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1.
Kalanchoë pinnata mitochondria readily oxidized succinate, malate, NADH, and NADPH at high rates and coupling. The highest respiration rates usually were observed in the presence of succinate. The high rate of malate oxidation was observed at pH 6.8 with thiamine pyrophosphate where both malic enzyme (ME) and pyruvate dehydrogenase were activated. In CAM phase III of K. pinnata mitochondria, both ME and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) simultaneously contributed to metabolism of malate. However, ME played a main function: malate was oxidized via ME to produce pyruvate and CO2 rather than via MDH to produce oxalacetate (OAA). Cooperative oxidation of two or three substrates was accompanied with the dramatic increase in the total respiration rates. Our results showed that the alternative (Alt) pathway was more active in malate oxidation at pH 6.8 with CoA and NAD+ where ME operated and was stimulated, indicating that both ME and Alt pathway were related to malate decarboxylation during the light. In K. pinnata mitochondria, NADH and NADPH oxidations were more sensitive with KCN than that with succinate and malate oxidations, suggesting that these oxidations were engaged to cytochrome pathway rather than to Alt pathway and these capacities would be desirable to supply enough energy for cytosol pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase activity.  相似文献   

2.
Several key enzymes related to carbohydrate metabolism were assayed in Setaria digitata. In the cytosolic fraction pyruvate kinase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, malate dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase were found. Among the TCA cycle enzymes succinate dehydrogenase, fumarate reductase, fumarase (malate dehydration), malate dehydrogenase (malate oxidation and oxaloacetate reduction) and malic enzyme (malate decarboxylation) were detected in the mitochondrial fraction. Only reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) dehydrogenase, NADH oxidase and NADH-cytochrome c reductase were found in the mitochondrial fraction. The significance of these results with respect to the metabolic capabilities of the worm are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
An investigation was made of the respiratory properties and the role of the mitochondria isolated from one phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK)-CAM plant Ananas comosus (pineapple) in malate metabolism during CAM phase III. Pineapple mitochondria showed very high malate dehydrogenase (MDH), and low malic enzyme (ME) and glutamate-oxaloacetate transaminase (GOT) activities. The mitochondria readily oxidized succinate and NADH with high rates and coupling, while they only oxidized NADPH in the presence of Ca(2+). Pineapple mitochondria oxidized malate with low rates under most assay conditions, despite increasing malate concentrations, optimizing pH, providing cofactors such as coenzyme A, thiamine pyrophosphate, and NAD(+), and supplying individually external glutamate or GOT. However, providing glutamate and GOT simultaneously strongly increased the rates of malate oxidation. The OAA easily permeated the mitochondrial membranes to import into or export out of pineapple mitochondria during malate oxidation, but the mitochondria did not consume external Asp or alpha-KG. These results suggest that OAA played a significant role in the mitochondrial malate metabolism of pineapple, in which malate was mainly oxidized by active mMDH to produce OAA which could be exported outside the mitochondria via a malate-OAA shuttle. Cytosolic GOT then consumed OAA by transamination in the presence of glutamate, leading to a large increase in respiration rates. The malate-OAA shuttle might operate as a supporting system for decarboxylation in phase III of PCK-CAM pineapple. This shuttle system may be important in pineapple to provide a source of energy and substrate OAA for cytosolic PCK activity during the day when cytosolic OAA and ATP was limited for the overall decarboxylation process.  相似文献   

4.
Low concentrations of HPE and MLA inhibited state 3 respiration of rat liver mitochondria in the presence of different NAD+-dependent substrates. MLA appeared to be more active than HPE. High aldehyde concentrations inhibited the state 3 respiration with succinate. The restraint of succinate oxidation by HPE and MLA and of glutamate plus malate oxidation by MLA correlated with the inhibition of succinate and glutamate dehydrogenase activites, respectively. HPE inhibited glutamate dehydrogenase at concentrations higher than those affecting glutamate oxidation. Malate dehydrogenase activity was slightly sensitive to HPE and MLA. Both aldehydes inhibited NADH oxidation by freeze-thawed mitochondria. These results suggest the existence of a site particularly sensitive to aldehydes in the electron transport chain between the specific NAD+-linked dehydrogenases and ubiquinone.  相似文献   

5.
Malate oxidation in plant mitochondria proceeds through the activities of two enzymes: a malate dehydrogenase and a NAD+-dependent malic enzyme. In cauliflower, mitochondria malate oxidation via malate dehydrogenase is rotenone- and cyanide-sensitive. Addition of exogenous NAD+ stimulates the oxidation of malate via malic enzyme and generates an electron flux that is both rotenone- and cyanide-insensitive. The same effects of exogenous NAD+ are also observed with highly cyanide-sensitive mitochondria from white potato tubers or with mitochondria from spinach leaves. Both enzymes are located in the matrix, but some experimental data also suggest that part of malate dehydrogenase activity is also present outside the matrix compartment (adsorbed cytosolic malate dehydrogenase?). It is concluded that malic enzyme and a specific pool of NAD+/NADH are connected to the cyanide-insensitive alternative pathway by a specific rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase located on the inner face of the inner membrane. Similarly, malate dehydrogenase and another specific pool of NAD+/NADH are connected to the cyanide- (and antimycin-) sensitive pathway by a rotenone-sensitive NADH dehydrogenase located on the inner face of the inner membrane. A general scheme of electron transport in plant mitochondria for the oxidation of malate and NADH can be given, assuming that different pools of ubiquinone act as a branch point between various dehydrogenases, the cyanide-sensitive cytochrome pathway and the cyanide-insensitive alternative pathway.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium is a major regulator of cellular metabolism. Calcium controls mitochondrial respiration, and calcium signaling is used to meet cellular energetic demands through energy production in the organelle. Although it has been widely assumed that Ca2+-actions require its uptake by mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), alternative pathways modulated by cytosolic Ca2+ have been recently proposed. Recent findings have indicated a role for cytosolic Ca2+ signals acting on mitochondrial NADH shuttles in the control of cellular metabolism in neurons using glucose as fuel. It has been demonstrated that AGC1/Aralar, the component of the malate/aspartate shuttle (MAS) regulated by cytosolic Ca2+, participates in the maintenance of basal respiration exerted through Ca2+-fluxes between ER and mitochondria, whereas mitochondrial Ca2+-uptake by MCU does not contribute. Aralar/MAS pathway, activated by small cytosolic Ca2+ signals, provides in fact substrates, redox equivalents and pyruvate, fueling respiration. Upon activation and increases in workload, neurons upregulate OxPhos, cytosolic pyruvate production and glycolysis, together with glucose uptake, in a Ca2+-dependent way, and part of this upregulation is via Ca2+ signaling. Both MCU and Aralar/MAS contribute to OxPhos upregulation, Aralar/MAS playing a major role, especially at small and submaximal workloads. Ca2+ activation of Aralar/MAS, by increasing cytosolic NAD+/NADH provides Ca2+-dependent increases in glycolysis and cytosolic pyruvate production priming respiration as a feed-forward mechanism in response to workload. Thus, except for glucose uptake, these processes are dependent on Aralar/MAS, whereas MCU is the relevant target for Ca2+ signaling when MAS is bypassed, by using pyruvate or β-hydroxybutyrate as substrates.  相似文献   

7.
P. Rustin  C. Queiroz-Claret 《Planta》1985,164(3):415-422
Kalanchoe blossfeldiana plants grown under long days (16 h light) exhibit a C3-type photosynthetic metabolism. Switching to short days (9 h light) leads to a gradual development of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). Under the latter conditions, dark CO2 fixation produces large amounts of malate. During the first hours of the day, malate is rapidly decarboxylated into pyruvate through the action of a cytosolic NADP+-or a mitochondrial NAD+-dependent malic enzyme. Mitochondria were isolated from leaves of plants grown under long days or after treatment by an increasing number of short days. Tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates as well as exogenous NADH and NADPH were readily oxidized by mitochondria isolated from the two types of plants. Glycine, known to be oxidized by C3-plant mitochondria, was still oxidized after CAM establishment. The experiments showed a marked parallelism in the increase of CAM level and the increase in substrate-oxidation capacity of the isolated mitochondria, particularly the capacity to oxidize malate in the presence of cyanide. These simultaneous variations in CAM level and in mitochondrial properties indicate that the mitochondrial NAD+-malic enzyme could account at least for a part of the oxidation of malate. The studies of whole-leaf respiration establish that mitochondria are implicated in malate degradation in vivo. Moreover, an increase in cyanide resistance of the leaf respiration has been observed during the first daylight hours, when malate was oxidized to pyruvate by cytosolic and mitochondrial malic enzymes.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - MDH malate dehydrogenase - ME malic enzyme  相似文献   

8.
Michel Neuburger  Roland Douce 《BBA》1980,589(2):176-189
Mitochondria isolated from spinach leaves oxidized malate by both a NAD+-linked malic enzyme and malate dehydrogenase. In the presence of sodium arsenite the accumulation of oxaloacetate and pyruvate during malate oxidation was strongly dependent on the malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and the metabolic state condition.Bicarbonate, especially at alkaline pH, inhibited the decarboxylation of malate by the NAD+-linked malic enzyme in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of the reaction products showed that with 15 mM bicarbonate, spinach leaf mitochondria excreted almost exclusively oxaloacetate.The inhibition by oxaloacetate of malate oxidation by spinach leaf mitochondria was strongly dependent on malate concentration, the pH in the reaction medium and on the metabolic state condition.The data were interpreted as indicating that: (a) the concentration of oxaloacetate on both sides of the inner mitochondrial membrane governed the efflux and influx of oxaloacetate; (b) the NAD+/NADH ratio played an important role in regulating malate oxidation in plant mitochondria; (c) both enzymes (malate dehydrogenase and NAD+-linked malic enzyme) were competing at the level of the pyridine nucleotide pool, and (d) the NAD+-linked malic enzyme provided NADH for the reversal of the reaction catalyzed by the malate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

9.
SYNOPSIS. Mitochondrial and supernatant fractions were isolated from Crithidia fasciculata by grinding with neutral alumina and differential centrifugation. Supernatant fractions contained at least 2 NAD-linked enzymes: an α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and a malate dehydrogenase. The properties of these enzymes were investigated polarographically with phenazine ethosulfate acting as electron acceptor. Agaricic acid, cinnamic acid and p-NO2-cinnamic acid were specific inhibitors of the α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. Succinate, malate, DL-α-glycerophosphate and NADH stimulated respiration of mitochondrial preparations; O2 uptake was greatest with succinate. KCN and antimycin A inhibited succinate respiration more than α-glycerophosphate respiration. Amytal did not affect succinate, α-glycerophosphate or NADH oxidation. The trypanocide suramin inhibited mitochondrial respiration at least 77% with each substrate. The relevance of these results to other members of the Trypanosomatidae is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
It is well established that NADH/NAD+ redox balance is heavily perturbed in diabetes, and the NADH/NAD+ redox imbalance is a major source of oxidative stress in diabetic tissues. In mitochondria, complex I is the only site for NADH oxidation and NAD+ regeneration and is also a major site for production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS). Yet how complex I responds to the NADH/NAD+ redox imbalance and any potential consequences of such response in diabetic pancreas have not been investigated. We report here that pancreatic mitochondrial complex I showed aberrant hyperactivity in either type 1 or type 2 diabetes. Further studies focusing on streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes indicate that complex I hyperactivity could be attenuated by metformin. Moreover, complex I hyperactivity was accompanied by increased activities of complexes II to IV, but not complex V, suggesting that overflow of NADH via complex I in diabetes could be diverted to ROS production. Indeed in diabetic pancreas, ROS production and oxidative stress increased and mitochondrial ATP production decreased, which can be attributed to impaired pancreatic mitochondrial membrane potential that is responsible for increased cell death. Additionally, cellular defense systems such as glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, sirtuin 3, and NQO1 were found to be compromised in diabetic pancreas. Our findings point to the direction that complex I aberrant hyperactivity in pancreas could be a major source of oxidative stress and β cell failure in diabetes. Therefore, inhibiting pancreatic complex I hyperactivity and attenuating its ROS production by various means in diabetes might serve as a promising approach for anti-diabetic therapies.  相似文献   

11.
The evolutionarily conserved soluble adenylyl cyclase (sAC, ADCY10) mediates cAMP signaling exclusively in intracellular compartments. Because sAC activity is sensitive to local concentrations of ATP, bicarbonate, and free Ca2+, sAC is potentially an important metabolic sensor. Nonetheless, little is known about how sAC regulates energy metabolism in intact cells. In this study, we demonstrated that both pharmacological and genetic suppression of sAC resulted in increased lactate secretion and decreased pyruvate secretion in multiple cell lines and primary cultures of mouse hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. The increased extracellular lactate-to-pyruvate ratio upon sAC suppression reflected an increased cytosolic free [NADH]/[NAD+] ratio, which was corroborated by using the NADH/NAD+ redox biosensor Peredox-mCherry. Mechanistic studies in permeabilized HepG2 cells showed that sAC inhibition specifically suppressed complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. A survey of cAMP effectors revealed that only selective inhibition of exchange protein activated by cAMP 1 (Epac1), but not protein kinase A (PKA) or Epac2, suppressed complex I-dependent respiration and significantly increased the cytosolic NADH/NAD+ redox state. Analysis of the ATP production rate and the adenylate energy charge showed that inhibiting sAC reciprocally affects ATP production by glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation while maintaining cellular energy homeostasis. In conclusion, our study shows that, via the regulation of complex I-dependent mitochondrial respiration, sAC-Epac1 signaling regulates the cytosolic NADH/NAD+ redox state, and coordinates oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis to maintain cellular energy homeostasis. As such, sAC is effectively a bioenergetic switch between aerobic glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation at the post-translational level.  相似文献   

12.
The possible existence of a malonate-sensitive dicarboxylate-mediated electron shuttle between microsomal NAD-linked fatty acid α-oxidation and the mitochondrial electron transport chain in uncoupled fresh potato slices was investigated. Uncoupled slice respiration is inhibited by benzylmalonate and butylmalonate, inhibitors of dicarboxylate transport into mitochondria. Uncoupled slice respiration is also inhibited by rotenone, an indication of intramitochondrial NADH oxidation. Since fatty acid α-oxidation per se is rotenone insensitive, rotenone and benzylmalonate inhibition of the oxidation of carboxyl-labeled myristate in slices points to a dicarboxylic acid shuttle linking microsomal fatty acid a-oxidation with intramitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase.
Malonute inhibits both respiration and 14CO2, release from carboxyl-labeled myristate in fresh uncoupled slices, as do inhibitors of dicarboxylate transport. Mitochondrial studies show that malonate inhibits malate oxidation but not malate dehydrogenase per se. Furthermore, malonate inhibits malate transport more severely than malate oxidation. Accordingly, mulonate inhibition of uncoupled slice respiration in the absence of tricarboxylic acid cycle activity is attributed to its interference with mitochondrial malate transport, and its consequent curtailment of a putative malate-OAA shuttle linked to cytosolic NAD-mediated fatty acid α-oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
Moreau F  Romani R 《Plant physiology》1982,70(5):1385-1390
After preparation on self-generated Percoll gradients, avocado (Persea americana Mill, var. Fuerte and Hass) mitochondria retain a high proportion of cyanide-insensitive respiration, especially with α-ketoglutarate and malate as substrates. Whereas α-ketoglutarate oxidation remains unchanged, the rate of malate oxidation increases as ripening advances through the climacteric. An enhancement of mitochondrial malic enzyme activity, measured by the accumulation of pyruvate, closely parallels the increase of malate oxidation. The capacity for cyanide-insensitive respiration is also considerably enhanced while respiratory control decreases (from 3.3 to 1.7), leading to high state 4 rates.

Both malate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme are functional in state 3, but malic enzyme appears to predominate before the addition of ADP and after its depletion. In the presence of cyanide, a membrane potential is generated when the alterntive pathway is operating. Cyanide-insensitive malate oxidation can be either coupled to the first phosphorylation site, sensitive to rotenone, or by-pass this site. In the absence of phosphate acceptor, malate oxidation is mainly carried out via malic enzyme and the alternative pathway. Experimental modification of the external mitochondrial environment in vitro (pH, NAD+, glutamade) results in changes in malate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme activities, which also modify cyanide resistance. It appears that a functional connection exists between malic enzyme and the alternative pathway via a rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase and that this pathway is responsible, in part, for nonphosphorylating respiratory activity during the climacteric.

  相似文献   

14.
Shibasaka M  Tsuji H 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1008-1012
Respiratory activities were compared among rice seedlings germinated in air for 6 days (aerobic seedlings), those germinated under water for 5 days (submerged seedlings), and those grown in air for 1 day after 5 days' submerged germination (air-adapted seedlings). The respiratory activity of the submerged seedlings increased rapidly on transfer to air and reached a plateau at 16 hours in air. Respiration of the submerged seedlings was as sensitive to cyanide as those of aerobic and air-adapted seedlings. 2,4-Dinitrophenol had no effect on the respiration of the submerged seedlings, but stimulated those of the other two types of seedlings. Mitochondria from three types of seedlings did not differ in the ADP/O ratio and the respiratory control ratio (RCR) when succinate was oxidized. However, mitochondria from submerged seedlings (submerged mitochondria) showed poor RCR of about unity when malate was oxidized. Both the rate of succinate oxidation and succinate dehydrogenase activity were low in submerged mitochondria, but increased during air adaptation. Although submerged mitochondria oxidized malate very slowly, this activity increased after exposure to air without any increase in malate dehydrogenase activity. When NAD+ was added to submerged mitochondria, oxidation of malate was restored to the level of the aerobic controls. Addition of NAD+ enhanced the state 3 rate in submerged mitochondria, and RCR recovered to nearly the same value as that of the aerobic controls. Similar effects of NAD+ on 2-oxoglutarate oxidation were observed. All these defects in submerged mitochondria were repaired during air adaptation. These results suggest that NAD+-linked substrate oxidation was low in submerged mitochondria because of NAD+ deficiency, and that the oxidation increased with an increasing level of NAD+ during air adaptation.  相似文献   

15.
Isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) activities were measured in mitochondria isolated from aerial parts of 21-day-old spruce (Picea abies L. Karst.) seedlings. Mitochondria were purified by two methods, involving continuous and discontinuous Percoll gradients. Whatever the method of purification, the mitochondrial outer membrane was about 69% intact, and the mitochondria contained very low cytosolic, chloroplastic and peroxisomal contaminations. Nevertheless, as judged by the recovery of fumarase activity, purification on a continuous 28% Percoll gradient gave the best yield in mitochondria, which exhibited a high degree of inner membrane intactness (91%). The purified mitochondria oxidized succinate and malate with good respiratory control and ADP/O ratios. The highest oxidation rate was obtained with succinate as substrate, and malate oxidation was improved (+ 60%) by addition of exogenous NAD+. Experiments using standard respiratory chain inhibitors indicated that, in spruce mitochondria, the alternative pathway was present. Both NAD+-isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.41) and NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.42) were present in the mitochondrial matrix fraction, and NAD+-IDH activity was about 2-fold higher than NADP+-IDH activity. The NAD+-IDH showed sigmoidal kinetics in response to isocitrate and standard Michaelis-Menten kinetics for NAD+ and Mg2+. The NADP+-IDH, in contrast, displayed lower Km values. For NAD+-IDH the pH optimum was at 7.4, whereas NADP+-IDH exhibited a broad pH optimum between 8.3 and 9. In addition, NAD+-IDH was more thermolabile. Adenine nucleotides and 2-oxoglutarate were found to inhibit NAD(P)+-IDH activities only at high concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanisms and accurate control of citrate oxidation by Percoll-purified potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber mitochondria were characterized in various metabolic conditions by recording time course evolution of the citric acid cycle related intermediates and O2 consumption. Intact potato tuber mitochondria showed good rates of citrate oxidation, provided that nonlimiting amounts of NAD+ and thiamine pyrophosphate were present in the matrix space. Addition of ATP increased initial oxidation rates, by activation of the energy-dependent net citrate uptake, and stimulated succinate and malate formation. When the intramitochondrial NADH to NAD+ ratio was high, α-ketoglutarate only was excreted from the matrix space. After addition of ADP, aspartate, or oxaloacetate, which decreased the NADH to NAD+ ratio, flux rates through the Krebs cycle dehydrogenases were strongly increased and α-ketoglutarate, succinate, and malate accumulated up to steady-state concentrations in the reaction medium. It was concluded that NADH to NAD+ ratio could be the primary signal for coordination of fluxes through electron transport chain or malate dehydrogenase and NAD+-linked Krebs cycle dehydrogenases. In addition, these results clearly showed that the tricarboxylic acid cycle could serve as an important source of carbon skeletons for extra-mitochondrial synthetic processes, according to supply and demand of metabolites.  相似文献   

17.
Infected cells of soybean (Glycine max) nodules require NADH,ATP, and 2-oxoglutarate for ammonia assimilation. The role ofmitochondria in nodule metabolism was investigated by determiningtheir respiratory properties and comparing them with cotyledonmitochondria. Nodule mitochondria oxidized malate at a ratetwice that of any other NAD-linked substrate although theirmalic enzyme activity was very low, accounting for only 12%of malate oxidation at pH 6.4 compared to 56% for cotyledonmitochondria. The reduction of NAD+ in mitochondria of noduleson adding malate (determined by fluorescence) was rapid andreached a stable level, whereas in cotyledon mitochondria theNADH level declined rapidly as oxaloacetate accumulated. Anoxaloacetate scavenging system in the mitochondrial reactionmedium increased malate oxidation by cotyledon mitochondria4-fold, but increased that of nodule mitochondria by less than50%. This demonstrates that the efflux of oxaloacetate by theoxaloacetate carrier is highly regulated by the extra-mitochondrialoxaloacetate concentration in cotyledon mitochondria comparedto nodule mitochondria. The activity of TCA cycle enzymes, exceptmalate and succinate dehydrogenases, was low in nodule mitochondria.Their oxaloacetate export during malate oxidation was rapid.The aspartate amino transferase activity associated with nodulemitochondria was sufficient to account for significant formationof 2-oxoglutarate from oxaloacetate and glutamate. These resultssuggest that nodule mitochondria operate a truncated form ofthe TCA cycle and primarily oxidize malate to provide oxaloacetateand ATP for NH3 assimilation. Key words: Glycine max (L.), nitrogen fixation, gluconeogenesis, respiration  相似文献   

18.
Studies on anaerobiosis in marine invertebrates have shown that many rely on malate, octopine, or alanopine dehydrogenases, rather than lactate dehydrogenase, for cytosolic redox balance. These systems were studied by computer simulations with the assumption that these dehydrogenases maintain their substrates and products at instantaneous equilibrium. The simulations permit a study of the redox ratio (NADH/NAD+) as a function of the concentration of lactate, malate, or octopine. The redox ratio was found to increase as these products accumulated. It was substantially less in the simulations of malate and octopine dehydrogenases when compared to those of lactate dehydrogenase. This factor may be important for maintaining glycolysis in these organisms, and suggests an advantage for the use of octopine dehydrogenase rather than its analogue lactate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》2023,1864(1):148930
At low inner mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ) oxaloacetate (OAA) accumulates in the organelles concurrently with decreased complex II-energized respiration. This is consistent with ΔΨ-dependent OAA inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase. To assess the metabolic importance of this process, we tested the hypothesis that perturbing metabolic clearance of OAA in complex II-energized mitochondria would alter O2 flux and, further, that this would occur in both ΔΨ and tissue-dependent fashion. We carried out respiratory and metabolite studies in skeletal muscle and interscapular brown adipose tissue (IBAT) directed at the effect of OAA transamination to aspartate (catalyzed by the mitochondrial form of glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, Got2) on complex II-energized respiration. Addition of low amounts of glutamate to succinate-energized mitochondria at low ΔΨ increased complex II (succinate)-energized respiration in muscle but had little effect in IBAT mitochondria. The transaminase inhibitor, aminooxyacetic acid, increased OAA concentrations and impaired succinate-energized respiration in muscle but not IBAT mitochondria at low but not high ΔΨ. Immunoblotting revealed that Got2 expression was far greater in muscle than IBAT mitochondria. Because we incidentally observed metabolism of OAA to pyruvate in IBAT mitochondria, more so than in muscle mitochondria, we also examined the expression of mitochondrial oxaloacetate decarboxylase (ODX). ODX was detected only in IBAT mitochondria. In summary, at low but not high ΔΨ, mitochondrial transamination clears OAA preventing loss of complex II respiration: a process far more active in muscle than IBAT mitochondria. We also provide evidence that OAA decarboxylation clears OAA to pyruvate in IBAT mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
Isolated mitochondria of wheat shoots oxidize α- ketoglutarate, DL-malate succinate and NADH with good relative respiration control and ADP: O ratio. They have high affinity for α-ketoglutarate and NADH as substrates and utilize malate and succinate with a respiration ratio of about one-half of α-ketoglutarate. The average ADP : O ratios approach the expected theoretical values, i.e., 3.6 ± 0.2 for α-ketoglutarate, 1.8 ± 0.2 for succinate, and 2.8 ± 0.2 for malate. The ADP: O ratio with NADH is 1.8 ± 0.2. The maximum coupling of oxidation and phosphorylation is obtained at concentrations of 10 mM, 2 mM, 10 mM and 8 mM for α-ketoglutarate, NADH, malate and succinate, respectively. — Wheat mitochondria have little or no dependence on added cofactors. Mitochondria prepared by our procedure apparently retain sufficient amounts of endogenous cofactors required for NAD-linked systems. FAD+ is found to improve succinate oxidation. Cytochrome c does not have any significant effect on respiratory parameters of wheat mitochondria. — Wheat mitochondria are some -what resistant to DNP at 1.7 × 10-5M. Malonate seems to improve coupling of α-ketoglutarate oxidation. Other Krebs cycle intermediates have been tested on three major substrates of TCA cycle, i.e., α-ketoglutarate, malate and succinate.  相似文献   

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