myxothiazol and duroquinone

myxothiazol has been researched along with duroquinone* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for myxothiazol and duroquinone

ArticleYear
[Interaction of menadione and duroquinone with Q-cycle during DT-diaphorase function].
    Biokhimiia (Moscow, Russia), 1991, Volume: 56, Issue:10

    The interaction of quinones (menadione and duroquinone) with DT-diaphorase and mitochondrial electron transport chain translocators at low (120 mosM) and high (400 mosM) values of the medium tonicity in the quinone concentration range of 6-90 microM was studied. It was shown that with a rise in menadione (K3) concentration the number of electron transport carriers interacting with it increase. At K3 concentration of 6 microM the latter is reduced by DT-diaphorase and fully oxidized via the Q-cycle. At K3 concentration of 15 microM the latter is also reduced by DT-diaphorase via the Q-cycle, but in this case the oxidation is incomplete (about 30% K3H2 is oxidized by the terminal part of the respiratory chain). At 90 microM K3 50% of quinone is reduced by DT-diaphorase and 50% by the respiratory chain NADH dehydrogenase complex enzymes; about 30% of K3H2 is oxidized via the Q-cycle, about 20%--by the terminal part of the respiratory chain and about 50%--by O2 without cytochrome oxidase. Unlike menadione, duroquinone (6-90 microM) is reduced only by DT-diaphorase and is oxidized in all cases by cytochrome oxidase. It was shown that the increase in the mitochondrial matrix volume in low tonicity media decreases the rate of the DT-diaphorase shunt operation.

    Topics: Animals; Antifungal Agents; Antimycin A; Benzoquinones; Electron Transport; Methacrylates; Mitochondria, Liver; NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase (Quinone); Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen; Rats; Rotenone; Thiazoles; Vitamin K

1991
The antimycin-A-insensitive respiratory pathway of Candida parapsilosis: evidence for a second quinone involved specifically in its functioning.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 1991, Mar-01, Volume: 1057, Issue:1

    The involvement of a quinone in the antimycin A-insensitive electron transfer from NADH-dehydrogenase to cytochrome c via the alternative respiratory chain of Candida parapsilosis, by-passing complex II, has been studied. After a partial extraction of quinones, the residual respiration was fully antimycin-A-sensitive, but reincorporation of the organic extract partially restored an antimycin A-insensitive respiration. Analysis of quinone content by HPLC, after purification by thin-layer chromatography, evidenced another quinone species in a very low amount. Myxothiazol and stigmatellin were shown to inhibit the alternative pathway but at a higher concentration than required to inhibit the classical pathway. Cytochrome spectra analysis showed that, in the presence of high myxothiazol concentrations, cytochromes c and aa3 were not reduced, while they were in the presence of antimycin A. It is suggested that the secondary pathway of C. parapsilosis involved a specific quinone pool which can be displaced from its binding site by high concentrations of myxothiazol or analogous compounds.

    Topics: Antimycin A; Benzoquinones; Candida; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Chromatography, Thin Layer; Electron Transport; Methacrylates; NADPH Dehydrogenase; Oxidation-Reduction; Quinones; Respiration; Thiazoles

1991
The interaction of quinone analogues with wild-type and ubiquinone-deficient yeast mitochondria.
    Biochimica et biophysica acta, 1988, Jul-27, Volume: 934, Issue:3

    The interaction of the exogenous quinones, duroquinone (DQ) and the decyl analogue of ubiquinone (DB) with the mitochondrial respiratory chain was studied in both wild-type and a ubiquinone-deficient mutant of yeast. DQ can be reduced directly by NADH dehydrogenase, but cannot be reduced by succinate dehydrogenase in the absence of endogenous ubiquinone. The succinate-driven reduction of DQ can be stimulated by DB in a reaction inhibited 50% by antimycin and 70-80% by the combined use of antimycin and myxothiazol, suggesting that electron transfer occurs via the cytochrome b-c1 complex. Both DQ and DB can effectively mediate the reduction of cytochrome b by the primary dehydrogenases through center o, but their ability to mediate the reduction of cytochrome b through center i is negligible. Two reaction sites for ubiquinol seem to be present at center o: one is independent of endogenous Q6 with a high reaction rate and a high Km; the other is affected by endogenous Q6 and has a low reaction rate and a low Km. By contrast, only one ubiquinol reaction site was observed at center i, where DB appears to compete with endogenous Q6. DB can oxidize most of the pre-reduced cytochrome b, while DQ can oxidize only 50%. On the basis of these data, the possible binding patterns of DB on different Q-reaction sites and the requirement for ubiquinone in the continuous oxidation of DQH are discussed.

    Topics: Antimycin A; Benzoquinones; Cytochrome b Group; Electron Transport; Electron Transport Complex III; Kinetics; Methacrylates; Mitochondria; Oxidation-Reduction; Quinones; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Succinate Dehydrogenase; Succinates; Succinic Acid; Thiazoles; Ubiquinone

1988