antimycin has been researched along with malic-acid* in 5 studies
5 other study(ies) available for antimycin and malic-acid
Article | Year |
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Differential effects of endurance training and creatine depletion on regional mitochondrial adaptations in rat skeletal muscle.
To examine the combined effects of 2-week endurance training and 3-week feeding with beta-guanidinopropionic acid (GPA) on regional adaptability of skeletal muscle mitochondria, intermyofibrillar mitochondria (IFM) and subsarcolemmal mitochondria (SSM) were isolated from quadriceps muscles of sedentary control, trained control, sedentary GPA-fed and trained GPA-fed rats. Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation was assessed polarographically by using pyruvate plus malate, succinate (plus rotenone), and ascorbate plus N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) (plus antimycin) as respiratory substrates. Assays of cytochrome c oxidase and F(1)-ATPase activities were also performed. In sedentary control rats, IFM exhibited a higher oxidative capacity than SSM, whereas F(1)-ATPase activities were similar. Training increased the oxidative phosphorylation capacity of mitochondria with both pyruvate plus malate and ascorbate plus TMPD as substrates, with no differences between IFM and SSM. In contrast, the GPA diet mainly improved the overall SSM oxidative phosphorylation capacity, irrespective of the substrate used. Finally, the superimposition of training to feeding with GPA strongly increased both oxidase and enzymic activities in SSM, whereas no cumulative effects were found in IFM mitochondria. It therefore seems that endurance training and feeding with GPA, which are both known to alter the energetic status of the muscle cell, might mediate distinct biochemical adaptations in regional skeletal muscle mitochondria. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Ascorbic Acid; Creatine; Diet; Electron Transport Complex IV; Guanidines; Humans; Malates; Male; Mitochondria; Muscle, Skeletal; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Oxygen Consumption; Physical Conditioning, Animal; Propionates; Proton-Translocating ATPases; Pyruvic Acid; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Rotenone; Sarcolemma; Succinic Acid; Tetramethylphenylenediamine; Time Factors | 2000 |
Substrate-dependent utilization of the glycerol 3-phosphate or malate/aspartate redox shuttles by Ehrlich ascites cells.
The rate of transfer of reducing equivalents from cytoplasm to mitochondria has been examined in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells incubated in the presence of lactate. The flux of reducing equivalents was determined from the rate of metabolism of reduced intermediates that are oxidized within the cytosol. The magnitude of the flux of reducing equivalents was dependent on both the concentration of added lactate and the presence of carbohydrate. The rate of flux was twice as great in the presence of glucose and four times as high when glucose and lactate were added together as when lactate was the only added substrate. Fructose was less effective than glucose in stimulating reducing equivalent flux. In the presence of glucose or fructose, there was a substantial accumulation of hexose phosphates, dihydroxyacetone phosphate and glycerol 3-phosphate. Rotenone, an inhibitor of NADH dehydrogenase, and amino-oxyacetate, which inhibits the malate/aspartate shuttle, were powerful suppressors of reducing equivalent flux from lactate as sole substrate, but were much less potent in the presence of carbohydrate. Antimycin substantially inhibited reducing equivalent flux from all combinations of added substrates, consistent with its ability to block oxidation of reducing equivalents transferred by both the malate/aspartate and glycerol 3-phosphate shuttles. The glycerol 3-phosphate shuttle represents around 80% of the maximum total observed activity but is active only while glycolytic intermediates are present to provide the necessary substrates of the shuttle. This Ehrlich ascites cell line has an essentially similar total reducing equivalent shuttle capacity to that of isolated hepatocytes. Topics: Aminooxyacetic Acid; Animals; Antimycin A; Aspartic Acid; Carcinoma, Ehrlich Tumor; Cytosol; Fructose; Glucose; Glycerophosphates; Glycolysis; Kinetics; Lactates; Malates; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; NADH Dehydrogenase; Oxidation-Reduction; Rotenone | 1995 |
Oxidation of NADH by a rotenone and antimycin-sensitive pathway in the mitochondrion of procyclic Trypanosoma brucei brucei.
The pathway of NADH oxidation in the procyclic Trypanosoma brucei brucei was investigated in a crude mitochondrial membrane fraction and in whole cells permeabilized with digitonin. NADH:cytochrome c reductase activity was 75% inhibited by concentrations of antimycin that inhibited 95% succinate:cytochrome c reductase activity suggesting that the major pathway for NADH oxidation in the mitochondria involved the cytochrome bc1 complex of the electron transfer chain. Both NADH:cytochrome c and NADH:ubiquinone reductase activities were inhibited 80-90% by rotenone indicating the presence of a complex I-like NADH dehydrogenase in the mitochondrion of trypanosomes. In whole cells permeabilized with low concentrations of digitonin, the oxidation of malate, proline and glucose (in the presence of salicylhydroxamic acid, the inhibitor of the alternate oxidase) was inhibited 30-50% by rotenone. The presence of an alternative pathway for NADH oxidation involving fumarate reductase was indicated by the observation that malonate, the specific inhibitor of succinate dehydrogenase, inhibited 30-35% the rate of oxygen uptake with malate and glucose as substrates in the digitonin-permeabilized cells. We conclude that in the mitochondrion of the procyclic form of T. brucei, NADH is preferentially oxidized by a rotenone-sensitive NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase; however, NADH can also be oxidized to some extent by the enzyme fumarate reductase present in the mitochondrion of T. brucei. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Electron Transport; Electron Transport Complex I; Glucose; Malates; Malonates; Mitochondria; NAD; NADH Dehydrogenase; NADH, NADPH Oxidoreductases; Oxidation-Reduction; Protozoan Proteins; Rotenone; Succinate Cytochrome c Oxidoreductase; Succinate Dehydrogenase; Trypanosoma brucei brucei | 1994 |
[The effect of inhibitors of the Q-cycle on cyano-resistant oxidation of malate by rat liver mitochondria in the presence of menadione].
Based on the inhibitor analysis data, it has been assumed that the Q-cycle plays a role in the cyano-resistant malate oxidation induced by menadione (90 microM) in rat liver mitochondria. The extent of involvement of Q-cycle transmitters in the cyano-resistant respiration of mitochondria is determined by the mode of the electron supply into the Q-cycle. In the presence of dicumarol, i.e., under conditions when CoQ and menadione are reduced by NADH-quinone reductase, the bulk of the electrons pass through the o-center of the Q-cycle. Myxothiazole inhibits the respiration by 70-80%, while antimycin--by only 20-30%. In the presence of myxothiazole and antimycin menadione oxidizes cytochrome b. In the presence of rotenone, when menadione is reduced by DT-diaphorase, the rate of cyano-resistant respiration decreases approximately twofold; its sensitivity towards myxothiazole and antimycin drops down to 40%. In the absence of rotenone and dicumarol the Q-cycle does not participate in the cyano-resistant respiration which under these conditions is insensitive either to myxothiazole or to antimycin. It is concluded that the mechanism of cyano-resistant respiration changes with an alteration in the rates of quinones K3 and CoQ reduction. The mechanism of cyano-resistant respiration is also controlled by the medium tonicity. A reduction in the medium tonicity decrease the participation of the Q-cycle and, correspondingly, the sensitivity of the cyano-resistant respiration towards myxothiazole and antimycin. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Cyanides; Electron Transport; Malates; Methacrylates; Mitochondria, Liver; NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase (Quinone); Oxidation-Reduction; Rats; Rotenone; Thiazoles; Ubiquinone; Vitamin K | 1993 |
Glutathione disulfide reduction in tumor mitochondria after t-butyl hydroperoxide treatment.
Treatment of isolated mitochondria from rat hepatoma tumor cells (AS-30D) with the oxidant, t-butyl hydroperoxide (tBuOOH, 1 or 5 mumol/ml) resulted in the oxidation of glutathione (GSH to GSSG) and the formation of protein-glutathione mixed disulfides (ProSSG). The GSSG was retained inside of the hepatoma mitochondria. In the presence of ADP+succinate (5 or 10 mM), or ketoglutarate (10 mM) or malate (5 mM), the GSSG was reduced to GSH, but the amount of ProSSG stayed constant. With saline or ADP+glutamate (10 mM)/malate (0.1 mm) no reduction of GSSG to GSH occurred. The presence of antimycin (5 micrograms/ml) with ADP+succinate inhibited reduction. At a concentration of 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU, 0.5 mM) which inhibited a major portion of the glutathione reductase activity, the reduction of GSSG to replenish GSH was also inhibited. NADPH may play a critical role as well, for the addition of 2.4 mM NADPH to permeabilized hepatoma mitochondria fostered the reduction of GSSG after tBuOOH treatment. Therefore, hepatoma mitochondria possess a glutathione reductase-dependent system to reduce GSSG to GSH. The reaction only occurs with actively respiring mitochondria. Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate; Animals; Antimycin A; Carmustine; Glutathione; Glutathione Disulfide; Glutathione Reductase; Ketoglutaric Acids; Liver Neoplasms, Experimental; Malates; Mitochondria, Liver; NADP; Oxidation-Reduction; Peroxides; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Succinates; Succinic Acid; tert-Butylhydroperoxide | 1992 |