Abstract

During the transition from the aerobic steady state with succinate as substrate to anaerobiosis, in suspensions of skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus) mitochondria treated with antimycin A, cytochrome b(562) becomes reoxidized to the extent of about 20%, synchronously with the reduction of cytochrome c(549). This reoxidation occurs in both the absence and presence of m-chlorobenzhydroxamic acid, a specific inhibitor for the alternate terminal oxidase of plant mitochondria. A flavoprotein component, amounting to 13% to 15% of the total nonfluorescent mitochondrial flavoprotein, undergoes reduction synchronously with the oxidation of cytochrome b(562) during the aerobic to anaerobic transition with succinate as substrate in the presence of both antimycin A and m-chlorobenzhydroxamic acid. This flavoprotein component remains reduced in the presence of cyanide. The half-time for reduction of the flavoprotein component and cytochrome c(549) and for oxidation of cytochrome b(562) during the aerobic to anaerobic transition with succinate as substrate in the presence of both antimycin A and m-chlorobenzhydroxamic acid is 2 seconds. The half-times for oxidation of cytochrome c(549) and the flavoprotein component are 2.1 and 170 milliseconds, respectively, during the anaerobic to aerobic transition induced by addition of 14 mum O(2) to the mitochondrial suspensions. The half-time for reduction of cytochrome b(562) under these conditions is 150 milliseconds, synchronous with the flavoprotein component. The synchrony of the flavoprotein oxidation and of the cytochrome b(562) reduction at a rate much slower than that of cytochrome c(549) oxidation implies that, in antimycin-treated plant mitochondria, the state of the cytochrome b(562)/antimycin complex is regulated by the redox state of this flavoprotein component, rather than by cytochrome c(549). It is tentatively suggested that these two components are not part of the main sequence of the respiratory chain, but may be part of a multienzyme complex active in the hydroxylation reactions required for ubiquinone biosynthesis in the inner mitochondrial membrane.

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