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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Y. Andreyev is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Y. Andreyev.


Biochemical Journal | 2002

Complex I-mediated reactive oxygen species generation: modulation by cytochrome c and NAD(P)+ oxidation-reduction state.

Yulia Kushnareva; Anne N. Murphy; Alexander Y. Andreyev

Several lines of evidence indicate that mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation is the major source of oxidative stress in the cell. It has been shown that ROS production accompanies cytochrome c release in different apoptotic paradigms, but the site(s) of ROS production remain obscure. In the current study, we demonstrate that loss of cytochrome c by mitochondria oxidizing NAD(+)-linked substrates results in a dramatic increase of ROS production and respiratory inhibition. This increased ROS production can be mimicked by rotenone, a complex I inhibitor, as well as other chemical inhibitors of electron flow that act further downstream in the electron transport chain. The effects of cytochrome c depletion from mitoplasts on ROS production and respiration are reversible upon addition of exogenous cytochrome c. Thus in these models of mitochondrial injury, a primary site of ROS generation in both brain and heart mitochondria is proximal to the rotenone inhibitory site, rather than in complex III. ROS production at complex I is critically dependent upon a highly reduced state of the mitochondrial NAD(P)(+) pool and is achieved upon nearly complete inhibition of the respiratory chain. Redox clamp experiments using the acetoacetate/L-beta-hydroxybutyrate couple in the presence of a maximally inhibitory rotenone concentration suggest that the site is approx. 50 mV more electronegative than the NADH/NAD(+) couple. In the absence of inhibitors, this highly reduced state of mitochondria can be induced by reverse electron flow from succinate to NAD(+), accounting for profound ROS production in the presence of succinate. These results lead us to propose a model of thermodynamic control of mitochondrial ROS production which suggests that the ROS-generating site of complex I is the Fe-S centre N-1a.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2000

Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is a downstream regulator of nitric oxide effects on chondrocyte matrix synthesis and mineralization

Kristen Johnson; Alexander Jung; Anne N. Murphy; Alexander Y. Andreyev; James A. Dykens; Robert Terkeltaub

OBJECTIVE Increased chondrocyte nitric oxide (NO) and peroxynitrite production appears to modulate decreased matrix synthesis and increased mineralization in osteoarthritis (OA). Because NO inhibits mitochondrial respiration, this study was undertaken to directly assess the potential role of chondrocyte mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) in matrix synthesis and mineralization. METHODS We studied cultured human articular chondrocytes and immortalized costal chondrocytes (TC28 cells). We also assessed the effects of antimycin A and oligomycin (inhibitors of mitochondrial complexes III and V, respectively) on chondrocyte mitochondrial respiration, ATP synthesis, and inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) generation, and the mineralizing potential of released matrix vesicles (MV). RESULTS Articular chondrocytes and TC28 cells respired at comparable rates. Peroxynitrite and NO donors markedly suppressed respiration and ATP generation in chondrocytes. Because NO exerts multiple effects on chondrocytes, we investigated the primary functions of mitochondrial respiration and OXPHOS. To do so, we identified minimally cytotoxic doses of antimycin and oligomycin, which both induced intracellular ATP depletion (by 50-80%), attenuated collagen and proteoglycan synthesis, and blocked transforming growth factor beta from increasing intracellular ATP and elaboration of PPi, a critical inhibitor of hydroxyapatite deposition. Antimycin and oligomycin also abrogated the ability of the ATP-hydrolyzing enzyme plasma cell membrane glycoprotein 1 (PC-1) to increase chondrocyte PPi generation. Finally, MV from cells treated with antimycin or oligomycin contained less PPi and precipitated >50% more 45Ca. CONCLUSION Chondrocyte mitochondrial reserve, as NO-sensitive mitochondrial respiration-mediated ATP production, appears to support matrix synthesis and PPi elaboration and to regulate MV composition and mineralizing activity. NO-induced depression of chondrocyte respiration could modulate matrix loss and secondary cartilage mineralization in OA.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Mitochondrial Cyclic AMP Response Element-binding Protein (CREB) Mediates Mitochondrial Gene Expression and Neuronal Survival

Junghee Lee; Chun Hyung Kim; David K. Simon; Lyaylya R. Aminova; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Yulia Kushnareva; Anne N. Murphy; Bonnie E. Lonze; Kwang Soo Kim; David D. Ginty; Robert J. Ferrante; Hoon Ryu; Rajiv R. Ratan

Cyclic AMP response element-binding protein (CREB) is a widely expressed transcription factor whose role in neuronal protection is now well established. Here we report that CREB is present in the mitochondrial matrix of neurons and that it binds directly to cyclic AMP response elements (CREs) found within the mitochondrial genome. Disruption of CREB activity in the mitochondria decreases the expression of a subset of mitochondrial genes, including the ND5 subunit of complex I, down-regulates complex I-dependent mitochondrial respiration, and increases susceptibility to 3-nitropropionic acid, a mitochondrial toxin that induces a clinical and pathological phenotype similar to Huntington disease. These results demonstrate that regulation of mitochondrial gene expression by mitochondrial CREB, in part, underlies the protective effects of CREB and raise the possibility that decreased mitochondrial CREB activity contributes to the mitochondrial dysfunction and neuronal loss associated with neurodegenerative disorders.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Thiazolidinediones are acute, specific inhibitors of the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier

Ajit S. Divakaruni; Sandra E. Wiley; George W. Rogers; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Susanna Petrosyan; Mattias Loviscach; Estelle A. Wall; Nagendra Yadava; Alejandro P. Heuck; David A. Ferrick; Robert R. Henry; William G. McDonald; Jerry R. Colca; Melvin I. Simon; Theodore P. Ciaraldi; Anne N. Murphy

Facilitated pyruvate transport across the mitochondrial inner membrane is a critical step in carbohydrate, amino acid, and lipid metabolism. We report that clinically relevant concentrations of thiazolidinediones (TZDs), a widely used class of insulin sensitizers, acutely and specifically inhibit mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) activity in a variety of cell types. Respiratory inhibition was overcome with methyl pyruvate, localizing the effect to facilitated pyruvate transport, and knockdown of either paralog, MPC1 or MPC2, decreased the EC50 for respiratory inhibition by TZDs. Acute MPC inhibition significantly enhanced glucose uptake in human skeletal muscle myocytes after 2 h. These data (i) report that clinically used TZDs inhibit the MPC, (ii) validate that MPC1 and MPC2 are obligatory components of facilitated pyruvate transport in mammalian cells, (iii) indicate that the acute effect of TZDs may be related to insulin sensitization, and (iv) establish mitochondrial pyruvate uptake as a potential therapeutic target for diseases rooted in metabolic dysfunction.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2010

Subcellular organelle lipidomics in TLR-4-activated macrophages

Alexander Y. Andreyev; Eoin Fahy; Ziqiang Guan; Samuel Kelly; Xiang Li; Jeffrey G. McDonald; Stephen B. Milne; David S. Myers; Hyejung Park; Andrea Ryan; Bonne M. Thompson; Elaine Wang; Yihua Zhao; H. Alex Brown; Alfred H. Merrill; Christian R. H. Raetz; David W. Russell; Shankar Subramaniam; Edward A. Dennis

Lipids orchestrate biological processes by acting remotely as signaling molecules or locally as membrane components that modulate protein function. Detailed insight into lipid function requires knowledge of the subcellular localization of individual lipids. We report an analysis of the subcellular lipidome of the mammalian macrophage, a cell type that plays key roles in inflammation, immune responses, and phagocytosis. Nuclei, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), plasmalemma, and cytoplasm were isolated from RAW 264.7 macrophages in basal and activated states. Subsequent lipidomic analyses of major membrane lipid categories identified 229 individual/isobaric species, including 163 glycerophospholipids, 48 sphingolipids, 13 sterols, and 5 prenols. Major subcellular compartments exhibited substantially divergent glycerophospholipid profiles. Activation of macrophages by the Toll-like receptor 4-specific lipopolysaccharide Kdo2-lipid A caused significant remodeling of the subcellular lipidome. Some changes in lipid composition occurred in all compartments (e.g., increases in the levels of ceramides and the cholesterol precursors desmosterol and lanosterol). Other changes were manifest in specific organelles. For example, oxidized sterols increased and unsaturated cardiolipins decreased in mitochondria, whereas unsaturated ether-linked phosphatidylethanolamines decreased in the ER. We speculate that these changes may reflect mitochondrial oxidative stress and the release of arachidonic acid from the ER in response to cell activation.


PLOS Biology | 2012

Bax Activation Initiates the Assembly of a Multimeric Catalyst that Facilitates Bax Pore Formation in Mitochondrial Outer Membranes

Yulia Kushnareva; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Tomomi Kuwana; Donald D. Newmeyer

Bax promotes mitochondrial permeabilization during apoptosis via a phase-transition-like event in the membrane and oligomerization of a catalyst molecule that facilitates Bax pore formation.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2007

Mitochondria frozen with trehalose retain a number of biological functions and preserve outer membrane integrity.

R Yamaguchi; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Anne N. Murphy; Guy A. Perkins; Mark H. Ellisman; Donald D. Newmeyer

In apoptosis, Bcl-2-family proteins regulate the barrier function of the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM), controlling the release of proapoptotic proteins from the intermembrane space into the cytoplasm. This process can be studied in vitro with freshly isolated mouse liver mitochondria. Unfortunately, mitochondria frozen/thawed in standard sucrose–mannitol buffers become leaky and useless for apoptosis research. However, here we show that mitochondria frozen in buffer containing the sugar, trehalose, maintained MOM integrity and responsiveness to Bcl-2-family proteins, much like fresh mitochondria. Trehalose also preserved ultrastructure, as well as biological functions such as ATP synthesis, calcium-induced swelling, transmembrane potential, and the import and processing of protein precursors. However, bioenergetic function was somewhat reduced. Thus, trehalose-frozen mitochondria retained most of the biological features of mitochondria including MOM integrity. Although not ideal for studies involving bioenergetics, this method will facilitate research on apoptosis and other mitochondrial functions that rely on an intact MOM.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Excitotoxic injury to mitochondria isolated from cultured neurons

Yulia Kushnareva; Sandra E. Wiley; Manus W. Ward; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Anne N. Murphy

Neuronal death in response to excitotoxic levels of glutamate is dependent upon mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation and is associated with a drop in ATP levels and a loss in ionic homeostasis. Yet the mapping of temporal events in mitochondria subsequent to Ca2+ sequestration is incomplete. By isolating mitochondria from primary cultures, we discovered that glutamate treatment of cortical neurons for 10 min caused 44% inhibition of ADP-stimulated respiration, whereas the maximal rate of electron transport (uncoupler-stimulated respiration) was inhibited by ∼10%. The Ca2+ load in mitochondria from glutamate-treated neurons was estimated to be 167 ± 19 nmol/mg protein. The glutamate-induced Ca2+ load was less than the maximal Ca2+ uptake capacity of the mitochondria determined in vitro (363 ± 35 nmol/mg protein). Comparatively, mitochondria isolated from cerebellar granule cells demonstrated a higher Ca2+ uptake capacity (686 ± 71 nmol/mg protein) than the cortical mitochondria, and the glutamate-induced load of Ca2+ was a smaller percentage of the maximal Ca2+ uptake capacity. Thus, this study indicated that Ca2+-induced impairment of mitochondrial ATP production is an early event in the excitotoxic cascade that may contribute to decreased cellular ATP and loss of ionic homeostasis that precede commitment to neuronal death.


Biochemistry | 2015

Mitochondrial ROS metabolism: 10 Years later

Alexander Y. Andreyev; Yulia Kushnareva; Anne N. Murphy; Anatoly A. Starkov

The role of mitochondria in oxidative stress is well recognized, but many questions are still to be answered. This article is intended to update our comprehensive review in 2005 by highlighting the progress in understanding of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) metabolism over the past 10 years. We review the recently identified or re-appraised sources of ROS generation in mitochondria, such as p66shc protein, succinate dehydrogenase, and recently discovered properties of the mitochondrial antioxidant system. We also reflect upon some controversies, disputes, and misconceptions that confound the field.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Arachidonate-derived dihomoprostaglandin production observed in endotoxin-stimulated macrophage-like cells.

Richard Harkewicz; Eoin Fahy; Alexander Y. Andreyev; Edward A. Dennis

Eicosanoids, including the prostaglandins, leukotrienes, hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids, epoxyeicosatetraenoic acids, and related compounds, are biosynthetic, bioactive mediators derived from arachidonic acid (AA), a 20:4(n-6) fatty acid. We have developed a comprehensive and sensitive mass spectral analysis to survey eicosanoid release from endotoxin-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophage-like cells that is capable of detecting over 70 diverse eicosanoids and eicosanoid metabolites, should they be present. We now address the question: Are biologically significant eicosanoids being overlooked? Herein, we illustrate a general approach to diverse isotope metabolic profiling of labeled exogenous substrates using mass spectrometry (DIMPLES/MS), demonstrated for one substrate (AA) and its resultant products (eicosanoids). RAW cells were incubated in medium supplemented with deuterium-labeled AA. When the cells are stimulated, two sets of eicosanoids are produced, one from endogenous AA and the other from the supplemented (exogenous) deuterium-labeled form. This produces a signature mass spectral “doublet” pattern, allowing for a comprehensive and diverse eicosanoid search requiring no previous knowledge or assumptions as to what these species may be, in contrast to traditional methods. We report herein observing unexpected AA metabolites generated by the cells, some of which may constitute novel bioactive eicosanoids or eicosanoid inactivation metabolites, as well as demonstrating differing metabolic pathways for the generation of isomeric prostaglandins and potential peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor activators. Unexpectedly, we report observing a series of 1a, 1b-dihomologue prostaglandins, products of adrenic acid (22:4(n-6)), resulting from the two-carbon elongation of AA by the RAW cells.

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Anne N. Murphy

University of California

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Yulia Kushnareva

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Donald D. Newmeyer

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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Eoin Fahy

University of California

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Guy A. Perkins

University of California

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Melvin I. Simon

California Institute of Technology

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Tomomi Kuwana

La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology

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