70,827 research outputs found
Physiological Evidence for Isopotential Tunneling in the Electron Transport Chain of Methane-Producing Archaea
Many, but not all, organisms use quinones to conserve energy in their electron transport chains. Fermentative bacteria and methane-producing archaea (methanogens) do not produce quinones but have devised other ways to generate ATP. Methanophenazine (MPh) is a unique membrane electron carrier found in Methanosarcina species that plays the same role as quinones in the electron transport chain. To extend the analogy between quinones and MPh, we compared the MPh pool sizes between two well-studied Methanosarcina species, Methanosarcina acetivorans C2A and Methanosarcina barkeri Fusaro, to the quinone pool size in the bacterium Escherichia coli. We found the quantity of MPh per cell increases as cultures transition from exponential growth to stationary phase, and absolute quantities of MPh were 3-fold higher in M. acetivorans than in M. barkeri. The concentration of MPh suggests the cell membrane of M. acetivorans, but not of M. barkeri, is electrically quantized as if it were a single conductive metal sheet and near optimal for rate of electron transport. Similarly, stationary (but not exponentially growing) E. coli cells also have electrically quantized membranes on the basis of quinone content. Consistent with our hypothesis, we demonstrated that the exogenous addition of phenazine increases the growth rate of M. barkeri three times that of M. acetivorans. Our work suggests electron flux through MPh is naturally higher in M. acetivorans than in M. barkeri and that hydrogen cycling is less efficient at conserving energy than scalar proton translocation using MPh
Electrodes modified with lipid membranes to study quinone oxidoreductases
Quinone oxidoreductases are a class of membrane enzymes that catalyse the oxidation or reduction of membrane-bound quinols/quinones. The conversion of quinone/quinol by these enzymes is difficult to study because of the hydrophobic nature of the enzymes and their substrates. We describe some biochemical properties of quinones and quinone oxidoreductases and then look in more detail at two model membranes that can be used to study quinone oxidoreductases in a native-like membrane environment with their native lipophilic quinone substrates. The results obtained with these model membranes are compared with classical enzyme assays that use water-soluble quinone analogues
Why 1,2‑quinone derivatives are more stable than their 2,3‑analogues?
In this work, we have studied the relative stability
of 1,2- and 2,3-quinones. While 1,2-quinones have
a closed-shell singlet ground state, the ground state for
the studied 2,3-isomers is open-shell singlet, except for
2,3-naphthaquinone that has a closed-shell singlet ground
state. In all cases, 1,2-quinones are more stable than their
2,3-counterparts. We analyzed the reasons for the higher
stability of the 1,2-isomers through energy decomposition
analysis in the framework of Kohn–Sham molecular orbital
theory. The results showed that we have to trace the origin
of 1,2-quinones’ enhanced stability to the more efficient
bonding in the π-electron system due to more favorable
overlap between the SOMOπ of the ·C4n−2H2n–CH·· and
··CH–CO–CO· fragments in the 1,2-arrangement. Furthermore,
whereas 1,2-quinones present a constant trend with their elongation for all analyzed properties (geometric,
energetic, and electronic), 2,3-quinone derivatives present a
substantial breaking in monotonicity.European
Union in the framework of European Social Fund through the Warsaw
University of Technology Development Programme. O.A. S., H.
S. and T.M. K
The MarR-Type Repressor MhqR Confers Quinone and Antimicrobial Resistance in Staphylococcus aureus
Aims: Quinone compounds are electron carriers and have antimicrobial and toxic properties due to their mode of actions as electrophiles and oxidants. However, the regulatory mechanism of quinone resistance is less well understood in the pathogen Staphylococcus aureus.
Results: Methylhydroquinone (MHQ) caused a thiol-specific oxidative and electrophile stress response in the S. aureus transcriptome as revealed by the induction of the PerR, QsrR, CstR, CtsR, and HrcA regulons. The SACOL2531-29 operon was most strongly upregulated by MHQ and was renamed as mhqRED operon based on its homology to the Bacillus subtilis locus. Here, we characterized the MarR-type regulator MhqR (SACOL2531) as quinone-sensing repressor of the mhqRED operon, which confers quinone and antimicrobial resistance in S. aureus. The mhqRED operon responds specifically to MHQ and less pronounced to pyocyanin and ciprofloxacin, but not to reactive oxygen species (ROS), hypochlorous acid, or aldehydes. The MhqR repressor binds specifically to a 9–9 bp inverted repeat (MhqR operator) upstream of the mhqRED operon and is inactivated by MHQ in vitro, which does not involve a thiol-based mechanism. In phenotypic assays, the mhqR deletion mutant was resistant to MHQ and quinone-like antimicrobial compounds, including pyocyanin, ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, and rifampicin. In addition, the mhqR mutant was sensitive to sublethal ROS and 24 h post-macrophage infections but acquired an improved survival under lethal ROS stress and after long-term infections.
Innovation: Our results provide a link between quinone and antimicrobial resistance via the MhqR regulon of S. aureus.
Conclusion: The MhqR regulon was identified as a novel resistance mechanism towards quinone-like antimicrobials and contributes to virulence of S. aureus under long-term infections
Efficient photochemical activity and strong dichroism of single crystals of reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas viridis
Crystallized reaction centers from Rhodopseudomonas viridis (i) are photochemically active with electron transfer from the special pair to the quinones, (ii) show dichroism giving valuable information on the orientation of the different chromophores and (iii) allow chemical treatment in the crystalline phase
Glutathione (GSH) conjugates with dopamine (DA)-derived quinones to form reactive or non-reactive GSH-conjugates
In this study we demonstrate for the first time that GSH could rapidly conjugate with dopamine (DA)-derived DA-o-quinones without enzymatic catalysis to form short-lived intermediate GSH-conjugates (2-S-GSH-DA-o-quinone and 5-S-GSH-DA-o-quinone). These intermediate GSH-conjugates are unstable and would finally form reactive or non-reactive GSH-conjugates dependent on ambient reductive forces. Under insufficient reductive forces, the intermediate GSH-conjugates could cyclize spontaneously to form reactive 7-S-GSH-aminochrome (7-S-GSH-AM). The 7-S-GSH-AM is so reactive that it could further react with another GSH to form 4,7-bi-GSH-5,6-dihydroindole. Its reactivity could also abrogate tyrosinase activity in solutions. In addition, the 7-S-GSH-AM could further undergo internal rearrangement to form non-reactive 7-S-GSH-5,6-dihydroindole. From these novel findings, we propose two detrimental positive feedback loops involving accelerated DA oxidation, increased GSH consumption and impaired GSH detoxification efficiency, as the underlying chemical explanation for dopaminergic neuron degeneration in Parkinson's disease
From planes to bowls: photodissociation of the bisanthenequinone cation
We present a combined experimental and theoretical study of the
photodissociation of the bisanthenequinone (C28H12O2) cation, Bq+. The
experiments show that, upon photolysis, the Bq+ cation does not dehydrogenate,
but instead fragments through the sequential loss of the two neutral carbonyl
groups, causing the formation of five-membered carbon cycles. Quantum chemical
calculations confirm this Bq+ -> [Bq - CO]+ -> [Bq - 2CO]+ sequence as the
energetically most favorable reaction pathway. For the first CO loss, a
transition state with a barrier of ~3.2 eV is found, substantially lower than
the lowest calculated H loss dissociation pathway (~ 4.9 eV). A similar
situation applies for the second CO loss channel (~3.8 eV vs. ~4.7 eV), but
where the first dissociation step does not strongly alter the planar PAH
geometry, the second step transforms the molecule into a bowl-shaped one
Electrochemistry of potential bioreductive alkylating quinones : Part 2. Electrochemical properties of 2,5-bis(1-aziridinyl)-3,6-bis(ethoxycarbonylamino)-1,4-benzoquinone and some model compounds
The reduction mechanism of 2,5-bis(1-aziridinyl)-3,6-bis(ethoxycarbonylamino)-1,4-benzoquinone (Diaziquone, AZQ) and several model compounds of the mono- and bis(1-aziridinyl)quinone type at the dropping mercury electrode in aqueous solutions was studied. In addition, the influence of methyl substitution of the aziridinyl moiety at the 2-position on the protonation of the aziridine nitrogen was investigated. Substituent effects on quinone reduction and aziridine protonation prior to and following quinone reduction were studied qualitatively
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