Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:Q16795 (ubiquinone)
5,455 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pre-steady-state kinetics of the reduction of the prosthetic groups of QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase in bovine heart submitochondrial particles were studied in relation to the kinetics of the Q-10 reduction, using duroquinol as substrate. The prosthetic groups, including semiquinone, were measured with EPR and low-temperature-diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, the samples being prepared with the rapid-freeze quench technique. For the determination of the redox state of ubiquinone in the pre-steady state the rapid chemical quench technique was used as an extension of the rapid-freeze quench technique, and Q-10 and QH2-10 were measured with reversed-phase HPLC after extraction with petroleum ether. Ubiquinone was reduced biphasically, 8% of total Q-10 (equal to 1 mol Q-10/mol cytochrome c1), being reduced within 5 ms, and the rest, the Q-pool, at a much lower rate. The initial rapid reduction of this special Q-10 was accompanied by rapid formation of Qi and rapid reduction of a large part of the cytochrome b-562. Both semiquinone formation and reduction of b-562 showed transient kinetics due to a contribution of the reaction pathway via centre o when the iron-sulphur cluster and cytochrome c1 were oxidised. The majority of the special quinol was located at centre i, probably bound, but also at centre o some bound quinol was formed. This was visible when antimycin was present, the antimycin-insensitive bound quinol being totally sensitive to myxothiazol. Myxothiazol alone accelerated the reduction of the Q-pool via centre i, but also the equilibration of cytochrome b-562 with the Q-pool. Antimycin drastically lowered the rate of reduction of the Q-pool and additionally seemed to block the rapid electron transfer from part of the Rieske iron-sulphur cluster to cytochrome c1. It is concluded that, during the pre-steady-state, cytochrome b-562 is not in equilibrium with the Q-pool and that the rate of equilibration is probably determined by the rate of dissociation of the special bound quinol from centre i.
...
PMID:Pre-steady-state reduction kinetics of QH2:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and the Q-pool: evidence for a special quinone not in rapid equilibrium with the Q-pool. 303 26

A soluble cytochrome b was purified from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus L.M.D. 79.41. On the basis of the alpha-band maximum of a reduced preparation, measured at 25 degrees C, it is designated as cytochrome b-562. This cytochrome is a basic monomeric protein (pI 10.2; Mr 18,000), containing one protohaem group per molecule. The reduced form, at 25 degrees C, showed absorption bands at 428, 532 and 562 nm. At 77 K the alpha-band shifted to 560 nm (with a shoulder at 558 nm). The reduced cytochrome did not react with CO. Cytochrome b-562 is most probably (loosely) attached to the outside of the cytoplasmic membrane, since substantial amounts of it, equimolar to quinoprotein glucose dehydrogenase (GDH), were present in the culture medium when cells were grown in the presence of low concentrations of Triton X-100. The midpoint potential at pH 7.0 was found to be +170 mV, a value that was lowered to +145 mV by the presence of GDH. Since the GDH was shown to have a midpoint potential of +50 mV, cytochrome b-562 could function as the natural primary electron acceptor. Arguments to substantiate this view and to propose a role of ubiquinone-9 as electron acceptor for cytochrome b-562 are presented.
...
PMID:Cytochrome b-562 from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus L.M.D. 79.41. Its characteristics and role as electron acceptor for quinoprotein glucose dehydrogenase. 317 44

The three E-beta-methoxyacrylate (MOA) inhibitors oudemansin A, strobilurin A and MOA stilbene [3-methoxy-2(2-styrylphenyl)propenic acid-methylester], which differ by more than one order of magnitude in their binding affinity to the mitochondrial ubihydroquinone:cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc1 complex), bind to a site that is not identical to the binding site for ubihydroquinone, the substrate of the outer ubiquinone reaction site (Qo centre). Although the ubihydroquinone molecule is still bound in the presence of the MOA inhibitors, its electrons cannot be transferred to the iron-sulfur centre. A shift of the relative position of the ubihydroquinone molecule in the reaction centre due to a conformational distortion of cytochrome b induced by the binding of the MOA inhibitor seems to be the reason for the blocked electron transfer. Further analysis shows that ubihydroquinone affects the Kd values of all three MOA inhibitors tested: the values are raised by a constant factor of two, although the inhibitors bind with quite different affinity. The iron-sulfur protein is not involved in the binding of the MOA inhibitors. These results have direct implications for the proper use of MOA inhibitors in experiments designed to analyse the structure/mechanism relationship in cytochrome c reductase. In particular, point mutations recently described in MOA-inhibitor-resistant mutants can no longer be taken to affect necessarily the ubihydroquinone binding site.
...
PMID:Characterisation of binding of the methoxyacrylate inhibitors to mitochondrial cytochrome c reductase. 337 45

The cationic fluorescent dyes, berberines, have been observed to inhibit NAD-linked respiration in rat liver mitochondria. Low concentrations inhibit electron transport in the NAD-ubiquinone span after penetration into mitochondria. More hydrophobic alkyl derivatives proved to be stronger inhibitors showing more rapid onset of inhibition. The inhibition was totally dependent on the energization of the membrane; however, the addition of a hydrophobic anion stimulated the inhibition effects in uncoupled mitochondria. Substantially higher concentrations of berberines are needed for the inhibition of the oxidation of succinate. The excess of dye interacting with surface dipoles in the energized state can inhibit the energy transduction through the complex bc1. On the basis of the difference in the rate of fluorescence response when berberines are added to coupled mitochondria and the corresponding inhibition effects, the presence minimally of two binding sites was suggested. The dye bound on the outer surface is highly fluorescent and inhibits the energy transduction if added in excess. The remaining dye interacting with NADH dehydrogenase does not fluoresce. The accumulation of alkylberberine in mitochondria results in additional effects in the region of cytochrome b the nature of which is not fully understood.
...
PMID:Interaction of fluorescent berberine alkyl derivatives with respiratory chain of rat liver mitochondria. 398 24

1. The function of ubiquinone in Escherichia coli was studied by using whole cells and membrane preparations of normal E. coli and of a mutant lacking ubiquinone. 2. The mutant lacking ubiquinone, strain AN59 (Ubi(-)), when grown under aerobic conditions, gave an anaerobic type of growth yield and produced large quantities of lactic acid, indicating that ubiquinone plays a vital role in electron transport. 3. NADH and lactate oxidase activities in membranes from strain AN59 (Ubi(-)) were greatly impaired and activity was restored by the addition of ubiquinone (Q-1). 4. Comparison of the percentage reduction of flavin, cytochrome b(1) and cytochrome a(2) in the aerobic steady state in membranes from the normal strain (AN62) and strain AN59 (Ubi(-)) and the effect of respiratory inhibitors on these percentages in membranes from strain AN62 suggest that ubiquinone functions at more than one site in the electron-transport chain. 5. Membranes from strain AN62, in the absence of substrate, showed an electron-spin-resonance signal attributed to ubisemiquinone. The amount of reduced ubiquinone (50%) found after rapid solvent extraction is consistent with the existence of ubiquinone in membranes as a stabilized ubisemiquinone. 6. The effects of piericidin A on membranes from strain AN62 suggest that this inhibitor acts at the ubiquinone sites: thus inhibition of electron transport is reversed by ubiquinone (Q-1); the aerobic steady-state oxidation-reduction levels of flavins and cytochrome b(1) in the presence of the inhibitor are raised to values approximating those found in the membranes of strain AN59 (Ubi(-)); the inhibitor rapidly eliminates the electron-spin-resonance signal attributed to ubisemiquinone and allows slow oxidation of endogenous ubiquinol in the absence of substrate and prevents reduction of ubiquinone in the presence of substrate. It is concluded that piericidin A separates ubiquinone from the remainder of the electron-transport chain. 7. A scheme is proposed in which ubisemiquinone, complexed to an electron carrier, functions in at least two positions in the electron-transport sequence.
...
PMID:The function of ubiquinone in Escherichia coli. 419 11

1. Escherichia coli 156:53D2 synthesized ubiquinone only when the growth medium was supplemented with 4-hydroxybenzoate acid. 2. Little or no vitamin K(2) was formed by the mutant under the growth conditions employed, in contrast with wild-type strains. 3. In the mutant ubiquinone deficiency was correlated with low respiration and with low particulate NADH-oxidase and NADH-cytochrome b(1)-reductase activity. 4. Preincubation of ubiquinone-deficient particles with ubiquinone-30 largely restored the NADH-oxidase and NADH-cytochrome b(1)-reductase activities. 5. Various NADH-dye-linked reductases which may be associated with NADH dehydrogenase were not affected by the absence of ubiquinone. 6. The succinate-oxidase complex was less affected than the particulate NADH oxidase by ubiquinone deficiency. 7. A pathway for electrons in the NADH-oxidase complex of the auxotroph of E. coli is proposed and its relationship to the pathway in the wild-type strain is discussed.
...
PMID:Ubiquinone deficiency in an auxotroph of Escherichia coli requiring 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. 429 36

A ubiquinone-deficient mutant of Escherichia coli K-12 forming 20% of the normal amount of ubiquinone was compared with a normal strain. This lowered concentration of ubiquinone is still four times the concentration of cytochrome b(1). The mutant strain grew more slowly than the normal strain on a minimal medium with glucose as sole source of carbon and gave a lower aerobic growth yield than the normal strain. The reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) oxidase rate in membranes from the mutant strain was 40% of the oxidase rate in membranes from the normal strain, and the percentage reduction of cytochrome b(1) in the aerobic steady state, with NADH as substrate, was increased in membranes from the mutant strain. It is concluded that ubiquinone is required for maximum oxidase activity at the relatively high concentration (27 times that of cytochrome b(1)) found in normal cells. The results are discussed in relation to a scheme previously advanced for ubiquinone function in E. coli.
...
PMID:Function of ubiquinone in Escherichia coli: a mutant strain forming a low level of ubiquinone. 433 83

1. A spectroscopic resolution has been made of the components contributing to the ;iron-flavoprotein' trough extending from 450 to 520nm in the reduced-minus-oxidized difference spectrum of submitochondrial particles of Torulopsis utilis. 2. Seven components were identified other than cytochrome b, ubiquinone and succinate dehydrogenase. On the basis of the effects of iron- and sulphate-limited growth of cells on their subsequently derived electron-transport particles, and also by consideration of analytical measurements of the concentration of FMN, FAD, non-haem iron and acid-labile sulphide in the electron-transport particles in relation to the magnitude of the spectroscopic changes, it was possible to identify five of these components as follows: species 1a, the flavin of NADH dehydrogenase ferroflavoprotein; species 1b, the iron-sulphur component of NADH dehydrogenase ferroflavoprotein; species 1', the flavin of an NADPH dehydrogenase; species 2, an iron-sulphur or ferroflavoprotein component; species 3, the flavin of l-3-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. Two additional components were a fluorescent flavoprotein, probably lipoamide dehydrogenase, and a b-type cytochrome reducible by NADH or NADPH but not reoxidizable by the respiratory chain. 3. Species 1b and 2 were undetectable in electron-transport particles from iron- or sulphate-limited cells, but could be recovered in vivo under non-growing conditions. 4. The recovery in vivo of species 2 but not species 1b was inhibited by cycloheximide. 5. The recovery of species 1b correlates with the recovery of site 1 conservation. 6. The recovery of species 1b with species 2 correlates with the recovery of piericidin A sensitivity. 7. Evidence is presented for an NADPH dehydrogenase distinct from NADH dehydrogenase. The oxidation of NADH and NADPH by the respiratory chain is sensitive to piericidin A, and an iron-sulphur protein common to both pathways (species 2) is suggested as the piericidin A-sensitive component. 8. The approximate E'(0) (pH7.0) values of species 1 (a and b, low potential) and species 2 (high potential) indicate that site 1 energy conservation occurs between the levels of species 1 (a and b) and species 2.
...
PMID:Spectroscopic studies of flavoproteins and non-haem iron proteins of submitochondrial particles of Torulopsis utilis modified by iron- and sulphate-limited growth in continuous culture. 439 18

In anaerobic, uncoupled pigeon-heart mitochondria treated with oxidizable substrate, the cytochrome b(566) remains largely oxidized. In the presence of antimycin A, addition of oxygen induces a reduction of this cytochrome. The rate of cytochrome b(566) reduction is comparable to and dependent on the rate of cytochrome c(1) oxidation. Kinetic data suggest that either ubiquinone or another donor of similar potential provides electrons for the reduction of cytochrome b(566). It is postulated that the aerobic reduction of cytochrome b(566) is directly related to the energy conservation at site II.
...
PMID:Aerobic reduction of cytochrome b 566 in pigeon-heart mitochondria (succinate-cytochrome C1 reductase-stopped-flow kinetics). 455 May 9

1. Pigeon heart mitochondria produce H(2)O(2) at a maximal rate of about 20nmol/min per mg of protein. 2. Succinate-glutamate and malate-glutamate are substrates which are able to support maximal H(2)O(2) production rates. With malate-glutamate, H(2)O(2) formation is sensitive to rotenone. Endogenous substrate, octanoate, stearoyl-CoA and palmitoyl-carnitine are by far less efficient substrates. 3. Antimycin A exerts a very pronounced effect in enhancing H(2)O(2) production in pigeon heart mitochondria; 0.26nmol of antimycin A/mg of protein and the addition of an uncoupler are required for maximal H(2)O(2) formation. 4. In the presence of endogenous substrate and of antimycin A, ATP decreases and uncoupler restores the rates of H(2)O(2) formation. 5. Reincorporation of ubiquinone-10 and ubiquinone-3 to ubiquinone-depleted pigeon heart mitochondria gives a system in which H(2)O(2) production is linearly related to the incorporated ubiquinone. 6. The generation of H(2)O(2) by pigeon heart mitochondria in the presence of succinate-glutamate and in metabolic state 4 has an optimum pH value of 7.5. In states 1 and 3u, and in the presence of antimycin A and uncoupler, the optimum pH value is shifted towards more alkaline values. 7. With increase of the partial pressure of O(2) to the hyperbaric region the formation of H(2)O(2) is markedly increased in pigeon heart mitochondria and in rat liver mitochondria. With rat liver mitochondria and succinate as substrate in state 4, an increase in the pO(2) up to 1.97MPa (19.5atm) increases H(2)O(2) formation 10-15-fold. Similar pO(2) profiles were observed when rat liver mitochondria were supplemented either with antimycin A or with antimycin A and uncoupler. No saturation of the system with O(2) was observed up to 1.97MPa (19.5atm). By increasing the pO(2) to 1.97MPa (19.5atm), H(2)O(2) formation in pigeon heart mitochondria with succinate as substrate increased fourfold in metabolic state 4, with antimycin A added the increase was threefold and with antimycin A and uncoupler it was 2.5-fold. In the last two saturation of the system with oxygen was observed, with an apparent K(m) of about 71kPa (0.7-0.8atm) and a V(max.) of 12 and 20nmol of H(2)O(2)/min per mg of protein. 8. It is postulated that in addition to the well-known flavin reaction, formation of H(2)O(2) may be due to interaction with an energy-dependent component of the respiratory chain at the cytochrome b level.
...
PMID:The mitochondrial generation of hydrogen peroxide. General properties and effect of hyperbaric oxygen. 474 71


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>