ubiquinone has been researched along with peroxynitric-acid* in 5 studies
1 trial(s) available for ubiquinone and peroxynitric-acid
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Oxidation and antioxidation of human low-density lipoprotein and plasma exposed to 3-morpholinosydnonimine and reagent peroxynitrite.
As peroxynitrite is implicated as an oxidant for low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in atherogenesis, we investigated this process using reagent peroxynitrite (ONOO-) and 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1, which produces peroxynitrite via generation of NO. and O2.-). LDL oxidation was assessed by the consumption of ubiquinol-10 (CoQ10H2) and alpha-tocopherol (alpha-TOH), the accumulation of cholesteryl ester hydro(pero)xides, the loss of lysine (Lys) and tryptophan (Trp) residues, and the change in relative electrophoretic mobility. Exposure to ONOO- or SIN-1 resulted in rapid (<1 min) and time-dependent oxidation, respectively, of LDL's lipids and protein. Manipulating the alpha-TOH content by in vivo or in vitro means showed that when ONOO- or SIN-1 was used at oxidant-to-LDL ratios of <100:1 the extent of LDL lipid peroxidation increased with increasing initial alpha-TOH content. In contrast, in vivo enrichment with the co-antioxidant CoQ10H2 decreased LDL lipid peroxidation induced by SIN-1. At oxidant-to-LDL ratios of >200:1, alpha-TOH enrichment decreased LDL lipid peroxidation for both SIN-1 and ONOO-. In contrast to lipid peroxidation, altering the alpha-TOH content of LDL did not affect Trp or Lys loss, independent of the amounts of either oxidant added. Aqueous antioxidants inhibited ONOO--induced lipid and protein oxidation with the order of efficacy: 3-hydroxyanthranilate (3-HAA) > urate > ascorbate. With SIN-1, these antioxidants inhibited Trp consumption, while only the co-antioxidants ascorbate and 3-HAA prevented alpha-TOH consumption and lipid peroxidation. Exposure of human plasma to SIN-1 resulted in the loss of ascorbate followed by loss of CoQ10H2 and bilirubin. Lipid peroxidation was inhibited during this period, though proceeded as a radical-chain process after depletion of these antioxidants and in the presence of alpha-TOH and urate. Bicarbonate at physiological concentrations decreased ONOO--induced lipid and protein oxidation, whereas it enhanced SIN-1-induced lipid peroxidation, Trp consumption, and alpha-tocopheroxyl radical formation in LDL. These results indicate an important role for tocopherol-mediated peroxidation and co-antioxidation in peroxynitrite-induced lipoprotein lipid peroxidation, especially when peroxynitrite is formed time-dependently by SIN-1. The studies also highlight differences between ONOO-- and SIN-1-induced LDL oxidation with regards to the effects of bicarbonate, ascorbate, and urate. Topics: Adenosine Triphosphatases; Adult; Antioxidants; Enzyme Inhibitors; Female; Humans; Lipoproteins, LDL; Male; Mass Spectrometry; Molsidomine; Nitrates; Oxidants; Oxidation-Reduction; Plasma; Ubiquinone; Vitamin E | 1998 |
4 other study(ies) available for ubiquinone and peroxynitric-acid
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Oxidation of ubiquinol by peroxynitrite: implications for protection of mitochondria against nitrosative damage.
A major pathway of nitric oxide utilization in mitochondria is its conversion to peroxynitrite, a species involved in biomolecule damage via oxidation, hydroxylation and nitration reactions. In the present study the potential role of mitochondrial ubiquinol in protecting against peroxynitrite-mediated damage is examined and the requirements of the mitochondrial redox status that support this function of ubiquinol are established. (1) Absorption and EPR spectroscopy studies revealed that the reactions involved in the ubiquinol/peroxynitrite interaction were first-order in peroxynitrite and zero-order in ubiquinol, in agreement with the rate-limiting formation of a reactive intermediate formed during the isomerization of peroxynitrite to nitrate. Ubiquinol oxidation occurred in one-electron transfer steps as indicated by the formation of ubisemiquinone. (2) Peroxynitrite promoted, in a concentration-dependent manner, the formation of superoxide anion by mitochondrial membranes. (3) Ubiquinol protected against peroxynitrite-mediated nitration of tyrosine residues in albumin and mitochondrial membranes, as suggested by experimental models, entailing either addition of ubiquinol or expansion of the mitochondrial ubiquinol pool caused by selective inhibitors of complexes III and IV. (4) Increase in membrane-bound ubiquinol partially prevented the loss of mitochondrial respiratory function induced by peroxynitrite. These findings are analysed in terms of the redox transitions of ubiquinone linked to both nitrogen-centred radical scavenging and oxygen-centred radical production. It may be concluded that the reaction of mitochondrial ubiquinol with peroxynitrite is part of a complex regulatory mechanism with implications for mitochondrial function and integrity. Topics: Albumins; Animals; Coenzymes; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy; Immunoblotting; Kinetics; Mitochondria; Mitochondria, Liver; Models, Chemical; Nitrates; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxidative Stress; Oxygen; Oxygen Consumption; Protein Binding; Rats; Spectrophotometry; Time Factors; Tyrosine; Ubiquinone | 2000 |
Reactions of peroxynitrite in the mitochondrial matrix.
Superoxide radical (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO) produced at the mitochondrial inner membrane react to form peroxynitrite (ONOO-) in the mitochondrial matrix. Intramitochondrial ONOO- effectively reacts with a few biomolecules according to reaction constants and intramitochondrial concentrations. The second-order reaction constants (in M(-1) s(-1)) of ONOO- with NADH (233 +/- 27), ubiquinol-0 (485 +/- 54) and GSH (183 +/- 12) were determined fluorometrically by a simple competition assay of product formation. The oxidation of the components of the mitochondrial matrix by ONOO- was also followed in the presence of CO2, to assess the reactivity of the nitrosoperoxocarboxylate adduct (ONOOCO2-) towards the same reductants. The ratio of product formation was about similar both in the presence of 2.5 mM CO2 and in air-equilibrated conditions. Liver submitochondrial particles supplemented with 0.25-2 microM ONOO- showed a O2- production that indicated ubisemiquinone formation and autooxidation. The nitration of mitochondrial proteins produced after addition of 200 microM ONOO- was observed by Western blot analysis. Protein nitration was prevented by the addition of 50-200 microM ubiquinol-0 or GSH. An intramitochondrial steady state concentration of about 2 nM ONOO- was calculated, taking into account the rate constants and concentrations of ONOO- coreactants. Topics: Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Blotting, Western; Carbon Dioxide; Glutathione; Inhibitory Concentration 50; Kinetics; Mice; Mitochondria, Liver; NAD; Nitrates; Oxidation-Reduction; Spectrometry, Fluorescence; Superoxides; Tyrosine; Ubiquinone | 2000 |
The mechanism of the nitric oxide-mediated enhancement of tert-butylhydroperoxide-induced DNA single strand breakage.
1. Caffeine (Cf) enhances the DNA cleavage induced by tert-butylhydroperoxide (tB-OOH) in U937 cells via a mechanism involving Ca2+-dependent mitochondrial formation of DNA-damaging species (Guidarelli et al., 1997b). Nitric oxide (NO) is not involved in this process since U937 cells do not express the constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS). 2. Treatment with the NO donors S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP, 10 microM), or S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO, 300 microM), however, potentiated the DNA strand scission induced by 200 microM tB-OOH. The DNA lesions generated by tB-OOH alone, or combined with SNAP, were repaired with superimposable kinetics and were insensitive to anti-oxidants and peroxynitrite scavengers but suppressed by iron chelators. 3. SNAP or GSNO did not cause mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation but their enhancing effects on the tB-OOH-induced DNA strand scission were prevented by ruthenium red, an inhibitor of the calcium uniporter of mitochondria. Furthermore, the enhancing effects of both SNAP and GSNO were identical to and not additive with those promoted by the Ca2+-mobilizing agents Cf or ATP. 4. The SNAP- or GSNO-mediated enhancement of the tB-OOH-induced DNA cleavage was abolished by the respiratory chain inhibitors rotenone and myxothiazol and was not apparent in respiration-deficient cells. 5. It is concluded that, in cells which do not express the enzyme cNOS, exogenous NO enhances the accumulation of DNA single strand breaks induced by tB-OOH via a mechanism involving inhibition of complex III. Topics: Caffeine; Calcium; Cytochromes c1; DNA Damage; DNA, Single-Stranded; Electron Transport; Humans; Mitochondria; NAD(P)H Dehydrogenase (Quinone); Nitrates; Nitric Oxide; Nitric Oxide Synthase; Nitric Oxide Synthase Type I; Penicillamine; tert-Butylhydroperoxide; Tumor Cells, Cultured; U937 Cells; Ubiquinone | 1998 |
Oxidative modification of nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase in submitochondrial particles: effect of endogenous ubiquinol.
The present paper describes the sensitivity of the mitochondrial nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (EC 1.6.1.1) to oxidative modification, and the effects of endogenous ubiquinol on this modification. A comparison is made between the effects of treatment with ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate and with peroxynitrite, using kinetic, electrophoretic, and immunological analyses, together with lipid peroxidation measurements. The transhydrogenase was inactivated by both types of oxidative modification, but apparently through different mechanisms. Ubiquinol protected the enzyme against inactivation only when the modification was caused by ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate treatment. Kinetic measurements revealed a threefold increase of the Km value of the enzyme for NADPH after exposure to ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate, and a twofold increase of the Km values for both NADH and NADPH after exposure to peroxynitrite. NAD(H) exerted a protection against trans-hydrogenase inactivation when added to the preincubation in the case of peroxynitrite, but neither NAD(H) or NADP(H) protected in the case of ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate. Using immunoblotting it was shown that the enzyme became both aggregated and fragmented, although to different extents, depending on the oxidative system used. Again, ubiquinol prevented these effects only in the case of ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate treatment. Furthermore, there occurred a striking decrease in the 66-kDa trypsin fragment after exposure of the enzyme to ADP-Fe3+ and ascorbate, and of the 48-kDa trypsin fragment after exposure to peroxynitrite. It is concluded that the mitochondrial nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase is sensitive to oxidative stress and that the mechanism underlying this can vary according to the challenge to which the enzyme is exposed. Endogenous ubiquinol may play a role in protecting the enzyme against agents perturbing the lipid phase of the membrane. Topics: Adenosine Diphosphate; Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Blotting, Western; Cattle; Ferric Compounds; Kinetics; Lipid Peroxides; NAD; NADP; NADP Transhydrogenases; Nitrates; Oxidation-Reduction; Peptide Mapping; Stress, Physiological; Submitochondrial Particles; Tyrosine; Ubiquinone | 1996 |