Architecture of Succinate Dehydrogenase and Reactive Oxygen Species Generation
San Francisco VA Medical Center · Imperial College London · +5 more institutions
Abstract
The structure of Escherichia coli succinate dehydrogenase (SQR), analogous to the mitochondrial respiratory complex II, has been determined, revealing the electron transport pathway from the electron donor, succinate, to the terminal electron acceptor, ubiquinone. It was found that the SQR redox centers are arranged in a manner that aids the prevention of reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation at the flavin adenine dinucleotide. This is likely to be the main reason SQR is expressed during aerobic respiration rather than the related enzyme fumarate reductase, which produces high levels of ROS. Furthermore, symptoms of genetic disorders associated with mitochondrial SQR mutations may be a result of ROS…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.20
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
9- VYVictoria YankovskayaCorresponding
San Francisco VA Medical Center
- RHRob HorsefieldCorresponding
Imperial College London
- STSusanna Törnroth‐HorsefieldCorresponding
Uppsala University
- CLC. Luna-ChavezCorresponding
San Francisco VA Medical Center, University of California, San Francisco
- HMHideto Miyoshi
Kyoto University
Topics & keywords
- Succinate dehydrogenase
- Electron transport chain
- Reactive oxygen species
- Flavin group
- Electron acceptor
- Redox
- Flavin adenine dinucleotide
- Chemistry