scholarly journals Theoretical studies on the control of oxidative phosphorylation in muscle mitochondria: application to mitochondrial deficiencies

1996 ◽  
Vol 319 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard KORZENIEWSKI ◽  
Jean-Pierre MAZAT

1. The dynamic model of oxidative phosphorylation developed previously for rat liver mitochondria incubated with succinate was adapted for muscle mitochondria respiring on pyruvate. We introduced the following changes considering: (1) a higher external ATP/ADP ratio and an ATP/ADP carrier less displaced from equilibrium; (2) a substrate dehydrogenation more sensitive to the NADH/NAD+ ratio; and (3) the respiratory chain, ATP synthase and phosphate carrier being more displaced from equilibrium. The experimental flux control coefficients already determined in state 3 for respiratory rate and ATP synthesis were used to adjust some parameters. This new oxidative phosphorylation model enabled us to simulate the whole titration curves obtained experimentally in state 3. These curves, which mimic the effect of mitochondrial complex deficiencies on oxidative phosphorylation, show a threshold effect, which is reproduced by the model. 2. The model was also used to simulate other physiological conditions such as: (i) state 3.5, conditions inbetween state 4 and state 3; and (ii) hypoxic conditions. In both cases a profound change in the pattern of the control coefficients was shown. 3. This model was thus found useful in investigating a variety of new conditions, the most interesting of which can then be experimentally studied.

1984 ◽  
Vol 218 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Ferreira ◽  
L Gil

Rats malnourished since birth and fed on a protein-free diet for 2 weeks showed a 23-27% decrease in the State-3 oxidation of glutamate, succinate and ascorbate + NNN′ N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine by liver mitochondria compared with control fed animals. ATP synthesis and the respiratory control index were diminished at the three coupling sites, but significant alterations were not observed in ADP/O ratios. Vmax. for NADH oxidation in electron-transport particles was 40% lower. Mitochondrial cytochromes b and c1 remained unchanged, but cytochrome c was increased by 26%. Cytochromes a + a3 were diminished by 22%. Vmax. for mitochondrial ATPase was 23% lower. These results suggest that the lower content of cytochrome a + a3 at the rate-controlling step of oxidative phosphorylation in malnourished rats might be mainly responsible for the decrease in substrate oxidations as well as ATP synthesis at the three coupling sites. The decreased synthesis and hydrolysis of ATP suggests that other energy-dependent mitochondrial processes could be decreased during malnutrition.


1975 ◽  
Vol 146 (2) ◽  
pp. 465-471 ◽  
Author(s):  
D N Skilleter

1. In a 100 mM-KCl medium (pH 6.8) containing ATP, triethyltin (1 muM) causes a decrease in the uptake of pyruvate, malate, citrate or β-hydroxybutyrate by rat liver mitochondria, but no decrease is observed in a 100 mM-KNO3 medium. This response is not modified by the presence of rotenone in the incubation medium. 2. In the KCl medium at least 1 muM-triethyltin is required to cause maximum inhibition of pyruvate uptake. 3. Trimethyltin, tributyltin and the trialkyl-lead analogues at 1 muM, to varying degrees, also cause a decrease in pyruvate uptake by mitochondria only in the KCl medium. 4. Triethyltin stimulates resting respiration of mitochondria with all the substrates tested in the KCl medium but not in the KNO3 medium, yet this stimulation of O2 uptake occurs under conditions when substrate uptake is decreased. 5. In contrast, both O2 uptake during state 3 respiration and ATP synthesis when linked to the oxidation of pyruvate, malate or citrate are strongly inhibited by 1 muM-triethyltin in a KCl medium, but O2 uptake and ATP synthesis during the oxidation of β-hydroxybutyrate are only slightly affected. In a KNO3 medium O2 uptake and ATP synthesis linked to the oxidation of all substrates are only slightly affected. 6. The relevance of the decrease in substrate uptake by mitochondria caused by triethyltin in a KCl medium to the greater sensitivity of various mitochondrial functions observed in vitro is discussed. It is concluded that decrease of matrix substrate content is probably not the major cause of the greater sensitivity of oxidative phosphorylation to triethyltin in a KCl medium observed previously.


1970 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. N. Aldridge ◽  
B. W. Street

1. The binding of trimethyltin and triethyltin to rat liver mitochondria was determined and the results were analysed by the method of Scatchard (1949). 2. One binding site (site 1) has the correct characteristics for the site to which trimethyltin and triethyltin are attached when they inhibit oxidative phosphorylation. For each compound the concentration of site 1 is 0.8nmol/mg of protein and the ratios of their affinity constants are the same as the ratio of the concentrations inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation. 3. Binding site 1 is present in a fraction derived from mitochondria containing only 15% of the original protein. In this preparation ultrasonication rapidly destroyed site 1. 4. Dimethyltin and diethyltin do not prevent binding of triethyltin to rat liver mitochondria, whereas triethyl-lead does. 5. Trimethyltin and triethyltin bind to mitochondria from brown adipose tissue and the results indicate a binding site 1 similar to that in rat liver mitochondria. 6. The advantages and limitations of this approach to the study of inhibitors are discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document