Synthesis of cationic plastoquinone derivatives (SkQs) containing positively charged phosphonium or rhodamine moieties connected to plastoquinone by decane or pentane linkers is described. It is shown that SkQs (i) easily penetrate through planar, mitochondrial, and outer cell membranes, (ii) at low (nanomolar) concentrations, posses strong antioxidant activity in aqueous solution, BLM, lipid micelles, liposomes, isolated mitochondria, and cells, (iii) at higher (micromolar) concentrations, show pronounced prooxidant activity, the "window" between anti- and prooxidant concentrations being very much larger than for MitoQ, a cationic ubiquinone derivative showing very much lower antioxidant activity and higher prooxidant activity, (iv) are reduced by the respiratory chain to SkQH2, the rate of oxidation of SkQH2 being lower than the rate of SkQ reduction, and (v) prevent oxidation of mitochondrial cardiolipin by OH*. In HeLa cells and human fibroblasts, SkQs operate as powerful inhibitors of the ROS-induced apoptosis and necrosis. For the two most active SkQs, namely SkQ1 and SkQR1, C(1/2) values for inhibition of the H2O2-induced apoptosis in fibroblasts appear to be as low as 1x10(-11) and 8x10(-13) M, respectively. SkQR1, a fluorescent representative of the SkQ family, specifically stains a single type of organelles in the living cell, i.e. energized mitochondria. Such specificity is explained by the fact that it is the mitochondrial matrix that is the only negatively-charged compartment inside the cell. Assuming that the Deltapsi values on the outer cell and inner mitochondrial membranes are about 60 and 180 mV, respectively, and taking into account distribution coefficient of SkQ1 between lipid and water (about 13,000 : 1), the SkQ1 concentration in the inner leaflet of the inner mitochondrial membrane should be 1.3x10(8) times higher than in the extracellular space. This explains the very high efficiency of such compounds in experiments on cell cultures. It is concluded that SkQs are rechargeable, mitochondria-targeted antioxidants of very high efficiency and specificity. Therefore, they might be used to effectively prevent ROS-induced oxidation of lipids and proteins in the inner mitochondrial membrane in vivo.
Antioxidants specifically addressed to mitochondria have been studied to determine if they can decelerate senescence of organisms. For this purpose, a project has been established with participation of several research groups from Russia and some other countries. This paper summarizes the first results of the project. A new type of compounds (SkQs) comprising plastoquinone (an antioxidant moiety), a penetrating cation, and a decane or pentane linker has been synthesized. Using planar bilayer phospholipid membrane (BLM), we selected SkQ derivatives with the highest permeability, namely plastoquinonyl-decyl-triphenylphosphonium (SkQ1), plastoquinonyl-decyl-rhodamine 19 (SkQR1), and methylplastoquinonyldecyltriphenylphosphonium (SkQ3). Anti- and prooxidant properties of these substances and also of ubiquinonyl-decyl-triphenylphosphonium (MitoQ) were tested in aqueous solution, detergent micelles, liposomes, BLM, isolated mitochondria, and cell cultures. In mitochondria, micromolar cationic quinone derivatives were found to be prooxidants, but at lower (sub-micromolar) concentrations they displayed antioxidant activity that decreases in the series SkQ1=SkQR1>SkQ3>MitoQ. SkQ1 was reduced by mitochondrial respiratory chain, i.e. it is a rechargeable antioxidant. Nanomolar SkQ1 specifically prevented oxidation of mitochondrial cardiolipin. In cell cultures, SkQR1, a fluorescent SkQ derivative, stained only one type of organelles, namely mitochondria. Extremely low concentrations of SkQ1 or SkQR1 arrested H(2)O(2)-induced apoptosis in human fibroblasts and HeLa cells. Higher concentrations of SkQ are required to block necrosis initiated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). In the fungus Podospora anserina, the crustacean Ceriodaphnia affinis, Drosophila, and mice, SkQ1 prolonged lifespan, being especially effective at early and middle stages of aging. In mammals, the effect of SkQs on aging was accompanied by inhibition of development of such age-related diseases and traits as cataract, retinopathy, glaucoma, balding, canities, osteoporosis, involution of the thymus, hypothermia, torpor, peroxidation of lipids and proteins, etc. SkQ1 manifested a strong therapeutic action on some already pronounced retinopathies, in particular, congenital retinal dysplasia. With drops containing 250 nM SkQ1, vision was restored to 67 of 89 animals (dogs, cats, and horses) that became blind because of a retinopathy. Instillation of SkQ1-containing drops prevented the loss of sight in rabbits with experimental uveitis and restored vision to animals that had already become blind. A favorable effect of the same drops was also achieved in experimental glaucoma in rabbits. Moreover, the SkQ1 pretreatment of rats significantly decreased the H(2)O(2) or ischemia-induced arrhythmia of the isolated heart. SkQs strongly reduced the damaged area in myocardial infarction or stroke and prevented the death of animals from kidney ischemia. In p53(-/-) mice, 5 nmol/kgxday SkQ1 decreased the ROS level in the spleen and inhibited appearance of lymphomas to th...
A unique phenomenon of mitochondria-targeted protonophores is described.ItconsistsinatransmembraneH þ -conductingfattyacidcycling mediated by penetrating cations such as 10-(6'-plastoquinonyl) decyltriphenylphosphonium (SkQ1) or dodecyltriphenylphosphonium (C 12 TPP). The phenomenon has been modeled by molecular dynamics and directly proved by experiments on bilayer planar phospholipid membrane, liposomes, isolated mitochondria, and yeast cells. In bilayer planar phospholipid membrane, the concerted action of penetrating cations and fatty acids is found to result in conversion of a pH gradient (ΔpH) to a membrane potential (Δψ) of the Nernstian value (about 60 mV Δψ at ΔpH ¼ 1). A hydrophobic cation with localized charge (cetyltrimethylammonium) failed to substitute for hydrophobic cations with delocalized charge. In isolated mitochondria, SkQ1 and C 12 TPP, but not cetyltrimethylammonium, potentiatedfattyacid-induced(i)uncouplingofrespirationandphosphorylation, and (ii) inhibition of H 2 O 2 formation. In intact yeast cells, C 12 TPP stimulated respiration regardless of the extracellular pH value, whereas a nontargeted protonophorous uncoupler (trifluoromethoxycarbonylcyanidephenylhydrazone)stimulatedrespiration at pH 5 but not at pH 3. Hydrophobic penetrating cations might be promising to treat obesity, senescence, and some kinds of cancer that require mitochondrial hyperpolarization.mild uncoupling | membrane | Mitochondria-targeted uncoupler | penetrating ion | antioxidant S ome decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψ) in the resting state may be favorable in treating obesity and hypothyroidism as well as in preventing senescence and certain types of cancer [for reviews, see refs. 1, 2]. In the first two cases, Δψ lowering stimulates respiratory metabolism. As to senescence and cancer, such an effect seems to be related to a decrease in production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in mitochondria. ROS, in turn, were assumed to mediate senescence and some steps of cancerogenesis (2, 3). As was shown in our group (4), there is a very steep dependence of mitochondrial ROS formation on Δψ. Small (10-15%) lowering of Δψ resulted in ten-fold decrease in the ROS production rate (4). In isolated mitochondria, this can be achieved by adding a low concentration of a protonophorous uncoupler (4-6). This approach, called "mild uncoupling" (4, 6), was recently used by Padalko (7) and by Kowaltowski and coworkers (8) to prolong the lifespan of Drosophila and mice, respectively. However, long-term treatment of animals with uncouplers results in toxic side effects (9).In this paper, we put forward an alternative approach based on the use of synthetic cations that easily penetrate through biological membranes. Penetrating ions were suggested by our group to reveal electric potential difference across mitochondrial membrane (9, 10). In tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP), a typical representative of such ions, the positive charge is strongly displaced over four phenyl residues. As a result, water dipoles cannot be held by t...
Cardiolipin (CL) is an anionic phospholipid at the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) that facilitates the formation of transient non-bilayer (non-lamellar) structures to maintain mitochondrial integrity. CL modulates mitochondrial functions including ATP synthesis. However, the biophysical mechanisms by which CL generates non-lamellar structures and the extent to which these structures contribute to ATP synthesis remain unknown. We hypothesized that CL and ATP synthase facilitate the formation of non-bilayer structures at the IMM to stimulate ATP synthesis. By using H NMR andP NMR techniques, we observed that increasing the temperature (8°C to 37°C), lowering the pH (3.0), or incubating intact mitochondria with CTII - an IMM-targeted toxin that increases the formation of immobilized non-bilayer structures - elevated the formation of non-bilayer structures to stimulate ATP synthesis. The F sector of the ATP synthase complex can facilitate the formation of non-bilayer structures as incubating model membranes enriched with IMM-specific phospholipids with exogenous DCCD-binding protein of the F sector (DCCD-BPF) elevated the formation of immobilized non-bilayer structures to a similar manner as CTII. Native PAGE assays revealed that CL, but not other anionic phospholipids, specifically binds to DCCD-BPF to promote the formation of stable lipid-protein complexes. Mechanistically, molecular docking studies identified two lipid binding sites for CL in DCCD-BPF. We propose a new model of ATP synthase regulation in which CL mediates the formation of non-bilayer structures that serve to cluster protons and ATP synthase complexes as a mechanism to enhance proton translocation to the F sector, and thereby increase ATP synthesis.
Association of mitochondrial population to a mitochondrial reticulum is typical of many types of the healthy cells. This allows the cell to organize a united intracellular power-transmitting system. However, such an association can create some difficulties for the cell when a part of the reticulum is damaged or when mitochondria should migrate from one cell region to another. It is shown that in these cases decomposition of extended mitochondria to small roundish organelles takes place (the thread-grain transition). As an intermediate step of this process, formation of beads-like mitochondria occurs when several swollen parts of the mitochondrial filament are interconnected with thin thread-like mitochondrial structures. A hypothesis is put forward that the thread-grain transition is used as a mechanism to isolate a damaged part of the mitochondrial system from its intact parts. If the injury is not repaired, spherical mitochondrion originated from the damaged part of the reticulum is assumed to convert to a small ultracondensed and presumably dead mitochondrion (this process is called 'mitoptosis'). Then the dead mitochondrion is engulfed by an autophagosome. Sometimes, an ultracondensed mitoplast co-exists with a normal mitoplast, both of them being surrounded by a common outer mitochondrial membrane. During apoptosis, massive thread-grain transition is observed which, according to Youle et al. (S. Frank et al., Dev Cell 1: 515, 2002), is mediated by a dynamin-related protein and represents an obligatory step of the mitochondria-mediated apoptosis. We found that there is a lag phase between addition of an apoptogenic agent and the thread-grain transition. When started, the transition occurs very fast. It is also found that this event precedes complete de-energization of mitochondria and cytochrome c release to cytosol. When formed, small mitochondria migrate to (and in certain rare cases even into) the nucleus. It is suggested that small mitochondria may serve as a transportable form of organelles ('cargo boats' transporting some apoptotic proteins to their nuclear targets).
A 5-min exposure of air-saturated bidistilled water to low-intensity laser infrared radiation at the wavelength of the electronic transition of dissolved oxygen to the singlet state ((3)∑(g)(-)→ (1)Δ(g)) induces, after a long latent period, auto-oscillations of water luminescence in the blue-green region, which last many hours. Laser irradiation causes the accumulation of hydrogen peroxide, which depends on the concentration of dissolved oxygen. The auto-oscillations do not arise if water is irradiated beyond the oxygen absorption band and if the oxygen is removed from water. The wavelet transform analysis of luminescence records indicates that there are two characteristic periods of pulsations of about 300 and 1150 s. The results obtained suggest that auto-oscillations are triggered by photoinduced singlet oxygen (1)Δ(g), and this phenomenon is closely related to formation of hydrogen peroxide.
The existence of a complete oxidative phosphorylation system (OXPHOS) supercomplex including both electron transport system and ATP synthases has long been assumed based on functional evidence. However, no structural confirmation of the docking between ATP synthase and proton pumps has been obtained. In this study, cryo-electron tomography was used to reveal the supramolecular architecture of the rat heart mitochondria cristae during ATP synthesis. Respirasome and ATP synthase structure in situ were determined using subtomogram averaging. The obtained reconstructions of the inner mitochondrial membrane demonstrated that rows of respiratory chain supercomplexes can dock with rows of ATP synthases forming oligomeric ordered clusters. These ordered clusters indicate a new type of OXPHOS structural organization. It should ensure the quickness, efficiency, and damage resistance of OXPHOS, providing a direct proton transfer from pumps to ATP synthase along the lateral pH gradient without energy dissipation.
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