Skip to Content
MilliporeSigma
  • Superoxides from mitochondrial complex III: the role of manganese superoxide dismutase.

Superoxides from mitochondrial complex III: the role of manganese superoxide dismutase.

Free radical biology & medicine (2000-09-12)
S Raha, G E McEachern, A T Myint, B H Robinson
ABSTRACT

In this report we show that ubiquinone cytochrome c reductase (complex III) from isolated rat heart mitochondria when inhibited with antimycin A, produces a large amount of superoxide as measured by the chemiluminescent probe coelenterazine. When mitochondria are inhibited with myxothiazol or stigmatellin, there is no detectable formation of superoxide. The antimycin A-sensitive free radical production can be dramatically reduced using either myxothiazol or stigmatellin. This suggests that the antimycin A-sensitive generation of superoxides originates primarily from the Q(o) semiubiquinone. When manganese superoxide dismutase depleted submitochondrial particles (SMP) were inhibited with myxothiazol or stigmatellin, a large superoxide signal was observed. These two inhibitors likely increase the concentration of the Q(i) semiquinone at the N center. The antimycin A-sensitive signal can, in the case of both the mitochondria and the SMP, be dissipated by the addition of copper zinc superoxide dismutase, suggesting that the measured coelenterazine signal was a result of superoxide production. Taken together, this data suggests that free radicals generated from the Q(i) species are more effectively eliminated by MnSOD in intact mitochondria.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Coelenterazine, A cell-permeable aequorin luminophore that acts as a very sensitive and specific chemiluminescence probe of the superoxide anion.