethyl)phenyldiazirinylfenpyroximate ([(3)H]TDF). When bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP) were illuminated with UV light in the presence of [(3)H]TDF, radioactivity was mostly incorporated into a 50 kDa band. There was a good correlation between radioactivity labeling of the 50 kDa band and inhibition of the NADH oxidase activity, indicating that a 50 kDa protein is responsible for the inactivation of
complex I
. Blue native gel electrophoresis of the [(3)H]TDF-labeled SMP revealed that the majority of radioactivity was found in
complex I
. Analysis of the
complex I
band on an
SDS
gel showed a major peak of radioactivity at approximately 50 kDa. There are three subunits in
complex I
that migrate in this region: FP51K, IP49K, and ND5. Further analysis using the 2D gel electrophoresis implied that the labeled protein was the ND5 subunit. Labeling of the ND5 subunit was stimulated by NADH/NADPH but was prevented by various
complex I
inhibitors. Amiloride derivatives that are known to be inhibitors of Na(+)/H(+) antiporters also diminished the labeling. In agreement with the protective effect, we observed that the amiloride derivatives inhibited
NADH-ubiquinone-1 reductase
activity but not NADH-K(3)Fe(CN)(6) reductase activity in bovine SMP. These results suggest that the ND5 subunit is involved in construction of the inhibitor- and quinone-binding site(s). Furthermore, it seems likely that the ND5 subunit may participate in H(+)(Na(+)) translocation in coupling site 1.
...
PMID:The ND5 subunit was labeled by a photoaffinity analogue of fenpyroximate in bovine mitochondrial complex I. 1253 87
The proton-translocating
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(complex I) has been purified from Aquifex aeolicus, a hyperthermophilic eubacterium of known genome sequence. The purified detergent solubilized enzyme is highly active above 50 degrees C. The specific activity for electron transfer from NADH to decylubiquinone is 29 U/mg at 80 degrees C. The A. aeolicus
complex I
is completely sensitive to rotenone and 2-n-decyl-quinazoline-4-yl-amine.
SDS
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis shows that it may contain up to 14 subunits. N-terminal amino acid sequencing of the bands indicates the presence of a stable subcomplex, which is composed of subunits E, F, and G. The isolated complex is highly stable and active in a temperature range from 50 to 90 degrees C, with a half-life of about 10 h at 80 degrees C. The activity shows a linear Arrhenius plot at 50-85 degrees C with an activation energy at 31.92 J/mol K. Single particle electron microscopy shows that the A. aeolicus
complex I
has the typical L-shape. However, visual inspection of averaged images reveals many more details in the external arm of the complex than has been observed for
complex I
from other sources. In addition, the angle (90 degrees ) between the cytoplasmic peripheral arm and the membrane intrinsic arm of the complex appears to be invariant.
...
PMID:Isolation, characterization and electron microscopic single particle analysis of the NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) from the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Aquifex aeolicus. 1262 69
Complex I purified from bovine heart mitochondria is a multisubunit membrane-bound assembly. In the past, seven of its subunits were shown to be products of the mitochondrial genome, and 35 nuclear encoded subunits were identified. The complex is L-shaped with one arm in the plane of the membrane and the other lying orthogonal to it in the mitochondrial matrix. With mildly chaotropic detergents, the intact complex has been resolved into various subcomplexes. Subcomplex Ilambda represents the extrinsic arm, subcomplex Ialpha consists of subcomplex Ilambda plus part of the membrane arm, and subcomplex Ibeta is another substantial part of the membrane arm. The intact complex and these three subcomplexes have been subjected to extensive reanalysis. Their subunits have been separated by three independent methods (one-dimensional
SDS
-PAGE, two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/
SDS
-PAGE, and reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC)) and analyzed by tryptic peptide mass fingerprinting and tandem mass spectrometry. The masses of many of the intact subunits have also been measured by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and have provided valuable information about post-translational modifications. The presence of the known 35 nuclear encoded subunits in
complex I
has been confirmed, and four additional nuclear encoded subunits have been detected. Subunits B16.6, B14.7, and ESSS were discovered in the
SDS
-PAGE analysis of subcomplex Ilambda, in the two-dimensional gel analysis of the intact complex, and in the HPLC analysis of subcomplex Ibeta, respectively. Despite many attempts, no sequence information has been obtained yet on a fourth new subunit (mass 10,566+/-2 Da) also detected in the HPLC analysis of subcomplex Ibeta. It is unlikely that any more subunits of the bovine complex remain undiscovered. Therefore, the intact enzyme is a complex of 46 subunits, and, assuming there is one copy of each subunit in the complex, its mass is 980 kDa.
...
PMID:Analysis of the subunit composition of complex I from bovine heart mitochondria. 1264 75
It has long been accepted that bacterial quinol-fumarate reductase (QFR) generally uses a low-redox-potential naphthoquinone, menaquinone (MK), as the electron donor, whereas mitochondrial QFR from facultative and anaerobic eukaryotes uses a low-redox-potential benzoquinone, rhodoquinone (RQ), as the substrate. In the present study, we purified novel complex II from the RQ-containing phototrophic purple bacterium, Rhodoferax fermentans that exhibited high rhodoquinol-fumarate reductase activity in addition to succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
activity.
SDS
/PAGE indicated that the purified R. fermentans complex II comprises four subunits of 64.0, 28.6, 18.7 and 17.5 kDa and contains 1.3 nmol heme per mg protein. Phylogenetic analysis and comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of R. fermentans complex II with pro/eukaryotic complex II indicate that the structure and the evolutional origins of R. fermentans complex II are closer to bacterial SQR than to mitochondrial rhodoquinol-fumarate reductase. The results strongly indicate that R. fermentans complex II and mitochondrial QFR might have evolved independently, although they both utilize RQ for fumarate reduction.
...
PMID:Complex II from phototrophic purple bacterium Rhodoferax fermentans displays rhodoquinol-fumarate reductase activity. 1269
An azido-ubiquinone 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 the ubiquinone-binding site in Escherichia coli
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(complex I). The purified
complex I
showed no loss of activity after incubation with a 20-fold molar excess of [3H]azido-Q in the dark. Illumination of the incubated sample with long wavelength UV light for 10 min at 0 degrees C caused a 40% decrease of
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
activity.
SDS
-PAGE of the complex labeled with [3H]azido-Q followed by analysis of the radioactivity distribution among the subunits revealed that subunit NuoM was heavily labeled, suggesting that this protein houses the Q-binding site. When the [3H]azido-Q-labeled NuoM was purified from the labeled reductase by means of preparative
SDS
-PAGE, a 3-azido-2-methyl-5-methoxy-6-decyl-1,4-benzoquinone-linked peptide, with a retention time of 41.4 min, was obtained by high performance liquid chromatography of the protease K digest of the labeled subunit. This peptide had a partial NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of NH2-VMLIAILALV-, which corresponds to amino acid residues 184-193 of NuoM. The secondary structure prediction of NuoM using the Toppred hydropathy analysis showed that the Q-binding peptide overlaps with a proposed Q-binding motif located in the middle of the transmembrane helix 5 toward the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Using the PHDhtm hydropathy plot, the labeled peptide is located in the transmembrane helix 4 toward the periplasmic side of the membrane.
...
PMID:The ubiquinone-binding site in NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase from Escherichia coli. 1273 Jan 98
Deficiencies in the activity of
complex I
(NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase) are an important cause of human mitochondrial disease. Complex I is composed of at least 46 structural subunits that are encoded in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. Enzyme deficiency can result from either impaired catalytic efficiency or an inability to assemble the holoenzyme complex; however, the assembly process remains poorly understood. We have used two-dimensional Blue-Native/
SDS
gel electrophoresis and a panel of 11 antibodies directed against structural subunits of the enzyme to investigate
complex I
assembly in the muscle mitochondria from four patients with
complex I
deficiency caused by either mitochondrial or nuclear gene defects. Immunoblot analyses of second dimension denaturing gels identified seven distinct
complex I
subcomplexes in the patients studied, five of which could also be detected in nondenaturing gels in the first dimension. Although the abundance of these intermediates varied among the different patients, a common constellation of subcomplexes was observed in all cases. A similar profile of subcomplexes was present in a human/mouse hybrid fibroblast cell line with a severe
complex I
deficiency due to an almost complete lack of assembly of the holoenzyme complex. The finding that diverse causes of
complex I
deficiency produce a similar pattern of
complex I
subcomplexes suggests that these are intermediates in the assembly of the holoenzyme complex. We propose a possible assembly pathway for the complex, which differs significantly from that proposed for Neurospora, the current model for
complex I
assembly.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of a common set of complex I assembly intermediates in mitochondria from patients with complex I deficiency. 1294 61
Dye-linked l-proline dehydrogenase catalyzes the oxidation of l-proline in the presence of artificial electron acceptors such as 2, 6-dichloroindophenol and ferricyanide. The enzyme from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus profundus was purified and characterized for the first time in archaea by Sakuraba et al. in 2001. In this study, cloning and sequencing analyses of the gene encoding the enzyme and functional analysis of the subunits were performed. The gene formed an operon that consisted of four genes, pdhA, pdhB, pdhF, and pdhX, which are tandemly arranged in the order of pdhA-F-X-B.
SDS
-PAGE analysis of the purified recombinant enzyme showed four different bands corresponding to alpha (54 kDa), beta (43 kDa), gamma (19 kDa), and delta (8 kDa) subunits encoded by pdhA, pdhB, pdhF, and pdhX, respectively, and the molecular ratio of these subunits was determined to be equal. This indicates that the enzyme consists of a heterotetrameric alphabetagammadelta structure. Functional analysis of each subunit revealed that the beta subunit catalyzed the dye-linked l-proline dehydrogenase reaction by itself and that, unexpectedly, the alpha subunit exhibited dye-linked
NADH dehydrogenase
activity. This is the first example showing the existence of a bifunctional dye-linked l-proline/
NADH dehydrogenase
complex. On the basis of genome analysis, similar gene clusters were observed in the genomes of Pyrococcus horikoshii, Pyrococcus abyssi, Pyrococcus furiosus, and Archaeoglobus fulgidus. These results indicate that the dye-linked l-proline dehydrogenase is a novel type of heterotetrameric amino acid dehydrogenase that might be widely distributed in the hyperthermophilic archaeal strain.
...
PMID:Gene and primary structures of dye-linked L-proline dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus profundus show the presence of a novel heterotetrameric amino acid dehydrogenase complex. 1506 76
The rotenone-sensitive
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(complex I) is the most intricate membrane-bound enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Notably the bovine enzyme comprises up to 46 subunits, while 27 subunits could be considered as widely conserved among eukaryotic
complex I
. By combining proteomic and genomic approaches, we characterized the
complex I
composition from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. After purification by blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN-PAGE), constitutive subunits were analyzed by
SDS
-PAGE coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (MS) that allowed the identification of 30 proteins. We compared the known
complex I
components from higher plants, mammals, nematodes and fungi with this MS data set and the translated sequences from the algal genome project. This revealed that the Chlamydomonas
complex I
is likely composed of 42 proteins, for a total molecular mass of about 970 kDa. In addition to the 27 typical components, we have identified four new
complex I
subunit families (bovine ESSS, PFFD, B16.6, B12 homologues), extending the number of widely conserved eukaryote
complex I
components to 31. In parallel, our analysis showed that a variable number of subunits appears to be specific to each eukaryotic kingdom (animals, fungi or plants). Protein sequence divergence in these kingdom-specific sets is significant and currently we cannot exclude the possibility that homology between them exists, but has not yet been detected.
...
PMID:Higher plant-like subunit composition of mitochondrial complex I from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: 31 conserved components among eukaryotes. 1545 Sep 59
Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction signify important biochemical events associated with the loss of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease (PD). Studies using in vitro and in vivo PD models or tissues from diseased patients have demonstrated a selective inhibition of mitochondrial
NADH dehydrogenase
(Complex I of the OXPHOS electron transport chain) that affects normal mitochondrial physiology leading to neuronal death. In an earlier study, we demonstrated that oxidative stress due to glutathione depletion in dopaminergic cells, a hallmark of PD, leads to Complex I inhibition via cysteine thiol oxidation (Jha et al. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 26096-26101). Complex I is a approximately 980-kDa multimeric enzyme spanning the inner mitochondrial membrane comprising at least 45 protein subunits. As a prerequisite to investigating modifications to Complex I using a rodent disease model for PD, we developed two independent rapid and mild isolation procedures based on sucrose gradient fractionation and immunoprecipitation to isolate Complex I from mouse brain and a cultured rat mesencephalic dopaminergic neuronal cell line. Both protocols are capable of purifying Complex I from small amounts of rodent tissue and cell cultures. Blue Native gel electrophoresis, one-dimensional and two-dimensional
SDS
-PAGE were employed to assess the purity and composition of isolated Complex I followed by extensive mass spectrometric characterization. Altogether, 41 of 45 rodent Complex I subunits achieved MS/MS sequence coverage. To our knowledge, this study provides the first detailed mass spectrometric analysis of neuronal Complex I proteins and provides a means to investigate the role of cysteine oxidation and other posttranslational modifications in pathologies associated with mitochondrial dysfunction.
...
PMID:Rapid purification and mass spectrometric characterization of mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase (Complex I) from rodent brain and a dopaminergic neuronal cell line. 1559 92
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>