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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)
We have previously reported that in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats that increased formation of superoxide and peroxynitrite is associated with impairment in vascular relaxation in epineurial arterioles of the sciatic nerve. In this study we demonstrate that pretreating epineurial arterioles from diabetic rats in vitro with alpha-lipoic acid, dihydrolipoic acid, tempol or
arginine
restores acetylcholine-mediated vascular relaxation to near the reactivity observed in vessels from control rats. Suggesting that increased oxidative stress and reduction in nitric oxide availability is partially responsible for the impairment in endothelium-dependent vasodilation observed in epineurial arterioles from diabetic rats. In contrast, pretreating epineurial arterioles from diabetic rats with aminoguanidine or allopurinol had no effect. Studies designed to investigate the source of superoxide formation provided results suggesting that
complex I
of the mitochondrial electron transport chain and NAD(P)H oxidase are responsible for the increase in superoxide formation observed with epineurial arterioles from the sciatic nerve. Pretreating epineurial arterioles from diabetic rats with the protein kinase C inhibitor bisindolymaleimide I (GF 109203X) improved acetylcholine-mediated vascular relaxation but did not prevent the increase in superoxide formation suggesting that activation of protein kinase C by oxidative stress is downstream of superoxide formation. These studies imply that increased superoxide formation via the mitochondrial electron transport chain and perhaps NAD(P)H oxidase is partially responsible for reduced vascular reactivity observed in epineurial arterioles of the sciatic nerve from diabetic rats.
...
PMID:Preventing superoxide formation in epineurial arterioles of the sciatic nerve from diabetic rats restores endothelium-dependent vasodilation. 1265 15
We have studied the ubiquinone-reducing catalytic core of
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase
(complex I) from Yarrowia lipolytica by a series of point mutations replacing conserved histidines and arginines in the 49-kDa subunit. Our results show that histidine 226 and
arginine
141 probably do not ligate iron-sulfur cluster N2 but that exchanging these residues specifically influences the properties of this redox center. Histidines 91 and 95 were found to be essential for
ubiquinone reductase
activity of
complex I
. Mutations at the C-terminal
arginine
466 affected ubiquinone affinity and inhibitor sensitivity but also destabilized
complex I
. These results provide further support for a high degree of structural conservation between the 49-kDa subunit of
complex I
and its ancestor, the large subunit of water-soluble [NiFe] hydrogenases. In several mutations of histidine 226,
arginine
141, and
arginine
466 the characteristic EPR signatures of iron-sulfur cluster N2 became undetectable, but specific, inhibitor-sensitive
ubiquinone reductase
activity was only moderately reduced. As we could not find spectroscopic indications for a modified cluster N2, we concluded that these
complex I
mutants were lacking most of this redox center but were still capable of catalyzing inhibitor-resistant ubiquinone reduction at near normal rates. We discuss that this at first surprising scenario may be explained by electron transfer theory; after removal of a single redox center in a chain, electron transfer rates are predicted to be still much faster than steady-state turnover of
complex I
. Our results question some of the central mechanistic functions that have been put forward for iron-sulfur cluster N2.
...
PMID:Functional significance of conserved histidines and arginines in the 49-kDa subunit of mitochondrial complex I. 1500 20
Mutations in the transcription factor IPF1/PDX1 have been associated with type 2 diabetes. To elucidate beta-cell dysfunction, PDX1 was suppressed by transduction of rat islets with an adenoviral construct encoding a dominant negative form of PDX1. After 2 days, there was a marked inhibition of insulin secretion in response to glucose, leucine, and
arginine
. Increasing cAMP levels with forskolin and isobutylmethylxanthine restored glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, indicating normal capacity for exocytosis. To identify molecular targets implicated in the altered metabolism secretion coupling, DNA microarray analysis was performed on PDX1-deficient and control islets. Of the 2640 detected transcripts, 70 were up-regulated and 56 were down-regulated. Transcripts were subdivided into 12 clusters; the most prevalent were associated with metabolism. Quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR confirmed increases in succinate dehydrogenase and ATP synthase mRNAs as well as pyruvate carboxylase and the transcript for the malate shuttle. In parallel there was a 50% reduction in mRNA levels for the mitochondrially encoded nd1 gene, a subunit of the
NADH dehydrogenase
comprising
complex I
of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. As a consequence, total cellular ATP concentration was drastically decreased by 75%, and glucose failed to augment cytosolic ATP, explaining the blunted glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Rotenone, an inhibitor of
complex I
, mimicked this effect. Surprisingly, TFAM, a nuclear-encoded transcription factor important for sustaining expression of mitochondrial genes, was down-regulated in islets expressing DN79PDX1. In conclusion, loss of PDX1 function alters expression of mitochondrially encoded genes through regulation of TFAM leading to impaired insulin secretion.
...
PMID:Oligonucleotide microarray analysis reveals PDX1 as an essential regulator of mitochondrial metabolism in rat islets. 1515 93
Hypoxia is known to stimulate reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Because reduced glutathione (GSH) is compartmentalized in cytosol and mitochondria, we examined the specific role of mitochondrial GSH (mGSH) in the survival of hepatocytes during hypoxia (5% O2). 5% O2 stimulated ROS in HepG2 cells and cultured rat hepatocytes. Mitochondrial
complex I
and II inhibitors prevented this effect, whereas inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis with Nomega-nitro-L-
arginine
methyl ester hydrochloride or the peroxynitrite scavenger uric acid did not. Depletion of GSH stores in both cytosol and mitochondria enhanced the susceptibility of HepG2 cells or primary rat hepatocytes to 5% O2 exposure. However, this sensitization was abrogated by preventing mitochondrial ROS generation by
complex I
and II inhibition. Moreover, selective mGSH depletion by (R,S)-3-hydroxy-4-pentenoate that spared cytosol GSH levels sensitized rat hepatocytes to hypoxia because of enhanced ROS generation. GSH restoration by GSH ethyl ester or by blocking mitochondrial electron flow at
complex I
and II rescued (R,S)-3-hydroxy-4-pentenoate-treated hepatocytes to hypoxia-induced cell death. Thus, mGSH controls the survival of hepatocytes during hypoxia through the regulation of mitochondrial generation of oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Critical role of mitochondrial glutathione in the survival of hepatocytes during hypoxia. 1554 23
A novel mitochondrial DNA point mutation, a C-to-A mutation at nucleotide position (np) 11,777, was identified in two unrelated patients out of 100 with Leigh syndrome. This mutation converted a highly evolutionary conserved
arginine
to a serine at codon 340 in ND4 gene. This codon was also converted by a G-to-A mutation at np 11,778, the most common mutation associated with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), but the amino acid replacement was different (R340S vs. R340H). Cybrid study revealed that the percentage of heteroplasmy was correlated with
complex I
function and that the novel mutation caused a much more deleterious effect than the np 11,778 LHON mutation in
complex I
activity.
...
PMID:A novel mtDNA C11777A mutation in Leigh syndrome. 1612 Mar 29
Methylmalonic acidemia is an inherited metabolic disorder biochemically characterized by tissue accumulation of methylmalonic acid (MMA) and clinically by progressive neurological deterioration and kidney failure, whose pathophysiology is so far poorly established. Previous studies have shown that MMA inhibits complex II of the respiratory chain in rat cerebral cortex, although no inhibition of complexes I-V was found in bovine heart. Therefore, in the present study we investigated the in vitro effect of 2.5mM MMA on the activity of complexes I-III, II, II-III and IV in striatum, hippocampus, heart, liver and kidney homogenates from young rats. We observed that MMA caused a significant inhibition of complex II activity in striatum and hippocampus (15-20%) at low concentrations of succinate in the medium, but not in the peripheral tissues. We also verified that the inhibitory property of MMA only occurred after exposing brain homogenates for at least 10 min with the acid, suggesting that this inhibition was mediated by indirect mechanisms. Simultaneous preincubation with the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor Nomega-nitro-L-
arginine
methyl ester (L-NAME) and catalase (CAT) plus superoxide dismutase (SOD) did not prevent MMA-induced inhibition of complex II, suggesting that common reactive oxygen (superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical) and nitric (nitric oxide) species were not involved in this effect. In addition, complex II-III (20-35%) was also inhibited by MMA in all tissues tested, and
complex I
-III only in the kidney (53%) and liver (38%). In contrast, complex IV activity was not changed by MMA in all tissues studied. These results indicate that MMA differentially affects the activity of the respiratory chain pending on the tissues studied, being striatum and hippocampus more vulnerable to its effect. In case our in vitro data are confirmed in vivo in tissues from methylmalonic acidemic patients, it is feasible that that the present findings may be related to the pathophysiology of the tissue damage characteristic of these patients.
...
PMID:Differential inhibitory effects of methylmalonic acid on respiratory chain complex activities in rat tissues. 1632 16
Although transcriptional effects of thyroid hormones have substantial influence on oxidative metabolism, how thyroid sets basal metabolic rate remains obscure. Compartmental localization of nitric-oxide synthases is important for nitric oxide signaling. We therefore examined liver neuronal nitric-oxide synthase-alpha (nNOS) subcellular distribution as a putative mechanism for thyroid effects on rat metabolic rate. At low 3,3',5-triiodo-L-thyronine levels, nNOS mRNA increased by 3-fold, protein expression by one-fold, and nNOS was selectively translocated to mitochondria without changes in other isoforms. In contrast, under thyroid hormone administration, mRNA level did not change and nNOS remained predominantly localized in cytosol. In hypothyroidism, nNOS translocation resulted in enhanced mitochondrial nitric-oxide synthase activity with low O2 uptake. In this context, NO utilization increased active O2 species and peroxynitrite yields and tyrosine nitration of
complex I
proteins that reduced complex activity. Hypothyroidism was also associated to high phospho-p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and decreased phospho-extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 and cyclin D1 levels. Similarly to thyroid hormones, but without changing thyroid status, nitric-oxide synthase inhibitor N(omega)-nitro-L-
arginine
methyl ester increased basal metabolic rate, prevented mitochondrial nitration and
complex I
derangement, and turned mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling and cyclin D1 expression back to control pattern. We surmise that nNOS spatial confinement in mitochondria is a significant downstream effector of thyroid hormone and hypothyroid phenotype.
...
PMID:Hypothyroid phenotype is contributed by mitochondrial complex I inactivation due to translocated neuronal nitric-oxide synthase. 1636 Dec 61
We measured the contribution of mitochondrial nitric oxide synthase (mtNOS) and respiratory chain enzymes to reactive nitrogen species (RNS) production. Diaminofluorescein (DAF) was applied for the assessment of RNS production in isolated mouse brain, heart and liver mitochondria and also in a cultured neuroblastoma cell line by confocal microscopy and flow cytometry. Mitochondria produced RNS, which was inhibited by catalysts of peroxynitrite decomposition but not by nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitors. Disrupting the organelles or withdrawing respiratory substrates markedly reduced RNS production. Inhibition of
complex I
abolished the DAF signal, which was restored by complex II substrates. Inhibition of the respiratory complexes downstream from the ubiquinone/ubiquinol cycle or dissipating the proton gradient had no effect on DAF fluorescence. We conclude that mitochondria from brain, heart and liver are capable of significant RNS production via the respiratory chain rather than through an
arginine
-dependent mtNOS.
...
PMID:Mitochondria produce reactive nitrogen species via an arginine-independent pathway. 1651 1
Assembly and trafficking of neurotransmitter receptors are processes contingent upon interactions between intracellular chaperone systems and discrete determinants in the receptor proteins. Kainate receptor subunits, which form ionotropic glutamate receptors with diverse roles in the central nervous system, contain a variety of trafficking determinants that promote either membrane expression or intracellular sequestration. In this report, we identify the coatomer protein
complex I
(COPI) vesicle coat as a critical mechanism for retention of the kainate receptor subunit KA2 in the endoplasmic reticulum. COPI subunits immunoprecipitated with KA2 subunits from both cerebellum and COS-7 cells, and beta-COP protein interacted directly with immobilized KA2 peptides containing the
arginine
-rich retention/retrieval determinant. Association between COPI proteins and KA2 subunits was significantly reduced upon alanine substitution of this signal in the cytoplasmic tail of KA2. Temperature-sensitive degradation of COPI complex proteins was correlated with an increase in plasma membrane localization of the homologous KA2 receptor. Assembly of heteromeric GluR6a/KA2 receptors markedly reduced association of KA2 and COPI. Finally, the reduction in COPI binding was correlated with an increased association with 14-3-3 proteins, which mediate forward trafficking of other integral signaling proteins. These interactions therefore represent a critical early checkpoint for biosynthesis of functional KARs.
...
PMID:Intracellular trafficking of KA2 kainate receptors mediated by interactions with coatomer protein complex I (COPI) and 14-3-3 chaperone systems. 1659 84
Nitric oxide (NO) supposedly derived via L-
arginine
-NO synthase (NOS) pathway has been implicated in inhibiting steroidogenesis by binding the heme moiety of steroidogenic enzymes. Previously, nitrite, and to a lesser extent nitrate ions inhibited steroidogenesis via NO by hitherto unknown reduction mechanism. Recently, a putative mammalian nitrite reductase activity ascribed to complex III of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes (MRCC) has been reported, where MRCC inhibitors reduced NO production from nitrite variably. We thus studied the effects of MRCC inhibitors on testosterone production in mouse Leydig tumor cells (MLTC-1) without (basal) or with human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) stimulation. In stimulated MLTC-1, MRCC inhibitors decreased testosterone production, order being: complex III (antimycin A and myxothiazol) >
complex I
(rotenone) > complex II (thenoyltrifluoroacetone), while cAMP production increased inversely. In unstimulated MLTC-1, MRCC inhibitors in same order, increased basal testosterone production, which correlated inversely with the percentage inhibition of NO production, with one exception; while antimycin A did not inhibit NO production in the nitrite reductase study mentioned above, it increased basal testosterone production in the present study. While MLTC-1 expressed mRNA for endothelial and neuronal, but not inducible NOS, various stimulators and inhibitors of L-
arginine
-NOS pathway had no effect on basal testosterone production in MLTC-1 or fresh Balb/c Leydig cells. Moreover, hCG increased nitrate uptake into MLTC-1, which suggests the gonadotropin aids nitrite and nitrate ions in their steroidogenesis inhibitory activity. In conclusion, this study supports the existence of a surrogate mammalian nitrite reductase and the dormancy of L-
arginine
-NOS pathway in MLTC-1.
...
PMID:Evidence for nitrite reductase activity in intact mouse Leydig tumor cells. 1695 82
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