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Query: KEGG:D02011 (
FAD
)
5,530
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe a system capable of measuring the laser induced fluorescence emission of two coenzymes (NADH and
FAD
) via an optical fibre for in vivo monitoring of anatomical, physiological or pathological changes in biological systems. This optical technique permits the measurement of changes in the metabolism of cells in real-time and is nearly non-destructive. We present results of examinations on the localisation of transitions between different tissue and the monitoring of the oxygenation level (
ischemia
) in muscle or changes in the cellular activity of bacteria in a bioreactor.
...
PMID:Applications of autofluorescence for characterisation of biological systems (biomonitoring). 1246 47
Many tissues produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) during reoxygenation after hypoxia or
ischemia
; however, whether ROS are formed during hypoxia is controversial. We tested the hypothesis that ROS are generated in skeletal muscle during exposure to acute hypoxia before reoxygenation. Isolated rat diaphragm strips were loaded with dihydrofluorescein-DA (Hfluor-DA), a probe that is oxidized to fluorescein (Fluor) by intracellular ROS. Changes in fluorescence due to Fluor, NADH, and
FAD
were measured using a tissue fluorometer. The system had a detection limit of 1 microM H2O2 applied to the muscle superfusate. When the superfusion buffer was changed rapidly from 95% O2 to 0%, 5%, 21%, or 40% O2, transient elevations in Fluor were observed that were proportional to the rise in NADH fluorescence and inversely proportional to the level of O2 exposure. This signal could be inhibited completely with 40 microM ebselen, a glutathione peroxidase mimic. After brief hypoxia exposure (10 min) or exposure to brief periods of H2O2, the fluorescence signal returned to baseline. Furthermore, tissues loaded with the oxidized form of the probe (Fluor-DA) showed a similar pattern of response that could be inhibited with ebselen. These results suggest that Fluor exists in a partially reversible redox state within the tissue. When Hfluor-loaded tissues were contracted with low-frequency twitches, Fluor emission and NADH emission were significantly elevated in a way that resembled the hypoxia-induced signal. We conclude that in the transition to low intracellular P(O2), a burst of intracellular ROS is formed that may have functional implications regarding skeletal muscle O2-sensing systems and responses to acute metabolic stress.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen species formation in the transition to hypoxia in skeletal muscle. 1578 84
We examined if sevoflurane given before cold
ischemia
of intact hearts (anesthetic preconditioning, APC) affords additional protection by further improving mitochondrial energy balance and if this is abolished by a mitochondrial KATP blocker. NADH and
FAD
fluorescence was measured within the left ventricular wall of 5 groups of isolated guinea pig hearts: (1) hypothermia alone; (2) hypothermia+ischemia; (3) APC (4.1% sevoflurane)+cold
ischemia
; (4) 5-HD+cold
ischemia
, and (5) APC+5-HD+cold
ischemia
. Hearts were exposed to sevoflurane for 15 minutes followed by 15 minutes of washout at 37 degrees C before cooling, 2 hours of 27 degrees C
ischemia
, and 2 hours of 37 degrees C reperfusion. The KATP channel inhibitor 5-HD was perfused before and after sevoflurane.
Ischemia
caused a rapid increase in NADH and a decrease in
FAD
that waned over 2 hours. Warm reperfusion led to a decrease in NADH and an increase in
FAD
. APC attenuated the changes in NADH and
FAD
and further improved postischemic function and reduced infarct size. 5-HD blocked the cardioprotective effects of APC but not APC-induced alterations of NADH and
FAD
. Thus, APC improves redox balance and has additive cardioprotective effects with mild hypothermic
ischemia
. 5-HD blocks APC-induced cardioprotective effects but not improvements in mitochondrial bioenergetics. This suggests that mediation of protection by KATP channel opening during cold
ischemia
and reperfusion is downstream from the APC-induced improvement in redox state or that these changes in redox state are not attenuated by KATP channel antagonism.
...
PMID:Improved mitochondrial bioenergetics by anesthetic preconditioning during and after 2 hours of 27 degrees C ischemia in isolated hearts. 1611 32
Reperfusion of the ischemic myocardium leads to a burst of reactive O(2) species (ROS), which is a primary determinant of postischemic myocardial dysfunction. We tested the hypothesis that early O(2) delivery and the cellular redox state modulate the initial myocardial ROS production at reperfusion. Isolated buffer-perfused rat hearts were loaded with the fluorophores dihydrofluorescein or Amplex red to detect intracellular and extracellular ROS formation using surface fluorometry at the left ventricular wall. Hearts were made globally ischemic for 20 min and then reperfused with either 95% or 20% O(2)-saturated perfusate. The same protocol was repeated in hearts loaded with dihydrofluorescein and perfused with either 20 or 5 mM glucose-buffered solution to determine relative changes in NADH and
FAD
. Myocardial O(2) delivery during the first 5 min of reperfusion was 84.7 +/- 4.2 ml O(2)/min with 20% O(2)-saturated buffer and 354.4 +/- 22.8 ml O(2)/min with 95% O(2) (n = 8/group, P < 0.001). The fluorescein signal (intracellular ROS) was significantly increased in hearts reperfused with 95% O(2) compared with 20% O(2). However, the resorufin signal (extracellular ROS) was significantly increased with 20% O(2) compared with 95% O(2) during reperfusion. Perfusion of hearts with 20 mM glucose reduced the (.)NADH during
ischemia
(P < 0.001) and the (.)ROS at reperfusion (P < 0.001) compared with 5.5 mM-perfused glucose hearts. In conclusion, initial O(2) delivery to the ischemic myocardium modulates a compartment-specific ROS response at reperfusion such that high O(2) delivery promotes intracellular ROS and low O(2) delivery promotes extracellular ROS. The redox state that develops during
ischemia
appears to be an important precursor for reperfusion ROS production.
...
PMID:O2 delivery and redox state are determinants of compartment-specific reactive O2 species in myocardial reperfusion. 1702 60
Mitochondria play a central role in both the physiological and pathophysiological regulation of cell survival/death. Increasing evidence places mitochondrial dysfunction at the center of many neuropathological conditions. The present study investigates the extent of mitochondrial dysfunction in cortical, hippocampal and cerebellar tissues in a rat model of hypoxia-
ischemia
(HI). We hypothesized that; mitochondrial dysfunction in situ may be prevented by treatment with clomethiazole (CMZ), a GABA(A) receptor agonist. Assessment of mitochondrial
FAD
-linked respiration at both 1- and 3-day post-HI revealed a marked decrease in activity from ipsilateral cortical and hippocampal regions (P<0.001). In addition, small changes were seen in contralateral cortical and hippocampal tissues as well as in the cerebellum at 3-days (P<0.05). Assessment of the mitochondrial electron transport chain (complexes I-V), and mitochondrial markers of integrity (citrate synthase) and oxidative stress (aconitase) confirmed mitochondrial impairment in ipsilateral regions following HI. Complexes I, II-III, V and citrate synthase were also impaired in contralateral regions and cerebellum 3-days post-HI. Treatment with CMZ (414 mg/kg/day via minipumps) provided marked protection to all aspects of neuronal tissue assessed. Circulating cytokine (interleukin [IL]-1alpha, IL-1beta, tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-alpha, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor [GM-CSF], IL-4 and IL-10) levels were also assessed in these animals 3-days post-HI. Plasma IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, TNF-alpha and GM-CSF levels were significantly increased post-HI. Treatment with CMZ ameliorated the increases in IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, TNF-alpha and GM-CSF levels while increasing plasma IL-4 and IL-10 levels. This study provides evidence of the extent of mitochondrial damage following an HI-insult. In addition, we have shown that protection afforded by CMZ extends to preservation of mitochondrial function and integrity via anti-inflammatory mediated pathways.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial involvement in transhemispheric diaschisis following hypoxia-ischemia: Clomethiazole-mediated amelioration. 1711 78
We have shown that cold perfusion of hearts generates reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS). In this study, we determined 1) whether ROS scavenging only during cold perfusion before global
ischemia
improves mitochondrial and myocardial function, and 2) which ROS leads to compromised cardiac function during
ischemia
and reperfusion (I/R) injury. Using fluorescence spectrophotometry, we monitored redox balance (NADH and
FAD
), O(2)(*-) levels and mitochondrial Ca(2+) (m[Ca(2+)]) at the left ventricular wall in 120 guinea pig isolated hearts divided into control (Con), MnTBAP (a superoxide dismutase 2 mimetic), MnTBAP (M) + catalase (C) + glutathione (G) (MCG), C+G (CG), and N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor) groups. After an initial period of warm perfusion, hearts were treated with drugs before and after at 27 degrees C. Drugs were washed out before 2 h at 27 degrees C
ischemia
and 2 h at 37 degrees C reperfusion. We found that on reperfusion the MnTBAP group had the worst functional recovery and largest infarction with the highest m[Ca(2+)], most oxidized redox state and increased ROS levels. The MCG group had the best recovery, the smallest infarction, the lowest ROS level, the lowest m[Ca(2+)], and the most reduced redox state. CG and L-NAME groups gave results intermediate to those of the MnTBAP and MCG groups. Our results indicate that the scavenging of cold-induced O(2)(*-) species to less toxic downstream products additionally protects during and after cold I/R by preserving mitochondrial function. Because MnTBAP treatment showed the worst functional return along with poor preservation of mitochondrial bioenergetics, accumulation of H(2)O(2) and/or hydroxyl radicals during cold perfusion may be involved in compromised function during subsequent cold I/R injury.
...
PMID:ROS scavenging before 27 degrees C ischemia protects hearts and reduces mitochondrial ROS, Ca2+ overload, and changes in redox state. 1728 67
Mitochondrial superoxide (O2.) is an important mediator of
ischemia
/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The O2. generated in mitochondria also acts as a redox signal triggering cellular apoptosis. The enzyme succinate ubiquinone reductase (SQR or complex II) is one of the major mitochondrial components hosting regulatory thiols. Here the intrinsic protein S-glutathionylation (PrSSG) at the 70-kDa
FAD
-binding subunit of SQR was detected in rat heart and in isolated SQR using an anti-GSH monoclonal antibody. When rats were subjected to 30 min of coronary ligation followed by 24 h of reperfusion, the electron transfer activity (ETA) of SQR in post-ischemic myocardium was significantly decreased by 41.5 +/- 2.9%. The PrSSGs of SQR-70 kDa were partially or completely eliminated in post-ischemic myocardium obtained from in vivo regional I/R hearts or isolated global I/R hearts, respectively. These results were further confirmed by using isolated succinate cytochrome c reductase (complex II + complex III). In the presence of succinate, O2. was generated and oxidized the SQR portion of SCR, leading to a 60-70% decrease in its ETA. The gel band of the S-glutathionylated SQR 70-kDa polypeptide was cut out and digested with trypsin, and the digests were subjected to liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry analysis. One cysteine residue, Cys(90), was involved in S-glutathionylation. These results indicate that the glutathione-binding domain, (77)AAFGLSEAGFNTACVTK(93) (where underline indicates Cys(90)), is susceptible to redox change induced by oxidative stress. Furthermore, in vitro S-glutathionylation of purified SQR resulted in enhanced SQR-derived electron transfer efficiency and decreased formation of the 70-kDa-derived protein thiyl radical induced by O2. . Thus, the decreasing S-glutathionylation and ETA in mitochondrial complex II are marked during myocardial ischemia/reperfusion. This redox-triggered impairment of complex II occurs in the post-ischemic heart and should be useful to identify disease pathogenesis related to reactive oxygen species-induced mitochondrial dysfunction.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial complex II in the post-ischemic heart: oxidative injury and the role of protein S-glutathionylation. 1784 55
Inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange (NHE) during
ischemia
reduces cardiac injury due to reduced reverse mode Na+/Ca2+ exchange. We hypothesized that activating NHE-1 at buffer pH 8 during
ischemia
increases mitochondrial oxidation, Ca2+ overload, and reactive O2 species (ROS) levels and worsens functional recovery in isolated hearts and that NHE inhibition reverses these effects. Guinea pig hearts were perfused with buffer at pH 7.4 (control) or pH 8 +/- NHE inhibitor eniporide for 10 minutes before and for 10 minutes after 35- minute
ischemia
and then for 110 minutes with pH 7.4 buffer alone. Mitochondrial NADH and
FAD
, [Ca2+], and superoxide were measured by spectrophotofluorometry. NADH and
FAD
were more oxidized, and cardiac function was worse throughout reperfusion after pH 8 versus pH 7.4, Ca2+ overload was greater at 10-minute reperfusion, and superoxide generation was higher at 30-minute reperfusion. The pH 7.4 and eniporide groups exhibited similar mitochondrial function, and cardiac performance was most improved after pH 7.4+eniporide. Cardiac function on reperfusion after pH 8+eniporide was better than after pH 8. Percent infarction was largest after pH 8 and smallest after pH 7.4+eniporide. Activation of NHE with pH 8 buffer and the subsequent decline in redox state with greater ROS and Ca2+ loading underlie the poor functional recovery after
ischemia
and reperfusion.
...
PMID:Enhanced Na+/H+ exchange during ischemia and reperfusion impairs mitochondrial bioenergetics and myocardial function. 1880 4
Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (LADH) is a
FAD
-linked subunit of alpha-ketoglutarate, pyruvate and branched-chain amino acid dehydrogenases and the glycine cleavage system. As an oxidoreductase it transfers electrons from the dihydrolipoic acid prosthetic group to the NAD(+) cofactor via its
FAD
center. Besides its physiological function it is capable of generating harmful reactive oxygen species (ROS) in pathological settings therefore it is implicated in neurodegeneration,
ischemia
-reperfusion, cancer and several other disorders. Pathological mutants of the enzyme cause severe, sometimes lethal syndromes like hypotonia, metabolic acidosis or inefficiency in development. Recently it has been revealed that LADH is a moonlighting protease when specific mutations in the dimerization surface destabilize the functional homodimer and expose a serine-protease-like catalytic dyad. As the basis of versatile functions of LADH is far from elucidation, there is a constant need for a pure and functional enzyme product for investigations. Several studies used recombinant human LADH before, however, it was generated by more complicated and/or physiologically less compatible protocols than reported here; most papers on functional and structural studies do not even report detailed protocols and characteristics (most importantly the purity) of their protein products. Here we describe the details of an optimized, easy-to-use periplasmic expression and one-step purification protocol for obtaining a highly pure, active and authentic (tag-cleaved) enzyme with the characterization of the protein product. The purified LADH can be used in biophysical and structural studies while the published protocol is easily convertible to a protein labeling procedure.
...
PMID:Periplasmic cold expression and one-step purification of human dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase. 1884 59
Mitochondria are damaged by cardiac
ischemia
/reperfusion (I/R) injury but can contribute to cardioprotection. We tested if hyperkalemic cardioplegia (CP) and lidocaine (LID) differently modulate mitochondrial (m) bioenergetics and protect hearts against I/R injury. Guinea pig hearts (n = 71) were perfused with Krebs Ringer's solution before perfusion for 1 minute just before
ischemia
with either CP (16 mM K) or LID (1 mM) or Krebs Ringer's (control, 4 mM K). The 1-minute perfusion period assured treatment during
ischemia
but not on reperfusion. Cardiac function, NADH,
FAD
, m[Ca], and superoxide (reactive oxygen species) were assessed at baseline, during the 1-minute perfusion, and continuously during I/R. During the brief perfusion before
ischemia
, CP and LID decreased reactive oxygen species and increased NADH without changing m[Ca]. Additionally, CP decreased
FAD
. During
ischemia
, NADH was higher and reactive oxygen species was lower after CP and LID, whereas m[Ca] was lower only after LID. On reperfusion, NADH and
FAD
were more normalized, and m[Ca] and reactive oxygen species remained lower after CP and LID. Better functional recovery and smaller infarct size after CP and LID were accompanied by better mitochondrial function. These results suggest that mitochondria may be implicated, directly or indirectly, in protection by CP and LID against I/R injury.
...
PMID:Modulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics in the isolated Guinea pig beating heart by potassium and lidocaine cardioplegia: implications for cardioprotection. 1962 Aug 79
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