Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (cytochrome oxidase)
8,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of antimycin on (i) the respiratory activity of the KCN-insensitive pathway of mitochondria of Neurospora grown on chloramphenicol (chloramphenicol-grown) with durohydroquinone and succinate or NADH as substrate, (ii) the electron transfer from the b-type cytochromes to ubiquinone with durohydroquinone as electron donor as well as (iii) the electron transfer from the b-type cytochromes to duroquinone with succinate as electron donor in chloramphenicol-grown Neurospora and beef heart submitochondrial particles was studied. All experiments were performed in the uncoupled state. 1. The respiratory chain of chloramphenicol-grown Neurospora mitochondria branches at ubiquinone into two pathways. Besides the cytochrome oxidase-dependent pathway, a KCN-insensitive branch equiped with a salicylhydroxamate-sensitive oxidase exists. Durohydroquinone, succinate or NADH are oxidized via both pathways. The durohydroquinone oxidation via the KCN-insensitive pathway is inhibited by antimycin, wheras the succinate or NADH oxidation is not. The titer for ful inhibition is one mol antimycin per mol cytochrome b-563 or cytochrome b-557. 2. The electron transfer from durohydroquinone to ubiquinone, which takes place in the KCN-inhibited state, does not occur in the antimycin-inhibited state. 3. The reduction of duroquinone by succinate in the presence of KCN is inhibited by antimycin. The titer for full inhibition is one mol antimycin per mol cytochrome b-566 or cytochrome b-562 for beef heart (or cytochrome b-563 or cytochrome b-557 for Neurospora). 4. When electron transfer from the b-type cytochromes to cytochrome C1, ubiquinone and duroquinone is inhibited by antimycin, the hemes of cytochrome b-566 and cytochrome b-562 (or cytochrome b-563 and cytochrome b-557) are in the reduced state. 5. The experimental results suggest that the two b-type cytochromes form a binary complex the electron transferring activity of which is inhibited by antimycin, the titer for full inhibition being one mol of antimycin per mol of complex. The electron transfer from the b-type cytochromes to ubiquinone is inhibited in a non-linear fashion.
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PMID:Inhibition of electron transfer from ferrocytochrome b to ubiquinone, cytochrome c1 and duroquinone by antimycin. 16 67

Tridemorph (N-tridecyl-2,6-dimethylmorpholine) inhibits both the NADH-oxidase and the succinate-cytochrome c oxydoreductase system of non-phosphorylating electron transfer particles from beef heart. The concentration required for half-inhibition amounted to 3,4 muM and 24 muM respectively. Two different sites of action in the respiratory chain could be localized by means of difference spectroscopy and measurements of enzymic activities in various partial systems. The inhibition of the NADH-ubiquinone oxydoreductase activity as well as the suppression of the NADH-induced reduction of all cytochromes on the one hand and the insensitivity of the NADH-ferricyanide oxydoreductase system on the other argue in favour of a site of action similar to rotenone. The partial suppression of the succinate-induced reduction of cytochrome b with simultaneous complete inhibition of the reduction of the other cytochromes indicate an additional site of action analogous to antimycin A. Both inhibitory actions appeared instantaneously after the addition of tridemorph and were counteracted by serum albumin. Furthermore, tridemorph inhibited the oxydation of external ferrocytochrome c but not that of ascorbate/tetra-methyl-p-phenylene-diamine-HCI (TMPID) showing that it is not a true inhibitor of the cytochrome oxidase. The TMPD-induced bypass of the succinate oxidation was inhibited as well. The possible role of the inhibition of the main pathway of the respiratory chain for the fungicidal action of tridemorph is discussed.
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PMID:[The systemic fungicide tridermorph as an inhibitor of the respiratory chain of electron transfer particles from beef heart mitochondria]. 18 65

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.
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PMID:Disappearance of the cyanide-insensitive pathway of oxidation in mitochondria of MI-1 mutant of Neurospora crassa in vitro. 20 34

1. Purified mitochondria have been prepared from wild type Paramecium tetraurelia and from the mutant Cl1 which lacks cytochrome aa3. Both mitochondrial preparations are characterized by cyanide insensitivity. Their spectral properties and their redox potentials have been studied. 2. Difference spectra (dithionite reduced minus oxidized) of mitochondria from wild type P. tetraurelia at 77 K revealed the alpha peaks of b-type cytochrome (s) at 553 and 557 nm, of c-type cytochrome at 549 nm and a-type cytochrome at 608 nm. Two alpha peaks at 549 and 545 nm could be distinguished in the isolated cytochrome c at 77 K. After cytochrome c extraction from wild type mitochondria, a new peak at 551 nm was unmasked, probably belonging to cytochdrome c1. The a-type cytochrome was characterized by a split Soret band with maxima at 441 and 450 nm. The mitochondria of the mutant Cl1 in exponential phase of growth differed from the wild type mitochondria in that cytochrome aa3 was absent while twice the quantity of cytochrome b was present. In stationary phase, mitochondria of the mutant were characterized by a new absorption peak at 590 nm. 3. Cytochrome aa3 was present at a concentration of 0.3 nmol/mg protein in wild type mitochondria and ubiquinone at a concentration of 8 nmol/mg protein both in mitochondria of the wild type and the mutant Cl1. Cytochrome aa3 was more susceptible to heat than cytochromes b and c,c1.
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PMID:The respiratory chain of Paramecium tetraurelia in wild type and the mutant Cl1. I. Spectral properties and redox potentials. 22 7

1. The relationship between chain composition and the efficiency of respiration-linked proton translocation was studied in nine bacterial species of widely differing taxonomic and ecological status. 2. All the bacteria investigated contained respiratory chain dehydrogenases, ubiquinone and/or menaquinone, cytochrome b and cytochrome oxidase aa3 and/or o. In addition, some of these organisms also contained pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase and/or cytochrome c. 3. leads to H+/O ratios of whole cell suspensions oxidising endogenous substrates were in the approximate range 4-8 mol H+ translocated per g-atom oxygen consumed. It was concluded from the observed leads to H+/O ratios of cells loaded with specific substrates that proton-translocating loops 1 and 2 were present in all of the organisms investigated, but that loops 0 and 3 were dependent upon the presence of pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase and cytochrome c respectively. 4. The wide range in energy conservation efficiency which was observed in these organisms is discussed in relation to their respiratory chain composition and natural habitat.
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PMID:Bacterial respiration-linked proton translocation and its relationship to respiratory-chain composition. 24 Jun 79

The mitochondria isolated from the ciliate protozoon Tetrahymena pyriformis carry an oxidative phosphorylation with P/O ratio of 2 for succinate oxidation and P/O ratio of 3 for the oxidation of the NAD-linked substrates. The respiration is more than 90% inhibited with 1 mM cyanide while antimycin A and rotenone inhibit at concentrations of 1000-fold higher than those effective in mammalian mitochondria. Using a combination of spectral studies and potentiometric titrations, the components of the respiratory chain were identified and characterized with respect to the values of their half-reduction potentials. In the cytochrome bc1 region of the chain a cytochrome c was present with an Em7.2 of 0.225 V and two components with absorption maxima at 560 nm and the half-reduction potential values of -0.065 and -0.15 V at pH 7.2. The cytochrome with the more positive half-reduction potential was identified as the analogue of the cytochrome(s) b present in mitochondria of higher organisms, while the cytochrome with the more negative half-reduction potential was tentatively identified as cytochrome o. In addition ubiquinone was present at a concentration of approx. 4 nmol per mg mitochondrial protein. In the spectral region where cytochromes a absorb at least three cytochromes were found. A cytochrome with an absorption maximum at 593 nm and a midpoint potential of -0.085 V at pH 7.2 was identified as cytochrome a1. The absorption change at 615-640 nm, attributed usually to cytochrome a2, was resolved into two components with Em7,2 values of 0,245 and 0.345 V. It is concluded that the terminal oxidase in Tetrahymena pyriformis mitochondria is cytochrome a2 which in its two component structure resembles cytochrome aa3.
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PMID:Mitochondrial respiratory chain of Tetrahymena pyriformis. The thermodynamic and spectral properties. 40 46

Energization of the pyridine nucleotide transhydrogenase in everted membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli JM83 was compared with the process in vesicles of the same strain transformed with the plasmid pDC21 overexpressing this enzyme. Proton translocation was assayed by the quenching of the fluorescence of the probe quinacrine. Agents able to discharge transmembrane proton gradients such as nigericin and the uncouplers 3,3',4',5-tetrachlorosalicylanilide and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone inhibited ATP-dependent transhydrogenation of NADP by NADH and discharged transmembrane proton gradients generated by transhydrogenation of AcNAD by NADPH, by oxidation of NADH, and by hydrolysis of ATP. This was observed in everted membrane vesicles of both strains JM83 and JM83pDC21. These strains differed significantly in the response of the NADH oxidation-dependent transhydrogenase. This reaction was inhibited by nigericin and uncouplers in membrane vesicles of JM83 but there was little inhibition or the reaction was stimulated in JM83pDC21, in spite of the discharge of the NADH oxidation-generated proton gradient measured by quinacrine fluorescence in the latter strain. It is proposed that the transhydrogenase is energized by direct or local (nonbulk phase) proton translocation in membranes of this strain. Uncouplers might facilitate these routes but would not discharge them. The generality of these observations was shown using other strains. NADH oxidase activity was severalfold lower in membrane vesicles of JM83pDC21 compared with JM83. The levels of ubiquinone and cytochromes, and the activities of NADH dehydrogenases I and II, and of cytochrome oxidase, were similar in the two strains. It is concluded that the NADH oxidase activity of JM83pDC21 is low because of the reduced rate of collision between electron-transferring complexes of the respiratory chain due to the large amount of transhydrogenase protein in the membranes of this strain. The large amount of transhydrogenase favors direct, nonbulk phase proton transfer. Transhydrogenase activity was stimulated by Ca2+, Mg2+, or Mn2+.
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PMID:Anomalous effect of uncouplers on respiratory chain-linked transhydrogenation in Escherichia coli membranes: evidence for a localized proton pathway? 131 Nov 61

Structural mitochondrial damage accompanies the cytotoxic effects of several drugs including tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Using various inhibitors of mitochondrial electron transport we have investigated the mechanism of TNF-mediated cytotoxicity in L929 and WEHI 164 clone 13 mouse fibrosarcoma cells. Inhibitors with different sites of action modulated TNF cytotoxicity, however, with contrasting effects on final cell viability. Inhibition of mitochondrial electron transport at complex III (cytochrome c reductase) by antimycin A resulted in a marked potentiation of TNF-mediated injury. In contrast, when the electron flow to ubiquinone was blocked, either at complex I (NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase) with amytal or at complex II (succinate-ubiquinone reductase) with thenoyltrifluoroacetone, cells were markedly protected against TNF cytotoxicity. Neither uncouplers nor inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation nor complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase) inhibitors significantly interfered with TNF-mediated effects, ruling out the involvement of energy-coupled phenomena. In addition, the toxic effects of TNF were counteracted by the addition of antioxidants and iron chelators. Furthermore, we analyzed the direct effect of TNF on mitochondrial morphology and functions. Treatment of L929 cells with TNF led to an early degeneration of the mitochondrial ultrastructure without any pronounced damage of other cellular organelles. Analysis of the mitochondrial electron flow revealed that TNF treatment led to a rapid inhibition of the mitochondria to oxidize succinate and NADH-linked substrates. The inhibition of electron transport was dose-dependent and became readily detectable 60 min after the start of TNF treatment, thus preceding the onset of cell death by at least 3-6 h. In contrast, only minor effects were observed on complex IV activity. The different effects observed with the mitochondrial respiratory chain inhibitors provide suggestive evidence that mitochondrial production of oxygen radicals mainly generated at the ubisemiquinone site is a causal mechanism of TNF cytotoxicity. This conclusion is further supported by the protective effect of antioxidants as well as the selective pattern of damage of mitochondrial chain components and characteristic alterations of the mitochondrial ultrastructure.
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PMID:Cytotoxic activity of tumor necrosis factor is mediated by early damage of mitochondrial functions. Evidence for the involvement of mitochondrial radical generation. 131 87

The tissutal concentrations of reduced glutathione (GSH) and the contents of some key components in the electron transfer chain (namely ubiquinone, cytochromes b, c1, c, and aa3) of the intraterminal mitochondria are measured in the forebrains from 20-, 60-, or 100-week-old Wistar rats. Moreover, in 60-week-old rats, the biochemical analyses are performed also 18 h after the induction of a peroxidative stress by cyclohexene-1-one. The rats have been i.p. pretreated for 8 weeks (7 days/week) with agents acting on macrocirculation (papaverine), carbohydrate metabolism (hopanthenate), lipid metabolism (phosphatidylcholine), energy transduction (theniloxazine), and dopaminergic system (dihydroergocriptine). Brain aging is characterized by the decrease in both GSH and mitochondrial cytochrome aa3, without changes in ubiquinone and cytochrome b populations. In the same way, the peroxidative stress induced by cyclohexene-1-one causes both a GSH depletion and an imbalance among the concentrations of the mitochondrial electron transfer carriers. Only cytochrome aa3 retains all the partially-reduced oxygen intermediates tightly bound to its active sites. Therefore, it is possible to hypothesize that an electron leakage at the level of the auto-oxidizing chain components (i.e., cytochrome b and ubiquinone populations) increases the release of activated oxygen species (superoxide radical, hydroxyl radical). The treatment with the quoted pharmacological tools suggests that GSH and mitochondrial electron transfer carriers are functionally linked, but not interdependent one another.
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PMID:The mitochondrial electron transfer alteration as a factor involved in the brain aging. 132 Jul 45

The biochemical characteristics of the electron transfer chain are evaluated in purified non-synaptic ("free") mitochondria from the forebrain of 60-week-old rats weekly subjected to peroxidative stress (once, twice, or three times) by the electrophilic prooxidant 2-cyclohexene-1-one. The following parameters are evaluated: (a) content of respiratory components, namely ubiquinone, cytochrome b, cytochrome c1, cytochrome c; (b) specific activity of enzymes, namely citrate synthase, succinate dehydrogenase, rotenone-sensitive NADH: cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase; (c) concentration of reduced glutathione (GSH). Before the first peroxidative stress induction, the rats are administered for 8 weeks by intraperitoneal injection of vehicle, papaverine, delta-yohimbine, almitrine or hopanthenate. The rats are treated also during the week(s) before the second or third peroxidative stress. The cerebral peroxidative stress induces: (a) initially, a decrease in brain GSH concentration concomitant with a decrease in the mitochondrial activity of cytochrome oxidase of aa3-type (complex IV), without changes in ubiquinone and cytochrome b populations; (b) subsequently, an alteration in the transfer molecule cytochrome c and, finally, in rotenone-sensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase (complex I) and succinate dehydrogenase (complex II). The selective sensitivity of the chain components to peroxidative stress is supported by the effects of the concomitant subchronic treatment with agents acting at different biochemical steps. In fact, almitrine sets limits to its effects at cytochrome c content and aa3-type cytochrome oxidase activity, while delta-yohimbine sets limits to its effects at the level of tricarboxylic acid cycle (citrate synthase) and/or of intermediary between tricarboxylic acid cycle and complex II (succinate dehydrogenase).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Sequential damage in mitochondrial complexes by peroxidative stress. 166 94


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