antimycin has been researched along with malonic-acid* in 9 studies
9 other study(ies) available for antimycin and malonic-acid
Article | Year |
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The Influence of Metabolic Inhibitors, Antibiotics, and Microgravity on Intact Cell MALDI-TOF Mass Spectra of the Cyanobacterium
Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antimycin A; Azides; Cell Respiration; Chloramphenicol; Citric Acid Cycle; Deoxyglucose; Fluoroacetates; Glycolysis; Malonates; Protein Biosynthesis; Pyruvates; Reproducibility of Results; Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization; Streptomycin; Synechococcus; Weightlessness | 2021 |
Iron deficiency induces changes in riboflavin secretion and the mitochondrial electron transport chain in hairy roots of Hyoscyamus albus.
Hyoscyamus albus hairy roots secrete riboflavin under Fe-deficient conditions. To determine whether this secretion was linked to an enhancement of respiration, both riboflavin secretion and the reduction of 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC), as a measure of respiration activity, were determined in hairy roots cultured under Fe-deficient and Fe-replete conditions, with or without aeration. Appreciable TTC-reducing activity was detected at the root tips, at the bases of lateral roots and in internal tissues, notably the vascular system. TTC-reducing activity increased under Fe deficiency and this increase occurred in concert with riboflavin secretion and was more apparent under aeration. Riboflavin secretion was not apparent under Fe-replete conditions. In order to examine which elements of the mitochondrial electron transport chain might be involved, the effects of the respiratory inhibitors, barbiturate, dicoumarol, malonic acid, antimycin, KCN and salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM) were investigated. Under Fe-deficient conditions, malonic acid affected neither root growth, TTC-reducing activity nor riboflavin secretion, whereas barbiturate and SHAM inhibited only root growth and TTC-reducing activity, respectively, and the other compounds variously inhibited growth and TTC-reducing activity. Riboflavin secretion was decreased, in concert with TTC-reducing activity, by dicoumarol, antimycin and KCN, but not by SHAM. In Fe-replete roots, all inhibitors which reduced riboflavin secretion in Fe-deficient roots showed somewhat different effects: notably, antimycin and KCN did not significantly inhibit TTC-reducing activity and the inhibition by dicoumarol was much weaker in Fe-replete roots. Combined treatment with KCN and SHAM also revealed that Fe-deficient and Fe-replete roots reduced TTC in different ways. A decrease in the Fe content of mitochondria in Fe-deficient roots was confirmed. Overall, the results suggest that, under conditions of Fe deficiency in H. albus hairy roots, the alternative NAD(P)H dehydrogenases, complex III and complex IV, but not the alternative oxidase, are actively involved both in respiration and in riboflavin secretion. Topics: Antimycin A; Barbiturates; Cyanates; Dicumarol; Electron Transport; Hyoscyamus; Iron Deficiencies; Malonates; Plant Roots; Riboflavin; Salicylamides | 2010 |
Effects of mitochondrial dysfunction on glutamate receptor-mediated neurotoxicity in cultured rat spinal motor neurons.
Glutamate-induced excitotoxicity is implicated as playing a key role in the pathogenesis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and mitochondrial dysfunction is also found in ALS patients. We investigated the relationship between glutamate excitotoxicity and mitochondrial dysfunction elicited by rotenone (a complex I inhibitor), malonate (a complex II inhibitor), or antimycin (a complex III inhibitor), in primary cultures of the embryonic rat spinal cord. Rotenone and malonate induced relatively selective toxicity against motor neurons as compared to non-motor neurons, whereas antimycin caused non-selective toxicity. The toxicity of rotenone was prevented by a non-N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) but not by an NMDA receptor antagonist, 5-methyl-10, 11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine hydrogen maleate (MK-801). The toxicity of malonate was blocked by both CNQX and MK-801. The toxicity of antimycin was affected by neither CNQX nor MK-801. When mitochondrial complex I was mildly inhibited by a sub-lethal concentration of rotenone, AMPA-induced motor neuron death was significantly exacerbated. A sub-lethal concentration of malonate exacerbated both NMDA- and AMPA-induced motor neuron death. These data suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction predisposes motor neurons to ionotropic glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxicity. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Calcium Channel Blockers; Calcium Channels; Cell Death; Disease Models, Animal; Drug Synergism; Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins; Enzyme Inhibitors; Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists; Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists; Glutamic Acid; Malonates; Mitochondria; Motor Neurons; Neurotoxins; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Receptors, Glutamate; Rotenone; Spinal Cord | 2004 |
Mitochondrial permeability transition in neuronal damage promoted by Ca2+ and respiratory chain complex II inhibition.
Changes in mitochondrial integrity, reactive oxygen species release and Ca2+ handling are proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of many neurological disorders including methylmalonic acidaemia and Huntington's disease, which exhibit partial mitochondrial respiratory inhibition. In this report, we studied the mechanisms by which the respiratory chain complex II inhibitors malonate, methylmalonate and 3-nitropropionate affect rat brain mitochondrial function and neuronal survival. All three compounds, at concentrations which inhibit respiration by 50%, induced mitochondrial inner membrane permeabilization when in the presence of micromolar Ca2+ concentrations. ADP, cyclosporin A and catalase prevented or delayed this effect, indicating it is mediated by reactive oxygen species and mitochondrial permeability transition (PT). PT induced by malonate was also present in mitochondria isolated from liver and kidney, but required more significant respiratory inhibition. In brain, PT promoted by complex II inhibition was stimulated by increasing Ca2+ cycling and absent when mitochondria were pre-loaded with Ca2+ or when Ca2+ uptake was prevented. In addition to isolated mitochondria, we determined the effect of methylmalonate on cultured PC12 cells and freshly prepared rat brain slices. Methylmalonate promoted cell death in striatal slices and PC12 cells, in a manner attenuated by cyclosporin A and bongkrekate, and unrelated to impairment of energy metabolism. We propose that under conditions in which mitochondrial complex II is partially inhibited in the CNS, neuronal cell death involves the induction of PT. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Bongkrekic Acid; Brain; Calcimycin; Calcium; Catalase; Cell Survival; Cyclosporins; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Interactions; Electron Transport Complex II; Enzyme Inhibitors; Female; In Vitro Techniques; Ionophores; Malonates; Membrane Potentials; Methylmalonic Acid; Mitochondria; NADP; Neurons; Nitro Compounds; Oxygen Consumption; PC12 Cells; Permeability; Propionates; Rats; Rotenone; Tacrolimus; Tetrazolium Salts; Thiazoles; Uncoupling Agents | 2004 |
Determining and understanding the control of flux. An illustration in submitochondrial particles of how to validate schemes of metabolic control.
Two complementary methods were used to determine how the rate of respiration and that of ATP hydrolysis were controlled in rat liver submitochondrial particles. In the first, 'direct control analysis' method, respiration was titrated with malonate, antimycin or cyanide at 20, 30 and 37 degrees C, to determine the flux control exerted by succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome bc1 complex and cytochrome c oxidase, respectively. Together, the three respiratory complexes only controlled the flux by about 50%, leaving the other 50% of flux control to the H+ leak. In the second, 'elasticity based' method, the elasticity coefficients of the respiratory chain or the H+-ATPase and the H+ leak towards the H+ gradient were determined. Then, the flux control coefficients were calculated using the connectivity and summation laws of metabolic control theory. The correspondence between the flux control coefficients determined in the two ways validated the two methods. This allowed us to use the second method to analyse what was the kinetic origin of the observed distribution of control. Control of ATP hydrolysis by the ATPase decreased with increasing ATPase activity; hence, the control exerted by the H+ leak increased with increasing ATPase activity, due to a diminishing elasticity towards the H+ gradient. Reverse electron transport was mainly controlled by the ATPase; the sum of flux control coefficients of succinate dehydrogenase, NADH-CoQ oxidoreductase, and H+-ATPase yielded a value greater than one, indicating that the H+ leak exerted a significant negative control on this pathway. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; Adenosine Triphosphate; Animals; Antimycin A; Cyanides; Electron Transport; Electron Transport Complex III; Electron Transport Complex IV; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Kinetics; Malonates; Mitochondria, Liver; Oxygen Consumption; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Succinate Dehydrogenase; Temperature | 1999 |
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 |
Requirement of an extracellular energy substrate for the guinea pig sperm acrosome reaction induced by calcium ionophore.
It is well established that calcium ionophore A 23187 induces acrosome reaction (AcR) of uncapacitated spermatozoa in the presence of extracellular Ca2+ ions. In the present study, we have investigated how extracellular energy substrates (glucose, pyruvate, and lactate) affect the ionophore-induced AcR of guinea pig spermatozoa. It was found that 0.3 microM concentration of A 23187 had the maximum effect to initiate AcR of guinea pig spermatozoa. Virtually no spermatozoa underwent their AcR when incubated in substrate-free modified Tyrode's medium containing 0.3 microM A 23187 and 2 mM Ca2+. At least one exogenous substrate is essential for the ionophore-induced AcR of spermatozoa. As for efficacy of the substrates, lactate was more effective than pyruvate and glucose. However, a better result was observed when lactate was added along with pyruvate. Malonate inhibited the ionophore-induced AcR but not the hyperactivated motility of spermatozoa. The mitochondrial electron transport chain blockers rotenone, antimycin, and oligomycin failed to inhibit AcR, although in the presence of these blockers spermatozoa were unable to show hyperactivated motility. These results suggest that the mitochondrial citric acid cycle, not the electron transport chain, is probably the energy source for ionophore-induced AcR of guinea pig spermatozoa. Topics: Acrosome; Animals; Antimycin A; Calcimycin; Energy Metabolism; Glucose; Guinea Pigs; Lactates; Male; Malonates; Mitochondria; Oligomycins; Pyruvates; Rotenone | 1991 |
Mitochondrial activity: a possible determinant of anoxic injury in renal medulla.
In brain, heart and kidney, cell work in the absence of oxygen has been thought to precipitate anoxic damage by increasing the rate of depletion of cellular energy stores. In the medullary thick ascending limb of isolated perfused rat kidneys, however, reduction of ATP synthesis by a variety of mitochondrial or metabolic inhibitors caused ATP depletion comparable to that produced by oxygen deprivation but did not reproduce the lesions of anoxia. In these cells, unrestrained mitochondrial activity may be an important source of anoxic injury. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Animals; Antimycin A; Cyanides; Deoxyglucose; Energy Metabolism; Hypoxia; Kidney Medulla; Malonates; Mitochondria; Oligomycins; Oxygen Consumption; Rats; Rotenone | 1986 |
Relationships between the effects of redox potential, alpha-thenoyltrifluoroacetone and malonate on O(2) and H2O2 generation by submitochondrial particles in the presence of succinate and antimycin.
The rate of the antimycin-induced H2O2 and O(2) generation in beef heart submitochondrial particles is maximal at the [succinate]/[fumarate] ratio of approximately 1:5 and decays at both higher and lower redox potentials. Succinate dehydrogenase inhibitors, such as TTFA or malonate, stimulate active oxygen production in the presence of excess succinate but are inhibitory at Eh values more positive than the optimal. The modulation of O(2) and H2O2 generation by these inhibitors can be explained by their effects on the steady-state redox potential(s) of the component(s) of mitochondrial site 2. Topics: Animals; Antimycin A; Cattle; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Kinetics; Malonates; Mitochondria, Heart; Oxidation-Reduction; Submitochondrial Particles; Succinates; Succinic Acid; Superoxides; Thenoyltrifluoroacetone | 1984 |