Effects of hypothermia on canine kidney mitochondria |
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Authors: | James H. Southard Karen A. Senzig Folkert O. Belzer |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Clinical Science Center, 600 Highland Ave., Madison, Wisconsin 53792 U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | The effect of hypothermia on the function of isolated dog kidney cortex mitochondria was determined with an FAD- and NAD+-linked substrate. In dog kidney mitochondria, temperatures of 10 °C or less suppress ADP stimulation of respiration but have little or no effect upon uncoupler, Ca2+ or valinomycin-K+ stimulation of respiration. This suggests that the adenine nucleotide translocase which catalyses the transport of ADP into the mitochondria limits the rate of respiration and generation of ATP at 10 °C in kidneys undergoing preservation. The coupling of oxidation to phosphylation, as determined by measuring the amount of ATP formed at low temperatures, indicates, however, that mitochondria are fully coupled at both 10 and 5 °C. The respiratory control index at 15 °C is greater (with pyruvate plus malate) than at 30 or 10 °C and suggests that 15 °C may be the optimum perfusion temperature for maintaining adenine nucleotide levels in the perfused kidney. |
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