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1.
Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC-MY) are pacemakers that generate and propagate electrical slow waves in gastrointestinal (GI) muscles. Slow waves appear to be generated by the release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores and activation of Ca2+-activated Cl channels (Ano1). Conduction of slow waves to smooth muscle cells coordinates rhythmic contractions. Mitochondrial Ca2+ handling is currently thought to be critical for ICC pacemaking. Protonophores, inhibitors of the electron transport chain (FCCP, CCCP or antimycin) or mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchange blockers inhibited slow waves in several GI muscles. Here we utilized Ca2+ imaging of ICC in small intestinal muscles in situ to determine the effects of mitochondrial drugs on Ca2+ transients in ICC. Muscles were obtained from mice expressing a genetically encoded Ca2+ indicator (GCaMP3) in ICC. FCCP, CCCP, antimycin, a uniporter blocker, Ru360, and a mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchange inhibitor, CGP-37157 inhibited Ca2+ transients in ICC-MY. Effects were not due to depletion of ATP, as oligomycin did not affect Ca2+ transients. Patch-clamp experiments were performed to test the effects of the mitochondrial drugs on key pacemaker conductances, Ano1 and T-type Ca2+ (CaV3.2), in HEK293 cells. Antimycin blocked Ano1 and reduced CaV3.2 currents. CCCP blocked CaV3.2 current but did not affect Ano1 current. Ano1 and Cav3.2 currents were inhibited by CGP-37157. Inhibitory effects of mitochondrial drugs on slow waves and Ca2+ signalling in ICC can be explained by direct antagonism of key pacemaker conductances in ICC that generate and propagate slow waves. A direct obligatory role for mitochondria in pacemaker activity is therefore questionable.  相似文献   
2.
A limited decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential can be beneficial for cells, especially under some pathological conditions, suggesting that mild uncouplers (protonophores) causing such an effect are promising candidates for therapeutic uses. The great majority of protonophores are weak acids capable of permeating across membranes in their neutral and anionic forms. In the present study, protonophorous activity of a series of derivatives of cationic rhodamine 19, including dodecylrhodamine (C(12)R1) and its conjugate with plastoquinone (SkQR1), was revealed using a variety of assays. Derivatives of rhodamine B, lacking dissociable protons, showed no protonophorous properties. In planar bilayer lipid membranes, separating two compartments differing in pH, diffusion potential of H(+) ions was generated in the presence of C(12)R1 and SkQR1. These compounds induced pH equilibration in liposomes loaded with the pH probe pyranine. C(12)R1 and SkQR1 partially stimulated respiration of rat liver mitochondria in State 4 and decreased their membrane potential. Also, C(12)R1 partially stimulated respiration of yeast cells but, unlike the anionic protonophore FCCP, did not suppress their growth. Loss of function of mitochondrial DNA in yeast (grande-petite transformation) is known to cause a major decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential. We found that petite yeast cells are relatively more sensitive to the anionic uncouplers than to C(12)R1 compared with grande cells. Together, our data suggest that rhodamine 19-based cationic protonophores are self-limiting; their uncoupling activity is maximal at high membrane potential, but the activity decreases membrane potentials, which causes partial efflux of the uncouplers from mitochondria and, hence, prevents further membrane potential decrease.  相似文献   
3.
Current antibiotics for treating Clostridium difficile infections (CDI), that is, metronidazole, vancomycin and more recently fidaxomicin, are mostly effective but treatment failure and disease relapse remain as significant clinical problems. The shortcomings of these agents are attributed to their low selectivity for C. difficile over normal gut microflora and their ineffectiveness against C. difficile spores. This Letter reports that certain diarylacylhydrazones identified during a high-throughput screening/counter-screening campaign show selective activity against two Clostridium species (C. difficile and Clostridium perfringens) over common gut commensals. Representative examples are shown to possess activity similar to vancomycin against clinical C. difficile strains and to kill stationary-phase C. difficile cells, which are responsible for spore production. Structure–activity relationships with additional synthesised analogues suggested a protonophoric mechanism may play a role in the observed activity/selectivity and this was supported by the well-known protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) showing selective anti-Clostridium effects and activity similar to diarylacylhydrazones against stationary-phase C. difficile cells. Two diarylacylhydrazones were shown to be non-toxic towards human FaDu and Hep G2 cells indicating that further studies with the class are warranted towards new drugs for CDI.  相似文献   
4.
The protonmotive force (Δp) across the mitochondrial inner membrane drives ATP synthesis. In addition, the energy stored in Δp can be dissipated by proton leak through the inner membrane, contributing to basal metabolic rate and thermogenesis. Increasing mitochondrial proton leak pharmacologically should decrease the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation and counteract obesity by enabling fatty acids to be oxidised with decreased ATP production. While protonophores such as 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) increase mitochondrial proton leak and have been used to treat obesity, a slight increase in DNP concentration above the therapeutically effective dose disrupts mitochondrial function and leads to toxicity. Therefore we set out to develop a less toxic protonophore that would increase proton leak significantly at high Δp but not at low Δp. Our design concept for a potential self-limiting protonophore was to couple the DNP moiety to the lipophilic triphenylphosphonium (TPP) cation and this was achieved by the preparation of 3-(3,5-dinitro-4-hydroxyphenyl)propyltriphenylphosphonium methanesulfonate (MitoDNP). TPP cations accumulate within mitochondria driven by the membrane potential (Δψ), the predominant component of Δp. Our hypothesis was that MitoDNP would accumulate in mitochondria at high Δψ where it would act as a protonophore, but that at lower Δψ the accumulation and uncoupling would be far less. We found that MitoDNP was extensively taken into mitochondria driven by Δψ. However MitoDNP did not uncouple mitochondria as judged by its inability to either increase respiration rate or decrease Δψ. Therefore MitoDNP did not act as a protonophore, probably because the efflux of deprotonated MitoDNP was inhibited.  相似文献   
5.
Opening of ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels by the uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, 2,4 dinitrophenol (DNP), has been assumed to be secondary to metabolic inhibition and reduced intracellular ATP levels. Herein, we present data which show that DNP (200 μm) can induce opening of cardiac KATP channels, under whole-cell and inside-out conditions, despite millimolar concentrations of ATP (1–2.5 mm). DNP-induced currents had a single channel conductance (71 pS), inward rectification, reversal potential, and intraburst kinetic properties (open time constant, τopen: 4.8 msec; fast closed time constant, τclosed(f): 0.33 msec) characteristic of KATP channels suggesting that DNP did not affect the pore region of the channel, but may have altered the functional coupling of the ATP-dependent channel gating. A DNP analogue, with the pH-titrable hydroxyl replaced by a methyl group, could not open KATP channels. The pH-dependence of the effect of DNP on channel opening under whole-cell, cell-attached, and inside-out conditions suggested that transfer of protonated DNP across the sarcolemma is essential for activation of KATP channels in the presence of ATP. We conclude that the use of DNP for metabolic stress-induced KATP channel opening should be reevaluated. Received: 10 September 1996/Revised: 27 December 1996  相似文献   
6.
Usnic acid (UA), an old antibiotic and one of the first described mitochondrial uncouplers, has demonstrated many beneficial activities, such as antimicrobial, antiviral, antitumour and anti-inflammatory properties. Here, we performed a thorough investigation of effects of usnic acid and its analogues on artificial planar bilayer lipid membrane (BLM), rat liver mitochondria and bacteria. Surprisingly enough, all of the three hydroxyl groups of UA appeared to be involved in its proton-shuttling activity on BLM. We ascribed this fact to an ability of UA to form complexes with calcium ions, aiding it in cycling protons across the membrane. Actually, the addition of calcium ions markedly stimulated the UA-induced electrical current across BLM. By using the calcium ionophore A23187, we proved the involvement of calcium ions in the UA uncoupling action on isolated rat liver mitochondria. The calcium-chelating property of UA was demonstrated here by the method of extracting metal ions into a hydrophobic phase. Modification of any of the hydroxyl groups in UA dramatically reduced not only the UA-induced current across BLM and the UA-mediated calcium extraction, but also the uncoupling activity of UA in mitochondria and the inhibiting effect of UA on the growth of Bacillus subtilis. The ability of UA to cause dissipation of membrane potential in isolated liver mitochondria and bacterial cells was shown here for the first time. In view of the data obtained, the protonophoric activity of UA is considered to make a significant contribution to its antibacterial action.  相似文献   
7.
We have previously shown that anacardic acid has an uncoupling effect on oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria using succinate as a substrate (Life Sci. 66 (2000) 229-234). In the present study, for clarification of the physicochemical characteristics of anacardic acid, we used a cyanine dye (DiS-C3(5)) and 9-aminoacridine (9-AA) to determine changes of membrane potential (ΔΨ) and pH difference (ΔpH), respectively, in a liposome suspension in response to the addition of anacardic acid to the suspension. The anacardic acid quenched DiS-C3(5) fluorescence at concentrations higher than 300 nM, with the degree of quenching being dependent on the log concentration of the acid. Furthermore, the K+ diffusion potential generated by the addition of valinomycin to the suspension decreased for each increase in anacardic acid concentration used over 300 nM, but the sum of the anacardic acid- and valinomycin-mediated quenching was additively increasing. This indicates that the anacardic acid-mediated quenching was not due simply to increments in the K+ permeability of the membrane. Addition of anacardic acid in the micromolar range to the liposomes with ΔΨ formed by valinomycin-K+ did not significantly alter 9-AA fluorescence, but unexpectedly dissipated ΔΨ. The ΔΨ preformed by valinomycin-K+ decreased gradually following the addition of increasing concentrations of anacardic acid. The ΔΨ dissipation rate was dependent on the pre-existing magnitude of ΔΨ, and was correlated with the logarithmic concentration of anacardic acid. Furthermore, the initial rate of ΔpH dissipation increased with logarithmic increases in anacardic acid concentration. These results provide the evidence for a unique function of anacardic acid, dissimilar to carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone or valinomycin, in that anacardic acid behaves as both an electrogenic (negative) charge carrier driven by ΔΨ, and a ‘proton carrier’ that dissipates the transmembrane proton gradient formed.  相似文献   
8.
The protonophores carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP) and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) stimulated the synthesis of 14C-catecholamines from [14C]tyrosine in cultured bovine adrenal medullary cells. The stimulatory effect of CCCP but not of FCCP was partially dependent on extracellular Ca2+. CCCP but not FCCP increased the influx of 45Ca2+ to the cells. When cells were incubated with either CCCP or FCCP (0.01-0.2 microgram/ml), the intracellular pH fell from 7.2 to 6.3-6.5 and catecholamine synthesis increased. Tyrosine hydroxylase activity in a soluble fraction prepared from cultured adrenal medullary cells was measured after incubation of the cells with FCCP or CCCP. Although FCCP did not affect the activity of the enzyme, CCCP caused a stable activation of it which was dependent on extracellular Ca2+. Since the optimal pH of soluble tyrosine hydroxylase is around 6.0 in adrenal medullary cells, FCCP may increase the synthesis of catecholamines by shifting the intracellular pH toward it. In addition to this mechanism, CCCP may enhance the synthesis of catecholamines by a Ca2+-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   
9.
The uptake by light-grown cells of Rhodobacter capsulatus of the highly toxic metalloid oxyanion tellurite (TeO(3)(2-)) was examined. We show that tellurite is rapidly taken up by illuminated cells in a process which is inhibited by the protonophore carbonyl cyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenyl-hydrazone (FCCP) and by the K(+)/H(+) exchanger nigericin. Notably, the light-driven membrane potential (Delta psi) is enhanced by K(2)TeO(3)> or =200 microM. Further, tellurite uptake is largely insensitive to valinomycin, strongly repressed by the sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylethylmaleimide (NEM) and competitively inhibited by phosphate. We conclude that tellurite is transported into cells by a Delta pH-dependent, non-electrogenic process which is likely to involve the phosphate transporter (PiT family).  相似文献   
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