Protein Information

ID 951
Name mMDH
Synonyms M MDH; MDH; MDH 2; MDH2; MOR1; Malate dehydrogenase; Malate dehydrogenase mitochondrial; mMDH…

Compound Information

ID 1341
Name rotenone
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
1722151 Rasmusson AG, Moller IM: Effect of calcium ions and inhibitors on internal NAD (P) H dehydrogenases in plant mitochondria. Eur J Biochem. 1991 Dec 5;202(2):617-23.
Both the external oxidation of NADH and NADPH in intact potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Bintje) tuber mitochondria and the rotenone-insensitive internal oxidation of NADPH by inside-out submitochondrial particles were dependent on Ca2+. The stimulation was not due to increased permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Neither the membrane potential nor the latencies of NAD (+)-dependent and NADP (+)-dependent malate dehydrogenases were affected by the addition of Ca2+. The pH dependence and kinetics of Ca (2+)-dependent NADPH oxidation by inside-out submitochondrial particles were studied using three different electron acceptors: O2, duroquinone and ferricyanide. Ca2+ increased the activity with all acceptors with a maximum at neutral pH and an additional minor peak at pH 5.8 with O2 and duroquinone. Without Ca2+, the activity was maximal around pH 6. The Km for NADPH was decreased fourfold with ferricyanide and duroquinone, and twofold with O2 as acceptor, upon addition of Ca2+. The Vmax was not changed with ferricyanide as acceptor, but increased twofold with both duroquinone and O2. Half-maximal stimulation of the NADPH oxidation was found at 3 microM free Ca2+ with both O2 and duroquinone as acceptors. This is the first report of a membrane-bound enzyme inside the inner mitochondrial membrane which is directly dependent on micromolar concentrations of Ca2+. Mersalyl and dicumarol, two potent inhibitors of the external NADH dehydrogenase in plant mitochondria, were found to inhibit internal rotenone-insensitive NAD (P) H oxidation, at the same concentrations and in manners very similar to their effects on the external NAD (P) H oxidation.
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