Publication | Open Access
Citreoviridin, a specific inhibitor of the mitochondiral adenosine triphosphatase
53
Citations
20
References
1978
Year
Cardiovascular PharmacologyPharmacotherapyMitochondrial BiologyRedox BiologyOxidative StressMolecular PharmacologySoluble Mitochondrial AtpaseMitochondrial BiogenesisInhibitory ActivityMitochondrial AtpaseBiochemistryMitochondrial DynamicOx HeartPharmacologyMitochondrial FunctionNatural SciencesPhysiologyMitochondiral Adenosine TriphosphataseMitochondrial MedicineCellular BiochemistryMetabolismMedicineDrug Discovery
1. Citreoviridin was a potent inhibitor of the soluble mitochondrial ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) similar to the closely related aurovertins B and D. 2. Citreoviridin inhibited the following mitochondrial energy-linked reactions also: ADP-stimulated respiration in whole mitochondria from ox heart and rat liver; ATP-driven reduction of NAD+ by succinate; ATP-driven NAD transhydrogenase and ATPase from ox heart submitochondrial particles. 3. The dissociation constant (KD) calculated by a simple law-of-mass-action treatment for the citreoviridin--ATPase complex was 0.5--4.2micron for ox-heart mitochondrial preparations and 0.15micron for rat liver mitochondria. 4. Monoacetylation of citreoviridin decreased its inhibitory potency (KD=2--25micron, ox heart; KD=0.7micron, rat liver). Diacetylation greatly decreased the inhibitory potency (KD=60--215micron, ox heart). 5. Hydrogenation of citreoviridin monoacetate diminished its inhibitory potency considerably. 6. No significant enhancement of fluorescence was observed when citreoviridin interacted with the mitochondrial ATPase.
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