2.02012-05-31 14:53:45 -06002015-09-17 15:41:49 -0600ECMDB20619M2MDB001417Ubiquinol-10Ubiquinol-10 is a member of the chemical class known as Polyprenylbenzoquinols. They are reduced forms of polyprenylbenzoquinines (ubiquinones). These are compounds containing a polyisoprene chain attached to a quinol at the second ring position. Ubiquiol-10 has 10 isoprene units. Normally in E. coli the active form of Ubiquinol has 8 isoprene units (Ubiquinol-8) and in humans it normally has 10. Ubiquinol-10 is an extended version of Ubiquinol 8 that arises from conjugation by an extended prenyl tail via 4-hydroxybenzoate polyprenyltransferase. Coenzyme Q(n) exists in three redox states, fully oxidized (ubiquinone), partially reduced (semiquinones or ubisemiquinones), and fully reduced (ubiquinols). The redox functions of ubiquinol in cellular energy production and antioxidant protection are based on the ability to exchange two electrons in a redox cycle between ubiquinol (reduced) and the ubiquinone (oxidized) form. Ubiquionols are important in cellular respiration. They are fat-soluble and therefore mobile in cellular membranes; they play a unique role in the electron transport chain (ETC). In the inner bacterial membrane, electrons from NADH and succinate pass through the ETC to the oxygen, which is then reduced to water. The transfer of electrons through ETC results in the pumping of H+ across the membrane creating a proton gradient across the membrane, which is used by ATP synthase (located on the membrane) to generate ATP.CoQ(,10)H(,2)CoQ10H2CoQH(,2)Ubiquinol(10)C59H92O4865.3594864.6995614322-[(2E,6E,10E,14E,18E,22E,26E,30E,34E)-3,7,11,15,19,23,27,31,35,39-decamethyltetraconta-2,6,10,14,18,22,26,30,34,38-decaen-1-yl]-5,6-dimethoxy-3-methylcyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-diol2-[(2E,6E,10E,14E,18E,22E,26E,30E,34E)-3,7,11,15,19,23,27,31,35,39-decamethyltetraconta-2,6,10,14,18,22,26,30,34,38-decaen-1-yl]-5,6-dimethoxy-3-methylcyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-diol5677-55-4COC1=C(OC)C(O)=C(C\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CCC=C(C)C)C(C)=C1OInChI=1S/C59H92O4/c1-44(2)24-15-25-45(3)26-16-27-46(4)28-17-29-47(5)30-18-31-48(6)32-19-33-49(7)34-20-35-50(8)36-21-37-51(9)38-22-39-52(10)40-23-41-53(11)42-43-55-54(12)56(60)58(62-13)59(63-14)57(55)61/h24,26,28,30,32,34,36,38,40,42,60-61H,15-23,25,27,29,31,33,35,37,39,41,43H2,1-14H3/b45-26+,46-28+,47-30+,48-32+,49-34+,50-36+,51-38+,52-40+,53-42+QNTNKSLOFHEFPK-UPTCCGCDSA-NInner membraneMembraneOuter membranelogp9.23logs-6.48solubility2.85e-04 g/llogp15.32pka_strongest_acidic12.91pka_strongest_basic-3.6iupac2-[(2E,6E,10E,14E,18E,22E,26E,30E,34E)-3,7,11,15,19,23,27,31,35,39-decamethyltetraconta-2,6,10,14,18,22,26,30,34,38-decaen-1-yl]-5,6-dimethoxy-3-methylcyclohexa-2,5-diene-1,4-diolaverage_mass865.3594mono_mass864.699561432smilesCOC1=C(OC)C(O)=C(C\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CCC=C(C)C)C(C)=C1OformulaC59H92O4inchiInChI=1S/C59H92O4/c1-44(2)24-15-25-45(3)26-16-27-46(4)28-17-29-47(5)30-18-31-48(6)32-19-33-49(7)34-20-35-50(8)36-21-37-51(9)38-22-39-52(10)40-23-41-53(11)42-43-55-54(12)56(60)58(62-13)59(63-14)57(55)61/h24,26,28,30,32,34,36,38,40,42,60-61H,15-23,25,27,29,31,33,35,37,39,41,43H2,1-14H3/b45-26+,46-28+,47-30+,48-32+,49-34+,50-36+,51-38+,52-40+,53-42+inchikeyQNTNKSLOFHEFPK-UPTCCGCDSA-Npolar_surface_area58.92refractivity287.84polarizability114.2rotatable_bond_count31acceptor_count4donor_count2physiological_charge0formal_charge0TCA cycle (ubiquinol-10)The TCA pathway is a catabolic pathway of aerobic respiration. It generates energy and reducing power. It is the first step in generating precursors for biosynthesis. When acetate is the carbon source, citrate synthase is rate-limiting for the TCA cycle. Respiration is an ATP-generating process in which compounds act as electron donors through a chain of electron transfer to electron acceptors. Aerobic respiration uses oxygen as the final acceptor. Anaerobic respiration uses several organic compounds as acceptors such as fumarate, nitrate and hydrogen. During the chain of electron transfer, protons (H+) are transported outside the cytoplasmic membrane, generating a proton motive force. Upon passage of protons back into the cytoplasm, the PMF energy is captured as ATP, catalyzed by a multisubunit ATPase.
The cycle can start from Acetyl-CoA interacting with Oxalacetic acid and water through a citrate synthase monomer resulting in a hydrogen ion, CoA and a Citric Acid. The latter compound is dehydrated by a Citrate hydro-lyase resulting in the release of water and a cis-Aconitic acid. This compound is then hydrated through a Citrate hydro-lyase resulting in a D-threo-Isocitric acid. This compound is decarboxylated by an NADP dependent Citrate dehydrogenase, resulting in a release of carbon dioxide and NADPH and Oxoglutaric acid. The oxoglutaric acid interacts with a Coenzyme A through a NAD driven 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase resulting in a release of carbon dioxide, an NADH and succinyl-CoA. The succinyl-CoA interacts with a phosphate and an ADP through a 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase resulting in a CoA, an ATP and Succinic Acid. Succinic acid interacts with a ubiquinone, in this case a ubiquinone 1 through a succinate:quinone oxidoreductase resulting in an ubiquinol, in this case a ubiquinol-1 and a fumaric acid.
The fumaric acid interacts with water through a fumarase hydratase resulting in a L-Malic acid.This compound can either interact with quinone through a malate:quinone oxidoreductase resulting in a release of hydroquinone and oxalacetic acid, or it can react with an NAD through a malate dehydrogenase resulting in a hydrogen ion, NADH and Oxalacetic acid.PW001010MetabolicSpecdb::MsMs1255186Specdb::MsMs1255187Specdb::MsMs1255188Specdb::MsMs1370374Specdb::MsMs1370375Specdb::MsMs1370376HMDB1311165047405004979CPD-9873UbiquinolKeseler, I. M., Collado-Vides, J., Gama-Castro, S., Ingraham, J., Paley, S., Paulsen, I. T., Peralta-Gil, M., Karp, P. D. (2005). "EcoCyc: a comprehensive database resource for Escherichia coli." Nucleic Acids Res 33:D334-D337.15608210van der Werf, M. J., Overkamp, K. M., Muilwijk, B., Coulier, L., Hankemeier, T. (2007). "Microbial metabolomics: toward a platform with full metabolome coverage." Anal Biochem 370:17-25.17765195Succinate dehydrogenase iron-sulfur subunitP07014DHSB_ECOLIsdhBhttp://ecmdb.ca/proteins/P07014.xmlSuccinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein subunitP0AC41DHSA_ECOLIsdhAhttp://ecmdb.ca/proteins/P0AC41.xmlSuccinate dehydrogenase hydrophobic membrane anchor subunitP0AC44DHSD_ECOLIsdhDhttp://ecmdb.ca/proteins/P0AC44.xmlSuccinate dehydrogenase cytochrome b556 subunitP69054DHSC_ECOLIsdhChttp://ecmdb.ca/proteins/P69054.xmlSuccinic acid + Ubiquinone-10 > Fumaric acid + Ubiquinol-10 + Ubiquinol-10PW_R003753