Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Iron-sulfur clusters present in rat liver submitochondrial particles were characterized by ESR at temperatures between 30 and 5.5 K combined with potentiometric titrations. The spectral and thermodynamic characteristics of the iron-sulfur clusters were generally similar to those previously reported for pigeon or bovine heart submitochondrial particles. Clusters N-1a, N-1b, N-2, N-3 and N-4 of NADH dehydrogenase had midpoint oxidation-reduction potentials at pH 7.5 of -425, -265, -85, -240 and -260 mV, respectively. Clusters S-1 and S-3 of succinate dehydrogenase had midpoint potentials of 0 and +65 mV, respectively. The iron-sulfur cluster of electron-transferring flavo-protein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase exhibited the gz signal at g = 2.08 and had a midpoint potential of +30 mV. This signal was relatively prominent in rat liver compared to pigeon or bovine heart. Submitochondrial particles from rats chronically treated with ethanol (36% of total calories, 40 days) showed decreases of 20-30+% in amplitudes of signals due to clusters N-2, N-3 and N-4 compared to those from pair-fed control rats. Signals from clusters N-1b, S-1, S-3 and electron-transferring flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase were unaffected. Microwave power-saturation behavior was similar for both submitochondrial particle preparations, suggesting that the lower signal amplitudes reflected a lower content of these particular clusters. NADH dehydrogenase activity was significantly decreased (46%), whilst succinate dehydrogenase activity was elevated (25%), following chronic ethanol consumption. The results indicate that chronic ethanol treatment leads to an alteration of the structure and function of the NADH dehydrogenase segment of the electron transfer chain. This alteration is one of the factors contributing to the lower respiration rates observed following chronic ethanol administration.
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PMID:Characterization of iron-sulfur clusters in rat liver submitochondrial particles by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Alterations produced by chronic ethanol consumption. 624 7

Two N-1 type iron-sulfur clusters in NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex I, EC 1.6.5.3) were potentiometrically resolved: one was titrated as a component with a midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of -335 mV at pH 8.0, and with an n-value equal to one; the other as an extremely low midpoint potential component (Em 8.0 less than -500 mV). These two clusters are tentatively assigned to N-1b and N-1a, respectively. Cluster N-1b is completely reducible with NADH and has a spin concentration of about 0.8/FMN. Its EPR spectrum can be simulated as a single rhombic component with principal g values of 2.019, 1.937, and 1.922, which correspond to the Center 1 reported earlier by Orme-Johnson, N. R., Hansen, R. E., and Beinert, H. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 1922-1927. At extremely low oxidation-reduction potentials (less than -450 mV), additional EPR signals emerge with apparent g values of gz = 2.03, gy = 1.95, and gx = 1.91, which we assign to cluster N-1a. It is difficult, however, to simulate the detailed spectral line shape of this component as a single rhombic component, suggesting some degree of protein modification or interaction with a neighboring oxidation-reduction component. EPR spectra of soluble NADH dehydrogenase, containing 5-6 g atoms of non-heme iron and 5-6 mol of acid-labile sulfide/mol of FMN, were examined. Signals from at least two iron-sulfur species could be distinguished in the NADH-reduced form: one of an N-1b type spectrum; the other of a spectrum with g values of 2.045, 1.95, and 1.87 (total of about 0.5 spin equivalents/FMN). This is the first example of an N-1 type signal detected in isolated soluble NADH dehydrogenase.
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PMID:Iron-sulfur N-1 clusters studied in NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase and in soluble NADH dehydrogenase. 626 66

The low molecular weight NADH dehydrogenase which can be solubilized from the mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex with chaotropic agents consists of three subunits in equimolar ratio [Galante, Y. M., & Hatefi, Y. (1979) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 192, 559]. The largest subunit (subunit I) can be completely separated from the other two (subunits II + III) by treatment with sodium trichloroacetate and ammonium sulfate fractionation. Both the subunit I and subunit II + III fractions contain iron and acid-labile sulfur. From visible and EPR spectroscopy and the iron and acid-labile sulfide content, we propose that the subunit II + III fraction contains a binuclear cluster. The cluster structure present in subunit I is as yet unclear. On separation of the subunits of NADH dehydrogenase, the FMN is lost.
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PMID:Resolution of mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase and isolation of two iron-sulfur proteins. 627 47

Iron may affect both respiratory O2 transport and mitochondrial electron transport in the performance of muscle work. This study was designed to elucidate the molecular defect of iron-deficient work performance by identifying heretofore unmeasurable mitochondrial enzymes that are diminished by iron deficiency and may be restored by iron repletion. Female rats were made iron-deficient by dietary control and were repleted by oral iron. Iron deficiency reduced physical work capacity (treadmill running time), haemoglobin (Hb), and mitochondrial iron-sulphur (Fe-S) centres in heart and skeletal muscles; mitochondrial number was unaffected. Oral iron supplementation restored work capacity and Hb within 4 d to normal or near-normal levels, but in general Fe-S centres of mitochondria due to NADH dehydrogenase remained at iron-deficient levels. Subnormal concentrations of mitochondrial iron-dependent NADH dehydrogenase in muscle are not by themselves rate-limiting in work performance.
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PMID:Mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase in iron-deficient and iron-repleted rat muscle: an EPR and work performance study. 629 76

This study investigated the effect of the anthracycline antibiotics on oxygen radical metabolism by cardiac mitochondrial reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) dehydrogenase [NADH:(acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.99.3]. Superoxide formation by NADH dehydrogenase after anthracycline treatment appeared to follow saturation kinetics with an apparent Km of 167.3, 73.3, 64.0, or 47.6 microM for doxorubicin, daunorubicin, rubidazone, or aclacinomycin A, respectively. Superoxide formation by NADH dehydrogenase after doxorubicin treatment occurred with a pH optimum of 7.6 and was accompanied by the production of hydrogen peroxide. Furthermore, drug-related hydroxyl radical generation was detected in this enzyme system by the evolution of methane gas from dimethyl sulfoxide. Hydroxyl radical production proceeded only in the presence of superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and trace amounts of iron or a chelate of iron and ethylenediaminetetraacetate and thus was probably the by-product of a transition metal-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction. The antitumor agents mitoxantrone and actinomycin D did not significantly enhance reactive oxygen metabolism by NADH dehydrogenase. These results suggest that the specific activation of the anthracycline antibiotics to free radicals by NADH dehydrogenase leads to the formation of a variety of reactive oxygen species that may contribute to the mitochondrial toxicity of these drugs.
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PMID:Anthracycline antibiotic-stimulated superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical production by NADH dehydrogenase. 630 69

NADH dehydrogenase is an iron-sulfur flavoprotein which is isolated and purified from Complex I (mitochondrial NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase) by resolution with NaClO4. The activity of the enzyme (followed as NADH: 2-methylnaphthoquinone oxidoreductase) increases linearly with protein concentration (in the range between 0.2 and 1.0 mg/ml) and decreases with aging upon incubation on ice. In the present work a good correlation was found between enzymic activity and labile sulfide content, at least within the limits of sensitivity of the assays employed. Rhodanese (thiosulfate: cyanide sulfurtransferase (EC 2.8.1.1) purified from bovine liver mitochondria was shown to restore, in the presence of thiosulfate, the activity of the partly inactivated NADH dehydrogenase. Concomitantly, sulfur was transferred from thiosulfate to the flavoprotein and incorporated as acid-labile sulfide. Rhodanese-mediated sulfide transfer was directly demonstrated when the reactivation of NADH dehydrogenase was performed in the presence of radioactive thiosulfate (labeled in the outer sulfur) and the 35S-loaded flavoprotein was re-isolated by gel filtration chromatography. The results indicated that the [35S]sulfide was inserted in NADH dehydrogenase and appeared to constitute the structural basis for the increase in enzymic activity.
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PMID:Interaction of rhodanese with mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase. 640 20

The external NADH dehydrogenase has been purified from Arum maculatum (cuckoo-pint) mitochondria by phosphate washing, extraction with deoxycholate, ion-exchange and gel-filtration chromatography. Sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis shows, when the gel is silver-stained, that the purified enzyme contains two major bands of Mr 78 000 and 65 000 and a minor one of Mr about 76 000. It is not possible at present to determine which of these, or which combination, constitutes the dehydrogenase. The enzyme contains non-covalently bound FAD and a small amount of FMN. Since the conditions of purification lead to considerable loss of flavin and possibly iron-sulphur centres, it is not possible to decide with certainty whether the enzyme is a flavo- or ferroflavo-protein. The enzyme has been distinguished from the other NADH dehydrogenases on the basis of its substrate specificity, its capability of reducing electron acceptors such as ubiquinone-1 and 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol and its sensitivity towards Ca2+, EGTA and dicoumarol.
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PMID:Partial purification and properties of the external NADH dehydrogenase from cuckoo-pint (Arum maculatum) mitochondria. 650 55

Soluble NADH dehydrogenase resolved from Complex I of the mitochondrial electron-transfer chain was subjected to gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate at 4 degrees C, and then the gel was stained for iron with bathophenanthroline disulfonate and thioglycolic acid. The 23,000-dalton subunit was markedly stained, and the 51,000-dalton subunit was also stained, but only slightly. High-performance gel permeation chromatography using an eluant containing 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate also demonstrated that these subunits contain an iron-sulfur center: the elution pattern recorded by light absorption at 400 nm gave two peaks corresponding to the positions of the subunits.
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PMID:Detection of iron-sulfur center-containing subunits of mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by high-performance gel permeation chromatography. 671 93

The non-ionic detergent lauryl dimethylamine N-oxide (LDAO) has been used to extract the NADH dehydrogenases of Arum maculatum mitochondria. Affinity chromatography on 5'-ADP-Sepharose 4B was used to separate the rotenone-sensitive (complex I) NADH dehydrogenase from the rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase. An 18-fold purification of the rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase was achieved. The enzyme is specific for NADH with optimal activity around pH 7.2. The apparent Km for NADH is 28 microM, with dichloroindophenol as acceptor at pH 7.2. The rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase appears to be a flavoprotein and no iron-sulphur centres were detected by electron spin resonance spectroscopy.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of the rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase of mitochondria from Arum maculatum. 674 60

A soluble NADH dehydrogenase (NADH:ferricyanide oxidoreductase) has been obtained by simple disruption of cells of Thermus aquaticus strain T351, and purified. The enzyme is of low molecular mass, 50 000 Da, and displays many of the properties of the membrane-bound enzyme, including inhibition by both NADH and ferricyanide, and the same Km for ferricyanide. The enzyme contains 0.05 mol of FMN, 0.16 mol of labile sulphur and 2.2 mol of iron per mol of protein. The enzyme is inhibited by NAD and cupferron competitively with ferricyanide, and by ATP (but not ADP) competitively with NADH. The enzyme is particularly thermostable, having a half-life at 95 degrees C of 35 min. The effect of temperature on the molar absorption coefficient and the stability of NADH was determined.
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PMID:A soluble NADH dehydrogenase (NADH: ferricyanide oxidoreductase) from Thermus aquaticus strain T351. 684 28


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