Az orvos-, egészségtudományi- és gyógyszerészképzés tudományos műhelyeinek fejlesztése(EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00009)
Támogató: EFOP-VEKOP
Anoxia halts oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) causing an accumulation of reduced
compounds in the mitochondrial matrix which impedes dehydrogenases. By simultaneously
measuring oxygen concentration, NADH autofluorescence, mitochondrial membrane potential
and ubiquinone reduction extent in isolated mitochondria in real-time, we demonstrate
that Complex I utilized endogenous quinones to oxidize NADH under acute anoxia. 13
C metabolic tracing or untargeted analysis of metabolites extracted during anoxia
in the presence or absence of site-specific inhibitors of the electron transfer system
showed that NAD + regenerated by Complex I is reduced by the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase
Complex yielding succinyl-CoA supporting mitochondrial substrate-level phosphorylation
(mtSLP), releasing succinate. Complex II operated amphidirectionally during the anoxic
event, providing quinones to Complex I and reducing fumarate to succinate. Our results
highlight the importance of quinone provision to Complex I oxidizing NADH maintaining
glutamate catabolism and mtSLP in the absence of OXPHOS.