Free radical chemistry in biological systems

Mitochondria are an active source of the free radical superoxide (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO), whose production accounts for about 2% and 0.5% respectively, of mitochondrial O2 uptake under physiological conditions. Superoxide is produced by the auto-oxidation of the semiquinones of ubiquinol and the...

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Main Authors: LAURA B VALDEZ, SILVIA LORES ARNAIZ, JUANITA BUSTAMANTE, SILVIA ALVAREZ, LIDIA E COSTA, ALBERTO BOVERIS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2000-01-01
Series:Biological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602000000200005
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spelling doaj-cb06f1f8f9b84602907a0bf8917bb5512020-11-24T22:11:45ZengBMCBiological Research0716-97600717-62872000-01-013326570Free radical chemistry in biological systemsLAURA B VALDEZSILVIA LORES ARNAIZJUANITA BUSTAMANTESILVIA ALVAREZLIDIA E COSTAALBERTO BOVERISMitochondria are an active source of the free radical superoxide (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO), whose production accounts for about 2% and 0.5% respectively, of mitochondrial O2 uptake under physiological conditions. Superoxide is produced by the auto-oxidation of the semiquinones of ubiquinol and the NADH dehydrogenase flavin and NO by the enzymatic action of the nitric oxide synthase of the inner mitochondrial membrane (mtNOS). Nitric oxide reversibly inhibits cytochrome oxidase activity in competition with O2. The balance between NO production and its utilization results in a NO intramitochondrial steady-state concentration of 20-50 nM, which regulates mitochondrial O2 uptake and energy supply. The regulation of cellular respiration and energy production by NO and its ability to switch the pathway of cell death from apoptosis to necrosis in physiological and pathological conditions could take place primarily through the inhibition of mitochondrial ATP production. Nitric oxide reacts with O2- in a termination reaction in the mitochondrial matrix, yielding peroxynitrite (ONOO-), which is a strong oxidizing and nitrating species. This reaction accounts for approximately 85% of the rate of mitochondrial NO utilization in aerobic conditions. Mitochondrial aging by oxyradical- and peroxynitrite-induced damage would occur through selective mtDNA damage and protein inactivation, leading to dysfunctional mitochondria unable to keep membrane potential and ATP synthesishttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602000000200005Superoxide radicalnitric oxideperoxynitritemitochondriaapoptosisaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author LAURA B VALDEZ
SILVIA LORES ARNAIZ
JUANITA BUSTAMANTE
SILVIA ALVAREZ
LIDIA E COSTA
ALBERTO BOVERIS
spellingShingle LAURA B VALDEZ
SILVIA LORES ARNAIZ
JUANITA BUSTAMANTE
SILVIA ALVAREZ
LIDIA E COSTA
ALBERTO BOVERIS
Free radical chemistry in biological systems
Biological Research
Superoxide radical
nitric oxide
peroxynitrite
mitochondria
apoptosis
aging
author_facet LAURA B VALDEZ
SILVIA LORES ARNAIZ
JUANITA BUSTAMANTE
SILVIA ALVAREZ
LIDIA E COSTA
ALBERTO BOVERIS
author_sort LAURA B VALDEZ
title Free radical chemistry in biological systems
title_short Free radical chemistry in biological systems
title_full Free radical chemistry in biological systems
title_fullStr Free radical chemistry in biological systems
title_full_unstemmed Free radical chemistry in biological systems
title_sort free radical chemistry in biological systems
publisher BMC
series Biological Research
issn 0716-9760
0717-6287
publishDate 2000-01-01
description Mitochondria are an active source of the free radical superoxide (O2-) and nitric oxide (NO), whose production accounts for about 2% and 0.5% respectively, of mitochondrial O2 uptake under physiological conditions. Superoxide is produced by the auto-oxidation of the semiquinones of ubiquinol and the NADH dehydrogenase flavin and NO by the enzymatic action of the nitric oxide synthase of the inner mitochondrial membrane (mtNOS). Nitric oxide reversibly inhibits cytochrome oxidase activity in competition with O2. The balance between NO production and its utilization results in a NO intramitochondrial steady-state concentration of 20-50 nM, which regulates mitochondrial O2 uptake and energy supply. The regulation of cellular respiration and energy production by NO and its ability to switch the pathway of cell death from apoptosis to necrosis in physiological and pathological conditions could take place primarily through the inhibition of mitochondrial ATP production. Nitric oxide reacts with O2- in a termination reaction in the mitochondrial matrix, yielding peroxynitrite (ONOO-), which is a strong oxidizing and nitrating species. This reaction accounts for approximately 85% of the rate of mitochondrial NO utilization in aerobic conditions. Mitochondrial aging by oxyradical- and peroxynitrite-induced damage would occur through selective mtDNA damage and protein inactivation, leading to dysfunctional mitochondria unable to keep membrane potential and ATP synthesis
topic Superoxide radical
nitric oxide
peroxynitrite
mitochondria
apoptosis
aging
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0716-97602000000200005
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AT silvialoresarnaiz freeradicalchemistryinbiologicalsystems
AT juanitabustamante freeradicalchemistryinbiologicalsystems
AT silviaalvarez freeradicalchemistryinbiologicalsystems
AT lidiaecosta freeradicalchemistryinbiologicalsystems
AT albertoboveris freeradicalchemistryinbiologicalsystems
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