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1.
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs), members of mitochondrial carrier family, are present in mitochondrial inner membrane and mediate free fatty acid-activated, purine-nucleotide-inhibited H+ re-uptake. UCPs can modulate the tightness of coupling between mitochondrial respiration and ATP synthesis. A physiological function of the first described UCP, UCP1 or termogenin, present in mitochondria of mammalian brown adipose tissues is well established. UCP1 plays a role in nonshivering thermogenesis in mammals. The widespread presence of UCPs in eukaryotes, in non-thermogenic tissues of animals, plants and in unicellular organisms implies that these proteins may elicit other functions than thermogenesis. However, the physiological functions of UCP1 homologues are still under debate. They can regulate energy metabolism through modulation of the electrochemical proton gradient and production of ROS. Functional activation of UCPs is proposed to decrease ROS production. Moreover, products of lipid peroxidation can activate UCPs and promote feedback down-regulation of mitochondrial ROS production. 相似文献
2.
Wieslawa Jarmuszkiewicz Andrzej Woyda-Ploszczyca Nina Antos-Krzeminska Francis E. Sluse 《BBA》2010,1797(6-7):792-799
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are members of the mitochondrial anion carrier protein family that are present in the mitochondrial inner membrane and mediate free fatty acid (FFA)-activated, purine nucleotide (PN)-inhibited proton conductance. Since 1999, the presence of UCPs has been demonstrated in some non-photosynthesising unicellular eukaryotes, including amoeboid and parasite protists, as well as in non-fermentative yeast and filamentous fungi. In the mitochondria of these organisms, UCP activity is revealed upon FFA-induced, PN-inhibited stimulation of resting respiration and a decrease in membrane potential, which are accompanied by a decrease in membranous ubiquinone (Q) reduction level. UCPs in unicellular eukaryotes are able to divert energy from oxidative phosphorylation and thus compete for a proton electrochemical gradient with ATP synthase. Our recent work indicates that membranous Q is a metabolic sensor that might utilise its redox state to release the PN inhibition of UCP-mediated mitochondrial uncoupling under conditions of phosphorylation and resting respiration. The action of reduced Q (QH2) could allow higher or complete activation of UCP. As this regulatory feature was demonstrated for microorganism UCPs (A. castellanii UCP), plant and mammalian UCP1 analogues, and UCP1 in brown adipose tissue, the process could involve all UCPs. Here, we discuss the functional connection and physiological role of UCP and alternative oxidase, two main energy-dissipating systems in the plant-type mitochondrial respiratory chain of unicellular eukaryotes, including the control of cellular energy balance as well as preventive action against the production of reactive oxygen species. 相似文献
3.
Mitochondrial uncoupling proteins and phylogenesis--UCP4 as the ancestral uncoupling protein 总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7
We searched for the previously defined uncoupling protein (UCP) signatures [Jezek, P. and Urbánková, E. (2000) IUBMB Life 49, 63-70] in genomes of Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, Dictyostelium discoideum, and Arabidopsis thaliana. We identified four UCPs in Drosophila and one in Caenorhabditis or Dictyostelium as close relatives of human UCP4 (BMCP), but distant from UCP1, UCP2, UCP3, and two plant UCPs of Arabidopsis. But the third Arabidopsis UCP is the closest UCP4 relative. This suggests that UCP4 represents the ancestral UCP from which other mammalian and plant UCPs diverged. Speculations on UCP4 participation in apoptosis are thus supported by its early phylogenetic occurrence. 相似文献
4.
Criscuolo F Gonzalez-Barroso Mdel M Bouillaud F Ricquier D Miroux B Sorci G 《The American naturalist》2005,166(6):686-699
Reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced damage on host cells and molecules has been considered the most likely proximal mechanism responsible for the age-related decline in organismal performance. Organisms have two possible ways to reduce the negative effect of ROS: disposing of effective antioxidant defenses and minimizing ROS production. The unbalance between the amount of ROS produced and the availability of antioxidant defenses determines the intensity of so-called oxidative stress. Interestingly, most studies that deal with the effect of oxidative stress on organismal performance have focused on the antioxidant defense compartment and, surprisingly, have neglected the mechanisms that control ROS production within mitochondria. Uncoupling proteins (UCPs), mitochondrial transporters of the inner membrane, are involved in the control of redox state of cells and in the production of mitochondrial ROS. Given their function, UCPs might therefore represent a major mechanistic link between metabolic activity and fitness. We suggest that by exploring the role of expression and function of UCPs both in experimental as well as in comparative studies, evolutionary biologists may gain better insight into this link. 相似文献
5.
Mitochondria are the major sites of ATP synthesis through oxidative phosphorylation, a process that is weakened by proton leak. Uncoupling proteins are mitochondrial membrane proteins specialized in inducible proton conductance. They dissipate the proton electrochemical gradient established by the respiratory chain at the expense of reducing substrates. Several physiological roles have been suggested for uncoupling proteins, including roles in the control of the cellular energy balance and in preventive action against oxidative stress. This review focuses on new leads emerging from comparative proteomics about the involvement of uncoupling protein in the mitochondrial physiology. A brief overview on uncoupling proteins and on proteomics applied to mitochondria is also presented herein. 相似文献
6.
Mitochondrial superoxide: production, biological effects, and activation of uncoupling proteins 总被引:25,自引:0,他引:25
Brand MD Affourtit C Esteves TC Green K Lambert AJ Miwa S Pakay JL Parker N 《Free radical biology & medicine》2004,37(6):755-767
Mitochondria are potent producers of cellular superoxide, from complexes I and III of the electron transport chain, and mitochondrial superoxide production is a major cause of the cellular oxidative damage that may underlie degradative diseases and aging. This superoxide production is very sensitive to the proton motive force, so it can be strongly decreased by mild uncoupling. Superoxide and the lipid peroxidation products it engenders, including hydroxyalkenals such as hydroxynonenal, are potent activators of proton conductance by mitochondrial uncoupling proteins such as UCP2 and UCP3, although the mechanism of activation has yet to be established. These observations suggest a hypothesis for the main, ancestral function of uncoupling proteins: to cause mild uncoupling and so diminish mitochondrial superoxide production, hence protecting against disease and oxidative damage at the expense of a small loss of energy. We review the growing evidence for this hypothesis, in mitochondria, in cells, and in vivo. More recently evolved roles of uncoupling proteins are in adaptive thermogenesis (UCP1) and perhaps as part of a signaling pathway to regulate insulin secretion in pancreatic beta cells (UCP2). 相似文献
8.
Mitochondrial potassium channels and uncoupling proteins in synaptic plasticity and neuronal cell death 总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9
The function of the nervous system relies upon synaptic transmission, a process in which a neurotransmitter released from pre-synaptic terminals of one neuron (in response to membrane depolarization and calcium influx) activates post-synaptic receptors on dendrites of another neuron. Synapses are subjected to repeated bouts of oxidative and metabolic stress as the result of changing ion gradients and ATP usage. Mitochondria play central roles in meeting the demands of synapses for ATP and in regulating calcium homeostasis, and mitochondrial dysfunction can cause dysfunction and degeneration of synapses, and can trigger cell death. We have identified two types of mitochondrial proteins that serve the function of protecting synapses and neurons against dysfunction and death. Mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium (MitoKATP) channels modulate inner membrane potential and oxyradical production; mitochondrial potassium fluxes can affect cytochrome c release and caspase activation and may determine whether neurons live or die in experimental models of stroke and Alzheimer's disease. Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are a family of mitochondrial membrane proteins that uncouple electron transport from ATP production by transporting protons across the inner membrane. Neurons express at least three UCPs including the widely expressed UCP-2 and the neuron-specific UCP-4 and UCP-5 (BMCP-1). We have found that UCP-4 protects neurons against apoptosis by a mechanism involving suppression of oxyradical production and stabilization of cellular calcium homeostasis. The expression of UCP-4 is itself regulated by changes in energy metabolism. In addition to their roles in neuronal cell survival and death, MitoKATP channels and UCPs may play roles in regulating neuronal differentiation during development and synaptic plasticity in the adult. 相似文献
9.
Jezek P Zácková M Růzicka M Skobisová E Jabůrek M 《Physiological research / Academia Scientiarum Bohemoslovaca》2004,53(Z1):S199-S211
Instead of a comprehensive review, we describe the basic undisputed facts and a modest contribution of our group to the fascinating area of the research on mitochondrial uncoupling proteins. After defining the terms uncoupling, leak, protein-mediated uncoupling, we discuss the assumption that due to their low abundance the novel mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCP2 to UCP5) can provide only a mild uncoupling, i.e. can decrease the proton motive force by several mV only. Contrary to this, the highly thermogenic role of UCP1 in brown adipose tissue is not given only by its high content (approximately 5 % of mitochondrial proteins) but also by the low ATP synthase content and high capacity respiratory chain. Fatty acid cycling mechanism as a plausible explanation for the protonophoretic function of all UCPs and some other mitochondrial carriers is described together with the experiments supporting it. The phylogenesis of all UCPs, estimated UCP2 content in several tissues, and details of UCP2 activation are described on the basis of our experiments. Functional activation of UCP2 is proposed to decrease reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Moreover, reaction products of lipoperoxidation such as cleaved hydroperoxy-fatty acids and hydroxy-fatty acid can activate UCP2 and promote feedback down-regulation of mitochondrial ROS production. 相似文献
10.
He J Cooper HM Reyes A Di Re M Sembongi H Litwin TR Gao J Neuman KC Fearnley IM Spinazzola A Walker JE Holt IJ 《Nucleic acids research》2012,40(13):6109-6121
Mitochondrial ribosomes and translation factors co-purify with mitochondrial nucleoids of human cells, based on affinity protein purification of tagged mitochondrial DNA binding proteins. Among the most frequently identified proteins were ATAD3 and prohibitin, which have been identified previously as nucleoid components, using a variety of methods. Both proteins are demonstrated to be required for mitochondrial protein synthesis in human cultured cells, and the major binding partner of ATAD3 is the mitochondrial ribosome. Altered ATAD3 expression also perturbs mtDNA maintenance and replication. These findings suggest an intimate association between nucleoids and the machinery of protein synthesis in mitochondria. ATAD3 and prohibitin are tightly associated with the mitochondrial membranes and so we propose that they support nucleic acid complexes at the inner membrane of the mitochondrion. 相似文献
11.
Mitochondrial uncoupling,ROS generation and cardioprotection 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Susana Cadenas 《BBA》2018,1859(9):940-950
Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is incompletely coupled, since protons translocated to the intermembrane space by specific respiratory complexes of the electron transport chain can return to the mitochondrial matrix independently of the ATP synthase —a process known as proton leak— generating heat instead of ATP. Proton leak across the inner mitochondrial membrane increases the respiration rate and decreases the electrochemical proton gradient (Δp), and is an important mechanism for energy dissipation that accounts for up to 25% of the basal metabolic rate. It is well established that mitochondrial superoxide production is steeply dependent on Δp in isolated mitochondria and, correspondingly, mitochondrial uncoupling has been identified as a cytoprotective strategy under conditions of oxidative stress, including diabetes, drug-resistance in tumor cells, ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury or aging. Mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCPs) are able to lower the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation and are involved in the control of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. There is strong evidence that UCP2 and UCP3, the UCP1 homologues expressed in the heart, protect against mitochondrial oxidative damage by reducing the production of ROS. This review first analyzes the relationship between mitochondrial proton leak and ROS generation, and then focuses on the cardioprotective role of chemical uncoupling and uncoupling mediated by UCPs. This includes their protective effects against cardiac IR, a condition known to increase ROS production, and their roles in modulating cardiovascular risk factors such as obesity, diabetes and atherosclerosis. 相似文献
12.
Using an antibody specific and selective to mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) peptide, this study confirms the observation that UCP 1 is present in thymocytes isolated from UCP 1 wild-type, but not UCP 1 knock-out mice. UCP 1 is also shown to be present in thymocytes isolated from rat. It was also demonstrated that an antibody raised to the full-length UCP 1 protein appears to be non-specific for UCP 1, as it detects protein in UCP 1 wild-type and UCP 1 knock-out mice, protein in mitochondria isolated from brown adipose tissue of both UCP 1 wild-type and UCP 1 knock-out mice, as well as detecting protein in mitochondria isolated from rat spleen, kidney, skeletal muscle and liver, tissues that do not express UCP 1. We were also able to show that CIDEA, a soluble protein with a suggested role in regulating UCP 1 function, is equally abundant in thymocytes from UCP 1 wild-type and UCP 1 knock-out mice. Taken together our data demonstrate that (a) UCP 1 is present in rat and mouse thymocytes, (b) that the antibody to full-length UCP 1 is not specific for UCP 1 and (c) that the absence of UCP 1 does not affect native expression of CIDEA in thymocytes. 相似文献
13.
Cold-acclimation did not alter uncoupling (state 4 respiration) in rat liver or skeletal muscle mitochondria. Palmitate significantly uncoupled mitochondria, but neither the magnitude of this uncoupling nor the contribution of different inner mitochondrial membrane transporters to uncoupling was altered by cold-acclimation. Guanosine diphosphate did not reduce uncoupling, suggesting no role for uncoupling protein homologues. The adenine nucleotide transporter and the permeability transition pore, either alone or in combination, appear to contribute significantly to free fatty-acid (FFA)-induced uncoupling. Evidence suggests that these two elements may be working together, as components of the same mechanism, to mediate FFA uncoupling. 相似文献
14.
Stuart JA Cadenas S Jekabsons MB Roussel D Brand MD 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2001,1504(1):144-158
Mitochondrial proton leak is the largest single contributor to the standard metabolic rate (SMR) of a rat, accounting for about 20% of SMR. Yet the mechanisms by which proton leak occurs are incompletely understood. The available evidence suggests that both phospholipids and proteins in the mitochondrial inner membrane are important determinants of proton conductance. The uncoupling protein 1 homologues (e.g. UCP2, UCP3) may play a role in mediating proton leak, but it is unlikely they account for all of the observed proton conductance. Experimental data regarding the functions of these proteins include important ambiguities and contradictions which must be addressed before their function can be confirmed. The physiological role of the proton leak, and of the uncoupling protein 1 homologues, remains similarly unclear. 相似文献
15.
Thyroid hormone and uncoupling proteins 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
p53 is a representative tumor suppressor whose dysfunction is a major cause of human cancer syndrome. Here we isolated flies lacking Dmp53, which encodes the single Drosophila orthologue of mammalian p53 family. Dmp53 null mutants well developed into adults, only displaying mild defects in longevity and fertility. However, genomic stability and viability of Dmp53 mutants dramatically decreased upon ionizing irradiation. Moreover, mutating Dmp53 abolished irradiation-induced apoptosis and reaper induction. These results indicate that Dmp53 is a central component of DNA damage-dependent apoptotic signaling. 相似文献
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18.
Cold survival in freeze-intolerant insects: the structure and function of beta-helical antifreeze proteins. 总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6
Antifreeze proteins (AFPs) designate a class of proteins that are able to bind to and inhibit the growth of macromolecular ice. These proteins have been characterized from a variety of organisms. Recently, the structures of AFPs from the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) and the yellow mealworm (Tenebrio molitor) have been determined by NMR and X-ray crystallography. Despite nonhomologous sequences, both proteins were shown to consist of beta-helices. We review the structures and dynamics data of these two insect AFPs to bring insight into the structure-function relationship and explore their beta-helical architecture. For the spruce budworm protein, the fold is a left-handed beta-helix with 15 residues per coil. The Tenebrio molitor protein consists of a right-handed beta-helix with 12 residues per coil. Mutagenesis and structural studies show that the insect AFPs present a highly rigid array of threonine residues and bound water molecules that can effectively mimic the ice lattice. Comparisons of the newly determined ryegrass and carrot AFP sequences have led to models suggesting that they might also consist of beta-helices, and indicate that the beta-helix might be used as an AFP structural motif in nonfish organisms. 相似文献
19.
Molecular Biology Reports - Meteorin-like hormone (Metrnl) is a peptide secreted from the adipose tissue and modulates the whole-body energy metabolism. Metrnl release into the circulation is... 相似文献
20.
State III respiration rates were measured in mitochondria isolated from hearts of Antarctic notothenioid fishes that differ
in the expression of hemoglobin (Hb) and myoglobin (Mb). Respiration rates were measured at temperatures between 2 and 40°C
in Gobionotothen gibberifrons (+Hb/+Mb), Chaenocephalus aceratus (–Hb/–Mb) and Chionodraco rastrospinosus (–Hb/+Mb). Blood osmolarity was measured in all three species and physiological buffers prepared for isolating mitochondria
and measuring respiration rates. Respiration rates were higher in mitochondria from G. gibberifrons compared to those from C. aceratus at 2°C, but were similar among all species at temperatures between 10 and 26°C. Respiration rates were significantly lower
in icefishes at 35 and 40°C compared to G. gibberifrons. The respiratory control ratio of isolated mitochondria was lower in C. aceratus compared to G. gibberifrons at all temperatures below 35°C. At 35 and 40°C, mitochondria were uncoupled in all species. The Arrhenius break temperature
of state III respiration was similar among all three species (30.5 ± 0.9°C) and higher than values previously reported for
Antarctic notothenioids, likely due to the higher osmolarity of buffers used in this study. These results suggest that differences
in mitochondrial structure, correlated with the expression of oxygen-binding proteins, minimally impact mitochondrial function. 相似文献