Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
NADH:
ubiquinone reductase
, the respiratory chain
complex I
of mitochondria, consists of some 25 nuclear-encoded and seven mitochondrially encoded subunits, and contains as redox groups one FMN, probably one internal ubiquinone and at least four iron-sulphur clusters. We are studying the assembly of the enzyme in Neurospora crassa. The flux of radioactivity in cells that were pulse-labelled with [35S]methionine was followed through immunoprecipitable assembly intermediates into the holoenzyme. Labelled polypeptides were observed to accumulate transiently in a Mr 350,000 intermediate complex. This complex contains all mitochondrially encoded subunits of the enzyme as well as subunits encoded in the nucleus that have no homologous counterparts in a small, merely nuclear-encoded form of the NADH:
ubiquinone reductase
made by Neurospora crassa cells poisoned with chloramphenicol. With regard to their subunit compositions, the assembly intermediate and small NADH:
ubiquinone reductase
complement each other almost perfectly to give the subunit composition of the large
complex I
. These results suggest that two pathways exist in the assembly of
complex I
that independently lead to the preassembly of two major parts, which subsequently join to form the complex. One preassembled part is related to the small form of NADH:
ubiquinone reductase
and contributes most of the nuclear-encoded subunits, FMN, three iron-sulphur clusters and the site for the internal ubiquinone. The other part is the assembly intermediate and contributes all mitochondrially encoded subunits, one iron-sulphur cluster and the catalytic site for the substrate ubiquinone. We discuss the results with regard to the evolution of the electron pathway through
complex I
.
J
Mol
Biol 1990 Jun 20
PMID:Assembly of NADH: ubiquinone reductase (complex I) in Neurospora mitochondria. Independent pathways of nuclear-encoded and mitochondrially encoded subunits. 214 52
In HeLa cells, RNA polymerase III (pol III)-mediated transcription is severely inhibited by poliovirus infection. This inhibition is due primarily to the reduction in transcriptional activity of the pol III transcription factor TFIIIC in poliovirus-infected cells. However, the specific binding of TFIIIC to the VAI gene B-box sequence, as assayed by DNase I footprinting, is not altered by poliovirus infection. We have used gel retardation analysis to analyze TFIIIC-DNA complexes formed in nuclear extracts prepared from mock- and poliovirus-infected cells. In mock-infected cell extracts, two closely migrating TFIIIC-containing complexes, complexes I and II, were detected in the gel retardation assay. The slower migrating complex,
complex I
, was absent in poliovirus-infected cell extracts, and an increase occurred in the intensity of the faster-migrating complex (complex II). Also, in poliovirus-infected cell extracts, a new, rapidly migrating complex, complex III, was formed. Complex III may have been the result of limited proteolysis of
complex I
or II. These changes in TFIIIC-containing complexes in poliovirus-infected cell extracts correlated kinetically with the decrease in TFIIIC transcriptional activity. Complexes I, II, and III were chromatographically separated; only
complex I
was transcriptionally active and specifically restored pol III transcription when added to poliovirus-infected cell extracts. Acid phosphatase treatment partially converted
complex I
to complex II but did not affect the binding of complex II or III. Dephosphorylation and limited proteolysis of TFIIIC are discussed as possible mechanisms for the inhibition of pol III-mediated transcription by poliovirus.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Oct
PMID:A transcriptionally active form of TFIIIC is modified in poliovirus-infected HeLa cells. 220 7
The plus-strand replication origin of bacteriophage fl has a bipartite structure consisting of a required core origin region and an adjacent A + T-rich enhancer sequence that potentiates replication approximately 100-fold. The core origin binds the initiator protein (gpII) and the enhancer binds the Escherichia coli integration host factor (IHF). gpII binds the core origin in two steps, forming a binding intermediate (complex I) and a functional complex for nicking (complex II). We have used a double-label gel binding assay to determine the stoichiometry of the gpII-origin interaction. The results indicate that
complex I
contains two gpII molecules per origin, and complex II contains four gpII molecules per origin. Enhancer-independent mutations in gpII allow wild-type levels of replication in the absence of either the enhancer or IHF. We have examined the binding of an enhancer-independent gpII mutant (mp1) protein to the replication origin. The mp1 mutation in gpII (Met40----Ile) increases the co-operativity with which the protein binds to form complex II. In addition, the mutant gpII forms both complexes with a DNA fragment containing only two (beta-gamma) of the three repeats from the core origin sequence, while the wild-type protein forms only
complex I
with this fragment. We discuss how a mutation that increases the co-operativity of binding of an initiator protein might stimulate DNA replication.
J
Mol
Biol 1990 Jan 05
PMID:Replication enhancer-independent mutation increases the co-operativity with which an initiator protein binds its origin. 240 67
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of chloroplast DNA from a liverwort, Marchantia polymorpha, using a clone bank of chloroplast DNA fragments. The circular genome consists of 121,024 base-pairs and includes two large inverted repeats (IRA and IRB, each 10,058 base-pairs), a large single-copy region (LSC, 81,095 base-pairs), and a small single-copy region (SSC, 19,813 base-pairs). The nucleotide sequence was analysed with a computer to deduce the entire gene organization, assuming the universal genetic code and the presence of introns in the coding sequences. We detected 136 possible genes. 103 gene products of which are related to known stable RNA or protein molecules. Stable RNA genes for four species of ribosomal RNA and 32 species of tRNA were located, although one of the tRNA genes may be defective. Twenty genes encoding polypeptides involved in photosynthesis and electron transport were identified by comparison with known chloroplast genes. Twenty-five open reading frames (ORFs) show structural similarities to Escherichia coli RNA polymerase subunits, 19 ribosomal proteins and two related proteins. Seven ORFs are comparable with human mitochondrial
NADH dehydrogenase
genes. A computer-aided homology search predicted possible chloroplast homologues of bacterial proteins; two ORFs for bacterial 4Fe-4S-type ferredoxin, two for distinct subunits of a protein-dependent transport system, one ORF for a component of nitrogenase, and one for an antenna protein of a light-harvesting complex. The other 33 ORFs, consisting of 29 to 2136 codons, remain to be identified, but some of them seem to be conserved in evolution. Detailed information on gene identification is presented in the accompanying papers. We postulated that there were 22 introns in 20 genes (8 tRNA genes and 12 ORFs), which may be classified into the groups I and II found in fungal mitochondrial genes. The structural gene for ribosomal protein S12 is trans-split on the opposite DNA strand. The universal genetic code was confirmed by the substitution pattern of simultaneous codons, and by possible codon recognition of the chloroplast-encoded tRNA molecules, assuming no importation of tRNA molecules from the cytoplasm. The nucleotide residue A or T is preferred at the third position of the codons (G+C, 11.9%) and in intergenic spacers (G+C, 19.5%), resulting in an overall G+C content that is low (28.8%) throughout the liverwort chloroplast genome. Possible gene expression signals such as promoters and terminators for transcription, predicted locations of gene products, and DNA replicative origins are discussed.
J
Mol
Biol 1988 Sep 20
PMID:Structure and organization of Marchantia polymorpha chloroplast genome. I. Cloning and gene identification. 246 54
A catalytic component of the bovine mitochondrial
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex
(Complex I) is a soluble
NADH dehydrogenase
iron-sulfur flavoprotein (FP). FP is composed of three subunits of Mr 51,000, 24,000, and 9,000, and contains FMN and two iron-sulfur clusters. Previous studies by others with the use of various chemical probes had suggested that, except for an access for NADH to the 51-kDa subunit, the FP polypeptides are buried within Complex I and shielded from the medium. In the present study, monospecific antibodies were raised to each of the three FP subunits, and used in conjunction with Complex I, submitochondrial particles (SMP), mitoplasts, and intact mitochondria as sources of antigens. Results of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and 125I-protein A labeling experiments indicated that epitopes from the 51-, 24-, and 9-kDa subunits of FP are exposed to the medium in Complex I and SMP, but not in mitoplasts and mitochondria. Appropriate enzymatic assays showed that none of the antibodies inhibited the
NADH dehydrogenase
activity of isolated FP or the NADH oxidase activity of SMP. These results have been discussed in relation to the structure of Neurospora Complex I deduced from membrane crystals of the isolated enzyme complex by Leonard et al. [K. Leonard, H. Haiker, and H. Weiss (1987) J.
Mol
. Biol. 194, 277-286].
...
PMID:Studies on the structure of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex: topography of the subunits of the iron-sulfur flavoprotein component. 246 82
The ndhC and ORF159 genes of the maize plastid DNA (ptDNA) were sequenced and maize ORF159 was used to screen a library of genomic DNA of the blue-green alga Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The cyanobacterial gene homologous to ORF159 (ORF157) was isolated and sequenced. In sequencing the region upstream of ORF157, reading frames with homology to the ndhC and psbG genes of maize ptDNA were identified. The ndhC and psbG genes overlap in the ptDNAs of maize, tobacco and Marchantia polymorpha, but are separated by a noncoding spacer in Synechocystis. Northern blot analysis showed that the ndhC, psbG and ORF157/159 genes are cotranscribed in maize and Synechocystis. The three genes occur in the same order in ptDNA of maize, tobacco, and M. polymorpha as in Synechocystis 6803. The amino acid sequences of the NDH-C, PSII-G and the ORF157/159 proteins deduced from the maize genes are 65%, 52% and 53% homologous to those of Synechocystis. However, the cyanobacterial and higher plant NDH-C protein sequences are only 23% homologous to the mitochondrial NDH-3 protein. Protein products of in vitro transcription/translation of the Synechocystis transcription unit had apparent molecular masses of 6 kDa (NDH-C), 25 kDa (PSII-G) and 22 kDa (ORF157) on lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. If these are components of an
NADH dehydrogenase
, cyanobacteria appear to resemble mitochondria more than they do Escherichia coli and Rhodopseudomonas capsulata with regard to this enzyme complex.
Mol
Gen Genet 1989 Mar
PMID:Characterization of the ndhC-psbG-ORF157/159 operon of maize plastid DNA and of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803. 249 64
The ndh gene of Escherichia coli which encodes an
NADH dehydrogenase
contains a putative FNR-binding site in its upstream non-coding region, and its expression has been investigated using an ndh-lacZ fusion. Expression of the fusion was found to be reduced during anaerobic growth, and experiments with hosts containing an fnr mutation and/or a multicopy fnr+ plasmid indicated that the anaerobic repression of the ndh gene is mediated by the FNR protein. Thus FNR can function as an anaerobic repressor as well as an anaerobic transcriptional activator. The results are consistent with the FNR-binding function attributed to the proposed consensus sequence. Using frdA- and ndh-lacZ fusions exhibiting positive and negative regulation by FNR, it was further shown that the depletion of metal ions in growth media with chelating agents mimics oxygen with respect to the activity of FNR. Possible roles for metal ions in the oxygen-sensing pathway associated with FNR function are discussed.
Mol
Microbiol 1989 May
PMID:FNR-dependent repression of the ndh gene of Escherichia coli and metal ion requirement for FNR-regulated gene expression. 250 80
The nucleotide sequence of a segment of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecule of the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica (phylum Platyhelminthes, class Trematoda) has been determined, within which have been identified the genes for tRNA(ala), tRNA(asp), respiratory chain
NADH dehydrogenase
subunit I (ND1), tRNA(asn), tRNA(pro), tRNA(ile), tRNA(lys), ND3, tRNA(serAGN), tRNA(trp), and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI). The 11 genes are arranged in the order given and are all transcribed from the same strand of the molecule. The overall order of the F. hepatica mitochondrial genes differs from what is found in other metazoan mtDNAs. All of the sequenced tRNA genes except the one for tRNA(serAGN) can be folded into a secondary structure with four arms resembling most other metazoan mitochondrial tRNAs, rather than the tRNAs that contain a T psi C arm replacement loop, found in nematode mtDNAs. The F. hepatica mitochondrial tRNA(serAGN) gene contains a dihydrouridine arm replacement loop, as is the case in all other metazoan mtDNAs examined to date. AGA and AGG are found in the F. hepatica mitochondrial protein genes and both codons appear to specify serine. These findings concerning F. hepatica mtDNA indicate that both a dihydrouridine arm replacement loop-containing tRNA(serAGN) gene and the use of AGA and AGG codons to specify serine must first have occurred very early in, or before, the evolution of metazoa.
J
Mol
Evol 1989 May
PMID:Platyhelminth mitochondrial DNA: evidence for early evolutionary origin of a tRNA(serAGN) that contains a dihydrouridine arm replacement loop, and of serine-specifying AGA and AGG codons. 254 89
From a high-salt extract of the purified thylakoid membrane, an 18-kD protein was detected. This protein was translated by the chloroplast ribosomes and could form a stable DNA-protein complex with a cloned chloroplast DNA replicative origin [Nie, Z.Q., Chang, D.Y., and Wu, M. (1987)
Mol
. Gen. Genet. 209, 265-269]. In this paper, the 18-kD protein is linked to frxB, a chloroplast-encoded, ferredoxin-type, iron-sulfur protein, by N-terminal microsequencing of the purified protein and computer analysis. The identification is further supported empirically by the fact that the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of the protein indicate the presence of iron-sulfur clusters. A polyclonal antibody raised against a synthetic pentadecameric peptide with amino acid sequence corresponds to the highly conserved region of the frxB protein and reacts strongly and specifically with the 18-kD protein band in protein gel blot analyses. The 18-kD iron-sulfur protein is found to be related to a subunit of the respiratory chain
NADH dehydrogenase
by its cross-reaction with a polyclonal antibody raised against highly purified
NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase
, a key enzyme of the respiratory chain. These data are consistent with chlororespiration, and, thus, possible implication of chlororespiration in regulating the initiation of chloroplast DNA replication is discussed.
...
PMID:The 18-kD protein that binds to the chloroplast DNA replicative origin is an iron-sulfur protein related to a subunit of NADH dehydrogenase. 256 13
Initial Polytron treatment with subsequent exposure to the bacterial proteinase Nagarse has been shown to result in the isolation of two distinct populations of cardiac mitochondria, subsarcolemmal and interfibrillar mitochondria, respectively. Although these populations have been shown to possess distinct biochemical properties, few studies have been reported which document the potential differences in their response to pathological insult. We therefore examined the effect of acute hypoxia with or without reoxygenation as well as treatment with phosphate on oxidative phosphorylation on both groups of mitochondria. Freshly-isolated interfibrillar mitochondria (IFM) exhibited significantly higher respiratory values, with the exception of the ADP:O ratios, than subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SLM). With pyruvate-malate as respiratory substrate, 40 minutes hypoxia alone produced no effect on SLM whereas a stimulation in respiration was seen in IFM. A 40-minute reoxygenation period depressed the oxidative phosphorylation rate in SLM whereas it was stimulated in IFM. These treatments did not produce any effect in either population when succinate was the substrate of choice. Because of the latter observation, the possibility that increased lability of
complex I
of the electron transport chain accounted for the differences associated with NAD-linked substrates was studied by assessing NADH oxidation of sonicated mitochondria following the treatments. SLM exhibited enhanced permeability to exogenous NADH as well as increased sensitivity to sonication following either hypoxia or hypoxia/reoxygenation compared to IFM. Compared to hypoxia/reoxygenation, increasing concentrations of phosphate (5-15 mM) produced a marked depression in oxidative phosphorylation of SLM whereas IFM were relatively resistant. The toxic effects of phosphate were much more evident with pyruvate-malate as substrates; with succinate, oxidative phosphorylation of IFM was not depressed by phosphate whereas only a slight depression was observed with SLM. The latter population similarly exhibited reduced NADH oxidation following phosphate treatment whereas IFM were unaffected. Our studies show a differential sensitivity of two mitochondrial populations to hypoxia/reoxygenation, and, more markedly to phosphate. Since these effects were much less pronounced with succinate-linked respiration and since they were associated with defective NADH oxidation in SLM, it is suggested that the differences between the two populations may be accounted for by the increased lability of
complex I
of SLM due to hypoxia/reoxygenation or phosphate.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1989 Oct 05
PMID:Acute effects of hypoxia and phosphate on two populations of heart mitochondria. 260 32
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>