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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)
Increased O2 metabolism imposed by physical exercise is likely to augment the production of active O2 species that have been shown to react with lipids, proteins, and DNA. Antioxidants and antioxidant enzymes, such as the selenium enzyme glutathione peroxidase, minimize or prevent such potentially toxic reactions. This study shows that selenium deficiency decreases glutathione peroxidase activity in liver and muscle (less than 80%, P less than 0.001), increases total glutathione in liver, muscle, and plasma (P less than 0.05) and increases muscle
cytochrome oxidase
activity, and
ubiquinone
content (P less than 0.05) but has no effect on endurance capacity. Exercise to exhaustion resulted in a significant (P less than 0.001) elevation of total and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and a significant (P less than 0.05) decrease of vitamin E in plasma of control and selenium-deficient rats. Acute exercise also increased tissue GSSG levels in both control and selenium-deficient groups of rats. Hence, despite a large depletion of selenium-deficient glutathione peroxidase, pronounced oxidation of glutathione to GSSG can be produced by the increased oxidative metabolism during physical exercise. The results suggest that the residual glutathione peroxidase activity is sufficient to detoxify hydroperoxides in exercising selenium-deficient animals and to prevent the impairment of endurance capacity.
...
PMID:Selenium deficiency, endurance exercise capacity, and antioxidant status in rats. 343 84
The half-time for oxidation of cytochrome b(557) in mitochondria from etiolated mung bean (Phaseolus aureus) hypocotyls is 5.8 milliseconds at 24 Celsius in the absence or presence of 0.3 mm KCN, when the oxidation is carried out by injecting a small amount of oxygenated medium into a suspension of mitochondria made anaerobic in the presence of succinate plus malonate. Since oxygen is consumed by the alternate, cyanide-insensitive respiratory pathway of these mitochondria, cycles of oxidation and reduction can be obtained with the oxygen pulses when cyanide is present. Reduced cytochromes (a + a(3)) also become oxidized at nearly the uninhibited rate under these conditions, a(3) completely and a partially. The half-time for oxidation of c(547) is also unaffected by 0.3 mm KCN, but c(549) has a half-time equal to that of c(547) in the presence of KCN, compared to the shorter one observed in the absence of inhibitor. The maximum extent of oxidation of the cytochromes c is about 70% in the presence of 0.3 mm KCN; this oxidation is rapidly followed by an extensive reduction which is synchronous with the reduction of cytochrome a observed under the same conditions. In the presence of cyanide, it appears likely that the cytochromes c and b(557) are oxidized by
cytochrome oxidase
in oxygen pulse experiments, rather than by the alternate oxidase. The oxidation of cytochrome b(553) is partially inhibited by KCN, but complete oxidation is attained in the aerobic steady state with excess oxygen. If the oxygen pulse experiment is carried out in the presence of sufficient malonate so that entry of reducing equivalents into the respiratory chain occurs at a rate negligible compared to inter-carrier electron transport, the half-time for flavoprotein oxidation is unaffected by 0.3 mm KCN while that for
ubiquinone
oxidation is but 2-fold larger. The observed net oxidation rate of these two carriers in mung bean mitochondria is more sensitive to the entry rate of reducing equivalents, as set by succinate concentration and malonate to succinate ratio, then it is in skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus) mitochondria. These observations are interpreted in terms of a respiratory carrier Y, placed between flavoprotein plus
ubiquinone
and the cytochromes, which is the fork in the split respiratory pathway to the two terminal oxidases and which has lower electron transport capacity in mung bean mitochondria than in skunk cabbage mitochondria.
...
PMID:The respiratory chain of plant mitochondria. IV. Oxidation rates of the respiratory carriers of mung bean mitochondria in the presence of cyanide. 542 15
A histochemical study of the metabolism of rat renal arteries and arterioles. Rat renal arteries and arterioles were examined histochemically to determine their metabolic profiles. Succinate, malate and NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase,
cytochrome oxidase
and
ubiquinone
were assessed to determine aerobic metabolism. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and DPN diaphorase were evaluated to determine hexose-monophosphate-shunt activity. Anaerobic metabolism was evaluated via lactate dehydrogenase, and the substrate, glycogen. Gomori's lipase, beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase and amounts of neutral fat and free fatty acids were assessed as indicators of lipid utilization. Myosin ATPase activity was evaluated as an index of ATP utilization for contraction. Deoxyribonucleic and ribonucleic acids were appraised as indicators of protein synthesis. In general, the oxidative enzymes and myosin ATPase demonstrate considerable activity in renal arteries and arterioles which suggests aerobic metabolism and ATP usage. Renal arteries and arterioles also appear capable of anaerobic metabolism as indicated by strong lactate dehydrogenase reactivity and by the presence of slight to moderate quantities of glycogen, while high levels of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and moderate amounts of deoxyribonucleic acid suggest a potential for beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, minimal lipase activity, and the absence of fatty acids with substantial amounts of neutral fat, indicate limited lipid catabolism.
...
PMID:A histochemical study of the metabolism of rat renal arteries and arterioles. 620 11
The effect of lonidamine, an antispermatogenic and antitumor drug, on the oxygen consumption, ATPase activity, and redox state of the electron carriers of Ehrlich ascites tumor mitochondria has been studied. Lonidamine inhibits ADP- and uncoupler-stimulated respiration on various NAD- and FAD-linked substrates, but does not affect state 4 respiration. Experiments to determine its site of action showed that lonidamine does not significantly inhibit electron flow through
cytochrome oxidase
. Electron flow through site 2, the
ubiquinone
-cytochrome b-cytochrome c1 complex, also was unaffected by lonidamine, which failed to inhibit the oxidation of duroquinol. Moreover, inhibition of electron flow through site 2 was also excluded because of the inability of the N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine bypass to relieve the lonidamine inhibition of the oxidation of pyruvate + malate. The F0F1ATPase activity and vectorial H+ ejection are also unaffected by lonidamine. The inhibition of succinate oxidation by lonidamine was found to take place at a point between succinate and iron-sulfur center S3. Spectroscopic experiments demonstrated that lonidamine inhibits the reduction of mitochondrial NAD+ by pyruvate + malate and other NAD-linked substrates in the transition from state 1 to state 4. However, lonidamine does not inhibit reduction of added NAD+ by submitochondrial vesicles or by soluble purified NAD-linked dehydrogenases. These observations, together with other evidence, suggest that electron transport in tumor mitochondria is inhibited by lonidamine at the dehydrogenase-coenzyme level, particularly when the electron carriers are in a relatively oxidized state and/or when the inner membrane-matrix compartment is in the condensed state. The action of lonidamine in several respects resembles the selective inhibition of electron transport in tumor cells produced by cytotoxic macrophages (D. L. Granger and A. L. Lehninger (1982) J. Cell Biol. 95, 527).
...
PMID:Action of the antitumor and antispermatogenic agent lonidamine on electron transport in Ehrlich ascites tumor mitochondria. 622 86
Membranes from free-living Rhizobium japonicum were isolated to study electron transport components involved in H2 oxidation. The H2/O2 uptake rate ratio in membranes was approximately 2. The electron transport inhibitors antimycin A, cyanide, azide, hydroxylamine, and 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO) inhibited H2 uptake and H2-dependent O2 uptake significantly. H2-reduced minus O2-oxidized absorption difference spectra revealed peaks at 551.5, 560, and 603 nm, indicating the involvement of cytochromes c, b, and a-a3, respectively. H2-dependent cytochrome reduction was completely inhibited in the presence of 0.15 mM HQNO. This inhibition was relieved by the addition of 0.1 mM menadione. Evidence is presented for the involvement of two b-type cytochromes in H2 oxidation. One b-type cytochrome was not reduced by ascorbate and had an absorption peak at 560 nm. The reduction of this cytochrome by H2 was not inhibited by cyanide. A second b-type cytochrome, cytochrome b', was not reduced by H2 in the presence of cyanide. This cytochrome had an absorption peak at 558 nm. Carbon monoxide difference spectra with H2 as reductant provided evidence for the involvement of cytochrome o as well as
cytochrome a3
in H2 oxidation. H2 uptake activity in cell-free extracts was inhibited by UV light irradiation. Most of the activity of the UV-treated extracts was restored with the addition of
ubiquinone
. The restored activity was inhibited by cyanide. A branched electron transport pathway from H2 to O2 is proposed.
...
PMID:Electron transport components involved in hydrogen oxidation in free-living Rhizobium japonicum. 628 65
Using dithionite difference spectra we have detected cytochrome b in highly purified human neutrophils at a concentration of 0.08 nmol/mg protein. The presence of quinone was identified in lipid extracts at a concentration of approx. 0.06 nmol/mg protein. It was identified as
ubiquinone
-10 by mass spectrographic analysis. Simultaneous measurements of
cytochrome oxidase
indicated that these compounds could not be attributed to mitochondrial contamination. These results are compatible with the hypothesis that initiation of the respiratory burst in human neutrophils involves a multicomponent electron-transport system.
...
PMID:Identification and quantitation of electron-transport components in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils. 629 72
Specific activities of succinate:coenzyme Q reductase,
ubiquinone
:cytochrome c reductase,
cytochrome oxidase
, succinate:cytochrome c reductase, succinate oxidase, and ubiquinol oxidase have been measured in rat liver mitochondria in the presence of Triton X-100. The last three activities are much more sensitive to Triton X-100 than the first ones; the data suggest that the electron transport chain components cannot react with each other in the presence of the detergent. At least in the case of succinate:cytochrome c reductase, reconstitution of the detergent-treated membranes with externally added phospholipids reverses the inhibition produced by Triton X-100. These results support the idea that the respiratory chain components diffuse at random in the plane of the inner mitochondrial membrane; the main effect of the detergent would be to impair lateral diffusion by decreasing the area of lipid bilayer. When detergent-treated mitochondrial suspensions are centrifuged in order to separate the solubilized from the particulate material, only the first three enzyme activities mentioned above are found in the supernatants. After centrifugation, a latent ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidase activity becomes apparent, whereas the same centrifugation process produces inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase in the presence of certain Triton X-100 concentrations. These effects could be due either to a selective solubilization of regulatory or catalytic subunits or to a conformational change of the enzyme-detergent complex.
...
PMID:Effect of the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 on mitochondrial succinate-oxidizing enzymes. 632 Jul 42
Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching was used to determine the diffusion coefficients of the oxidation-reduction (redox) components
ubiquinone
, complex III (cytochromes b-c1), cytochrome c, and
complex IV
(
cytochrome oxidase
) of the mitochondrial inner membrane. All redox components diffuse in two dimensions as common-pool electron carriers. Cytochrome c diffuses in two and three dimensions concomitantly, and its diffusion rate, unlike that of all other redox components, is modulated along with its activity by ionic strength. The diffusion coefficients established in this study reveal that the theoretical diffusion-controlled collision frequencies of all redox components are greater than their experimental maximum (uncoupled) turnover numbers. Since electron transport is slower than the theoretical limit set by the lateral diffusion of the redox components, ordered chains, assemblies, or aggregates of redox components are not necessary to account for electron transport. Rather, mitochondrial electron transport is diffusion coupled, consistent with a "random-collision model" for electron transport.
...
PMID:Relationship between lateral diffusion, collision frequency, and electron transfer of mitochondrial inner membrane oxidation-reduction components. 632 33
Cells of the E3-24 mutant of the strain D273-10B of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, grown in a fermentable substrate not showing catabolite repression of respiration (2% galactose), are able to respire, in spite of their
ubiquinone
deficiency in mitochondrial membranes. Mitochondria isolated from these mutant cells oxidize exogenous NADH through a pathway insensitive to antimycin A but inhibited by cyanide. Addition of methanolic solutions of
ubiquinone
homologs stimulates the oxidation rate and restores antimycin A sensitivity in both isolated mitochondria and whole cells. Mersalyl preincubation of isolated mitochondria inhibits both NADH oxidation and NADH-cytochrome c oxido-reductase activity (assayed in the presence of cyanide) with the same pattern. Electrons resulting from the oxidation of exogenous NADH reduce both cytochrome b5 and endogenous cytochrome c. The increase in ionic strength stimulates NADH oxidation, which is also coupled to the ATP synthesis with an ATP/O ratio similar to that obtained with ascorbate plus N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylendiamine (TMPD) as substrate. The effect of cyanide on these activities and on NADH-induced endogenous cytochrome c reduction is also comparable. These results support the existence in vivo and in isolated mitochondria of a energy-conserving pathway for the oxidation of cytoplasmatic NADH not related to the dehydrogenases of the inner membrane, the
ubiquinone
, and the b-c1 complex, but involving a cytochrome c shuttle between the NADH-cytochrome c reductase of the outer membrane and
cytochrome oxidase
in the inner membrane.
...
PMID:The oxidation of external NADH by an intermembrane electron transfer in mitochondria from the ubiquinone-deficient mutant E3-24 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 637 98
Administration of 2-methyl-4-dimethylaminobenzene in the diet (0.1%, w/w) for 85-90 days doubled the content of mitochondria in the livers of rats. The azodye was covalently bound to liver proteins, and about 15% of the amount found in liver was associated with the mitochondrial fraction. Mitochondria isolated from the livers of azodye-fed animals showed drastically lowered ability to oxidize NAD+-linked substrates. The inhibited electron-transfer step was the reduction of
ubiquinone
. The organelles showed a large increase in succinate oxidase activity. The activity of
cytochrome oxidase
and the content of
cytochrome aa3
were substantially higher in these organelles. Azodye-fed animals showed depressed serum cholesterol concentrations. The content of
ubiquinone
in liver also registered a small increase.
...
PMID:Functional changes in rat liver mitochondria on administration of 2-methyl-4-dimethylaminoazobenzene. 644 70
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