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1.
The midgut of the tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) is a highly aerobic tissue that is destroyed by programmed cell death during larval-pupal metamorphosis. The death of the epithelium begins after commitment to pupation, and the oxygen consumption of isolated midgut mitochondria decreases soon after commitment. To assess the role of the electron transport chain in this decline in mitochondrial function, the maximal activities of complexes I-IV of the respiratory chain were measured in isolated midgut mitochondria. Whereas there were no developmental changes in the activity of complex I or III, activities of complexes II and IV [cytochrome c oxidase (COX)] were higher in mitochondria from precommitment than postcommitment larvae. This finding is consistent with a higher rate of succinate oxidation in mitochondria isolated from precommitment larvae and reveals that the metamorphic decline in mitochondrial respiration is due to the targeted destruction or inactivation of specific sites within the mitochondria, rather than the indiscriminate destruction of the organelles. The COX turnover number (e- x s(-1) x cytochrome aa3(-1)) was greater for the enzyme from precommitment than postcommitment larvae, indicating a change in the enzyme structure and/or its lipid environment during the early stages of metamorphosis. The turnover number of COX in the intact mitochondria (in organello COX) was also lower in postcommitment larvae. In addition to changes in the protein or membrane phospholipids, the metamorphic decline in this rate constant may be a result of the observed loss of endogenous cytochrome c.  相似文献   

2.
Top-down control and elasticity analysis was conducted on mitochondria isolated from the midgut of the tobacco hornworm (Manduca sexta) to assess how temperature affects oxidative phosphorylation in a eurythermic ectotherm. Oxygen consumption and protonmotive force (measured as membrane potential in the presence of nigericin) were monitored at 15, 25, and 35 degrees C. State 4 respiration displayed a Q(10) of 2.4-2.7 when measured over two temperature ranges (15-25 degrees C and 25-35 degrees C). In state 3, the Q(10)s for respiration were 2.0 and 1.7 for the lower and higher temperature ranges, respectively. The kinetic responses (oxygen consumption) of the substrate oxidation system, proton leak, and phosphorylation system increased as temperature rose, although the proton leak and substrate oxidation system showed the greatest thermal sensitivity. Whereas there were temperature-induced changes in the activities of the oxidative phosphorylation subsystems, there was no change in the state 4 membrane potential and little change in the state 3 membrane potential. Top-down control analysis revealed that control over respiration did not change with temperature. In state 4, control of respiration was shared nearly equally by the proton leak and the substrate oxidation system, whereas in state 3 the substrate oxidation system exerted over 90% of the control over respiration. The proton leak and phosphorylation system account for <10% of the temperature-induced change in the state 3 respiration rate. Therefore, when the temperature is changed, the state 3 respiration rate is altered primarily because of temperature's effect on the substrate oxidation system.  相似文献   

3.
Control over oxidative phosphorylation by purified potato mitochondria was determined using the top-down approach of metabolic control analysis. The control over the respiration rate, phosphorylation rate, proton-leak rate and proton motive force exerted by the respiratory chain, phosphorylation reactions and the proton leak were measured over a range of phosphorylation rates from resting (state 4) to maximal (state 3). These rates were obtained by adding different amounts of hexokinase in the presence of glucose, or different amounts of oligomycin in the presence of ADP. The respiratory substrate was NADH or succinate, both of which feed electrons directly to ubiquinone. The rate of oxygen consumption by the alternative oxidase pathway was negligible with NADH as substrate but was measurable with succinate and was subtracted. Control over the respiration rate in potato mitochondria was predominantly exerted by the respiratory chain at all rates except close to state 4, where control by the proton leak was equally or more important. For oxidation of NADH, the flux control coefficient over the respiration rate exerted by the respiratory chain in state 3 was between 0.8 and 1.0, while in state 4, control over the respiration rate was shared about equally between the chain and the proton leak. The control over the phosphorylation rate was predominantly exerted by the respiratory chain, although at low rates control by the phosphorylation system was also important. For oxidation of NADH, the flux control coefficient over the phosphorylation rate exerted by the respiratory chain in state 3 was 0.8-1.0, while near state 4 the flux control coefficients over the phosphorylation rate were about 0.8 for the phosphorylation system and 0.25 for the chain. Control over the proton leak rate was shared between the respiratory chain and the proton leak; the phosphorylation system had negative control. For oxidation of NADH, the flux control coefficients over the leak rate in state 3 were 1.0 for the leak, 0.4 for the chain and -0.4 for the phosphorylation system, while in state 4 the flux control coefficients over leak rate were about 0.5 for the leak and 0.5 for the chain. Control over the magnitude of the protonmotive force was small, between -0.2 and +0.2, reflecting the way the system operates to keep the protonmotive force fairly constant; the respiratory chain and the phosphorylation system had equal and opposite control and there was very little control by the proton leak except near state 4.  相似文献   

4.
The dynamic model developed in our previous publications [1,2] was used to calculate the flux control coefficients of oxidation, phosphorylation and proton leak fluxes for isolated mitochondria and for three modes of work of intact cells (hepatocytes). The results obtained were compared with experimental data, especially those measured in the frame of the 'top-down approach' of the metabolic control theory. A good agreement for mitochondria and for intact cells was found. The control of the oxygen consumption flux is shared between the ATP utilization (main controlling factor), substrate dehydrogenation, proton leak and, in some conditions, the ATP/ADP carrier. The phosphorylation subsystem seemed to be controlled mainly by itself, while the proton leak was influenced by all three subsystems. It was also shown that the large relative change in the enzyme activity during inhibitor titration of mitochondria or cells could lead to the overestimation of some flux control coefficient values in experimental measurements. An influence of some hormones (glucagon, vasopressin, adrenaline and others) on the mitochondrial respiration was also simulated. Our results suggest that these hormones stimulate the substrate dehydrogenation as well as the phosphorylation system (ATP usage and, possibly, the ATP/ADP carrier).  相似文献   

5.
The mathematical dynamic model of oxidative phosphorylation developed previously and in the accompanying paper was modified to involve isolated mitochondria conditions; it was also used to simulate state 4 --> state 3 transition in rat liver mitochondria incubated with succinate as respiratory substrate and glucose-hexokinase as an ADP-regenerating system. Changes in the respiration rate, protonmotive force and reduction level of ubiquinone and cytochrome c as well as the internal (i) and external (e) ATP/ADP ratio between state 4 and state 3 were calculated and compared with the experimental data. Flux control coefficients with respect to oxygen consumption flux for different reactions and processes of oxidative phosphorylation were simulated for different values of the respiration rate (state 4, state 3 and intermediate states). Flux control coefficients for the oxidation, phosphorylation and proton leak subsystems with respect to the oxidation, phosphorylation and proton leak fluxes for different values of the respiration rate were also calculated. These theoretical data were compared with the experimental results obtained in the frame of metabolic control analysis and the 'top-down' approach to this analysis. A good agreement was obtained. Simulated time courses of the respiration rate, the protonmotive force (Deltap) and other parameters after addition of a small amount of ADP to mitochondria in state 4 mimicked at least semiquantitatively the experimentally measured time courses of these parameters. It was concluded, therefore, that in the present stage, the model is able to reflect different properties of the oxidative phosphorylation system in a broad range of conditions fairly well, allows deeper insight into the mechanisms responsible for control and regulation of this process, and can be used for simulation of new experiments, thus inspiring experimental verification of the theoretical predictions.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial membrane fatty acid composition has been proposed to play a role in determining mitochondrial proton leak rate. The purpose of this study was to determine if feeding rats diets with different fatty acid sources produces changes in liver proton leak and H(2)O(2) production. Six-month-old male FBNF(1) rats were fed diets with a primary fat source of either corn or fish oil for a 6-month period. As expected, diet manipulations produced substantial differences in mitochondrial fatty acid composition. These changes were most striking for 20:4n6 and 22:6n3. However, proton leak and phosphorylation kinetics as well as lipid and protein oxidative damage were not different (P > 0.10) between fish and corn oil groups. Metabolic control analysis, however, did show that control of both substrate oxidation and phosphorylation was shifted away from substrate oxidation reactions to increased control by phosphorylation reactions in fish versus corn oil groups. Increased mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production was observed in corn versus fish oil-fed rats when mitochondria were respiring on succinate alone or on either succinate or pyruvate/malate in the presence of antimycin A. These results show that mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production and the regulation of oxidative phosphorylation are altered in liver mitochondria from rats consuming diets with either fish or corn oil as the primary lipid source.  相似文献   

7.
Activation of oxidative phosphorylation by physiological levels of calcium in mitochondria from rat skeletal muscle was analysed using top-down elasticity and regulation analysis. Oxidative phosphorylation was conceptually divided into three subsystems (substrate oxidation, proton leak and phosphorylation) connected by the membrane potential or the protonmotive force. Calcium directly activated the phosphorylation subsystem and (with sub-saturating 2-oxoglutarate) the substrate oxidation subsystem but had no effect on the proton leak kinetics. The response of mitochondria respiring on 2-oxoglutarate at two physiological concentrations of free calcium was quantified using control and regulation analysis. The partial integrated response coefficients showed that direct stimulation of substrate oxidation contributed 86% of the effect of calcium on state 3 oxygen consumption, and direct activation of the phosphorylation reactions caused 37% of the increase in phosphorylation flux. Calcium directly activated phosphorylation more strongly than substrate oxidation (78% compared to 45%) to achieve homeostasis of mitochondrial membrane potential during large increases in flux.  相似文献   

8.
The rate of respiration of isolated mitochondria was set at different values by addition of either oligomycin or an ADP-regenerating system (glucose and different amounts of hexokinase). We measured the relationship between respiration rate and membrane potential as respiration was titrated by the addition of malonate under each condition. We used the flux control summation and connectivity theorems and the branching theorem of metabolic control theory to calculate the control over respiration rate exerted by the respiratory chain (and associated reactions), phosphorylating system (and associated reactions) and proton leak at each respiration rate. The analysis also yielded the flux control coefficients of these three reactions over phosphorylation rate and proton leak rate and their concentration control coefficients over protonmotive force. We found that respiration rate was controlled largely by the proton leak under non-phosphorylating conditions, by the phosphorylating system at intermediate rates and by both the phosphorylating system and the respiratory chain in state 3. The rate of phosphorylation was controlled largely by the phosphorylating system itself in state 4 and at intermediate rates, while state 3 control was shared between the phosphorylating system and the respiratory chain; the proton leak had insignificant control. In all states the phosphorylating system had large negative control over the proton leak; the chain and the proton leak both had large positive control coefficients. The protonmotive force was controlled by the chain and by the phosphorylating system; the proton leak had little control.  相似文献   

9.
A significant proportion of standard metabolic rate is devoted to driving mitochondrial proton leak, and this futile cycle may be a site of metabolic control during hibernation. To determine if the proton leak pathway is decreased during metabolic depression related to hibernation, mitochondria were isolated from liver and skeletal muscle of nonhibernating (active) and hibernating arctic ground squirrels (Spermophilus parryii). At an assay temperature of 37 degrees C, state 3 and state 4 respiration rates and state 4 membrane potential were significantly depressed in liver mitochondria isolated from hibernators. In contrast, state 3 and state 4 respiration rates and membrane potentials were unchanged during hibernation in skeletal muscle mitochondria. The decrease in oxygen consumption of liver mitochondria was achieved by reduced activity of the set of reactions generating the proton gradient but not by a lowered proton permeability. These results suggest that mitochondrial proton conductance is unchanged during hibernation and that the reduced metabolism in hibernators is a partial consequence of tissue-specific depression of substrate oxidation.  相似文献   

10.
Synaptosomes, isolated from the whole brain of young (3 months) and old (24 months) rats were used to study the major bioenergetic systems of neuronal mitochondria in situ, within the synaptosome. Approximately 85% of the resting oxygen consumption of synaptosomes from both young and old rats was a result of proton leak (and possibly other ion cycling) across the mitochondrial inner membrane. There were no significant differences between synaptosomes from the young and old rats in the kinetic responses of the substrate oxidation system, the mitochondrial proton leak and the phosphorylation system to changes in the proton electrochemical gradient. Flux control coefficients of 0.71, 0.27 and 0.02 were calculated for substrate oxidation system, phosphorylation system and the proton leak, respectively, at maximal ATP producing capacity in synaptosomes from young animals. The corresponding values calculated for synaptosomes from old animals were 0.53, 0.43 and 0.05. Thus substrate oxidation had greatest control over oxygen consumption at maximal phosphorylating capacity for synaptosomes from whole brain, with proton leak, having little control under maximal ATP producing capacity. The uncoupled rate of oxygen consumption, in the presence of the mitochondrial uncoupler, carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP), was significantly lower (p = 0.0124) in synaptosomes from old rats (6.08 +/- 0.42, n = 11) when compared with those from the young rats (7.87 +/- 0.48, n = 8). Thus, there is an impaired flux through the substrate oxidation system is synaptosomes from old rats, as compared to synaptosomes from the young animals. These in situ results may have important implications for the interpretation of theories that age-dependent impairment of mitochondrial energy production may result in increased susceptibility to neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

11.
疲劳性运动中线粒体电子漏引起质子漏增加   总被引:35,自引:0,他引:35  
以大鼠递增强度力竭性竭性跑台运动为疲劳运动模型,观察了运动后大鼠骨骼肌线粒体电子漏和质子漏的变化。结果表明,运动性疲劳状态下大鼠骨骼肌线粒体超氧阴离子生成增加,脂质过氧线粒体质子漏增多是氧化磷酸化偶联程度下降的重要因素。实验结果支持电子漏引起质子漏的假说。  相似文献   

12.
During hibernation, animals cycle between periods of torpor, during which body temperature (T(b)) and metabolic rate (MR) are suppressed for days, and interbout euthermia (IBE), during which T(b) and MR return to resting levels for several hours. In this study, we measured respiration rates, membrane potentials, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production of liver and skeletal muscle mitochondria isolated from ground squirrels (Ictidomys tridecemlineatus) during torpor and IBE to determine how mitochondrial metabolism is suppressed during torpor and how this suppression affects oxidative stress. In liver and skeletal muscle, state 3 respiration measured at 37°C with succinate was 70% and 30% lower, respectively, during torpor. In liver, this suppression was achieved largely via inhibition of substrate oxidation, likely at succinate dehydrogenase. In both tissues, respiration by torpid mitochondria further declined up to 88% when mitochondria were cooled to 10°C, close to torpid T(b). In liver, this passive thermal effect on respiration rate reflected reduced activity of all components of oxidative phosphorylation (substrate oxidation, phosphorylation, and proton leak). With glutamate + malate and succinate, mitochondrial free radical leak (FRL; proportion of electrons leading to ROS production) was higher in torpor than IBE, but only in liver. With succinate, higher FRL likely resulted from increased reduction state of complex III during torpor. With glutamate + malate, higher FRL resulted from active suppression of complex I ROS production during IBE, which may limit ROS production during arousal. In both tissues, ROS production and FRL declined with temperature, suggesting ROS production is also reduced during torpor by passive thermal effects.  相似文献   

13.
Arnaud Mourier 《BBA》2010,1797(2):255-468
The main function of mitochondria is energy transduction, from substrate oxidation to the free energy of ATP synthesis, through oxidative phosphorylation. For physiological reasons, the degree of coupling between these two processes must be modulated in order to adapt redox potential and ATP turnover to cellular needs. Such a modulation leads to energy wastage. To this day, two energy wastage mechanisms have been described: the membrane passive proton conductance (proton leak) and the decrease in the coupling efficiency between electrons transfer and proton extrusion at the proton pumps level (redox or proton slipping). In this paper, we describe a new energy wastage mechanism of interest. We show that in isolated yeast mitochondria, the membrane proton conductance is strictly dependent on the external dehydrogenases activity. An increase in their activity leads to an increase in the membrane proton conductance. This proton permeability is independent of the respiratory chain and ATP synthase proton pumps. We propose to name this new mechanism “active proton leak.” Such a mechanism could allow a wide modulation of substrate oxidation in response to cellular redox constraints.  相似文献   

14.
The proton leak across the mitochondrial inner membrane   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The proton conductance of the mitochondrial inner membrane increases at high protonmotive force in isolated mitochondria and in mitochondria in situ in rat hepatocytes. Quantitative analysis of its importance shows that about 20-30% of the oxygen consumption by resting hepatocytes is used to drive a heat-producing cycle of proton pumping by the respiratory chain and proton leak back to the matrix. The flux control coefficient of the proton leak pathway over respiration rate varies between 0.9 and zero in mitochondria depending on the rate of respiration, and has a value of about 0.2 in hepatocytes. Changes in the proton leak pathway in situ will therefore change respiration rate. Mitochondria isolated from hypothyroid animals have decreased proton leak pathway, causing slower state 4 respiration rates. Hepatocytes from hypothyroid rats also have decreased proton leak pathway, and this accounts for about 30% of the decrease in hepatocyte respiration rate. Mitochondrial proton leak may be a significant contributor to standard metabolic rate in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Calorie restriction (CR) without malnutrition increases maximal life span in diverse species. It has been proposed that reduction in energy expenditure and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production could be a mechanism for life span extension with CR. As a step toward testing this theory, mitochondrial proton leak, H2O2 production, and markers of oxidative stress were measured in liver from FBNF1 rats fed control or 40% CR diets for 12 or 18 mo. CR was initiated at 6 mo of age. Proton leak kinetics curves, generated from simultaneous measures of oxygen consumption and membrane potential, indicated a decrease in proton leak after 18 mo of CR, while only a trend toward a proton leak decrease was observed after 12 mo. Significant shifts in phosphorylation and substrate oxidation curves also occurred with CR; however, these changes occurred in concert with the proton leak changes. Metabolic control analysis indicated no difference in the overall pattern of control of the oxidative phosphorylation system between control and CR animals. At 12 mo, no significant differences were observed between groups for H2O2 production or markers of oxidative stress. However, at 18 mo, protein carbonyl content was lower in CR animals, as was H2O2 production when mitochondria were respiring on either succinate alone or pyruvate plus malate in the presence of rotenone. These results indicate that long-term CR lowers mitochondrial proton leak and H2O2 production, and this is consistent with the idea that CR may act by decreasing energy expenditure and ROS production.  相似文献   

16.

Background

Metamorphosis is a complex, highly conserved and strictly regulated development process that involves the programmed cell death of obsolete larval organs. Here we show a novel functional role for the aspartic proteinase cathepsin D during insect metamorphosis.

Results

Cathepsin D of the silkworm Bombyx mori (BmCatD) was ecdysone-induced, differentially and spatially expressed in the larval fat body of the final instar and in the larval gut of pupal stage, and its expression led to programmed cell death. Furthermore, BmCatD was highly induced in the fat body of baculovirus-infected B. mori larvae, suggesting that this gene is involved in the induction of metamorphosis of host insects infected with baculovirus. RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated BmCatD knock-down inhibited programmed cell death of the larval fat body, resulting in the arrest of larval-pupal transformation. BmCatD RNAi also inhibited the programmed cell death of larval gut during pupal stage.

Conclusion

Based on these results, we concluded that BmCatD is critically involved in the programmed cell death of the larval fat body and larval gut in silkworm metamorphosis.  相似文献   

17.
Regulation of energy metabolism in liver   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Energy metabolism in liver has to cope with the special tasks of this organ in intermediary metabolism. Main ATP-generating processes in the liver cell are the respiratory chain and glycolysis, whereas main ATP-consuming processes are gluconeogenesis, urea synthesis, protein synthesis, ATPases and mitochondrial proton leak. Mitochondrial respiratory chain in the intact liver cell is subject to control mainly by substrate (hydrogen donors, ADP, oxygen) transport and supply and proton leak/slip. Whereas hormonal control is mainly on substrate supply to mitochondria, proton leak/slip is supposed to play an important role in the modulation of the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation.  相似文献   

18.
The present study aimed to investigate the change of proton leak and discuss the role of cerebral uncoupling proteins (UCPs) and its regulatory molecules non-esterified fatty acid (NEFA) in high altitude mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation deficiency. The model group animals were exposed to acute high altitude hypoxia, and the mitochondrial respiration, protein leak, UCPs abundance/activity and cerebral NEFA concentration were measured. We found that in the model group, cerebral mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation was severely impaired with decreased ST3 respiration rate and ATP pool. Proton leak kinetics curves demonstrated an increase in proton leak; GTP binding assay pointed out that total cerebral UCPs activity significantly increased; Q-PCR and western blot showed upregulated expression of UCP4 and UCP5. Moreover, cerebral NEFA concentration increased. In conclusion, UCPs mediated proton leak is closely related to cerebral mitochondria oxidative phosphorylation deficiency during acute high altitude hypoxia and NEFA is involved in this signaling pathway.  相似文献   

19.
During daily torpor in the dwarf Siberian hamster, Phodopus sungorus, metabolic rate is reduced by 65% compared with the basal rate, but the mechanisms involved are contentious. We examined liver mitochondrial respiration to determine the possible role of active regulated changes and passive thermal effects in the reduction of metabolic rate. When assayed at 37 degrees C, state 3 (phosphorylating) respiration, but not state 4 (nonphosphorylating) respiration, was significantly lower during torpor compared with normothermia, suggesting that active regulated changes occur during daily torpor. Using top-down elasticity analysis, we determined that these active changes in torpor included a reduced substrate oxidation capacity and an increased proton conductance of the inner mitochondrial membrane. At 15 degrees C, mitochondrial respiration was at least 75% lower than at 37 degrees C, but there was no difference between normothermia and torpor. This implies that the active regulated changes are likely more important for reducing respiration at high temperatures (i.e., during entrance) and/or have effects other than reducing respiration at low temperatures. The decrease in respiration from 37 degrees C to 15 degrees C resulted predominantly from a considerable reduction of substrate oxidation capacity in both torpid and normothermic animals. Temperature-dependent changes in proton leak and phosphorylation kinetics depended on metabolic state; proton leakiness increased in torpid animals but decreased in normothermic animals, whereas phosphorylation activity decreased in torpid animals but increased in normothermic animals. Overall, we have shown that both active and passive changes to oxidative phosphorylation occur during daily torpor in this species, contributing to reduced metabolic rate.  相似文献   

20.
Aging is associated with a decline in performance in many organs and loss of physiological performance can be due to free radicals. Mitochondria are incompletely coupled: during oxidative phosphorylation some of the redox energy is dissipated as natural proton leak across the inner membrane. To verify whether proton leak occurs in mitochondria during aging, we measured the mitochondrial respiratory chain activity, membrane potential and proton leak in liver, kidneys and heart of young and old rats. Mitochondria from old rats showed normal rates of Complex I and Complex II respiration. However, they had a lower membrane potential compared to mitochondria from younger rats. In addition, they exhibited an increased rate of proton conductance which partially dissipated the mitochondrial membrane potential when the rate of electron transport was suppressed. This could compromise energy homeostasis in aging cells in conditions that require additional energy supply and could minimize oxidative damage to DNA.  相似文献   

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