1. A chromosomal respiration-deficient mutant of the petite-negative yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe was isolated. Its mitochondria show respiration rates of about 7% of the wild-type respiration with NADH and succinate as substrate, and 45% with ascorbate in the presence of tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine. Oxidation of NADH and succinate is insensitive to antimycin and cyanide and that of ascorbate is much less sensitive to cyanide than the wild type. 2. The amounts of cytochromes c1 and aa3 are similar in the mutant and wild type. Cytochrome b-566 could not be detected in low-temperature spectra after reduction with various substrates or dithionite. A b-558 is, however, present. 3. The b-cytochromes in the mutant are not reduced by NADH or succinate during the steady state even after addition of ubiquinone-1. QH2-3: cytochrome c reductase activity is very low and succinate oxidation is highly stimulated by phenazine methosulphate. 4. Antimycin does not bind to either oxidized or reduced mitochondrial particles of the mutant. 5. In contrast to the b-cytochromes of the wild type, b-558 in the mutant reacts with CO. 6. Cytochromes aa3, c and c1 are partly reduced in aerated submitochondrial particles isolated from the mutant and the EPR signal of Cu (II), measured at 35°K, is detectable only after the addition of ferricyanide. In the mutant, a signal with a trough at g = 2.01 is found, in addition to the signal at g = 1.98 found in the wild type. 7. The ATPase activity of particles isolated from the mutant is much lower than in the wild type but is still inhibited by oligomycin. |