Inhibition of Photosynthetic Reactions by Aureomycin

1984 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 627-633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji-yu Ye ◽  
U. Heber

The effect of aureomycin on photosynthesis was investigated. This antibiotic which has been reported to stimulate photosynthesis at very low concentrations is an effective inhibitor at higher concentrations. In mesophyll protoplasts and isolated chloroplasts from spinach, 50% inhibition of CO2 reduction required about 20 μᴍ aureomycin. The reduction of 3-phosphoglycerate and of oxaloacetate by intact chloroplasts was also inhibited, but not that of nitrite and methylviologen which was actually stimulated. NADP reduction by broken chloroplasts and methylviologen- dependent photophosphorylation were also sensitive to aureomycin. The electrochromic shift at 518 nm which indicates formation of a light-dependent membrane potential was suppressed in the presence of 200 μᴍ aureomycin and the transthylakoid proton gradient was decreased. The data confirm reports that aureomycin has uncoupling properties, and they indicate that it also acts as an inhibitor of ferredoxin/NADP reductase.

1969 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen I. Asencio ◽  
Arturo Cedeño-Maldonado

Low concentrations of Cadmium inhibit the electron transport and CO2 fixation reactions of isolated chloroplasts. CO2 fixation is more sensitive to Cd than electron transport and dark pre-incubation increases the degree of toxicity to both. Carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme associated with CO2 fixation, is very sensitive to Cd either when applied directly to partially purified preparations of the enzyme or when enzyme preparations are obtained from intact chloroplasts previously exposed to Cd. Strong inhibition occurs at Cd concentrations lower than those required to inhibit any of the electron transport dependent reactions studied. These results are interpreted as evidence that carbonic anhydrase is one of the most sensitive sites of Cd action in isolated chloroplasts.


Author(s):  
Sarah Aherfi ◽  
Djamal Brahim Belhaouari ◽  
Lucile Pinault ◽  
Jean-Pierre Baudoin ◽  
Philippe Decloquement ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSince the discovery of Acanthamoeba polyphaga Mimivirus, the first giant virus of amoeba, the historical hallmarks defining a virus have been challenged. Giant virion sizes can reach up to 2.3 µm, making them visible by optical microscopy. They have large genomes of up to 2.5 Mb that encode proteins involved in the translation apparatus. Herein, we investigated possible energy production in Pandoravirus massiliensis, the largest of our giant virus collection. MitoTracker and TMRM mitochondrial membrane markers allowed for the detection of a membrane potential in virions that could be abolished by the use of the depolarizing agent CCCP. An attempt to identify enzymes involved in energy metabolism revealed that 8 predicted proteins of P. massiliensis exhibited low sequence identities with defined proteins involved in the universal tricarboxylic acid cycle (acetyl Co-A synthase; citrate synthase; aconitase; isocitrate dehydrogenase; α-ketoglutarate decarboxylase; succinate dehydrogenase; fumarase). All 8 viral predicted ORFs were transcribed together during viral replication, mainly at the end of the replication cycle. Two of these proteins were detected in mature viral particles by proteomics. The product of the ORF132, a predicted protein of P. massiliensis, cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, provided a functional isocitrate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, which converts isocitrate to α-ketoglutarate. We observed that membrane potential was enhanced by low concentrations of Acetyl-CoA, a regulator of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Our findings show for the first time that energy production can occur in viruses, namely, pandoraviruses, and the involved enzymes are related to tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes. The presence of a proton gradient in P. massiliensis coupled with the observation of genes of the tricarboxylic acid cycle make this virus a form a life for which it is legitimate to question ‘what is a virus?’.


1989 ◽  
Vol 86 (17) ◽  
pp. 6626-6629 ◽  
Author(s):  
L B Margolis ◽  
Y u Novikova I ◽  
I A Rozovskaya ◽  
V P Skulachev

Acidification of the cytoplasm of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells to pH 6.3 arrests DNA synthesis in these cells. Such an effect can be achieved by incubating the cells at pH 6.2 or by adding low concentrations of the K+/H+ antiporter, the antibiotic nigericin, at neutral pH. Glucose and anaerobiosis potentiate the nigericin effect. The inhibition of DNA synthesis by nigericin occurs without any significant decrease in the ATP concentration and in the mitochondrial membrane potential. The DNA synthesis inhibition is caused neither by a decrease in the intracellular [K+] nor by an increase in the intracellular [Na+] accompanying the nigericin effect (at least at low concentrations of the antibiotic). Nigericin should thus be regarded as a type of a cytostatic primarily affecting intracellular pH.


1977 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 253 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Stewart ◽  
AWD Larkum

The effects of dibromothymoquinone (DBMIB) on electron transport in types A, B, C and D spinach and pea chloroplast preparations have been studied. DBMIB (1 x 10-6M) strongly inhibited electron transport to methyl viologen in all the types of chloroplasts, while electron transport to ferricyanide was inhibited by 60%. Envelope-free (type C) chloroplast preparations with poor photosynthetic control were inhibited more strongly than intact (types A and B) chloroplast preparations at low (< 5 x 10-7M) concentrations of DBMIB. Type C preparations with good photosynthetic control were less strongly inhibited except in the presence of uncoupler or in the absence of ADP. Above 1 x 10-6M DBMIB, inhibition of electron transport to ferricyanide became progressively less and, with type A chloroplast preparations, a large stimulation compared to the control level occurred. Phenylenediamine stimulated high rates of electron transport to ferricyanide in the presence of low concentrations of DBMIB. At higher DBMIB concentrations, the stimulation was completely reversed and envelope-free chloroplasts again showed greater sensitivity to DBMIB compared to intact chloroplasts. DBMIB appears to have a number of sites of interaction with the thylakoid membrane.


1983 ◽  
Vol 212 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Ahmed ◽  
I R Booth

Valinomycin, nigericin and trichlorocarbanilide were assessed for their ability to control the protonmotive force in Escherichia coli cells. Valinomycin, at high K+ concentrations, was found to decrease the membrane potential delta phi and indirectly to decrease the pH gradient delta pH. Nigericin was found to have two modes of action. At low concentrations (0.05-2 microM) it carried out K+/H+ exchange and decreased delta pH. At higher concentrations (50 microM) it carried out a K+-dependent transfer of H+, decreasing both delta phi and delta pH. In EDTA-treated cells only the latter mode of action was evident, whereas in a mutant sensitive to deoxycholate both types of effect were observed. Trichlorocarbanilide is proposed as an alternative to nigericin for the specific control of delta pH, and it can be used in cells not treated with EDTA.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 227-227
Author(s):  
Katja G. Weinacht

Reticular Dysgenesis (RD) is one of the most serious forms of severe combined immune deficiency (SCID). It is characterized by complete absence of circulating lymphocytes and neutrophils. In addition, patients suffer from sensorineural hearing loss. Before newborn screening for SCID was implemented, the majority of patients succumbed to infection long before hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) could be attempted. To this date, the prognosis for RD remains grim. RD is caused by mutations in the mitochondrial ADP-generator Adenylate Kinase 2 (AK2). AK1 is a cytosolic protein that may compensate in various tissues for the lack of AK2. However, AK1 is not expressed in leukocytes and the stria vascularis of the inner ear [1]. While this observation may explain where AK2 defects manifest, the molecular mechanisms how AK2 defects take effect, remain largely obscure. Significant obstacles to elucidating disease pathology have been the lack of a suitable animal models and the unavailability of patient specimens. Using skin fibroblasts from an RD-patient we have recently identified at Boston Children’s Hospital [2], we have generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) with homozygous loss of function mutation in AK2. In-vitro myeloid differentiation of AK2-mutated iPSCs recapitulates the characteristic maturation arrest at the promyelocyte stage observed in-vivo in patients with this condition. AK2 is expressed in the intermitochondrial space and serves as primary mitochondrial ADP generator by promoting the reversible reaction AMP + ATP = 2 ADP. Maintenance of adequate levels of ADP is critical to support ATP synthase activity. Using Mass Spectrometry, we have shown that decreased AK2 activity leads to an increase in the AMP/ADP ratio in iPS-derived myeloid cells, indicating that AK2 is indispensable in maintaining ADP supply in the myeloid lineage. We have also performed transcriptome analysis of AK2- mutated myeloid cells compared to control and found a significant down regulation of ATP-dependant transporters. Based on this data, we hypothesized that in patients with RD, ADP-depletion in myeloid progenitors leads to stage 4 respiration, a well defined state in mitochondrial biology, in which the ATP-synthase lacks substrate and decreases its activity. This causes a reduction in proton flux from the intermitochondrial space back into the matrix, transient rise in membrane potential, and an escalation in the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The cell responds by activating “inducible uncoupling”, the opening of alternative proton pores, which allows proton flux back into the matrix, bypassing the ATP-synthase and foregoing the use of energy stored in the proton gradient. While this represents a cellular rescue mechanism in response to acute oxidative stress, extended oxidative-stress-induced uncoupling eventually leads to a decline in proton gradient and membrane potential and ultimately in demise of the cell. To test this hypothesis, we have added Glutathione, the primary endogenous cellular antioxidant, to the culture conditions. We also tested G-CSF and all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA), agents known to promote promyelocyte differentiation to mature neutrophils in other conditions. While G-CSF had no, and ATRA clearly deleterious effects on myeloid maturation in AK2-mutated cells, Glutathione led to a significant improvement in differentiation, allowing development of mature neutrophils in-vitro. Our results suggest that cell fate in RD is linked to oxidative stress and identify antioxidants as a possible therapeutic approach that may help reduce early mortality due to severe infections in patients with RD. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Endocrinology ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 139 (3) ◽  
pp. 993-998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Claude Henquin

Glucose stimulation of pancreatic β-cells triggers electrical activity (slow waves of membrane potential with superimposed spikes) that is best monitored with intracellular microelectrodes. Closure of ATP-sensitive K+ channels underlies the depolarization to the threshold potential and participates in the increase in electrical activity produced by suprathreshold (&gt;7 mm) concentrations of glucose, but it is still unclear whether this is the sole mechanism of control. This was investigated by testing whether blockade of ATP-sensitive K+ channels by low concentrations of tolbutamide is able to mimic the effects of glucose on mouse β-cell electrical activity even in the absence of the sugar. The response to tolbutamide was influenced by the duration of the perifusion with the low glucose medium. Tolbutamide (25 μm) caused a rapid and sustained depolarization with continuous activity after 6 min of perifusion of the islet with 3 mm glucose, and a progressive depolarization with slow waves of the membrane potential after 20 min. In the absence of glucose, the β-cell response to tolbutamide was a transient phase of depolarization with rare slow waves (6 min) or a silent, small, but sustained, depolarization (20 min). Readministration of 3 mm glucose was sufficient to restore slow waves, whereas an increase in the glucose concentration to 5 and 7 mm was followed by a lengthening of the slow waves and a shortening of the intervals. In contrast, induction of slow waves by tolbutamide proved very difficult in the absence of glucose, because the β-cell membrane tended to depolarize from a silent level to the plateau level, at which electrical activity is continuous. Azide, a mitochondrial poison, abrogated the electrical activity induced by tolbutamide in the absence of glucose, which demonstrates the influence of the metabolism of endogenous fuels on the response to the sulfonylurea. The partial repolarization that azide also produced was reversed by increasing the concentration of tolbutamide, but reappearance of the spikes required the addition of glucose. It is concluded that inhibition of ATP-sensitive K+ channels is not the only mechanism by which glucose controls electrical activity inβ -cells.


1984 ◽  
Vol 220 (1220) ◽  
pp. 327-338 ◽  

Experiments with carefully isolated, largely intact chloroplasts, capable of fast rates of CO 2 -dependent O 2 evolution, show that the fall in chlorophyll a fluorescence (from the early maxima reached immediately after illumination) is interrupted by a ‘shoulder’ which is associated with the exponential increase in the rate of O 2 evolution. The length of this induction period was increased by storage, by decreased temperature, by increased orthophosphate concentration in the assay medium or by the presence of D, L-glyceraldehyde. It could also be shortened by the addition of 3-phosphoglycerate or dihydroxyacetonephosphate. In each treatment the shoulder in fluorescence shifted so that the association with the period of exponential increase was maintained. When illumination was re-started after a short dark interval, induction was minimal and no shoulder could be discerned, but both the lag in the onset of O 2 evolution and the shoulder were restored when the chloroplasts were resuspended in fresh assay medium during the period of darkness. The relation between chlorophyll a fluorescence and the onset of photosynthetic carbon assimilation is discussed.


2009 ◽  
pp. 685-692
Author(s):  
R Endlicher ◽  
P Křiváková ◽  
H Rauchová ◽  
H Nůsková ◽  
Z Červinková ◽  
...  

The concentration-dependence of tert-butyl hydroperoxide (BHP) inhibitory effect on oxygen consumption in isolated rat liver mitochondria was measured in the presence of various respiratory substrates. Strong inhibitory effect at low concentrations of BHP (15-30 µM) was found for oxoglutarate and palmitoyl carnitine oxidation. Pyruvate and glutamate oxidation was inhibited at higher concentrations of BHP (100-200 µM). Succinate oxidation was not affected even at 3.3 mM BHP. Determination of mitochondrial membrane potential has shown that in the presence of NADH-dependent substrates the membrane potential was dissipated by BHP but was completely restored after addition of succinate. Our data thus indicate that beside peroxidative damage of complex I also various mitochondrial NADH-dependent dehydrogenases are inhibited, but to a different extent and with different kinetics. Our data also show that succinate could be an important nutritional substrate protecting hepatocytes during peroxidative damage.


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