Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.6.99.3 (diaphorase)
5,903 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Measurement of the effect of drugs on the in vivo rates of synthesis of rabbit liver organelle bound proteins were measured following individual treatments with the inducers phenobarbital, 3-methylcholanthrene and PCB (a mixture of polychlorinated biphenyls) and the inhibitors, cycloheximide, aflatoxin B1, chloramphenicol and actinomycin D. Following their isolation from a homogenate containing the combined livers of 14C-leucine injected experimental animals and 3H-leucine injected control animals, purified fractions of the following proteins were prepared: microsomal cytochrome b5, cytochrome P-450, NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and proteolipids, outer mitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5, NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase and proteolipids, inner mitochondrial membrane cytochrome c, NADH dehydrogenase and proteolipids, intermitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5 and circulating serum albumin. The effect of a drug was examined by measuring the 14C/3H ratio of leucine incorporation of each fraction; ratios which differed markedly from a control value of 1 represented actual changes in the relative rates of protein synthesis. Increased rates of synthesis of cytochrome P-450 and its reductase, intermitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5 and all three proteolipid fractions resulted from each inducer treatment. Treatments with 3-methylcholanthrene and PCB also increased the rate of synthesis of cytochrome b5 and its reductase in both the microsome and outer mitochondrial membrane. In addition, the PCB treatment increased the rates of synthesis of cytochrome c and NADH-dehydrogenase. The rates of synthesis of cytochromes, reductases and of circulating serum albumin were inhibited following treatments with cycloheximide, aflatoxin B1 and actinomycin D. Actinomycin D appeared to inhibit the release of newly synthesized albumin into the bloodstream while chloramphenicol treatment appeared to inhibit the incorporation of cytochrome c into the mitochondria. After 20 hours of treatment with inhibitors, the inhibitory effect of actinomycin D and cycloheximide were still apparent while the rates of protein synt;esis in chloramphenicol and aflatoxin B1 treated animals increased to levels above the controls. The incorporation of radioactively labeled leucine into the proteolipids of the microsomal, and the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes were inhibited following the treatment with actinomycin D and stimulated following the treatment with cycloheximide.
...
PMID:Effect of a single dose of inducers and inhibitors on the rate of synthesis of cytochromes and reductases in liver organelles. 11 59

During early postnatal development there was an increase in the specific activity of a number of oxidative enzymes localized on the outer and inner mitochondrial membrane. The succinic oxidase complex of the inner mitochondrial membrane, whose activity in 1-day-old rats was 50% of the value in adult animals, attained the maximum on about the 10th day after birth. Activity of the choline and the proline oxidase complex, both of which are also localized in the inner mitochondrial membrane, was minimal in 1-day-old rats and went on rising after the 10th day. Rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity, which is localized on the outer mitochondrial membrane, remained stable up to the 10th day, and rose between the 10th and the 90th day. Developmental changes in monoaminooxidase activity, which is likewise localized on the outer mitochondrial membrane, followed a similar course to the choline and proline oxidase complexes. The amount of cytochromes a+alpha3 and cytochrome b in isolated mitochondria did not alter during development. The protein spectrum of the mitochondrial particles, determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate, likewise displayed no marked changes during postnatal development. The above findings show that the metabolic functions of the mitochondria mature during development and that changes in the different enzymes have their own characteristic time course.
...
PMID:The development of oxidative enzymes in rat liver mitochondria. 14 72

Cytochrome c has two stimulatory effects on respiration of mitochondria especially those from wounded potato tuber. In the first place a stimulation of succinate- and NADH-consuming, antimycin-A-sensitive respiration, which reaches a maximal value at low cytochrome c concentrations, has been found. In the second place, at higher concentrations of cytochrome c a stimulation of NADH-consuming respiration occurs, which is antimycin-A-resistant, but KCN-sensitive. This antimycin-A-resistant, NADH-consuming respiration is absent, when no cytochrome c is added to the reaction medium. It is insensitive to metal chelators, to which the antimycin-A-and KCN-resistant plant mitochondrial alternative oxidase is sensitive. By measurements of NADH-cytochrome c reductase activities a corresponding antimycin-A-resistant NADH-cytochrome c reductase has been found, which is insensitive to osmotic shock treatment. A localization of this antimycin-A-resistant electron transport with NADH as the electron donor in the outer mitochondrial membrane is likely. In the mitochondrial preparations cytochrome c might stimulate by acting as an electron-carrier between the outer membrane reductase and the inner membrane cytochrome oxidase. A big increase of the outer membrane mediated electron transport in the mitochondria has been observed after wounding of potato tuber tissue. The ability of the tissue to produce this electron transport pathway after wounding disappeared after prolonged storage of the tubers. A possible function of this electron transport pathway in fatty acid desaturation during the wound-reaction is suggested.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c dependent, antimycin-A resistant respiration in mitochondria from potato tuber (Solanum tuberosum L.). Influence of wounding and storage time on outer membrane NADH-cytochrome-c-reductase. 17 74

15 min cold exposure of rats adapted to cold results in switching on a pathway of the fast oxidation of extramitochondrial NADH in the isolated liver mitochondria. This pathway is sensitive to mersalyl and cyanide, resistant to amytal and antimycin A, and can be stimulated by dinitrophenol. A portion of the endogenous cytochrome c pool can easily be removed by washing mitochondria of the cold-exposed rats. A scheme is discussed, postulating desorption of the inner membrane-bound cytochrome c into intermembrane space of mitochondria, resulting in formation of a link between the non-phosphorylating NADH-cytochrome c reductase in the outer mitochondrial membrane and cytochrome c oxidase in the inner membrane. It is suggested that such an oxidative pathway is involved in the urgent heat production in liver in response to the cold treatment.
...
PMID:Activation of the external pathway of NADH oxidation in liver mitochondria of cold-adapted rats. 20 43

The phospholipid depletion of rat liver mitochondria, induced by acetoneextraction or by digestion with phospholipase A2 or phospholipase C, greatly inhibited the activity of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive). A great decrease of the reductase activity also occurred in isolated outer mitochondrial membranes after incubation with phospholipase A2. The enzyme activity was almost completely restored by the addition of a mixture of mitochondrial phospholipids to either lipid-deficient mitochondria, or lipid-deficient outer membranes. The individual phospholipids present in the outer mitochondrial membrane induced little or no stimulation of the reductase activity. Egg phosphatidylcholine was the most active phospholipid, but dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine was almost ineffective. The lipid depletion of mitochondria resulted in the disappearance of the non-linear Arrhenius plot which characterized the native reductase activity. A non-linear plot almost identical to that of the native enzyme was shown by the enzyme reconstituted with mitochondrial phospholipids. Triton X-100, Tween 80 or sodium deoxycholate induced only a small activation of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) in lipid-deficient mitochondria. The addition of cholesterol to extracted mitochondrial phospholipids at a 1 : 1 molar ratio inhibited the reactivation of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) but not the binding of phospholipids to lipid-deficient mitochondria or lipid-deficient outer membranes. These results show that NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) of the outer mitochondrial membrane requires phospholipids for its activity. A mixture of phospholipids accomplishes this requirement better than individual phospholipids or detergents. It also seems that the membrane fluidity may influence the reductase activity.
...
PMID:The role of lipid-protein interactions in NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) of rat liver mitochondria. 21 8

1. Anti-heart mitochondria autoantibodies were developed in serum from dogs following experimental myocardial infarction. 2. Heart mitochondria frozen and thawed repeatedly in a sucrose/Tris-chloride buffer retained both their functional integrity as measured by the respiratory control ratio and their ability to serve as an antigen in a complement fixation test. Mitochondria frozen and thawed in a potassium chloride/Tris-chloride buffer lost both their functional integrity and their autoantigenic activity after one freeze-thaw cycle. 3. Extraction of the heart mitochondria with acetone/water mixtures to remove phospholipids from the membrane led to a complete loss of the ability of the mitochondria to react in the complement fixation test but did not affect the ability of the membranes to bind autoantibody in absorption experiments. 4. Treatment of the mitochondrial membranes with increasing concentrations of trypsin caused a loss of up to approximately 50% of the membrane protein with a gradual decrease in the autoantigenic activity of the membrane without impairment of the ability of the membrane to bind autoantibody. 5. Removal of up to 90% of the sialic acid of the mitochondrial membrane with neuraminidase resulted in a considerable increase in the complement-fixing autoantigenic activity of the membrane without changing the apparent ability of the membrane to bind autoantibody in absorption experiments. 6. Exposure of mitochondrial membranes to autoantibody and complement caused an inhibition of both an inner mitochondrial membrane enzyme, i.e. cytochrome oxidase (48%) and an outer mitochondrial membrane enzyme, i.e. NADH cytochrome c reductase (rotenone insensitive) (37%).
...
PMID:Characterization of autoantigenic sites on isolated dog heart mitochondria. 118 45

The trypsin sensitivity of the mitochondrial N-acetylglucosaminyl and mannosyltransferase activities involved in the N-glycoprotein biosynthesis through dolichol intermediates as well as the N-acetylglucosaminyl-transferase activity involved in direct N-glycosylation were examined in mitochondria and isolated outer mitochondrial membrane preparations. The trypsin action on mitochondrial membrane was checked by measuring the activities of marker enzymes (rotenone-insensitive NADH cytochrome c reductase, adenylate kinase, and monoamine oxidase). Glycosyl-transferase activities of both N-glycosylation pathways were insensitive to trypsin action and consequently were located in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Based on the activator effect of the trypsin on these enzyme activities, the results suggested two distinct orientations of their active sites. As regards the N-glycoprotein biosynthesis pathway through dolichol intermediates, the dolicholphosphoryl-mannose and dolichol-pyrophosphoryl-di-N-acetylchitobiose synthases would be oriented outside while the oligomannosyl-synthase and the oligomannosyl-transferase would be rather oriented inside in the outer membrane. The N-acetylglucosaminyl-transferase involved in the direct transfer of N-acetylglucosamine from its nucleotide donor to a proteinic acceptor would be oriented outside in the outer membrane.
...
PMID:Topological investigations. Study of the trypsin sensitivity of the N-acetylglucosaminyl and mannosyl-transferase activities located in the outer mitochondrial membrane. 252 39

Tissue, cellular, and subcellular distributions of OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-semidehydroascorbate (SDA) reductase activity were investigated in rat. NADH-SDA reductase activity was found in the post-nuclear particulate fractions of liver, kidney, adrenal gland, heart, brain, lung, and spleen of rat. Liver, kidney, and adrenal gland had higher NADH-SDA reductase activity than other tissues, and OM cytochrome b-dependent activity was 60-70% of the total activity. On the other hand, almost all of the reductase activity of heart and brain cells was mediated by OM cytochrome b. The ratio of the OM cytochrome b-mediated activities of NADH-SDA reductase to rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase varied among these tissues. OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-SDA reductase and rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activities were mainly present in the parenchymal cells of rat liver. The localization of the cytochrome-mediated reductase activities in the outer mitochondrial membrane was confirmed by subfractionation of liver mitochondria. Among the submicrosomal fractions, OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-SDA reductase activity was highest in the cis-Golgi membrane fraction, in which monoamine oxidase activity was also highest. On the other hand, OM cytochrome b-mediated rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity showed a slightly different distribution pattern from the NADH-SDA reductase activity. Thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA), a metal chelator, effectively inhibited the NADH-SDA reductase activity, though other metal chelators did not affect the activity. TTFA failed to inhibit rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity at the concentration which gave complete inhibition of NADH-SDA reductase activity.
...
PMID:Subcellular distribution of OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-semidehydroascorbate reductase activity in rat liver. 357 Nov 84

1. After conventional fractionation of rat liver homogenates in 0.88m-sucrose the mitochondrial fraction was subjected to short-term water lysis followed by separation of the resulting membrane preparations. 2. Phosphatidate formation was measured in all subcellular fractions and subfractions and was compared with the distribution of succinate dehydrogenase, monoamine oxidase, rotenone-insensitive NADH cytochrome c reductase, arylsulphatase, urate oxidase, arylesterase and glucose 6-phosphatase. 3. The results obtained indicated that mitochondria were capable of synthesizing phosphatidate, though this activity was only about one-third of the total homogenate activity. 4. Mitochondrial phosphatidate formation was located predominantly in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Although this membrane preparation was found to be significantly contaminated by the microsomal fraction, this contamination was estimated to account for not more than about 20% of the total phosphatidate formation observed in preparations of outer mitochondrial membrane.
...
PMID:Phosphatidate biosynthesis in mitochondrial subfractions of rat liver. 430 22

The surface charge of intact mitochondria and submitochondrial particles was examined by the technique of preparative free flow electrophoresis. When submitochondrial preparations obtained by a swelling-contraction procedure were examined with this technique, two fractions were observed. One of these fractions exhibited the same electrophoretic properties as intact mitochondria, which indicated that it was derived from the outer limiting membrane of the mitochondrion. This fraction was found to contain the enzymes monoamine oxidase and rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase which have been reported to be localized in the outer mitochondrial membrane. The other fraction exhibited an electrophoretic mobility which was different from that of intact mitochondria, and this fraction contained enzymes characteristic of the inner membrane-matrix fraction such as soluble and particulate enzymes of the Krebs cycle. Microsomes exhibited an electrophoretic mobility which was almost identical with that of the outer mitochondrial membrane. In addition to resolving the localization of enzymes in mitochondrial membranes, these data indicate that the outer limiting membrane of the mitochondrion is the sole determinant of the surface charge of mitochondria.
...
PMID:The surface charge of rat liver mitochondria and their membranes. Clarification of some controversies concerning mitochondrial structure. 431 44


1 2 3 Next >>