1. [(14)C]Acetoin was enzymically synthesized from [(14)C]pyruvate with a pyruvate decarboxylase preparation. Its optical activity was [alpha](20) (d)-78 degrees . 2. Large amounts (1000-fold higher than physiological concentrations) of acetoin were incubated with rat liver mince. Acetoin disappeared but very little (14)CO(2) was evolved. A compound accumulated, which was purified and identified as butane-2,3-diol. Chromatography on borate-impregnated paper indicated the presence of both the erythro and threo forms. 3. Liver extracts capable of interconverting biacetyl, acetoin and butane-2,3-diol were obtained. These interconversions were catalysed by two different enzymes: acetoin dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.5) and butane-2,3-diol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.4), previously identified in bacteria. Both required NAD(+) or NADP(+) as cofactors and were different from alcohol dehydrogenase. The equilibrium in both cases favoured the more reduced compound. 4. The activity of butane-2,3-diol dehydrogenase was decreased by dialysis against EDTA: the addition of Co(2+), Cu(2+), Zn(2+) and other bivalent metal ions restored activity. 5. Biacetyl reductase was resolved into multiple forms by CM-Sephadex chromatography and electrophoresis.
Mitochondrial and nuclear counts and homogenate and washed mitochondrial qO2 determinations were made on kidney cortex, liver and brain of albino rats. Homogenate qO2 was inversely related to mitochondrial count in the three tissues, but directly related to cellularity and to O2 uptake per mitochondrion. It is shown that the former is a spurious and the latter a real correlation. It is concluded that the characteristic differences in the qO2 of these three tissues are due largely to specific differences in the oxidative metabolism of their respective mitochondria and not to differences in the mitochondrial count per unit weight of tissue.
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