In mammalian mitochondria, cardiolipin molecules are the primary targets of oxidation by reactive oxygen species. The interaction of oxidized cardiolipin molecules with the constituents of the apoptotic cascade may lead to cell death. In the present study, we compared the effects of quinol-containing synthetic and natural amphiphilic antioxidants on cardiolipin peroxidation in a model system (liposomes of bovine cardiolipin). We found that both natural ubiquinol and synthetic antioxidants, even being introduced in micro- and submicromolar concentrations, fully protected the liposomal cardiolipin from peroxidation. The duration of their action, however, varied; it increased with the presence of either methoxy groups of ubiquinol or additional reduced redox groups (in the cases of rhodamine and berberine derivates). The concentration of ubiquinol in the mitochondrial membrane substantially exceeds the concentrations of antioxidants we used and would seem to fully prevent peroxidation of membrane cardiolipin. In fact, this does not happen: cardiolipin in mitochondria is oxidized, and this process can be blocked by amphiphilic cationic antioxidants (Y. N. Antonenko et al. (2008) Biochemistry (Moscow), 73, 1273-1287). We suppose that a fraction of mitochondrial cardiolipin could not be protected by natural ubiquinol; in vivo, peroxidation most likely threatens those cardiolipin molecules that, being bound within complexes of membrane proteins, are inaccessible to the bulky hydrophobic ubiquinol molecules diffusing in the lipid bilayer of the inner mitochondrial membrane. The ability to protect these occluded cardiolipin molecules from peroxidation may explain the beneficial therapeutic action of cationic antioxidants, which accumulate electrophoretically within mitochondria under the action of membrane potential.
Molecules of mitochondrial cardiolipin (CL) get selectively oxidized upon oxidative stress, which triggers the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. In a chemical model most closely resembling the mitochondrial membrane—liposomes of pure bovine heart CL—we compared ubiquinol-10, ubiquinol-6, and alpha-tocopherol, the most widespread naturally occurring antioxidants, with man-made, quinol-based amphiphilic antioxidants. Lipid peroxidation was induced by addition of an azo initiator in the absence and presence of diverse antioxidants, respectively. The kinetics of CL oxidation was monitored via formation of conjugated dienes at 234 nm. We found that natural ubiquinols and ubiquinol-based amphiphilic antioxidants were equally efficient in protecting CL liposomes from peroxidation; the chromanol-based antioxidants, including alpha-tocopherol, were 2-3 times less efficient. Amphiphilic antioxidants, but not natural ubiquinols and alpha-tocopherol, were able, additionally, to protect the CL bilayer from oxidation by acting from the water phase. We suggest that the previously reported therapeutic efficiency of mitochondrially targeted amphiphilic antioxidants is owing to their ability to protect those CL molecules that are inaccessible to natural hydrophobic antioxidants, being trapped within respiratory supercomplexes. The high susceptibility of such occluded CL molecules to oxidation may have prompted their recruitment as apoptotic signaling molecules by nature.
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