scholarly journals Regulation of Pyruvate-Dehydrogenase Interconversion in Rat-Liver Mitochondria as Related to the Phosphorylation State of Intramitochondrial Adenine Nucleotides

1974 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 577-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Otto H. Wieland ◽  
Rudolf Portenhauser
1975 ◽  
Vol 148 (3) ◽  
pp. 527-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Fayle ◽  
G J Barritt ◽  
F L Bygrave

The effect of the local anaesthetic, butacaine, on adenine nucleotide binding and translocation in rat liver mitochondria partially depleted of their adenine nucleotide content was investigated. The range of butacaine concentrations that inhibit adenine nucleotide translocation and the extent of the inhibition are similar to the values obtained for native mitochondria. Butacaine does not alter either the total number of atractyloside-sensitive binding sites of depleted mitochondria, or the affinity of these sites for ADP or ATP under conditions where a partial inhibition of the rate of adenine nucleotide translocation is observed. The data are consistent with an effect of butacaine on the process by which adenine nucleotides are transported across the mitochondrial inner membrane rather than on the binding of adenine nucleotides to sites on the adenine nucleotide carrier. The results are briefly discussed in relation to the use of local anaesthetics in investigations of the mechanism of adenine nucleotide translocation.


1969 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Nicholls ◽  
P. B. Garland

1. The factors capable of affecting the rate of isocitrate oxidation in intact mitochondria include the rate of isocitrate penetration, the activity of the NAD-specific and NADP-specific isocitrate dehydrogenases, the activity of the transhydrogenase acting from NADPH to NAD+, the rate of NADPH oxidation by the reductive synthesis of glutamate and the activity of the respiratory chain. A quantitative assessment of these factors was made in intact mitochondria. 2. The kinetic properties of the NAD-specific and NADP-specific isocitrate dehydrogenases extracted from rat liver mitochondria were examined. 3. The rate of isocitrate oxidation through the respiratory chain in mitochondria with coupled phosphorylation is approximately equal to the maximal of the NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase but at least ten times as great as the transhydrogenase activity from NADPH to NAD+. 4. It is concluded that the energy-dependent inhibition of isocitrate oxidation by palmitoylcarnitine oxidation is due to an inhibition of the NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase. 5. Kinetic studies of NAD-specific isocitrate dehydrogenase demonstrated that its activity could be inhibited by one or more of the following: an increased reduction of mitochondrial NAD, an increased phosphorylation of mitochondrial adenine nucleotides or a fall in the mitochondrial isocitrate concentration. 6. Uncoupling agents stimulate isocitrate oxidation by an extent equal to the associated stimulation of transhydrogenation from NADPH to NAD+. 7. A technique is described for continuously measuring with a carbon dioxide electrode the synthesis of glutamate from isocitrate and ammonia.


1978 ◽  
Vol 176 (3) ◽  
pp. 705-714 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronica Prpić ◽  
Terry L. Spencer ◽  
Fyfe L. Bygrave

1. Mitochondria isolated from rat liver by centrifugation of the homogenate in buffered iso-osmotic sucrose at between 4000 and 8000g-min, 1h after the administration in vivo of 30μg of glucagon/100g body wt., retain Ca2+ for over 45min after its addition at 100nmol/mg of mitochondrial protein in the presence of 2mm-Pi. In similar experiments, but after the administration of saline (0.9% NaCl) in place of glucagon, Ca2+ is retained for 6–8min. The ability of glucagon to enhance Ca2+ retention is completely prevented by co-administration of 4.2mg of puromycin/100g body wt. 2. The resting rate of respiration after Ca2+ accumulation by mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats remains low by contrast with that from saline-treated rats. Respiration in the latter mitochondria increased markedly after the Ca2+ accumulation, reflecting the uncoupling action of the ion. 3. Concomitant with the enhanced retention of Ca2+ and low rates of resting respiration by mitochondria from glucagon-treated rats was an increased ability to retain endogenous adenine nucleotides. 4. An investigation of properties of mitochondria known to influence Ca2+ transport revealed a significantly higher concentration of adenine nucleotides but not of Pi in those from glucagon-treated rats. The membrane potential remained unchanged, but the transmembrane pH gradient increased by approx. 10mV, indicating increased alkalinity of the matrix space. 5. Depletion of endogenous adenine nucleotides by Pi treatment in mitochondria from both glucagon-treated and saline-treated rats led to a marked diminution in ability to retain Ca2+. The activity of the adenine nucleotide translocase was unaffected by glucagon treatment of rats in vivo. 6. Although the data are consistent with the argument that the Ca2+-translocation cycle in rat liver mitochondria is a target for glucagon action in vivo, they do not permit conclusions to be drawn about the molecular mechanisms involved in the glucagon-induced alteration to this cycle.


1985 ◽  
Vol 231 (3) ◽  
pp. 581-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
J G McCormack

The regulatory properties of the Ca2+-sensitive intramitochondrial enzymes (pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphate phosphatase, NAD+-isocitrate dehydrogenase and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase) in extracts of rat liver mitochondria appeared to be essentially similar to those described previously for other mammalian tissues. In particular, the enzymes were activated severalfold by Ca2+, with half-maximal effects at about 1 microM-Ca2+ (K0.5 value). In intact rat liver mitochondria incubated in a KCl-based medium containing 2-oxoglutarate and malate, the amount of active, non-phosphorylated, pyruvate dehydrogenase could be increased severalfold by increasing extramitochondrial [Ca2+], provided that some degree of inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (e.g. by pyruvate) was achieved. The rates of 14CO2 production from 2-oxo-[1-14C]glutarate at non-saturating, but not at saturating, concentrations of 2-oxoglutarate by the liver mitochondria (incubated without ADP) were similarly enhanced by increasing extramitochondrial [Ca2+]. The rates and extents of NAD(P)H formation in the liver mitochondria induced by non-saturating concentrations of 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, threo-DS-isocitrate or citrate were also increased in a similar manner by Ca2+ under several different incubation conditions, including an apparent ‘State 3.5’ respiration condition. Ca2+ had no effect on NAD(P)H formation induced by β-hydroxybutyrate or malate. In intact, fully coupled, rat liver mitochondria incubated with 10 mM-NaCl and 1 mM-MgCl2, the apparent K0.5 values for extramitochondrial Ca2+ were about 0.5 microM, and the effective concentrations were within the expected physiological range, 0.05-5 microM. In the absence of Na+, Mg2+ or both, the K0.5 values were about 400, 200 and 100 nM respectively. These effects of increasing extramitochondrial [Ca2+] were all inhibited by Ruthenium Red. When extramitochondrial [Ca2+] was increased above the effective ranges for the enzymes, a time-dependent deterioration of mitochondrial function and ATP content was observed. The implications of these results on the role of the Ca2+-transport system of the liver mitochondrial inner membrane are discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 231 (3) ◽  
pp. 597-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
J G McCormack

The administration in vivo of either adrenaline or glucagon alone resulted in increases of about 2-fold in the amounts of active, non-phosphorylated, pyruvate dehydrogenase in the livers of fed male or female rats, whereas when administered together increases of about 4-fold were obtained. Ca2+-dependent increases in the amount of active enzyme of up to about 5-fold could be achieved in isolated rat liver mitochondria by incubating them with increasing extramitochondrial [Ca2+]; from this, two conditions of Ca loading were chosen which caused increases in active enzyme similar to those with the hormone treatments given above. The increases in enzyme activity owing to these Ca loads persisted through the ‘re-isolation’ of mitochondria and their incubation in Na+-free KCl-based media containing EGTA. Differences from values obtained with unloaded controls could be diminished by adding Na+ ions to cause the egress of Ca2+ from the mitochondria, or enough extramitochondrial Ca2+ to saturate the enzyme in its Ca2+-dependent activation; the effects of Na+ could be blocked by diltiazem, an inhibitor of mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchange. The re-isolated, Ca-preloaded, mitochondria also exhibited enhanced activities of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase when assayed at non-saturating [2-oxoglutarate] by two different methods; effects of Na+, Ca2+ or diltiazem on the persistent activations of this enzyme were similar to those for pyruvate dehydrogenase. Na+ caused a marked depletion, which could be blocked by diltiazem, of the 45Ca content of re-isolated mitochondria which had pre-loaded with Ca, containing 45Ca, to the same degrees as above. The activities of pyruvate dehydrogenase and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase in incubated liver mitochondria prepared from rats subjected to the hormone treatments given above were found to behave in a very similar manner to those exhibited in the re-isolated, Ca-preloaded, mitochondria. It is concluded that these hormones each bring about the activations of these rat liver enzymes by causing increases in intramitochondrial [Ca2+], and that their effects, as such, are additive.


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