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Query: EC:1.6.99.5 (
NADH dehydrogenase
)
2,135
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. Respiration of chemotrophically and phototrophically grown Rhodospirillum rubrum is inhibited by 2-hydroxydiphenyl. 2. Membrane-bound NADH oxidase and NADH: cytochrome c reductase are inhibited also. The inhibitor constant for both reactions (Ki) is 0.075 plus or minus 0.012 mM.
NADH dehydrogenase
is not inhibited significantly. 3. The inhibition of succinate:cytochrome c reductase is associated for chemotrophic membranes with Ki equals 0.22 plus or minus 0.03 mM and for phototrophic membranes with Ki equals 0.49 plus or minus 0.09 mM.
Succinate
dehydrogenase is not affected by 2-hydroxydiphenyl. 4. Cytochrome oxidase is inhibited only slightly. 5. While NADH-dependent reactions in both phototrophic and chemotrophic membranes are inhibited maximally more than 95 percent, succinate-dependent reactions can be inhibited more than 95 percent only in chemotrophic membranes. In phototrophic membranes the maximum inhibition of succinate-dependent reactions is about 70 percent. 6. The type of inhibition in both cases 2 and 3 is non-competitive. 7. While the reduction of b-type cytochrome is inhibited by 2-hydroxydiphenyl, the degree of ubiquinone reduction is not influenced. The data suggest that the site of inhibition is localized between ubiquinone and cytochrome b. 8. Implications of these data for the respiratory electron transport system in R. rubrum are discussed.
...
PMID:Separation of respiratory reactions in Rhodospirillum rubrum: inhibition studies with 2-hydroxydiphenyl. 16 37
(1) Aerobic incubation of heart muscle submitochondrial particles in phosphate buffer after treatment with NADH causes a progressive and substantial inhibition of the NADH oxidation system.
Succinate
oxidation remains almost unaffected by NADH treatment. (2) The loss of NADH oxidase activity is due to an inhibition of the respiratory chain-linked
NADH dehydrogenase
. This inhibition of the enzyme is very similar to that caused by combination of the organic mercurial mersalyl with
NADH dehydrogenase
. (3) The inhibition of NADH oxidation is largely prevented by compounds that are known to react with superoxide ions (02-.), including superoxide dismutase, cytochrome c, tiron and Mn2+. EDTA also has a protective effect, but a number of other metal chelating agents, and several proteins, including catalase, are without effect. (4) It is concluded that the inhibition of NADH oxidation of NADH oxidation by superoxide ions or by mersalyl is reversible and is therefore not due to the loss of oxidoreduction components from the respiratory chain or to an irreversible change in protein conformation. (6) The function of mitochondrial superxide dismutase is discussed in relation to the key role of
NADH dehydrogenase
in energy-conserving reactions and the formation of hydrogen peroxide during mitochondrial oxidations.
...
PMID:A protective function of superoxide dismutase during respiratory chain activity. 16 98
Oxidation of exogenous NADH in mitochondria isolated from wild type and mi-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa decreases rapidly in vitro. In mi-1 mutant mitochondria the inactivation concerns the alternate pathway of oxidation whereas in the wild type it involves an unknown component of the respiratory chain. The activity of the primary
NADH dehydrogenase
is constant within the time of the experiments (2-4 h). NADH oxidase is not inactivated if oxygen is removed from the incubation medium by nitrogen bubbling.
Succinate
oxidase does not show any remarkable changes in activity within 2-3 h. In fresh mitochondria of the mi-1 mutant reduced ubiquinone is completely reoxidized by cytochrome oxidase but only 80% reoxidized by the alternate oxidase. In aged mitochondria of the mi-1 mutant in the presence of cyanide, ubiquinone is reduced to the level characteristic for fresh mitochondria in which respiration is completely inhibited by cyanide plus salicylhydroxamic acid. In these mitochondria the reoxidation of the reduced ubiquinone proceeds only via the cytochrome pathway. It is supposed that a labile component(s) of the respiratory chain present in the mi-1 mutant and the wild type mitochondria may, in mi-1 mutant, act as an alternate oxidase.
...
PMID:Disappearance of the cyanide-insensitive pathway of oxidation in mitochondria of MI-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa in vitro. 20 34
The effect of treating mitochondria with visible light above 400 nm on electron transport and coupled reactions was examined. The temporal sequence of changes was: stimulation of respiration coupled to ATP synthesis, a decline in ATP synthesis, inactivation of respiration, increased ATPase activity and, later, loss of the membrane potential. Loss of respiration was principally due to inactivation of dehydrogenases. Of the components of dehydrogenase systems, flavins and quinones were most susceptible to illumination, the iron-sulfur centers were remarkably resistant to being damaged.
Succinate
dehydrogenase was inactivated before choline and
NADH dehydrogenase
. Redox reactions of cytochromes and cytochrome c oxidase activity were unaffected. Inactivation was O2-dependent and prevented by anaerobiosis or the presence of substrates for the dehydrogenases. Light in the range 400-500 nm was most effective and the presence of free flavins greatly enhanced inactivation of all of the above mitochondrial activities. This suggests that visible light mediates a flavin-photosensitized reaction that initiates damage involving participation of an activated species of oxygen in the damage propagation.
...
PMID:Damage to mitochondrial electron transport and energy coupling by visible light. 65 6
The topography of the inner mitochondrial membrane was investigated using inhibitors of electron transport on preparations of beef heart mitochondria and electron transport particles of opposite orientation. Reductions of juglone, ferricyanide, indophenol, coenzyme Q, duroquinone, and cytochrome c by NADH are inhibited to different extents on both sides of the membrane by the impermeant hydrophilic chelators bathophenanthroline sulfonate and orthophenanthroline. The extent of inhibition for each acceptor increased in the order given. At least two chelator-sensitive sites are present on each membrane face between the flavoprotein and coenzyme Q and a chelator-sensitive site is present on the matrix face between the sites of coenzyme Q and duroquinone interaction. Duroquinol oxidation in mitochondria only is stimulated by bathophenanthroline sulfonate. Juglone reduction is stimulated in electron transport particles (only) by p-hydroxymercuribenzenesulfonate, but after mercurial treatment, juglone reduction in both particles and mitochondria is more sensitive to bathophenanthroline sulfonate.
Succinate
dehydrogenase components are inhibited by hydrophilic orthophenanthroline or bathophenanthroline sulfonate in mitochondria only. Electron flow between the dehydrogenases of succinate and NADH occurs via a chelator-sensitive site located on the matrix face of the membrane. Inter-complex electron flow is prevented by rotenone or thenoyltrifluoroacetone. The lack of succinate-indophenol reductase inhibition by bathophenanthroline sulfonate in the presence of rotenone or thenoyltrifluoroacetone indicates that the rotenone-sensitive site may be located on the matrix face and demonstrates that electrons flow between the NADH and succinate dehydrogenases via a hydrophilic chelator and rotenone-thenoyltrifluoroacetone-sensitive site on the matrix face of the membrane. Inhibiton by hydrophilic chelators only in mitochondria indicates that succinate dehydrogenase as well as
NADH dehydrogenase
has a transmembranous orientation.
...
PMID:Inhibition of mitochondrial electron transport by hydrophilic metal chelators. Determination of dehydrogenase topography. 94 64
Neutrophil myeloperoxidase, hydrogen peroxide, and chloride constitute a potent antimicrobial system with multiple effects on microbial cytoplasmic membranes. Among these is inhibition of succinate-dependent respiration mediated, principally, through inactivation of succinate dehydrogenase.
Succinate
-dependent respiration is inhibited at rates that correlate with loss of microbial viability, suggesting that loss of respiration might contribute to the microbicidal event. Because respiration in Escherichia coli can be mediated by dehydrogenases other than succinate dehydrogenase, the effects of the myeloperoxidase system on other membrane dehydrogenases were evaluated by histochemical activity stains of electrophoretically separated membrane proteins. Two bands of succinate dehydrogenase activity proved the most susceptible to inactivation with complete loss of staining activity within 20 min, under the conditions employed. A group with intermediate susceptibility, consisting of lactate, malate, glycerol-3-phosphate, and dihydroorotate dehydrogenases as well as three bands of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, was almost completely inactivated within 30 min. The relatively resistant group, including the dehydrogenases for glutamate, NADH, and NADPH and the remaining bands of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, retained substantial amounts of diaphorase activity for up to 60 min of incubation with the myeloperoxidase system. The differential effects of myeloperoxidase on dehydrogenase inactivation could not be correlated with published enzyme contents of flavin or iron-sulfur centers, potential targets of myeloperoxidase-derived oxidants. Despite the relative resistance of
NADH dehydrogenase
/diaphorase activity to myeloperoxidase-mediated inactivation, electron transport particles prepared from E. coli incubated for 20 min with the myeloperoxidase system lost 55% of their NADH oxidase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Differential inactivation of Escherichia coli membrane dehydrogenases by a myeloperoxidase-mediated antimicrobial system. 169 36
Exposure of isolated mouse hepatocytes to a toxic concentration of acetaminophen (5 mM) resulted in damage to the mitochondrial respiratory apparatus. The nature of this damage was investigated by measuring respiration stimulated by site-specific substrates in digitonin-permeabilized hepatocytes after acetaminophen exposure. Respiration stimulated by succinate at energy-coupling site 2 was most sensitive to inhibition and was decreased by 47% after 1 h. Respiration supported by NADH-linked substrates (site 1) was also decreased but to a lesser extent, while there was no decrease in the rate of ascorbate + N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD)-supported respiration (site 3). The loss of mitochondrial respiratory function was accompanied by a decrease in ATP levels and ATP/ADP ratios in the cytosolic compartment and was preceded by a loss of reduced glutathione in both the cytosol and mitochondria. All these effects occurred well before the loss of cell membrane integrity. The putative toxic metabolite of acetaminophen, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinonimine (NAPQI), produced a similar pattern of respiratory dysfunction in isolated hepatic mitochondria. Respiration stimulated by succinate- and NADH-linked substrates was very sensitive to 50 microM NAPQI, while ascorbate + TMPD-supported respiration was unaffected. The interaction between NAPQI and the respiratory chain was further investigated using submitochondrial particles.
Succinate
dehydrogenase (associated with respiratory complex II) was found to be very sensitive to NAPQI, while
NADH dehydrogenase
(respiratory complex I) was inhibited to a lesser extent. Our results indicate that a loss of the ability to utilize succinate- and NADH-linked substrates due to attack of the respiratory chain by NAPQI causes a disruption of energy homeostasis in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity.
...
PMID:Acetaminophen toxicity results in site-specific mitochondrial damage in isolated mouse hepatocytes. 200 47
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
The hypothesis that mitochondria damaged during complete cerebral ischemia generate increased amounts of superoxide anion radical and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) upon postischemic reoxygenation has been tested. In rat brain mitochondria, succinate supported H2O2 generation, whereas NADH-linked substrates, malate plus glutamate, did so only in the presence of respiratory chain inhibitors.
Succinate
-supported H2O2 generation was diminished by rotenone and the uncoupler carbonyl cyanide m-chlorphenylhydrazone and enhanced by antimycin A and increased oxygen tensions. When maximally reduced, the
NADH dehydrogenase
and the ubiquinone-cytochrome b regions of the electron transport chain are sources of H2O2. These studies suggest that a significant portion of H2O2 generation in brain mitochondria proceeds via the transfer of reducing equivalents from ubiquinone to the
NADH dehydrogenase
portion of the electron transport chain.
Succinate
-supported H2O2 generation by mitochondria isolated from rat brain exposed to 15 min of postdecapitative ischemia was 90% lower than that of control preparations. The effect of varying oxygen tensions on H2O2 generation by postischemic mitochondrial preparations was negligible compared with the increased H2O2 generation measured in control preparations. Comparison of the effects of respiratory chain inhibitors and oxygen tension on succinate-supported H2O2 generation suggests that the ability for reversed electron transfer is impaired during ischemia. These data do not support the hypothesis that mitochondrial free radical generation increases during postischemic reoxygenation.
...
PMID:Generation of hydrogen peroxide by brain mitochondria: the effect of reoxygenation following postdecapitative ischemia. 291 86
Succinate
dehydrogenase is a conserved membrane-bound enzyme consisting of two nonidentical subunits: a flavo iron-sulfur protein (Fp) subunit, containing a covalently bound flavin, and an iron-sulfur protein (Ip) subunit. Bacillus subtilis succinate dehydrogenase in wild type bacteria and 12 well characterized succinate dehydrogenase-defective mutants were examined by low temperature EPR spectroscopy to characterize the enzyme and study subunit location and biosynthesis of its iron-sulfur clusters. The wild type B. subtilis enzyme contains iron-sulfur clusters which are analogous to clusters S-1 and S-3 of bovine heart succinate dehydrogenase but with slightly different EPR characteristics. Spins from cluster S-2 were not detectable as in the case of the intact form of bovine heart succinate dehydrogenase. However, dithionite reduction of the B. subtilis enzyme greatly enhanced spin relaxation of the ferredoxin-type cluster S-1, indicating the presence of the cluster S-2. Iron-sulfur cluster S-1 was found to be assembled in soluble succinate dehydrogenase subunits in the cytoplasm, but only if full-length Fp polypeptides and relatively large fragments of Ip polypeptides were present. Cluster S-1 was not detected in mutants with soluble mutated Fp polypeptides or in a mutant totally lacking Ip subunit polypeptide. Iron-sulfur clusters S-1, S-2, and S-3 were assembled also when the covalently bound flavin in the Fp subunit was absent. Clusters S-1 and S-3 in the membrane-bound flavin-deficient succinate dehydrogenase were not reduced by succinate but could be reduced by electron transfer from
NADH dehydrogenase
via the menaquinone pool.
...
PMID:Characterization by electron paramagnetic resonance and studies on subunit location and assembly of the iron-sulfur clusters of Bacillus subtilis succinate dehydrogenase. 298 99
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