Abstract
Succinoxidase activity of mitochondria from an antimycin A-sensitive ( ants) mutant of Ustilago maydis is approximately five times less sensitive to the fungicide carboxin than that of mitochondria from wild-type cells. The antimycin A sensitivity is due to the absence of an alternative electron transport pathway in mitochondria obtained from mutant cells grown in control medium. The same mutant, however, develops high rates of alternative respiration if grown in the presence of chloramphenicol. Substrate and oxygen affinity as well as resistance to hydroxamates indicate that this respiration is mediated by only one mitochondrial electron transport pathway, similar to the inducible system described earlier in wild-type mitochondria. Induction appears to be regulated by the activity of the cytochrome pathway. The absence of the constitutive system from the ants mutant mitochondria which are resistant to carboxin, a selective inhibitor of the succinate dehydrogenase complex, supports the view that this system must be related to succinic dehydrogenase.
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