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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 pH dependence of formation of a peroxidatic intermediate from the reaction of deuteroferriheme with hydrogen peroxide has been determined for the region pH 8.7-10.1 from stopped-flow kinetic studies in which absorbancy changes are observed at heme monomer-dimer isosbestic points. Results are interpreted primarily in terms of the attainment of double "steady-state" concentrations of Michaelis-Menten
complex I
and peroxidatic intermediate I'. A linear correlation of observed first-order rate constants with alpha, the degree of dissociation of heme dimer, has been demonstrated and nonzero intercepts are obtained. Slopes and intercepts show a linear logarithmic dependence on pH which is interpreted in terms of HO2-participation both in the formation and subsequent (catalatic) decomposition of a peroxidatically active intermediate. General acid catalysis of intermediate formation is indicated from studies in phosphate, arsenate, and citrate buffer at pH 7.4-9.3. It is suggested that such catalysis may be responsible for anomalously high rates of
H2O2
decomposition previously observed in phosphate buffer solution.
...
PMID:Pre-steady-state kinetics of intermediate formation in the deuteroferriheme-hydrogen peroxide system. 1 53
The formation of glutathione radicals, the evolution of nascent oxygen or the peroxidatic reaction with catalase
complex I
are considered as possible mechanisms for the oxidation of mercury vapor by red blood cells. To select among these, the uptake of atomic mercury by erythrocytes from different species was studied and related to their various activities of catalase (hydrogenperoxide : hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.6) and glutathione peroxidase (glutathione : hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.9). A slow and continuous infusion of diluted
H2O2
was used to maintain steady concentrations of
complex I
. 1% red cell supsensions were found most suitable showing high rates of Hg uptake and yielding still enough cells for subsequent determinations. The results indicate that the oxidation of mercury depends upon the
H2O2
-generation rate and upon the specific acticity of red-cell catalase. The oxidation occurred in a range of the catalase-
H2O2
reaction where the evolution of oxygen could be excluded. Compounds reacting with
complex I
were shown to be effective inhibitors of the mercury uptake. GSH-peroxidase did not participate in the oxidation but rather, was found to inhibit it by competing with catalase for hydrogen peroxide. These findings support the view that elemental mercury is oxidized in erythrocytes by a peroxidatic reaction with
complex I
only.
...
PMID:Enzymatic oxidation of mercury vapor by erythrocytes. 65 39
Mercuric ion (Hg(II)) causes oxidative tissue damage in kidney cortical cells. We studied the in vitro effects of Hg(II) on hydrogen peroxide (
H2O2
) production by rat kidney mitochondria, a principal intracellular target of Hg(II). In mitochondria supplemented with a respiratory chain substrate (succinate or malate/glutamate) and an electron transport inhibitor (antimycin A (AA) or rotenone), Hg(II) (30 nmol/mg protein) increased
H2O2
formation approximately 4-fold at the ubiquinone-cytochrome b region (AA-inhibited) and 2-fold at the
NADH dehydrogenase
region (rotenone-inhibited). Concomitantly, Hg(II) increased iron-dependent lipid peroxidation 3.5-fold at the
NADH dehydrogenase
region, but only by 25% at the ubiquinone-cytochrome b region. The mitochondrial concentration of reduced glutathione (GSH) decreased both with incubation time and Hg(II) concentration. Hg(II), at a concentration of 12 nmol/mg protein, caused almost complete depletion of measurable GSH in substrate-supplemented mitochondria after a 30-min incubation. In electron transport-inhibited mitochondria, Hg(II) caused greater depletion of GSH in rotenone-inhibited than in AA-inhibited mitochondria, consistent with the effects of Hg(II) on lipid peroxidation. These results suggest that Hg(II) at low concentrations depletes mitochondrial GSH and enhances
H2O2
formation in kidney mitochondria under conditions of impaired respiratory chain electron transport. The increased
H2O2
formation by Hg(II) may lead to oxidative tissue damage, such as lipid peroxidation, observed in mercury-induced nephrotoxicity.
...
PMID:Mercury-induced H2O2 production and lipid peroxidation in vitro in rat kidney mitochondria. 176 76
The effect of aging on the release of
H2O2
by mitochondria was studied in the housefly in order to elucidate the causes of previously observed age-related increase in the level of oxidative stress. Intact flight muscle mitochondria of the housefly, supplemented with alpha-glycerophosphate, produce 1-2 nmol
H2O2
/min per mg protein, even in the absence of respiratory inhibitors. The rate of
H2O2
secretion progressively increases approximately 2-fold during aging of the fly. Neither uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation nor mechanical damage to mitochondria during the isolation procedure appear to be responsible for the age-related increase in
H2O2
production. Activities of NADH-ferricyanide reductase, succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
, and NADH-, succinate- and alpha-glycerophosphate-cytochrome c reductases, were approximately 2-fold higher in mitochondria from the old than those from the young flies. However, the concentration of enzymatically reducible ubiquinone remained unchanged with age. Infliction of damage by exposure of mitochondria to free radical-generating systems in vitro caused an increase in the rate of
H2O2
generation. Glutaraldehyde, an intermolecular crosslinking agent, induced an increase in the rate of
H2O2
generation by mitochondria. Results of this study demonstrate that aging in the housefly is associated with an increase in the rate of
H2O2
generation by mitochondria probably due, at least in part, to self-inflicted damage by mitochondria. Intermolecular cross-linking in the inner mitochondrial membrane can contribute towards the increased
H2O2
generation.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide release by mitochondria increases during aging. 190 65
Ischemia and reperfusion causes severe mitochondrial damage, including swelling and deposits of hydroxyapatite crystals in the mitochondrial matrix. These crystals are indicative of a massive influx of Ca2+ into the mitochondrial matrix occurring during reoxygenation. We have observed that mitochondria isolated from rat hearts after 90 minutes of anoxia followed by reoxygenation, show a specific inhibition in the electron transport chain between
NADH dehydrogenase
and ubiquinone in addition to becoming uncoupled (unable to generate ATP). This inhibition is associated with an increased
H2O2
formation at the
NADH dehydrogenase
level in the presence of NADH dependent substrates. Control rat mitochondria exposed for 15 minutes to high Ca2+ (200 nmol/mg protein) also become uncoupled and electron transport inhibited between
NADH dehydrogenase
and ubiquinone, a lesion similar to that observed in post-ischemic mitochondria. This Ca(2+)-dependent effect is time dependent and may be partially prevented by albumin, suggesting that it may be due to phospholipase A2 activation, releasing fatty acids, leading to both inhibition of electron transport and uncoupling. Addition of arachidonic or linoleic acids to control rat heart mitochondria, inhibits electron transport between Complex I and III. These results are consistent with the following hypothesis: during ischemia, the intracellular energy content drops severely, affecting the cytoplasic concentration of ions such as Na+ and Ca2+. Upon reoxygenation, the mitochondrion is the only organelle capable of eliminating the excess cytoplasmic Ca2+ through an electrogenic process requiring oxygen (the low ATP concentration makes other ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport systems non-operational).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mitochondrial generation of oxygen radicals during reoxygenation of ischemic tissues. 206 Aug 40
Bovine heart submitochondrial particles (SMP) were exposed to continuous fluxes of hydroxyl radical (.OH) alone, superoxide anion radical (O2-) alone, or mixtures of .OH and O2-, by gamma radiolysis in the presence of 100% N2O (.OH exposure), 100% O2 + formate (O2- exposure), or 100% O2 alone (.OH + O2- exposure).
Hydrogen peroxide
effects were studied by addition of pure
H2O2
.
NADH dehydrogenase
, NADH oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase, succinate oxidase, and ATPase activities (Vmax) were rapidly inactivated by .OH (10% inactivation at 15-40 nmol of .OH/mg of SMP protein, 50-90% inactivation at 600 nmol of .OH/mg of SMP protein) and by .OH + O2- (10% inactivation at 20-80 nmol of .OH + O2-/mg of SMP protein, 45-75% inactivation at 600 nmol of .OH + O2-/mg of SMP protein). Importantly, O2- was a highly efficient inactivator of
NADH dehydrogenase
, NADH oxidase, and ATPase (10% inactivation at 20-50 nmol of O2-/mg of SMP protein, 40% inactivation at 600 nmol of O2-/mg of SMP protein), a mildly efficient inactivator of succinate dehydrogenase (10% inactivation at 150 nmol of O2-/mg of SMP protein, 30% inactivation at 600 nmol of O2-/mg of SMP protein), and a poor inactivator of succinate oxidase (less than 10% inactivation at 600 nmol of O2-/mg of SMP protein).
H2O2
partially inactivated
NADH dehydrogenase
, NADH oxidase, and cytochrome oxidase, but even 10% loss of these activities required at least 500-600 nmol of
H2O2
/mg of SMP protein. Cytochrome oxidase activity (oxygen consumption supported by ascorbate + N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) was remarkably resistant to oxidative inactivation, with less than 20% loss of activity evident even at .OH, O2-, OH + O2-, or
H2O2
concentrations of 600 nmol/mg of SMP protein. Cytochrome c oxidase activity, however (oxidation of, added, ferrocytochrome c), exhibited more than a 40% inactivation at 600 nmol of .OH/mg of SMP protein. The .OH-dependent inactivations reported above were largely inhibitable by the .OH scavenger mannitol. In contrast, the O2(-)-dependent inactivations were inhibited by active superoxide dismutase, but not by denatured superoxide dismutase or catalase. Membrane lipid peroxidation was evident with .OH exposure but could be prevented by various lipid-soluble antioxidants which did not protect enzymatic activities at all.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The oxidative inactivation of mitochondrial electron transport chain components and ATPase. 216 88
We have investigated the influence of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) on bioenergetic functions of isolated heart-mitochondria. Electron transfer and energy conservation activities were found to be decreased in the presence of very low amounts of the polychlorinated biphenyl compound (1.5 nmol/mg mitochondrial protein). The effect was greatest when substrates for
complex I
were used. In this case coupling of oxidative phosphorylation to respiration was drastically diminished, essentially at the expense of state 3 respiration, and P/O values were found around 2 instead of 3. Succinate-related energy conservation remained practically unaffected in the presence of TCDD, suggesting an interference of the toxic compound at coupling site I. SOD plus catalase were found to protect energy-linked respiration from the effect of dioxin indicating the involvement of superoxide radicals and
H2O2
in the development of the observed phenomena. The present contribution provides experimental evidence on the formation of these oxygen species in the presence of TCDD. Furthermore, the site of action of TCDD is demonstrated and discussed in relation to the oxygen radical formation observed.
...
PMID:2,3,7,8, tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin induces oxygen activation associated with cell respiration. 254 69
The quinonoid anthracycline, doxorubicin (Adriamycin) is a potent anti-neoplastic agent whose clinical use is limited by severe cardiotoxicity. Mitochondrial damage is a major component of this cardiotoxicity, and rival oxidative and non-oxidative mechanisms for inactivation of the electron transport chain have been proposed. Using bovine heart submitochondrial preparations (SMP) we have now found that both oxidative and non-oxidative mechanisms occur in vitro, depending solely on the concentration of doxorubicin employed. Redox cycling of doxorubicin by Complex I of the respiratory chain (which generates doxorubicin semiquinone radicals, O2-,
H2O2
, and .OH) caused a 70% decrease in the Vmax. for
NADH dehydrogenase
during 15 min incubation of SMP, and an 80% decrease in NADH oxidase activity after 2 h incubation. This inactivation required only 25-50 microM-doxorubicin and represents true oxidative damage, since both NADH (for doxorubicin redox cycling) and oxygen were obligatory participants. The damage appears localized between the
NADH dehydrogenase
flavin (site of doxorubicin reduction) and iron-sulphur centre N-1. Succinate dehydrogenase, succinate oxidase, and cytochrome c oxidase activities were strongly inhibited by higher doxorubicin concentrations, but this phenomenon did not involve doxorubicin redox cycling (no NADH or oxygen requirement). Doxorubicin concentrations of 0.5 mM were required for 50% decreases in these activities, except for cytochrome c oxidase which was only 30% inhibited following incubation with even 1.0 mM-doxorubicin. Our results indicate that low concentrations of doxorubicin (50 microM or less) can catalyse a site-specific oxidative damage to the NADH oxidation pathway. In contrast, ten-fold higher doxorubicin concentrations (or more) are required for non-oxidative inactivation of the electron transport chain; probably via binding to cardiolipin and/or generalized membrane chaotropic effects. The development of agents to block doxorubicin toxicity in vivo will clearly require detailed clinical studies of doxorubicin uptake in the heart.
...
PMID:Oxidative and non-oxidative mechanisms in the inactivation of cardiac mitochondrial electron transport chain components by doxorubicin. 271 42
Myeloperoxidase, a granule-associated enzyme of neutrophils and monocytes, combines with
H2O2
and chloride to form a potent microbicidal system that contributes to phagocyte antimicrobial activity. The nature of the lesion or lesions induced by the myeloperoxidase system which are responsible for the loss of microbial replicative activity (viability) remains unknown. Using Escherichia coli grown to late log or stationary phase under conditions of low aeration with succinate as the sole carbon source, we found that myeloperoxidase-induced loss of microbial viability could be correlated with a decrease in succinate-dependent respiration (succinate oxidase activity). Succinate dehydrogenase activity fell rapidly to undetectable levels during incubation with the myeloperoxidase system, suggesting that damage to the dehydrogenase was a major factor in the loss of oxidase activity. Other components of the succinate oxidase system were resistant to the actions of myeloperoxidase. The ubiquinone-8 and cytochrome components of the respiratory chain remained nearly constant in amount despite reduction of respiration to undetectable levels. However, as expected from the loss of succinate dehydrogenase activity, succinate-
ubiquinone reductase
and succinate-cytochrome reductase activities were markedly impaired. We propose that the loss of E. coli viability induced by the myeloperoxidase-
H2O2
-chloride system is due in part to the loss of electron transport function consequent to the oxidation of critical catalytic centers in susceptible dehydrogenases.
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase-mediated damage to the succinate oxidase system of Escherichia coli. Evidence for selective inactivation of the dehydrogenase component. 282 9
5-(4-Nitrophenyl)penta-2,4-dienal (NPPD) stimulated NADPH-supported oxygen consumption by rat liver microsomes in a concentration-dependent manner. The NPPD stimulation of O2 uptake was not inhibited by metyrapone and was decreased in the presence of NADP+ and p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. These observations suggest that the NPPD initial reduction step is mediated by NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and not by cytochrome P-450. Spin-trapping studies using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) revealed the formation of superoxide anion upon incubation of NPPD, NADPH, DMPO and rat liver microsomes.
Hydrogen peroxide
generation was also detected in these incubations, thus confirming redox cycling of NPPD under aerobic conditions. NPPD stimulated oxygen consumption, superoxide anion formation and hydrogen peroxide generation by rat kidney, testes and brain microsomes. Other enzymes capable of nitroreduction (
NADH dehydrogenase
, xanthine oxidase, glutathione reductase, and NADP+ ferredoxin oxidoreductase) were also found to stimulate redox cycling of NPPD. The ability of NPPD to induce superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide formation might play a role in its reported mutagenicity.
...
PMID:Generation of superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide during redox cycling of 5-(4-nitrophenyl)-penta-2,4-dienal by mammalian microsomes and enzymes. 283 86
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