scholarly journals 9-Aminoacridine as a fluorescent probe of the electrical diffuse layer associated with the membranes of plant mitochondria

1981 ◽  
Vol 193 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
I M Møller ◽  
W S Chow ◽  
J M Palmer ◽  
J Barber

1. Mitochondria from Jerusalem artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus) tubers and Arum maculatum spadices caused a quenching of the fluorescence of 9-aminoacridine when mixed in a low-cation medium (approximately 1 mM-K+) and addition of chelators further decreased the fluorescence. Salts released the quenching of the 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and the efficiency of the release appeared to be mainly dependent on the valency of the cation (C3+ greater than C2+ greater than C+). 2. The results are consistent with the theory of charge screening and demonstrate that 9-aminoacridine is a convenient probe of the behaviour of cations on the membranes of mitochondria and in the diffuse layer associated with these membranes. 3. The concentration of salt required to achieve half-maximal release of quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence was proportional to the concentration of mitochondria in the solution and theoretical considerations show this effect to be inherent in the Gouy-Chapman theory. 4. 9-Aminoacridine was removed from the bulk of the solution by the mitochondria to a far greater extent than was Na+ or K+, which is suggested to be due to the formation of bi- and poly-valent cations by aggregation of 9-aminoacridine molecules in the diffuse layer. This would have implications for the use of 9-aminoacridine to determine delta pH across membranes. 5. Jerusalem-artichoke mitochondria removed from 9-aminoacridine and Ca2+ from the bulk of the solution and required more ions to screen the membranes than did an equal concentration (mg of protein/ml) of Arum mitochondria, indicating that Jerusalem-artichoke mitochondria contain more negative charges per mg of protein.

1986 ◽  
Vol 237 (3) ◽  
pp. 765-771 ◽  
Author(s):  
I M Møller ◽  
C J Kay ◽  
J M Palmer

The oxidation of NADH or succinate by Jerusalem-artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus L.) mitochondria in the presence of chlortetracycline induced an increase in chlortetracycline fluorescence. Any treatment that prevented the formation of a transmembrane potential (as monitored by changes in safranine absorbance, A511-A533), e.g. uncoupling with carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone, inhibition of dehydrogenase activity or electron transport, anaerobiosis or depletion of substrate, prevented the increase in chlortetracycline fluorescence or caused it to disappear. Changes in chlortetracycline fluorescence were always slower than changes in the safranine absorbance. The increase in chlortetracycline fluorescence caused by succinate oxidation had an excitation maximum at 393 nm, indicating that a Ca2+-chlortetracycline complex was involved. The increase in fluorescence was observed even in the presence of EDTA, which removes all external bivalent cations, indicating that internal Ca2+ is mobilized. Although NADH and succinate oxidations gave the same membrane potential and qualitatively had the same effect on chlortetracycline fluorescence, NADH oxidation caused a much larger (over 3-fold) increase in chlortetracycline fluorescence than did succinate oxidation. It is possible that this is connected with the Ca2+-dependence of NADH oxidation. In the presence of 2 mM external Ca2+, chlortetracycline collapsed the transmembrane potential and uncoupled succinate and duroquinone oxidation.


Helia ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 24 (35) ◽  
pp. 25-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janoš Berenji ◽  
Vladimir Sikora

SUMMARYThe objective of this paper was to estimate the genetic and ecological variation as well as the stability of tuber yield per plant, tuber number per plant and tuber size of Jerusalem artichoke based on the results of a variety trial carried out with 20 different Jerusalem artichoke varieties during the period of 1994-2000. Significant genetic as well as ecologycal variation was observed for all of the traits studied. The most promissing varieties showing high tuber yield combined with high yield stability were “BT-4”, “Violet Rennes” and “UKR 4/ 82”. It is encouraging that the highest yielding varieties exibited a rather stable performance over environments.


LWT ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 738-746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Iraporda ◽  
Irene A. Rubel ◽  
Guillermo D. Manrique ◽  
Analía G. Abraham

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