Publication: Alternative respiratory oxidases to study the animal electron transport chain.
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publishers
Elsevier
Abstract
Oxidative phosphorylation is a common process to most organisms in which the main function is to generate an electrochemical gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) and to make energy available to the cell. However, plants, many fungi and some animals maintain non-energy conserving oxidases which serve as a bypass to coupled respiration. Namely, the alternative NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase NDI1, present in the complex I (CI)-lacking Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the alternative oxidase, ubiquinol:oxygen oxidoreductase AOX, present in many organisms across different kingdoms. In the last few years, these alternative oxidases have been used to dissect previously indivisible processes in bioenergetics and have helped to discover, understand, and corroborate important processes in mitochondria. Here, we review how the use of alternative oxidases have contributed to the knowledge in CI stability, bioenergetics, redox biology, and the implications of their use in current and future research.
Description
This study was supported by MINECO: SAF2015-65633-R, RTI2018-099357-B-I00, HFSP (RGP0016/2018) and CIBER (CB16/10/00282) to JAE. The CNIC is supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion ´ y Universidades (MCNU) and the Pro CNIC Foundation and is a Severo Ochoa Center of Excellence (SEV2015-0505). This research has been financed by Spanish Government grants (ISCIII and AEI agencies, partially funded by the European Union FEDER/ERDF). PH-A is recipient of a Juan de la Cierva fellowship (IJC2020-042679-I).
Keywords
MeSH Terms
DeCS Terms
Bibliographic citation
Biochim Biophys Acta Bioenerg. 2023 Jan 1;1864(1):148936.





