Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10837540 Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology 2005 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Exposure of mitochondria isolated from bovine heart to the insecticidal coumarin surangin B results in inhibition of complex II (IC50 = 0.2 μM), III (IC50 = 14.8 μM), and IV (IC50 = 3.1 μM), but in contrast, the NADH:ubiquinone reductase (complex I) was completely insensitive to this compound at 100 μM. Kinetic analysis of surangin B's interaction with complex II was then investigated using sub-mitochondrial particles. With succinate as the substrate, surangin B, like carboxin, acted with non-competitive kinetics and clearly contrasted in its action with malonate, a competitive inhibitor of complex II. Likewise, surangin B acted as a non-competitive inhibitor of decylubiquinone-dependent interception of electrons at complex II. Difference spectra of reduced complex III equilibrated with surangin B were found to closely parallel those of antimycin A, but were different in nature to those of the Qo site inhibitors myxothiazol and famoxadone. Investigation of surangin B-dependent functional perturbation of complex III used the synthetic electron acceptor 2-nitrosofluorene, which intercepts electrons specifically from the Qi site. These experiments demonstrated that like antimycin A, surangin B acts as a selective blocker of electron diversion to 2-nitrosofluorene through Qi within complex III. We conclude that surangin B blocks electron transport at several points in bovine heart mitochondria, however, complex I is spared. The potent inhibitory action of surangin B on complex II involves binding to a site which is distinct from both the succinate binding site and the domain responsible for interacting with ubiquinone. Surangin B apparently blocks complex III by interacting with the Qi (antimycin A-binding) pocket.
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