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1.
Hydrogen peroxide production by roots and its stimulation by exogenous NADH   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
H2O2 production by roots of young seedlings was monitored using a non-destructive in vivo assay at pH 5.0. A particularly high rate of H2O2 production was measured in the roots of soybean (Glycine max L. cv. Labrador) seedlings which were used for further investigation of the physiological and enzymological properties of apoplastic H2O2 production. In the soybean root H2O2 production can be stimulated 10-fold by exogenous NADH or NADPH. This response displays typical features of a peroxidase-catalyzed oxidase reaction using NAD(P)H as electron donor for the reduction of O2 to H2O2. Comparative measurements showed that the NADH-induced H2O2 production of the roots resembles the H2O2-forming activity of horseradish peroxidase with respect to NADH and O2 concentration requirements and sensitivity to inhibition by KCN, NaN3, superoxide dismutase and catalase. NADH-induced H2O2 production can be observed with similar intensity in all regions of the root, in agreement with the distribution of apoplastic peroxidase activity. In contrast, the activity responsible for the basal H2O2 production in the absence of exogenous NADH was mainly confined to a short subapical zone of the root and differs from the NADH-induced reaction by insensitivity to inhibition by superoxide dismutase and a strikingly lower requirement for O2. It is concluded that the basal H2O2 production of the root is mediated by an enzyme different from peroxidase, possibly a plasma membrane O2?-producing oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
In addition to well-known cell wall peroxidases, there is now evidence for the presence of this enzyme at the plasma membrane of the plant cells (surface peroxidase). Both are able to catalyze, through a chain of reactions involving the superoxide anion, the oxidation of NADH to generate hydrogen peroxide. The latter is oxidized by other wall-bound peroxidases to convert cinnamoyl alcohols into radical forms, which, then polymerize to generate lignin. However, there are other enzymes at the surface of plasma membranes capable of generating hydrogen peroxide (cell wall polyamine oxidase), superoxide anion (plasma membrane Turbo reductase), or both (plasma membrane flavoprotein?). These enzymes utilize NAD(P)H as a substrate. The Turbo reductase and the flavoprotein catalyze the univalent reduction of Fe3+ and then of O2 to produce Fe2+ and \(O_2^{\bar \cdot } \) , respectively. The superoxide anion, in the acidic environment of the cell wall, may then dismutate to H2O2. These superoxide anion- and hydrogen peroxide-generating systems are discussed in relation to their possible involvement in physiological and pathological processes in the apoplast of plant cells.  相似文献   

3.
Barry Halliwell 《Planta》1978,140(1):81-88
The enzyme horseradish peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) catalyses oxidation of NADH. NADH oxidation is prevented by addition of the enzyme superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) to the reaction mixture before adding peroxidase but addition of dismutase after peroxidase has little inhibitory effect. Catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) inhibits peroxidase-catalysed NADH oxidation when added at any time during the reaction. Apparently the peroxidase uses hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) generated by non-enzymic breakdown of NADH to catalyse oxidation of NADH to a free-radical, NAD., which reduces oxygen to the superoxide free-radical ion, O2 .-. Some of the O2 .- reacts with peroxidase to give peroxidase compound III, which is catalytically inactive in NADH oxidation. The remaining O2 .- undergoes dismutation to O2 and H2O2. O2 .- does not react with NADH at significant rates. Mn2+ or lactate dehydrogenase stimulate NADH oxidation by peroxidase because they mediate a reaction between O2 .- and NADH. 2,4-Dichlorophenol, p-cresol and 4-hydroxycinnamic acid stimulate NADH oxidation by peroxidase, probably by breaking down compound III and so increasing the amount of active peroxidase in the reaction mixture. Oxidation in the presence of these phenols is greatly increased by adding H2O2. The rate of NADH oxidation by peroxidase is greatest in the presence of both Mn2+ and those phenols which interact with compound III. Both O2 .- and H2O2 are involved in this oxidation, which plays an important role in lignin synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Addition of vanadate, stimulated oxidation of NADH by rat liver microsomes. The products were NAD+ and H2O2. High rates of this reaction were obtained in the presence of phosphate buffer and at low pH values. The yellow-orange colored polymeric form of vanadate appears to be the active species and both ortho- and meta-vanadate gave poor activities even at mM concentrations.The activity as measured by oxygen uptake was inhibited by cyanide, EDTA, mannitol, histidine, ascorbate, noradrenaline, adriamycin, cytochrome c, Mn2+, superoxide dismutase, horseradish peroxidase and catalase. Mitochondrial outer membranes possess a similar activity of vanadate-stimulated NADH oxidation. But addition of mitochondria and some of its derivative particles abolished the microsomal activity. In the absence of oxygen, disappearance of NADH measured by decrease in absorbance at 340 nm continued at nearly the same rate since vanadate served as an electron acceptor in the microsomal system. Addition of excess catalase or SOD abolished the oxygen uptake while retaining significant rates of NADH disappearance indicating that the two activities are delinked. A mechanism is proposed wherein oxygen receives the first electron from NAD radical generated by oxidation of NADH by phosphovanadate and the consequent reduced species of vanadate (Viv) gives the second electron to superoxide to reduce it H2O2. This is applicable to all membranes whereas microsomes have the additional capability of reducing vanadate.  相似文献   

5.
Sites of H2O2 generation in lightly prefixed, intact thyroid follicles were studied by two cytochemical reactions: peroxidase-dependent DAB oxidation and cerium precipitation. In both cases reaction product accumulated on the apical surface of the follicle cell at the membrane-colloid interface. The former reaction was inhibited by the peroxidase inhibitor, aminotriazole; both reactions were blocked by the presence of catalase. NADH in the medium slightly increased the amount of cerium precipitation. The ferricyanide technique for oxidoreductase activity was also applied; reaction product again was associated with the apical surface. These results strongly imply that the follicle cells have a NADH oxidizing system generating H2O2 at the apical plasma membrane.  相似文献   

6.
Plasma membrane vesicles of HeLa cells are characterized by a drug-responsive oxidation of NADH. The NADH oxidation takes place in an argon or nitrogen atmosphere and in samples purged of oxygen. Direct assay of protein thiols by reaction with 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB; Ellman's reagent), suggests that protein disulfides may be the natural electron acceptors for NADH oxidation by the plasma membrane vesicles. In the presence of NADH, protein disulfides of the membranes were reduced with a concomitant stoichiometric increase in protein thiols. The increase in protein thiols was inhibited in parallel to the inhibition of NADH oxidation by the antitumor sulfonylurea LY181984 with an EC50 of ca. 30 nM. LY181984, with an EC50 of 30 nM, also inhibited a protein disulfide–thiol interchange activity based on the restoration of activity to inactive (scrambled) RNase and thiol oxidation. The findings suggest that thiol oxidation, NADH-dependent disulfide reduction (NADH oxidation), and protein disulfide–thiol interchange in the absence of NADH all may be manifestations of the same sulfonylurea binding protein of the HeLa plasma membrane. A surface location of the thiols involved was demonstrated using detergents and the impermeant thiol reagent p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonic acid (PCMPS). The surface location precludes a physiological role of the protein in NADH oxidation. Rather, it may carry out some other role more closely related to a function in growth, such as protein disulfide–thiol interchange coupled to cell enlargement.  相似文献   

7.
Highly purified plasma membranes were isolated by aqueous two-phase partitioning from rice (Oryza sativa) seedling roots. The effects of lanthanum chloride (LaCl3) on the activities of lipid peroxidation, the redox system and H+-ATPase, Ca2+-ATPase of plasma membranes were studied. The lipid peroxidation of plasma membranes could be depressed by certain low concentrations of LaCl3 and enhanced by high concentrations of LaCl3, while the lipid peroxidation was also dependent on the plasma membrane protein and incubation time. The relative activity of O2 uptake of plasma membranes was inhibited by all tested LaCl3 concentrations. In contrast, the reduction rate of Fe(CN)6 3– by plasma membranes was stimulated below 40 M of LaCl3, but was reduced above 60 M of LaCl3. The relative activities of both H+-ATPase and Ca2+-ATPase increased constantly from control to LaCl3 of concentration 60 M where the activities of both enzymes were the maximum, but decreased remarkably at 80 M LaCl3 concentrations various LaCl3 were added to culture solutions. In the other measurement case in which various LaCl3 concentrations were added directly to reaction medium and the plasma membrane vesicles only came from the control cultured rice seedling roots, the response of H+-ATPase activity to La3+ was similar to the response in culture solution. However, the La3+ concentration was only 20 M when the activity of H+-ATPase was the maximum. In contrast to the case of LaCl3 addition to culture solution, Ca2+-ATPase activity was inhibited by all concentrations of La3+ which were added directly to the reaction medium. The above results revealed that REEs inhibited electron transfer from NADH to oxygen in plant plasma membranes, depressed the production of active oxygen radicals, and reduced the formation of lipid peroxides through plasma membrane lipid peroxidation. REEs ions also enhanced the H+ extrusion by both standard redox system and H+-ATPase in plasma membranes at certain concentrations. A possible role for the plant cell wall in REEs effects on plasma membranes was also suggested.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidation of NADH and accompanying reduction of oxygen to H2O2 stimulated by polyvanadate was markedly inhibited by SOD and cytochrome c. The presence of decavanadate, the polymeric form, is necessary for obtaining the microsomal enzyme-catalyzed activity. The accompanying activity of reduction of cytochrome c was found to be SOD-insensitive and therefore does not represent superoxide formation. The reduction of cytochrome c by vanadyl sulfate was also SOD-insensitive. In the presence of H2O2 all the forms of vanadate were able to oxidize reduced cytochrome c, which was sensitive to mannitol, tris and also catalase, indicating H202-dependent generation of hydroxyl radicals. Using ESR and spin trapping technique only hydroxyl radicals, but not superoxide anion radicals, were detected during polyvanadate-dependent NADH oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
The rate of ascorbate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide plus hydrogen (NADH) cooxidation (i.e., their nonenzymic oxidation by peroxidase/H2O2-generated phenoxyl radicals of three hydroxycinnamates: caffeate, ferulate and p-coumarate) was studied in vitro. The reactions initiated by different sources of peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) [isolates from soybean (Glycine max L.) seed coat, maize (Zea mays L.) root-cell wall, and commercial horseradish peroxidase] were monitored. Native electrophoresis of samples and specific staining for peroxidase activity revealed various isoforms in each of the three enzyme sources. The peroxidase sources differed both in the rate of H2O2-dependent hydroxycinnamate oxidation and in the order of affinity for the phenolic substrates. The three hydroxycinnamates did not differ in their ability to cooxidize ascorbate, whereas NADH cooxidation was affected by substitution of the phenolic ring. Thus, p-coumarate was more efficient than caffeate in NADH cooxidation, with ferulate not being effective at all. Metal ions (Zn2+ and Al3+) inhibited the reaction of peroxidase with p-coumarate and affected the cooxidation rate of ascorbate and the peroxidase reaction in the same manner with all substrates used. However, inhibition of p-coumarate oxidation by metal ions did not affect NADH cooxidation rate. We propose that both the ascorbate and NADH cooxidation systems can function as mechanisms to scavenge H2O2 and regenerate phenolics in different cellular compartments, thus contributing to protection from oxidative damage. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

10.
When detergent-derived photosystem II (PSII) membranes are treated with CaCl2 to remove the three extrinsic proteins associated with the O2-evolving complex, the resulting membranes (CaPSII) can still catalyze water oxidation if sufficient Ca2+ and Cl- are present. When CaPSII membranes are exposed to single turnover flashes on an O2 rate electrode, anomalous O2 is produced by the first two flashes. The addition of catalase to the membrane suspension completely inhibits O2 produced by the first two flashes, but not by subsequent flashes. Exogenous H2O2 stimulates anomalous O2 production by the first few flashes in CaPSII membranes, but not in control PSII membranes. Diuron (DCMU) does not inhibit H2O2-stimulated O2 production by the first flash. However, it does inhibit the O2 yield of all subsequent flashes, indicating that all flash-induced O2 signals in CaPSII membranes are dependent on photosystem II electron transport. H2O2 stimulation of O2 yields is inhibited in Tris-, heat-, and EDTA-(ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid)-treated CaPSII. In the presence of high salt, H2O2 (but not EDTA) treatment of CaPSII, extracts Mn functional in normal photosynthetic O2 evolution. The addition of exogenous Mn2+ reconstitutes anomalous O2 production in Tris-and H2O2/EDTA-treated CaPSII preparations but only in the presence of H2O2. Anomalous H2O2-stimulated O2 production can be observed both with a Clark electrode (steady state) and an O2 rate electrode (flash sequence). The mechanism involves electron donation from H2O2, mediated by free Mn2+, to PSII, and the 33-kDa extrinsic protein under some conditions can block this process. Since H2O2 can remove functional Mn from CaPSII membranes, its presence can convert functional Mn to the Mn2+ mediator state required for anomalous O2 production. EDTA binds Mn in CaPSII disrupted by H2O2 and prevents anomalous O2 evolution.Abbreviations CaPSII a PSII preparation washed with approximately 1M CaCl2 - Chl chlorophyll - DCBQ 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - MES 2-[N-morpholino]-ethanesulfonic acid - PSII a detergent-derived photosystem II membrane preparation - RC reaction center - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)-aminomethane - Yn oxygen rate electrode flash yield resulting from the nth flash of a sequence of single turnover flashes of light Operated by the Midwest Research Institute for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-83CH10093.  相似文献   

11.
Nitrate reductase (NR, EC 1.6.6.1) is sensitive to O2 concentration, and therefore it was of interest to study the action of H2O2, a normal substance in plant metabolism, on NR activity in segments of 7-, 14- and 17-day-old leaves of oat (Avena sativa L. ev. Suregrain). After 4 h of treatment in the dark, H2O2 decreased NR activity as measured with the in vivo assay. The effect was stronger in 14- and 17- than in 7-day-old leaves. Vacuum infiltration of cysteine did not prevent this decrease. When NR was determined with the in vitro assay, H2O2 did not seem to affect the activity after the 4 h treatment. but NR decreased when crude extracts prepared from untreated 14-day-old leaves were incubated directly with H2O2. This effect was prevented by addition of cysteine, ascorbate or reduced glutathione to the extracts. In order to study the possibility that low activity of the system for defense against oxidations could account for the age-dependent response of NR to H2O2 in the in vivo test, activities of catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and glutathione reductase were measured during leaf development and after a 4-h treatment with H2O2 in the dark. No clear correlation was found between the activities of those enzymes and changes in in vivo NR activity caused by H2O2. The results suggest that H2O2 might affect NR both directly by oxidizing SH-groups and indirectly by decreasing reductant availability as a result of NADH oxidation. The age-dependent response of NR to H2O2 treatment could also be explained in terms of decreased NADH availability in the tissues due to decreased NADH synthesis and/or increased degradation.  相似文献   

12.
Membranes of Klebsiella pneumoniae, grown anaerobically on citrate, contain a NADH oxidase activity that is activated specifically by Na+ or Li+ ions and effectively inhibited by 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide (HQNO). Cytochromes b and d were present in the membranes, and the steady state reduction level of cytochrome b increased on NaCl addition. Inverted bacterial membrane vesicles accumulated Na+ ions upon NADH oxidation. Na+ uptake was completely inhibited by monensin and by HQNO and slightly stimulated by carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone (FCCP), thus indicating the operation of a primary Na+ pump. A Triton extract of the bacterial membranes did not catalyze NADH oxidation by O2, but by ferricyanide or menadione in a Na+-independent manner. The Na+-dependent NADH oxidation by O2 was restored by adding ubiquinone-1 in micromolar concentrations. After inhibition of the terminal oxidase with KCN, ubiquinol was formed from ubiquinone-1 and NADH. The reaction was stimulated about 6-fold by 10 mM NaCl and was severely inhibited by low amounts of HQNO. Superoxide radicals were formed during electron transfer from NADH to ubiquinone-1. These radicals disappeared by adding NaCl, but not with NaCl and HQNO. It is suggested that the superoxide radicals arise from semiquinone radicals which are formed by one electron reduction of quinone in a Na+-independent reaction sequence and then dismutate in a Na+ and HQNO sensitive reaction to quinone and quinol. The mechanism of the respiratory Na+ pump of K. pneumoniae appears to be quite similar to that of Vibrio alginolyticus.  相似文献   

13.
Ferric leghemoglobin reductase (FLbR) from soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr) nodules catalyzed oxidation of NADH, reduction of ferric leghemoglobin (Lb+3), and reduction of dichloroindophenol (diaphorase activity). None of these reactions was detectable when O2 was removed from the reaction system, but all were restored upon readdition of O2. In the absence of exogenous electron carriers and in the presence of O2 and excess NADH, FLbR catalyzed NADH oxidation with the generation of H2O2 functioning as an NADH oxidase. The possible involvement of peroxide-like intermediates in the FLbR-catalyzed reactions was analyzed by measuring the effects of peroxidase and catalase on FLbR activities; both enzymes at low concentrations (about 2 μg/mL) stimulated the FLbR-catalyzed NADH oxidation and Lb+3 reduction. The formation of H2O2 during the FLbR-catalyzed NADH oxidation was confirmed using a sensitive assay based on the fluorescence emitted by dichlorofluorescin upon reaction with H2O2. The stoichiometry ratios between the FLbR-catalyzed NADH oxidation and Lb+3 reduction were not constant but changed with time and with concentrations of NADH and O2 in the reaction solution, indicating that the reactions were not directly coupled and electrons from NADH oxidation were transferred to Lb+3 by reaction intermediates. A study of the affinity of FLbR for O2 showed that the enzyme required at least micromolar levels of dissolved O2 for optimal activities. A mechanism for the FLbR-catalyzed reactions is proposed by analogy with related oxidoreductase systems.  相似文献   

14.
The granule rich-fraction isolated from human resting polymorphonuclear leukocytes is capable of CN-insensitive NADH oxidation and O2-uptake, accompanied by production of superoxide anion, hydroxyl radicals and H2O2. We showed that H2O2 initiates and maintains NADH oxidation and O2-uptake but is also necessary for the formation of superoxide anion and hydroxyl radicals. It acts as a primary substrate for CN-insensitive protein-mediated formation of hydroxyl radicals, which in turn produce superoxide anions, probably through univalent oxidation of NADH as an intermediary.  相似文献   

15.
Exposure of bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle plasma membrane suspension with the oxidant H2O2 (1 mM) stimulated Ca2+ATPase activity. We sought to determine the role of matrix metalloprotease-2 (MMP-2) in stimulating Ca2+ATPase activity by H2O2 in the smooth muscle plasma membrane. The smooth muscle membrane possesses a Ca2+-dependent protease activity in the gelatin containing zymogram having an apparent molecular mass of 72 kDa. The 72 kDa protease activity was found to be inhibited by EGTA, 1: 10-phenanthroline, a2-macroglobulin and tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease-2 (TIMP-2) indicating that the Ca2+-dependent 72 kDa protease is the MMP-2. Western immunoblot studies of the membrane suspension with polyclonal antibodies of MMP-2 and TIMP-2 revealed that MMP-2 and TIMP-2, respectively, are the ambient matrix metalloprotease and the corresponding tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease in the membrane. In addition to increasing the Ca2+ATPase activity, H2O2 also enhanced the activity of the smooth muscle plasma membrane associated protease activity as evidenced by its ability to degrade14C-gelatin. The protease activity and the Ca2+ATPase activity were prevented by the antioxidant, vitamin E, indicating that the effect produced by H2O2 was due to reactive oxidant species(es). Both basal and H2O2 stimulated MMP-2 activity and Ca2+ATPase activity were inhibited by the general inhibitors of matrix metalloproteases: EGTA, 1: 10-phenanthroline, α2-macroglobulin and also by TIMP-2 (the specific inhibitor of MMP-2) indicating that H2O2 increased MMP-2 activity and that subsequently stimulated Ca2+ATPase activity in the plasma membrane. This was further confirmed by the following observations: (i) adding low doses of MMP-2 or H2O2 to the smooth muscle membrane suspension caused submaximal increase in Ca2+ATPase activity, and pretreatment with TIMP-2 prevents the increase in Ca2+ATPase activity; (ii) combined treatment of the membrane with low doses of MMP-2 and H2O2 augments further the Ca2+ATPase activity caused by the respective low doses of either H2O2 or MMP-2; and (iii) pretreatment with TIMP-2 prevents the increase in Ca2+ATPase activity in the membrane caused by the combined treatment of MMP-2 and H2O2.  相似文献   

16.
Among various metal ions of physiological interest, Cu2+ is uniquely capable of catalyzing the oxidation of NADH by H2O2. This oxidation is stimulated about fivefold in the presence of imidazole. A similar activating effect is found for some imidazole derivatives (1-methyl imidazole, 2-methyl imidazole, andN-acetyl-L-histidine). Some other imidazole-containing compounds (L-histidine,L-histidine methyl ester, andL-carnosine), however, inhibit the Cu2+-catalyzed peroxidation of NADH. Other chelating agents such as EDTA andL-alanine are also inhibitory. Stoichiometry for NADH oxidation per mole of H2O2 utilized is 1, which excludes the possibility of a two-step oxidation mechanism with a nucleotide free-radical intermediate. About 92% of the NADH oxidation product can be identified as enzymatically active NAD+. D2O, 2,5-dimethylfuran, and 1,4-diazabicyclo [2.2.2]-octane have no significant effect on the oxidation, thus excluding1O2 as a mediator. Similarly, OH· is also not a likely intermediate, since the system is not affected by various scavengers of this radical. The results suggest that a copper-hydrogen peroxide intermediate, when complexed with suitable ligands, can generate still another oxygen species much more reactive than its parent compound, H2O2.  相似文献   

17.
Acidaminococcus fermentans is able to ferment glutamate to ammonia, CO2, acetate, butyrate, and H2. The molecular hydrogen (approximately 10 kPa; E′ = –385 mV) stems from NADH generated in the 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase reaction (E°′ = –240 mV) of the hydroxyglutarate pathway. In contrast to growing cells, which require at least 5 mM Na+, a Na+-dependence of the H2-formation was observed with washed cells. Whereas the optimal glutamate fermentation rate was achieved already at 1 mM Na+, H2 formation commenced only at > 10 mM Na+ and reached maximum rates at 100 mM Na+. The acetate/butyrate ratio thereby increased from 2.0 at 1 mM Na+ to 3.0 at 100 mM Na+. A hydrogenase and an NADH dehydrogenase, both of which were detected in membrane fractions, are components of a model in which electrons, generated by NADH oxidation inside of the cytoplasmic membrane, reduce protons outside of the cytoplasmic membrane. The entire process can be driven by decarboxylation of glutaconyl-CoA, which consumes the protons released by NADH oxidation inside the cell. Hydrogen production commences exactly at those Na+ concentrations at which the electrogenic H+/Na+-antiporter glutaconyl-CoA decarboxylase is converted into a Na+/Na+ exchanger. Received: 3 May 1996 / Accepted: 12 August 1996  相似文献   

18.
Two strains of Lactobacillus plantarum accumulated H2O2 when grown aerobically in a complex glucose based medium. The H2O2 accumulation did not occur immediately on exposure of the culture to O2 but was delayed for a time which, in the case of one strain, was dependent on the amount of inoculum used to seed the culture. The accumulation was always preceded by an increase in the rate of O2 utilization by the cultures. The latter coincided approximately with an increase in specific activity of NADH oxidase, pyruvate oxidase and NADH peroxidase. H2O2 was not a product of NADH oxidase in vitro but was formed in substantial quantities from O2 during oxidation of pyruvate. The three enzymes were induced by O2 and H2O2; the induction of NADH oxidase responded to lower levels of O2 (but not of H2O2) than the pyruvate oxidase or the NADH peroxidase.Abbreviations MRSG Mann, Rogosa and Sharpe medium (1960) with glucose as fermentation source - TPP thiamin pyrophosphate  相似文献   

19.
The possible role of redox-associated protons in growth of plant cells   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The protons excreted by plant cells may arise by two different mechanisms: (1) by the action of the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and (2) by plasma membrane redox reactions. The exact proportion from each source is not known, but the plasma membrane H+-ATPase is, by far, the major contributor to proton efflux. There is still some question of whether the redox-associated protons produced by NADH oxidation on the inner side of the plasma membrane traverse the membrane in a 1 : 1 relationship with electrons generated in the redox reactions. Membrane depolarization observed in the presence of ferricyanide reduction by plasma membranes of whole cells or tissues or the lag period between ferricyanide reduction and medium acidification argue that only scalar protons may be involved. The other major argument against tight coupling between protons and electrons involves the concept of strong charge compensation. When ferricyanide is reduced to ferrocyanide on the outside of cells or tissues, an extra negative charge arises, which is compensated for by the release of H+ or K+, so that the total ratio of increased H+ plus K+ equals the electrons transferred by transmembrane electron transport. These are strong arguments against a tight coupling between electrons and protons excreted by the plasma membrane. On the other hand, there is no question that inhibitor studies provide evidence for two mechanisms of proton generation by plasma membranes. When the H+-ATPase activity is totally inhibited, the addition of ferricyanide induces a burst of extra proton excretion, orvice versa, when plasma membrane redox reactions are inhibited, the H+-ATPase can function normally. Since plasma membrane redox reactions and associated H+ excretion are related to growth, it is possible that in plants the ATPase-generated protons have a different function from redox-associated protons. The H+-ATPase-generated protons have been considered for many years to be necessary for cell wall expansion, allowing elongation to take place. A special function of the redox-generated protons may be in initiating proliferative cell growth, based on the presence of a hormone-stimulated NADH oxidase in membranes of soybean hypocotyls and stimulation of root growth by low concentrations of oxidants. Here we propose that this NADH oxidase and the redox protons released by its action control growth. The mechanism for this may be the evolution of protons into a special membrane domain, from which a signal to initiate cell proliferation may originate, independent of the action of the H+-ATPase-generated protons. It is also possible that both expansion and proliferative growth are controlled by redox-generated protons.  相似文献   

20.
NADH oxidase of plasma membranes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
NADH oxidase is a cyanide-resistant and hormone-responsive oxidase intrinsic to the plasma membrane of both plant and animal cells. The activity has many unique characteristics that distinguish it from other oxidases and oxidoreductases of both organelles and internal membranes and from other oxidoreductases of the plasma membrane. Among these are resistance to inhibition by cyanide, catalase, superoxide dismutase, and phenylchloromer-curibenzoate. Activity is stimulated by hormones and growth factors and inhibited by quinone analogs such as piericidin, the flavin antagonist atebrin, and growth inhibiting gangliosides such as GM3. In marked contact to the NADH-ferricyanide oxidoreductase of the plasma membrane, the NADH oxidase is activated by lysophospholipids and fatty acids, products of phospholipase A2 action, in a time-dependent manner suggestive of stabilization of an activated form of the enzyme. The hormone-responsive NADH oxidase of the plasma membrane is not a peroxidase and may function as a terminal oxidase to link transfer of electrons from NADH to oxygen at the plasma membrane. The functional significance of the NADH oxidase of the plasma membrane is unknown but some relationship to growth or growth control is indicated. In both animal and plant plasma membranes, the oxidase is activated by growth factors and hormones to which the cells or tissues of origin have functional hormone or growth factor receptors. In addition, substances that inhibit the oxidase, the associated transmembrane reductase or both, inhibit growth. In transformed cells and tissues, the hormone and growth factor responsiveness of the NADH oxidase is reduced or absent. With human keratinocytes which exhibit an increased sensitivity to the anti-proliferative action of both retinoic acid and calcitriol, the NADH oxidase of the plasma membrane is strongly inhibited by these agents and shows the same increased sensitivity. If transfer of electrons from NADH to oxygen across or within the eukaryotic plasma membrane is an important aspect of growth or growth control, then the hormone- and growth factor-responsive NADH oxidase associated with the plasma membrane could be of fundamental importance. Because of its low basal activity, stimulation by growth factors and hormones, and the inhibition of growth in direct proportion to inhibition of the oxidase, the activity is a candidate as a rate-limiting step in the growth process. Completely unknown is the mechanism whereby NADH oxidization and growth or growth control may be coupled. This, together with further characterization of the activity and the mechanism of loss of control with neoplastic transformation, represent important challenges for future investigations.  相似文献   

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