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Joseph-Horne T, et al.  (2001) Fungal respiration: a fusion of standard and alternative components. Biochim Biophys Acta 1504(2-3):179-95

Abstract: In animals, electron transfer from NADH to molecular oxygen proceeds via large respiratory complexes in a linear respiratory chain. In contrast, most fungi utilise branched respiratory chains. These consist of alternative NADH dehydrogenases, which catalyse rotenone insensitive oxidation of matrix NADH or enable cytoplasmic NADH to be used directly. Many also contain an alternative oxidase that probably accepts electrons directly from ubiquinol. A few fungi lack Complex I. Although the alternative components are non-energy conserving, their organisation within the fungal electron transfer chain ensures that the transfer of electrons from NADH to molecular oxygen is generally coupled to proton translocation through at least one site. The alternative oxidase enables respiration to continue in the presence of inhibitors for ubiquinol:cytochrome c oxidoreductase and cytochrome c oxidase. This may be particularly important for fungal pathogens, since host defence mechanisms often involve nitric oxide, which, whilst being a potent inhibitor of cytochrome c oxidase, has no inhibitory effect on alternative oxidase. Alternative NADH dehydrogenases may avoid the active oxygen production associated with Complex I. The expression and activity regulation of alternative components responds to factors ranging from oxidative stress to the stage of fungal development.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article | Review PubMed ID: 11245784

Topics addressed in this paper

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Topics Genes linked to topics (#1 - 10 )
COB COR1 COX1 COX12 COX13 COX2 COX3 COX4 COX5A COX5B
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#11 - 20 )
COX6 COX7 COX8 COX9 CYT1 NDE1 NDE2 NDI1 QCR2 QCR6
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#21 - 28 )
QCR7 QCR8 QCR9 RIP1 SDH1 SDH2 SDH3 SDH4
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