Abstract

A NADH dehydrogenase was isolated from an inner membrane-enriched fraction of beetroot mitochondria (Beta vulgaris L.) by solubilization with sodium deoxycholate and purified using gel filtration and affinity chromatography. The NADH dehydrogenase preparation contained a minor ATPase contamination. Beetroot mitochondria were chosen as the isolation material for purifying the enzymes responsible for oxidizing matrix NADH due to the absence of the externally facing NADH dehydrogenase in the variety we have used. The purified NADH dehydrogenase complex catalyzed the reduction of various electron acceptors with NADH as the electron donor, was not sensitive to rotenone inhibition, and had a slow NADPH-ubiquinone 5 reductase activity. The isolated complex contained 14 major polypeptides. It was concluded that the dehydrogenase represented a form of the plant mitochondrial complex I and not the internally facing rotenone-insensitive NADH dehydrogenase found in plant mitochondria because of its complex structure, its cross-reactivity with antisera raised against bovine heart mitochondrial complex I, and the similarity of its kinetics and inhibitor responses to rotenone-sensitive NADH oxidation by beetroot submitochondrial particles.

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