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Regulation of Ca2+ release from mitochondria by the oxidation-reduction state of pyridine nucleotides

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TLDR
Observations form the basis of a hypothesis for feedback regulation of Ca( 2+)-dependent substrate- or energy-mobilizing enzymatic reactions by the uptake or release of mitochondrial Ca(2+), mediated by the cytosolic phosphate potential and the ATP-dependent reduction of mitochondrial pyridine nucleotides by reversal of electron transport.
Abstract
Mitochondria from normal rat liver and heart, and also Ehrlich tumor cells, respiring on succinate as energy source in the presence of rotenone (to prevent net electron flow to oxygen from the endogenous pyridine nucleotides), rapidly take up Ca(2+) and retain it so long as the pyridine nucleotides are kept in the reduced state. When acetoacetate is added to bring the pyridine nucleotides into a more oxidized state, Ca(2+) is released to the medium. A subsequent addition of a reductant of the pyridine nucleotides such as beta-hydroxybutyrate, glutamate, or isocitrate causes reuptake of the released Ca(2+). Successive cycles of Ca(2+) release and uptake can be induced by shifting the redox state of the pyridine nucleotides to more oxidized and more reduced states, respectively. Similar observations were made when succinate oxidation was replaced as energy source by ascorbate oxidation or by the hydrolysis of ATP. These and other observations form the basis of a hypothesis for feedback regulation of Ca(2+)-dependent substrate- or energy-mobilizing enzymatic reactions by the uptake or release of mitochondrial Ca(2+), mediated by the cytosolic phosphate potential and the ATP-dependent reduction of mitochondrial pyridine nucleotides by reversal of electron transport.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Prooxidant states and tumor promotion.

Peter A. Cerutti
- 25 Jan 1985 - 
TL;DR: Prooxidant states can be caused by different classes of agents, including hyperbaric oxygen, radiation, xenobiotic metabolites and Fenton-type reagents, modulators of the cytochrome P-450 electron-transport chain, peroxisome proliferators, inhibitors of the antioxidant defense, and membrane-active agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms by which mitochondria transport calcium.

TL;DR: It has been suggested that the permeability transition and its reversal may also function as a mitochondrial Ca2+ efflux mechanism under some conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondrial Transport of Cations: Channels, Exchangers, and Permeability Transition

TL;DR: The review should provide the basic elements needed to understand both earlier mitochondrial literature and current problems associated with mitochondrial transport of cations and hopefully will foster new interest in the molecular definition of mitochondrial cation channels and exchangers as well as their roles in cell physiology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidants as stimulators of signal transduction

TL;DR: Reactive oxygen species may be second messengers for transcription factor activation, apoptosis, bone resorption, cell growth, and chemotaxis as well as the mechanisms of the oxidant-stimulation of signal transduction are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondria and reactive oxygen species.

TL;DR: The sources and metabolism of ROS in this organelle are reviewed, including the conditions that regulate the production of these species, such as mild uncoupling, oxygen tension, respiratory inhibition, Ca2+ and K+ transport, and mitochondrial content and morphology.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The energy-linked reaction of calcium with mitochondria.

TL;DR: This contribution and previous work emphasize the reaction of low concentrations of divalent cations with phosphorylating mitochondria, which leads to a short term activation of respiration that is followed by a restitution of respiratory control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stoichiometry of respiratory stimulation, accumulation of ca++ and phosphate, and oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria.

TL;DR: Isolated mitochondria of various tissues have been found to accumulate large amounts of Ca++ and phosphate from the medium in a process stoichiometrically dependent on high energy intermediates generated by the energy-conserving mechanisms of the respiratory chain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for more than one Ca2+ transport mechanism in mitochondria.

TL;DR: A model is proposed in which divalent cations are transported by at least two mechanisms: a passive uniport and and active pump, cation antiport or anion symport, which is more sensitive to La3+ and ruthenium red.
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