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1.
In liver mitochondria fatty acids act as protonophoric uncouplers mainly with participation of internal membrane protein carriers — ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters. In this study the values of recoupling effects of carboxyatractylate and glutamate (or aspartate) were used to assess the degree of participation of ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters in uncoupling activity of fatty acids. These values were determined from the ability of these recoupling agents to suppress the respiration stimulated by fatty acids and to raise the membrane potential reduced by fatty acids. Increase in palmitic and lauric acid concentration was shown to increase the degree of participation of ADP/ATP antiporter and to decrease the degree of participation of aspartate/glutamate antiporter in uncoupling to the same extent. These data suggest that fatty acids are not only inducers of uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation, but that they also act the regulators of this process. The linear dependence of carboxyatractylate and glutamate recoupling effects ratio on palmitic and lauric acids concentration was established. Comparison of the effects of fatty acids (palmitic, myristic, lauric, capric, and caprylic having 16, 14, 12, 10, and 8 carbon atoms, respectively) has shown that, as the hydrophobicity of fatty acids decreases, the effectiveness decreases to a greater degree than the respective values of their specific uncoupling activity. The action of fatty acids as regulators of uncoupling is supposed to consist of activation of transport of their anions from the internal to the external monolayer of the internal membrane with participation of ADP/ATP antiporter and, at the same time, in inhibition of this process with the participation of aspartate/glutamate antiporter.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of ethanol on the uncoupling activity of palmitate and recoupling activities of carboxyatractylate and glutamate was studied in liver mitochondria at various Mg2+ concentrations and medium pH values (7.0, 7.4, and 7.8). Ethanol taken at concentration of 0.25 M had no effect on the uncoupling activity of palmitic acid in the presence of 2 mM MgCl2 and decreased the recoupling effects of carboxyatractylate and glutamate added to mitochondria either just before or after the fatty acid. However, ethanol did not modify the overall recoupling effect of carboxyatractylate and glutamate taken in combination. The effect of ethanol decreased as medium pH was decreased to 7.0. Elevated concentration of Mg2+ (up to 8 mM) inhibits the uncoupling effect of palmitate. Ethanol eliminates substantially the recoupling effect of Mg2+ under these conditions, but does not influence the recoupling effects of carboxyatractylate and glutamate. It is inferred that ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters are involved in uncoupling function as single uncoupling complex with the common fatty acid pool. Fatty acid molecules gain the ability to migrate under the action of ethanol: from ADP/ATP antiporter to aspartate/glutamate antiporter on addition of carboxyatractylate and in opposite direction on addition of glutamate. Possible mechanisms of fatty acid translocation from one transporter to another are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Study of the uncoupling effect of various saturated fatty acids (from caprylic to palmitic) revealed that the glutamate recoupling effect was more pronounced in the case of short chain fatty acids, whereas recoupling of mitochondria by carboxyatractylate was more effective in the case of long chain fatty acids. The overall recoupling effect, however, did not depend on the fatty acid chain length. Besides carboxyatractylate, glutamate and aspartate also exhibited a recoupling effect under uncoupling by lauryl sulfate. The uncoupling effect of lauryl sulfate was markedly weaker in the presence of DNP or laurate (but not FCCP) which were added in concentrations causing twofold increase in mitochondrial respiration. In the presence of lauryl sulfate the uncoupling action of laurate and DNP was insensitive to carboxyatractylate and glutamate. With laurate and DNP as uncouplers increasing the pH from 7.0 to 7.8 potentiated the recoupling effect of carboxyatractylate and attenuated the recoupling effect of glutamate. In the case of uncoupling by lauryl sulfate similar changes in the recoupling effect of carboxyatractylate and glutamate were observed only in the presence of 10 microM tetraphenylphosphonium. Thus, when uncoupling is induced by fatty acids, DNP, and lauryl sulfate, the ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters function as two parallel and independent pathways for mitochondrial membrane potential dissipation. We suggest that the role of the ADP/ATP antiporter in uncoupling includes proton capture from the intermembrane space with subsequent protonation of uncoupler anions, their transport as neutral molecules on the internal side, and deprotonation followed by proton release into the matrix and transfer of the uncoupler anion in the reverse direction. During uncoupling the aspartate/glutamate antiporter cyclically carries the uncoupler anion with simultaneous proton transfer from the intermembrane space into the matrix.  相似文献   

4.
In liver mitochondria, the phosphate carrier is involved in protonophoric uncoupling effect of fatty acids together with ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters (Samartsev et al. 2003. Biochemistry (Moscow). 68, 618–629). Liver mitochondria depleted of endogenous oxidation substrates (exhausted mitochondria) have been used in the present work. In these mitochondria, like in the intact liver mitochondria, the specific inhibitor of ADP/ATP antiporter (carboxyatractylate) and the substrate of aspartate/glutamate antiporter (aspartate) suppress the uncoupling activity of palmitic acid. It is shown that in exhausted mitochondria the substrate of phosphate carrier (inorganic phosphate) and its nonspecific inhibitor mersalyl partially suppress palmitic acid-induced uncoupling due to decrease in the component of uncoupling activity sensitive to carboxyatractylate and aspartate. In the presence of inorganic phosphate or mersalyl, carboxyatractylate and aspartate added separately subsequent to palmitic acid do not suppress its uncoupling activity. They are effective only when added jointly. In the presence of thiourea or pyruvate, such effects of inorganic phosphate and mersalyl are not observed. It is supposed that in the presence of inorganic phosphate or mersalyl and under the condition of oxidation of critical SH-groups in mitochondria, the phosphate carrier, ADP/ATP antiporter, and aspartate/glutamate antiporter are involved in uncoupling function together with the general fatty acid pool as an uncoupling complex. The role of phosphate carrier in this complex may consist in facilitation of lateral transfer of the fatty acid molecules from one antiporter to another.  相似文献   

5.
Palmitate-induced uncoupling, which involves ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters, has been studied in liver mitochondria of old rats (22-26 months) under conditions of lipid peroxidation and inhibition of oxidative stress by antioxidants--thiourea, Trolox, and ionol. It has been shown that in liver mitochondria of old rats in the absence of antioxidants and under conditions of overproduction of conjugated dienes, the protonophoric uncoupling activity of palmitate is not suppressed by either carboxyatractylate or aspartate used separately. However, the combination of carboxyatractylate and aspartate decreased uncoupling activity of palmitate by 81%. In this case, palmitate-induced uncoupling is limited by a stage insensitive to both carboxyatractylate and aspartate. In the presence of antioxidants, the palmitate-induced protonophoric uncoupling activity is suppressed by either carboxyatractylate or aspartate used separately. Under these conditions, palmitate-induced uncoupling is limited by a stage sensitive to carboxyatractylate (ADP/ATP antiporter) or aspartate (aspartate/glutamate antiporter). In the absence of antioxidants, the uncoupling activity of palmitate is not suppressed by ADP either in the absence or in the presence of aspartate. However, in the presence of thiourea, Trolox, or ionol ADP decreased the uncoupling activity of palmitate by 38%. It is concluded that in liver mitochondria of old rats the development of oxidative stress in the presence of physiological substrates of ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters (ADP and aspartate) results in an increase of the protonophoric uncoupling activity of palmitate.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of the positively charged amphiphilic compound cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB) on palmitate- and laurate-induced uncoupling and on carboxyatractylate and glutamate recoupling effects in liver mitochondria have been studied. CTAB (40 M) in the presence of 3 mM MgCl2 had little (if any) effect on the palmitic acid-stimulated respiration of mitochondria; the glutamate recoupling effect increased, and the carboxyatractylate recoupling effect decreased to the same degree with the combined effect (about 80%) remaining unchanged. Thus, CTAB decreases the ADP/ATP antiporter involvement and increases to the same extent the aspartate/glutamate antiporter involvement in the fatty acid-induced uncoupling. The carboxyatractylate and glutamate recoupling effects were less pH dependent in the presence of CTAB than in its absence. These data could be interpreted with the assumption that fatty acid anions are more accessible to the ADP/ATP antiporter and their neutral forms are more accessible to the aspartate/glutamate antiporter, and that CTAB changes the relative anion carrier involvement in the fatty acid-induced uncoupling as it forms neutral complexes with fatty acid anions.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of acetoacetate on palmitate-induced uncoupling with the involvement of ADP/ATP antiporter and aspartate/glutamate antiporter has been studied in liver mitochondria. The incubation of mitochondria with acetoacetate during succinate oxidation in the presence of rotenone, oligomycin, and EGTA suppresses the accumulation of conjugated dienes. This is considered as a display of antioxidant effect of acetoacetate. Under these conditions, acetoacetate does not influence the respiration of mitochondria in the absence or presence of palmitate but eliminates the ability of carboxyatractylate or aspartate separately to suppress the uncoupling effect of this fatty acid. The action of acetoacetate is eliminated by β-hydroxybutyrate or thiourea, but not by the antioxidant Trolox. In the absence of acetoacetate, the palmitate-induced uncoupling is limited by a stage sensitive to carboxyatractylate (ADP/ATP antiporter) or aspartate (aspartate/glutamate antiporter); in its presence, it is limited by a stage insensitive to the effect of these agents. In the presence of Trolox, ADP suppresses the uncoupling action of palmitate to the same degree as carboxyatractylate. Under these conditions, acetoacetate eliminates the recoupling effects of ADP and aspartate, including their joint action. This effect of acetoacetate is eliminated by β-hydroxybutyrate or thiourea. It is supposed that the stimulating effect of acetoacetate is caused both by increase in the rate of transfer of fatty acid anion from the inner monolayer of the membrane to the outer one, which involves the ADP/ATP antiporter and aspartate/glutamate antiporter, and by elimination of the ability of ADP to inhibit this transport. Under conditions of excessive production of reactive oxygen species in mitochondria at a high membrane potential and in the presence of small amounts of fatty acids, such effect of acetoacetate can be considered as one of the mechanisms of antioxidant protection.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of thermoregulatory uncoupling of respiration and phosphorylation in skeletal muscles has been studied. It is found that 24 h cold exposure results in (i) a 3-fold increase in the amount of UCP3 protein in rat skeletal muscle mitochondria, and (ii) pronounced lowering of the membrane potential in isolated rat or mouse skeletal muscle mitochondria. The decrease in membrane potential is reversed by adding bovine serum albumin. Cold exposure is also found to sensitize the membrane potential to the uncoupling action of added fatty acid (laurate). After laurate addition, the recoupling effects of GDP and carboxyatractylate decrease whereas that of albumin increases in mitochondria from cold-treated rats or mice. Changes similar to those induced by cold can be initiated by the in vivo addition of thyroxine. Cold exposure does not affect energy coupling in liver mitochondria. The possible involvement of UCP3 isoforms in nucleotide-sensitive and -insensitive uncoupling is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Effects of cold exposure in vivo and treatment with laurate, carboxyatractylate, atractylate, nucleotides, and BSA in vitro on potato tuber mitochondria have been studied. Cold exposure of tubers for 48-96 h resulted in some uncoupling that could be reversed completely by BSA and partially by ADP, ATP, UDP, carboxyatractylate, and atractylate. UDP was less effective than ADP and ATP, and atractylate was less effective than carboxyatractylate. The recoupling effects of nucleotides were absent when the nucleotides were added after carboxyatractylate. GDP, UDP, and CDP did not recouple mitochondria from either the control or the cold-exposed tubers. This indicates that the cold-induced fatty acid-mediated uncoupling in potato tuber mitochondria is partially due to the operation of the ATP/ADP antiporter. As to the plant uncoupling protein, its contribution to the uncoupling in tuber is negligible or, under the conditions used, somehow desensitized to nucleotides.  相似文献   

10.
Effects of cold exposure in vivo and treatment with laurate, carboxyatractylate, atractylate, nucleotides, and BSA in vitro on potato tuber mitochondria have been studied. Cold exposure of tubers for 48-96 h resulted in some uncoupling that could be reversed completely by BSA and partially by ADP, ATP, UDP, carboxyatractylate, and atractylate. UDP was less effective than ADP and ATP, and atractylate was less effective than carboxyatractylate. The recoupling effects of nucleotides were absent when the nucleotides were added after carboxyatractylate. GDP, UDP, and CDP did not recouple mitochondria from either the control or the cold-exposed tubers. This indicates that the cold-induced fatty acid-mediated uncoupling in potato tuber mitochondria is partially due to the operation of the ATP/ADP antiporter. As to the plant uncoupling protein, its contribution to the uncoupling in tuber is negligible or, under the conditions used, somehow desensitized to nucleotides.  相似文献   

11.
Uncoupling effects of laurate and lauryl sulfate have been studied in the isolated rat liver and skeletal muscle mitochondria. In the oligomycin-treated liver mitochondria, 0.02 mM laurate or 0.16 mM lauryl sulfate caused a two-fold stimulation of respiration, accompanied by a membrane potential decrease. Carboxyatractylate (CAtr) and glutamate (or aspartate) strongly decrease the effect of laurate and lauryl sulfate on respiratory rate and membrane potential (the recoupling effect). With both uncouplers, this effect is maximal for CAtr and glutamate (aspartate) at pH 7.8 and 7.0, respectively. Tetraphenyl phosphonium cations, which decrease negative membrane charges, cause an alkaline shift of these pH dependences. Small amounts of lauryl sulfate, which increase the membrane negative charge, induce the opposite shift when laurate is used as an uncoupler. ADP, but not GDP, partially recouple with both laurate and lauryl sulfate. We conclude that lauryl sulfate-induced uncoupling in rat liver, like the uncoupling induced by laurate, is mediated by the ATP/ ADP and glutamate/aspartate antiporters. In skeletal muscle mitochondria uncoupled by laurate, 200 microM GDP causes partial recoupling which can be enhanced by a subsequent additions of CAtr, glutamate and serum albumin. CAtr added before GDP promotes a larger recoupling than when added after GDP and prevents the subsequent effect of GDP. ADP is effective as recoupler at lower concentrations that GDP, whereas CDP is without influence. Lauryl sulfate uncoupling of skeletal muscle mitochondria is GDP-resistant but is sensitive to ADP, CAtr, glutamate and serum albumin. Our data suggest that in skeletal muscle mitochondria a GDP-sensitive mechanism is involved in uncoupling induced by laurate. This mechanism is absent in liver mitochondria. Possible mechanisms of laurate and lauryl sulfate-induced uncoupling are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The activity of free saturated fatty acids (caprylic, capric, lauric, myristic, palmitic and stearic) as inducers and regulators of uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation with participation of ADP/ATP antiporter, aspartate/glutamate antiporter and cyclosporin A-sensitive structure was investigated in experiments on rat liver mitochondria. It is established that at equal uncoupling activity of fatty acids the regulatory effect is minimal for caprylic acid and raised with increasing the hydrophobicity of fatty acids reaching the maximum value for stearic acid. There exists the linear dependence of the regulatory effect value of fatty acids on fatty acids content in the hydrophobic region of the inner membrane. The model that describes the interaction of fatty acids with the hydrophobic region of the mitochondrial inner membrane preserving functional activity of organelles is developed. It is established that if molecules of various fatty acids being in the hydrophobic region of the membrane are equally effective as uncoupling regulators, their specific uncoupling activity is different. Caprylic acid, a short-chain fatty acid, possesses the highest uncoupling activity. As the acyl chain length increases, the specific uncoupling activity of fatty acids reduces exponentially. Under these conditions components of the uncoupling activity sensitive to glutamate and carboxyatractylate and glutamate and insensitive to these reagents (but sensitive to cyclosporin A) change approximately equally.  相似文献   

13.
Data are presented on molecular mechanisms of uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation by fatty acids (laurate) in liver mitochondria of one of the poikilothermal animals, the frog Rana temporaria. It has been shown that the uncoupling action of laurate in frog liver mitochondria, like in those of mammals, occurs with participation of protein carriers of anions of the inner mitochondrial membrane, ADP/ATP- and aspartate/glutamate antiporters. At the same time, in frog liver mitochondria the uncoupling activity of laurate is lower than in liver mitochondria of mammals (white mice). Seasonal differences in the laurate uncoupling activity in frog liver mitochondria are revealed: it is much lower in April, than in January, the season of metabolic depression. This difference is due to that in January the degree of participation of the aspartate/glutamate antiporter in the uncoupling is considerably decreased.  相似文献   

14.
It has been found that the protonophoric specific uncoupling activity of palmitic acid in rat liver mitochondria does not change as its concentration increases from 5 to 40 μM. Under these conditions, the component of the specific uncoupling activity that describes the participation in uncoupling of the ADP/ATP antiporter (sensitive to carboxyatractylate) increases, and the component of specific uncoupling activity that characterizes the participation in the uncoupling of the aspartate/glutamate antiporter (sensitive to glutamate) decreases by the same value. A kinetic model of the fatty acid-induced uncoupling activity with the participation of ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters has been developed. According to the model, these carriers can exist in two forms: active, i.e., participating in the uncoupling, and inactive. The interaction of a fatty acid with the regulator site of the ADP/ATP antiporter translates it from the inactive to the active form, while the interaction of a fatty acid with the regulator site of the aspartate/glutamate antiporter, on the contrary, translates it from the active form to inactive. The velocity of transport of a fatty acid anion by the antiporter from the internal monolayer of the inner membrane to the external monolayer is proportional to the product of the concentration of the fatty acid and the active form of this carrier. A good conformity of the model to experimentally obtained data is shown provided that (a) ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters, being completely in active state, transfer fatty acid anions with the same velocity; (b) the equilibrium dissociation constants of a complex of the carrier with the fatty acid in these antiporters are equal.  相似文献   

15.
It has been found that the protonophoric specific uncoupling activity of palmitic acid in rat liver mitochondria does not change as its concentration increases from 5 to 40 microM. Under these conditions, the component of the specific uncoupling activity, which describes the participation in uncoupling of the ADP/ATP antiporter (sensitive to carboxyatractylate), increases, and the component of specific uncoupling activity, which characterizes the participation in the uncoupling of the aspartate/glutamate antiporter (sensitive to glutamate), decreases by the same value. A kinetic model of the fatty acid-induced uncoupling activity with the participation of ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters has been developed. According to the model, these carriers can exist in two forms: an active, i.e., participating in the uncoupling, and an inactive. The interaction of a fatty acid with the regulator site of the ADP/ATP antiporter translates it from the inactive to the active form, while the interaction of a fatty acid with the regulator site of the aspartate/glutamate antiporter, on the contrary, translates it from the active form to inactive. The velocity of transport of a fatty acid anion by the antiporter from the internal monolayer of the internal membrane to the external monolayer is proportional to the product of the concentration of the fatty acid and the active form of this carrier. A good conformity of the model to experimentally obtained data is shown provided that (a) ADP/ATP and aspartate/glutamate antiporters, being completely in an active state, transfer fatty acid anions with the same velocity; (b) the equilibrium dissociation constants of a complex of the carrier with the fatty acid in these antiporters are equal.  相似文献   

16.
Uncoupling proteins (UCPs) mediate fatty acid-induced proton cycling in mitochondria, which is stimulated by superoxide and inhibited by GDP. Fatty acid anions can also be transported by adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT), thus resulting in the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. In the present work, an attempt was made to distinguish between the protonophoric activity of UCP3 and that of ANT using inhibition analysis. This study was carried out using mitochondria from skeletal muscles of hibernating Yakut ground squirrel, which have a significant level of UCP3 mRNA. We found that millimolar concentrations of GDP, which is considered to be a specific inhibitor of UCPs, slightly recoupled the mitochondrial respiration and restored the membrane potential. Addition of the specific ANT inhibitor CAT (carboxyatractylate), in micromolar concentration, prior to GDP prevented its recoupling effect. Moreover, GDP and ADP exhibited a competitive kinetic behavior with respect to ANT. In brown adipose tissue, CAT did not prevent the UCP1-iduced increase in chloride permeability and the inhibitory effect of GDP, thus confirming the inability of CAT to affect UCP1. These results allow us to conclude that the recoupling effect of purine nucleotides on skeletal muscle mitochondria of hibernating ground squirrels can be explained by interaction of the nucleotides with ANT, whereas UCP3 is not involved in the process.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of dicarboxylic fatty acids with varying positions of the carboxyl groups on respiration and membrane potential of liver mitochondria were studied. Tetradecylmalonic acid (a fatty acid with two carboxyl groups in the alpha-position) efficiently uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation similarly to palmitic acid with the same number of carbon atoms. Similarly to the uncoupling by palmitic acid, the coupling effects of carboxyatractylate and glutamate changed reciprocally with changes in pH of the incubation medium: on increasing the pH from 7.0 to 7.8, the coupling effect of carboxyatractylate increased and that of glutamate decreased. A dicarboxylic fatty acid with the second carboxyl at the end of the alkyl chain in the omega-position (alpha, omega-tetradecyldicarboxylic acid) stimulated respiration of the mitochondria at a significantly higher concentration than myristic acid with the same number of carbon atoms, but unlike the latter nearly failed to decrease the transmembrane potential DeltaPsi. Neither carboxyatractylate nor glutamate inhibited the respiration stimulated by this dicarboxylic fatty acid.  相似文献   

18.
The respiration rate of liver mitochondria in the course of succinate oxidation depends on temperature in the presence of palmitate more strongly than in its absence (in state 4). In the Arrhenius plot, the temperature dependence of the palmitate-induced stimulation of respiration has a bend at 22°C which is characterized by transition of the activation energy from 120 to 60 kJ/mol. However, a similar dependence of respiration in state 4 is linear over the whole temperature range and corresponds to the activation energy of 17 kJ/mol. Phosphate partially inhibits the uncoupling effect of palmitate. This effect of phosphate is increased on decrease in temperature. In the presence of phosphate the temperature dependence in the Arrhenius plot also has a bend at 22°C, and the activation energy increases from 128 to 208 kJ/mol in the range from 13 to 22°C and from 56 to 67 kJ/mol in the range from 22 to 37°C. Mersalyl (10 nmol/mg protein), an inhibitor of the phosphate carrier, similarly to phosphate, suppresses the uncoupling effect of laurate, and the effects of mersalyl and phosphate are not additive. The recoupling effects of phosphate and mersalyl seem to show involvement of the phosphate carrier in the uncoupling effect of fatty acids in liver mitochondria. Possible mechanisms of involvement of the phosphate carrier in the uncoupling effect of fatty acids are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The action of ATP/ADP-antiporter inhibitors upon the uncoupling effect of palmitate, detergents and 'classical' uncouplers has been studied. The uncoupling effect was estimated by stimulation of succinate oxidation and of H+ permeability of rat liver mitochondria in the presence of oligomycin. It is shown that carboxyatractylate (CAtr) and pyridoxal 5-phosphate (PLP) suppress the uncoupling induced by palmitate and the anionic detergents SDS and cholate, but do not affect that induced by the cationic detergents CTAB, by the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100, as well as by the 'classical' uncouplers FCCP and DNP. The results are discussed in terms of a concept assuming that the ATP/ADP-antiporter facilitates the electrophoretic export of hydrophobic anions from mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
It was found that α,ω-tetradecanedioic acid (TDA) at the concentration of 0–500 μM doubles the rate of nonphosphorylating respiration (free oxidation) of liver mitochondria in a dose-dependent manner. This effect of TDA is observed in the presence of the excess of EGTA, which eliminates the induction of the Ca2+-dependent nonspecific permeability of the mitochondrial inner membrane (pore opening). An unusually high concentration of cyclosporin A (10 mM) completely eliminates this effect when added to the mitochondria before or after TDA. The stimulatory effect of TDA is not accompanied by inhibition of oxidative ATP synthesis and decrease in the ADP/O ratio, in contrast to the effects of other activators of free oxidation, such as protonophore uncoupler carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone and palmitic acid. It was shown that neither oligomycin, an inhibitor of H+-ATP synthase, nor ADP, ATP and Pi affected the activity of TDA. This is seen as an evidence that the effect of TDA is not associated with the influence on H+-ATP synthase and it differs from the action of membranotropic uncouplers. In the presence of the lipophilic cation tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) cyclosporin A does not affect the TDA-stimulated respiration of mitochondria, but carboxyatractylate and glutamate added after TDA do inhibit the respiration. In addition, under these conditions TDA decreases the rate of oxidative ATP synthesis and reduces the ADP/O ratio. It is assumed that the mechanism of the TDA-induced activation of free oxidation in liver mitochondria in the absence of TPP+ is similar to that of the so-called decouplers and is associated with the switching of the respiratory chain complexes to the idle mode (inner uncoupling).  相似文献   

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