Residual Complex I activity supports glutamate catabolism and mtSLP via canonical Krebs cycle activity during acute anoxia without OXPHOS
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Abstract
ABSTRACT Anoxia halts oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) causing an accumulation of reduced compounds in mitochondrial matrix which impedes dehydrogenases. By simultaneously measuring oxygen concentration, NADH autofluorescence, mitochondrial membrane potential and ubiquinone reduction extent in organello in real-time, we show that Complex I utilized endogenous quinones to oxidize NADH under acute anoxia. Untargeted or [U- 13 C]glutamate-targeted metabolomic analysis of matrix and effluxed metabolites extracted during anoxia in the presence or absence of site-specific inhibitors of the electron transfer system inferred that NAD + regenerated by Complex I is reduced by the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex yielding succinyl-CoA supporting mitochondrial substrate-level phosphorylation (mtSLP), releasing succinate. Yet, targeted metabolomic analysis using [U- 13 C]malate also revealed concomitant succinate dehydrogenase reversal during anoxia yielding succinate by reducing fumarate, albeit to a small extent. Our results highlight the importance of quinone availability to Complex I oxidizing NADH, thus maintaining glutamate catabolism and mtSLP in the absence of OXPHOS.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00