3.8 Article

Cytosol-mitochondria transfer of reducing equivalents by a lactate shuttle in heterotrophic Euglena

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 270, Issue 24, Pages 4942-4951

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1432-1033.2003.03896.x

Keywords

energy metabolism; lactate metabolism; NAD(+)-lactate dehydrogenase; NAD(+)-independent lactate dehydrogenase

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To assess the expression and physiological role of the mitochondrial NAD(+)-independent lactate dehydrogenase (iLDH) in Euglena gracilis, cells were grown with different carbon sources, and the D- and L-iLDH activities and several key metabolic intermediates were examined. iLDH activity was significant throughout the growth period, increasing by three- to fourfold from latency to the stationary phase. Intracellular levels of D- and L-lactate were high (5-40 mM) from the start of the culture and increased (20-80 mM) when the stationary phase was entered. All external carbon sources were actively consumed, reaching a minimum upon entering the stationary phase, when degradation of paramylon started. The level of ATP was essentially unchanged under all experimental conditions. Oxalate, an inhibitor of iLDH, strongly inhibited oligomycin-sensitive respiration and growth, whereas rotenone, an inhibitor of respiratory complex I, only slightly affected these parameters in lactate-grown cells. Isolated mitochondria exhibited external NADH-supported respiration, which was sensitive to rotenone and flavone, and an inability to oxidize pyruvate. Addition of cytosol, NADH and pyruvate to mitochondria incubated with rotenone and flavone prompted significant O-2 uptake, which was blocked by oxalate. The data suggested that iLDH expression in Euglena is independent of substrate availability and that iLDHs play a key role in the transfer of reducing equivalents from the cytosol to the respiratory chain (lactate shuttle).

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