Abstract

Tightly coupled bovine heart submitochondrial particles treated to activate complex I and to block ubiquinol oxidation were capable of rapid uncoupler-sensitive inside-directed proton translocation when a limited amount of NADH was oxidized by the exogenous ubiquinone homologue Q 1. External alkalization, internal acidification and NADH oxidation were followed by the rapidly responding ( t 1/2≤1 s) spectrophotometric technique. Quantitation of the initial rates of NADH oxidation and external H + decrease resulted in a stoichiometric ratio of 4 H + vectorially translocated per 1 NADH oxidized at pH 8.0. ADP-ribose, a competitive inhibitor of the NADH binding site decreased the rates of proton translocation and NADH oxidation without affecting →H +/2 e stoichiometry. Rotenone, piericidin and thermal deactivation of complex I completely prevented NADH-induced proton translocation in the NADH-endogenous ubiquinone reductase reaction. NADH-exogenous Q 1 reductase activity was only partially prevented by rotenone. The residual rotenone- (or piericidin-) insensitive NADH-exogenous Q 1 reductase activity was found to be coupled with vectorial uncoupler-sensitive proton translocation showing the same →H +/2 e stoichiometry of 4. It is concluded that the transfer of two electrons from NADH to the Q 1-reactive intermediate located before the rotenone-sensitive step is coupled with translocation of 4 H +.

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