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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1992

A growth factor- and hormone-stimulated NADH oxidase from rat liver plasma membrane

Andrew O. Brightman; Juan Wang; Raymond Kin-man Miu; Iris L. Sun; Rita Barr; Frederick L. Crane; D. James Morré

NADH oxidase activity (electron transfer from NADH to molecular oxygen) of plasma membranes purified from rat liver was characterized by a cyanide-insensitive rate of 1 to 5 nmol/min per mg protein. The activity was stimulated by growth factors (diferric transferrin and epidermal growth factor) and hormones (insulin and pituitary extract) 2- to 3-fold. In contrast, NADH oxidase was inhibited up to 80% by several agents known to inhibit growth or induce differentiation (retinoic acid, calcitriol, and the monosialoganglioside, GM3). The growth factor-responsive NADH oxidase of isolated plasma membranes was not inhibited by common inhibitors of oxidoreductases of endoplasmic reticulum or mitochondria. As well, NADH oxidase of the plasma membrane was stimulated by concentrations of detergents which strongly inhibited mitochondrial NADH oxidases and by lysolipids or fatty acids. Growth factor-responsive NADH oxidase, however, was inhibited greater than 90% by chloroquine and quinone analogues. Addition of coenzyme Q10 stimulated the activity and partially reversed the analogue inhibition. The pH optimum for NADH oxidase was 7.0 both in the absence and presence of growth factors. The Km for NADH was 5 microM and was increased in the presence of growth factors. The stoichiometry of the electron transfer reaction from NADH to oxygen was 2 to 1, indicating a 2 electron transfer. NADH oxidase was separated from NADH-ferricyanide reductase, also present at the plasma membrane, by ion exchange chromatography. Taken together, the evidence suggests that NADH oxidase of the plasma membrane is a unique oxidoreductase and may be important to the regulation of cell growth.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 1993

The essential functions of coenzyme Q

Frederick L. Crane; Iris L. Sun; E.E. Sun

SummaryThe essential role of coenzyme Q in biological energy transduction is well established. Coenzyme Q is a unique carrier for two-electron transfer within the lipid phase of the mitochondrial membrane. The function is essential for proton-based energy coupling. The sites of entry and exit of electrons into the quinone are at specific quinone-binding sites which are constructed to allow only two-electron transfer and thus prevent damaging free radical formation by direct reaction of oxygen with the semiquinone. Failure of proper function with diminished energy supply can be related to insufficient quinone, modification of lipid fluidity, or lipid protein interaction and damage or poisoning in binding sites. Supplementation with coenzyme Q can act by reversal of deficiency or decreased mobility, or by overcoming binding site modification. Coenzyme Q has also been shown to increase antioxidant protection in membranes. New sites for coenzyme Q function in Golgi and plasma membrane show evidence for a role in growth control and secretion-related membrane flow.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1991

Electron and proton transport across the plasma membrane

Frederick L. Crane; Iris L. Sun; Rita Barr; H. Löw

Transplasma membrane electron transport in both plant and animal cells activates proton release. The nature and components of the electron transport system and the mechanism by which proton release is activated remains to be discovered. Reduced pyridine nucleotides are substrates for the plasma membrane dehydrogenases. Both plant and animal membranes have unusual cyanide-insensitive oxidases so oxygen can be the natural electron acceptor. Natural ferric chelates or ferric transferrin can also act as electron acceptors. Artificial, impermeable oxidants such as ferricyanide are used to probe the activity. Since plasma membranes containb cytochromes, flavin, iron, and quinones, components for electron transport are present but their participation, except for quinone, has not been demonstrated. Stimulation of electron transport with impermeable oxidants and hormones activates proton release from cells. In plants the electron transport and proton release is stimulated by red or blue light. Inhibitors of electron transport, such as certain antitumor drugs, inhibit proton release. With animal cells the high ratio of protons released to electrons transferred, stimulation of proton release by sodium ions, and inhibition by amilorides indicates that electron transport activates the Na+/H+ antiport. In plants part of the proton release can be achieved by activation of the H+ ATPase. A contribution to proton transfer by protonated electron carriers in the membrane has not been eliminated. In some cells transmembrane electron transport has been shown to cause cytoplasmic pH changes or to stimulate protein kinases which may be the basis for activation of proton channels in the membrane. The redox-induced proton release causes internal and external pH changes which can be related to stimulation of animal and plant cell growth by external, impermeable oxidants or by oxygen.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

Decrease of NADH in HeLa cells in the presence of transferrin or ferricyanide

P. Navas; Iris L. Sun; D.J. Morré; Frederick L. Crane

The short-term incubation of HeLa cells in the presence of diferric transferrin or ferricyanide, which are reduced externally by the transplasma membrane reductase, produces a stoichiometric decrease in NADH and increase in NAD+, which is stimulated by insulin. The NADP/NADPH ratio does not change during 15 min incubation with the oxidants. The total pyridine nucleotide pool of HeLa cells is not affected. Incubation with apotransferrin and ferrocyanide, which cannot act as oxidants for transmembrane electron transport, does not change the pyridine nucleotide concentrations in the cells. Our results show that NADH can act as the internal electron donor for the reduction of external oxidants by the transmembrane reductase. It appears that oxidation of NADH by the transmembrane electron transport using ferricyanide or iron transferrin as external electron acceptors is sufficient to stimulate growth in HeLa cells.


Molecular Aspects of Medicine | 1994

Coenzyme Q10, plasma membrane oxidase and growth control

Frederick L. Crane; Iris L. Sun; R.A. Crowe; Francisco J. Alcaín; H. Löw

The plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells contains an NADH oxidase which can transfer electrons across the membrane. This oxidase is controlled by hormones, growth factors and other ligands which bind to receptors in the plasma membrane. Oncogenes also affect activity of the oxidase. Natural serum components such as diferric transferrin and ceruloplasmin which stimulate proliferation also stimulate membrane oxidase activity. Additional growth factors can be required to complement the proliferative effect. Electron transport across the plasma membrane can be measured by the reduction of impermeable electron acceptors, such as ferricyanide, which also stimulate cell growth. The oxidants activate growth-related signals such as cytosolic alkalinization and calcium mobilization. Antiproliferative agents such as adriamycin and retinoic acid inhibit the plasma membrane electron transport. Flavin, Coenzyme Q and an iron chelate on the cell surface are apparent electron carriers for the transmembrane electron transport. Coenzyme Q10 stimulates cell growth, and Coenzyme Q analogs such as capsaicin and chloroquine reversibly inhibit both growth and transmembrane electron transport. Addition of iron salts to the depleted cells restores activity and growth. The ligand-activated oxidase in the plasma membrane introduces a new basis for control of signal transduction in cells. The redox state of the quinone in the oxidase is proposed to control tyrosine kinase either by generation of H2O2 or redox-induced conformational change.


Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes | 1984

Properties of a transplasma membrane electron transport system in HeLa cells

Iris L. Sun; Frederick L. Crane; C. Grebing; H. Löw

A transmembrane electron transport system has been studied in HeLa cells using an external impermeable oxidant, ferricyanide. Reduction of ferricyanide by HeLa cells shows biphasic kinetics with a rate up to 500 nmoles/min/g w.w. (wet weight) for the fast phase and half of this rate for the slow phase. The apparentKm is 0.125 mM for the fast rate and 0.24 mM for the slow rate. The rate of reduction is proportional to cell concentration. Inhibition of the rate by glycolysis inhibitors indicates the reduction is dependent on glycolysis, which contributes the cytoplasmic electron donor NADH. Ferricyanide reduction is shown to take place on the outside of cells for it is affected by external pH and agents which react with the external surface. Ferricyanide reduction is accompanied by proton release from the cells. For each mole of ferricyanide reduced, 2.3 moles of protons are released. It is, therefore, concluded that a transmembrane redox system in HeLa cells is coupled to proton gradient generation across the membrane. We propose that this redox system may be an energy source for control of membrane function in HeLa cells. The promotion of cell growth by ferricyanide (0.33–0.1 mM), which can partially replace serum as a growth factor, strongly supports this hypothesis.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

Transplasmalemma electron transport from cells is part of a diferric transferrin reductase system

H. Löw; Iris L. Sun; P. Navas; C. Grebing; Frederick L. Crane; D.J. Morré

Intact cells are known to reduce external, impermeable electron acceptors. We now show that cells can reduce the iron in diferric transferrin at the cell surface and that this reduction reaction depends on the transferrin receptor as well as the transmembrane electron transport system. Reduction of external diferric transferrin is accompanied by oxidation of internal NADH which indicates that the transmembrane enzyme is an NADH diferric transferrin reductase. Highly purified liver plasma membranes have NADH diferric transferrin reductase activity which shows properties similar to the diferric transferrin reductases activity of intact cells. Cell growth stimulation by diferric transferrin and other impermeable oxidants which can react with the diferric transferrin reductase can be based on electron transport through he plasma membrane.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1984

Transplasma membrane redox stimulates HeLa cell growth

Iris L. Sun; Frederick L. Crane; H. Löw; C. Grebing

Impermeable ferricyanide stimulates the growth of HeLa cells in absence of fetal bovine serum or other growth factors. A series of impermeable oxidants with redox potentials down to -125 mV stimulate equivalent growth. All of these oxidants are reduced by the transplasma membrane electron transport system. Oxidants with redox potentials below -175 mV are not reduced by the transmembrane electron transport and do not stimulate growth. Insulin which stimulates growth in absence of serum also stimulates transmembrane ferricyanide reduction. Ferricyanide increases growth in presence of insulin. Antitumor drugs, which inhibit HeLa cell growth, inhibit the transplasma membrane redox system. Transplasma membrane electron transport is accompanied by proton release from HeLa cells.


Experimental Cell Research | 1985

Transmembrane redox in control of cell growth Stimulation of HeLa cell growth by ferricyanide and insulin

Iris L. Sun; Frederick L. Crane; C. Grebing; H. Löw

The impermeable electron acceptor ferricyanide stimulates the growth of HeLa cells in the absence of serum and increases cell replication with limiting amounts of serum (0.75%). Maximum growth stimulation occurs at low ferricyanide concentration from 0.01 to 0.1 mM. Higher ferricyanide concentrations inhibit growth on serum. Addition of insulin enhances the stimulating effect of ferricyanide. Increase in the transplasmalemma electron transport activity in the presence of insulin is also observed by measuring the rate of ferricyanide reduction by cells. There is a close correlation between insulin stimulation of ferricyanide reduction and insulin induction of cell proliferation and attachment. In addition to ferricyanide, the growth response is observed with other impermeable oxidants, such as indigotetrasulfonate and hexaamine ruthenium III, which are reduced by the transplasma membrane electron transport system. Inactive oxidants such as cytochrome c do not stimulate cell growth. Ferrocyanide does not stimulate growth. We propose that electron flow through the transplasma membrane electron transport system stimulates growth and that insulin acts to increase that flow.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1983

Transformed liver cells have modified transplasma membrane redox activity which is sensitive to adriamycin

Iris L. Sun; Frederick L. Crane; J.Y. Chou; H. Löw; C. Grebing

Electron transport across the plasma membrane is found in all cells which have been tested. This activity has been implicated in control of cellular growth, transport and hormone response. In virus transformed cells and tumor cells we find the activity is decreased and becomes sensitive to the antitumor drug adriamycin. Inhibition of transmembrane redox by adriamycin parallels cytoxicity to transformed cells.

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H. Löw

Karolinska Institutet

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