2000
DOI: 10.1042/bj3480209
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Effects of magnesium and nucleotides on the proton conductance of rat skeletal-muscle mitochondria

Abstract: During oxidative phosphorylation most of the protons pumped out to the cytosol across the mitochondrial inner membrane return to the matrix through the ATP synthase, driving ATP synthesis. However, some of them leak back to the matrix through a proton-conductance pathway in the membrane. When the ATP synthase is inhibited with oligomycin and ATP is not being synthesized, all of the respiration is used to drive the proton leak. We report here that Mg# + inhibits the proton conductance in rat skeletal-muscle mit… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…The results from the present study are in agreement with the former studies: during hibernation, state 4 respiration was decreased by 41% in mitochondria isolated from liver and assayed at 37°C (Table 1). Procedural differences may account for the discrepancy between our and previous (28) studies: magnesium inhibits succinate dehydrogenase in rat liver (26,29) and skeletal muscle (15) mitochondria, and the inclusion of magnesium in the assay buffer (28) may have masked differences in state 4 respiration between hibernating and active animals. This possibility is supported by the finding that the average state 4 respiration of both active and hibernating liver mitochondria in goldenmantled ground squirrels (28) was less than that measured in hibernators in this study and in Richardson's ground squirrels (30).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…The results from the present study are in agreement with the former studies: during hibernation, state 4 respiration was decreased by 41% in mitochondria isolated from liver and assayed at 37°C (Table 1). Procedural differences may account for the discrepancy between our and previous (28) studies: magnesium inhibits succinate dehydrogenase in rat liver (26,29) and skeletal muscle (15) mitochondria, and the inclusion of magnesium in the assay buffer (28) may have masked differences in state 4 respiration between hibernating and active animals. This possibility is supported by the finding that the average state 4 respiration of both active and hibernating liver mitochondria in goldenmantled ground squirrels (28) was less than that measured in hibernators in this study and in Richardson's ground squirrels (30).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 69%
“…The kinetics of the mitochondrial proton leak were measured by determining the dependence of the respiration rate required to drive proton leak (in the presence of oligomycin to inhibit ATP synthesis) on mitochondrial membrane potential. It was measured using an electrode sensitive to the potential‐sensitive probe, TPMP (triphenylmethylphosphonium), in the presence of nigericin to dissipate the pH gradient (Brand 1995, Cadenas & Brand, 2000). Intact mitochondria extracted from the thoraces of 11 day‐old flies were resuspended at 0.2–0.3 mg of protein per mL in assay medium containing oligomycin (1 µg mL −1 ), nigericin (100 ng mL −1 ) and rotenone (5 µ m ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the kinetic response of the proton conductance pathway to its driving force (membrane potential, Dw) can be measured as the relationship between respiration rate and mitochondrial Dw when the latter is varied by titrating the electron transport system (ETS) with inhibitors (Cadenas and Brand 2000). Mitochondria were isolated from diapause and postdiapause embryos of A. franciscana (Kwast and Hand 1993;Reynolds and Hand 2004), and the dependence of proton leak respiration on mitochondrial Dw was measured based on methods previously described (Brand 1995;Brand et al 2005;Affourtit et al 2012).…”
Section: Kinetics Of Mitochondrial Proton Leakmentioning
confidence: 99%