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1.
Distribution of total creatine (free creatine + phosphocreatine) between two subcellular macrocompartments – mitochondrial matrix space and cytoplasm – in heart and skeletal muscle cells was reinvestigated by using a permeabilized cell technique. Isolated cardiomyocytes were treated with saponin (50 g/ml for 30 min or 600 g/ml for 1 min) to open the outer cellular membrane and release the metabolites from cytoplasm (cytoplasmic fraction, CF). All mitochondrial population in permeabilized cells remained intact: the outer membrane was impermeable for exogenous cytochrome c, the acceptor control index of respiration exceeded 10, the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction was fully coupled to the adenine nucleotide translocator. Metabolites were released from mitochondrial fraction (MF) by 2–5% Triton X100. Total cellular pool of free creatine + phosphocreatine (69.6 ± 2.1 nmoles per mg of protein) was found exclusively in CF and was practically absent in MF. When fibers were prepared from perfused rat hearts, cellular distribution of creatine was not dependent on functional state of the heart and only slightly modified by ischemia. It is concluded that there is no stable pool of creatine or phosphocreatine in the mitochondrial matrix in the intact muscle cells, and the total creatine pool is localized in only one macrocompartment – cytoplasm.  相似文献   

2.
Fluxes catalyzed by soluble creatine kinase (MM) in equilibrium in vitro and by the creatine kinase system in perfused rat hearts were studied by 31P-NMR saturation transfer method. It was found that in vitro both forward and reverse fluxes through creatine kinase at equilibrium were almost equal and very stable to changes in phosphocreatine/creatine ratio (from 0.2 to 3.0) as well as to changes in pH (from 7.4 to 6.5 or 8.1), free Mg2+ concentration and 2-fold decrease of total adenine nucleotides and creatine pools (from 8.0 to 4.0 mM and from 30 to 14 mM, respectively). In the rat hearts perfused by the Langendorff method the creatine kinase-catalyzed flux from phosphocreatine to ATP was increased by 50% when oxygen consumption grew from 8 to 55 mumol/min per g of dry wt. due to transition from rest to high workload. These changes could not be exclusively explained on the basis of the equilibrium model by activation of heart creatine kinase due to some decrease in [phosphocreatine]/[creatine] ratio (from 1.8 to 0.8) observed during transition from rest to high workload. Analysis of our data showed that an increase in the flux via creatine kinase is correlated with an increase in the rate of ATP synthesis with a linearity coefficient higher than 1.0. These data are more consistent with the concept of energy channeling by phosphocreatine shuttle than with that of the creatine kinase equilibrium in the heart.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanisms of the phosphocreatine/creatine ratio decrease in female Wistar rats with hyperthyroidism were studied. L-Thyroxin was injected to animals in doses of 50 and 100 micrograms/100 g of body weight, daily for 1 and 2 weeks. Oxidative phosphorylation and the rate of phosphocreatine synthesis were studied in isolated rat heart mitochondria. It was found that hyperthyroidism caused an increase in the ADP-activated mitochondrial respiration, whereas the coupling between electron transport and ADP phosphorylated remained at a constant level. Besides oxidative phosphorylation, activation, hyperthyroidism increased the rate of phosphocreatine synthesis at high values of the phosphocreatine/oxygen ratio. Thus, hyperthyroidism is unaccompanied by and significant changes in the coupling of mitochondrial creatine kinase with oxidative phosphorylation.  相似文献   

4.
The creatine/phosphocreatine circuit provides an efficient energy buffering and transport system in a variety of cells with high and fluctuating energy requirements. It connects sites of energy production (mitochondria, glycolysis) with sites of energy consumption (various cellular ATPases). The cellular creatine/phosphocreatine pool is linked to the ATP/ADP pool by the action of different isoforms of creatine kinase located at distinct subcellular compartments. Octameric mitochondrial creatine kinase (MtCK), together with porin and adenine nucleotide translocase, forms a microcompartment at contact sites between inner and outer mitochondrial membranes and facilitates the production and export into the cytosol of phosphocreatine. MtCK is probably in direct protein-protein contact with outer membrane porin, whereas interaction with inner membrane adenine nucleotide translocase is rather mediated by acidic phopholipids (like cardiolipin) present in significant amounts in the inner membrane. Octamer-dimer transitions of MtCK as well as different creatine kinase substrates have a profound influence on controlling mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT). Inactivation by reactive oxygen species of MtCK and destabilization of its octameric structure are factors that contribute to impairment of energy homeostasis and facilitated opening of the MPT pore, which eventually lead to tissue damage during periods of ischemia/reperfusion.  相似文献   

5.
The formation of creatine phosphate by isolated rabbit heart mitochondria in the presence of creatine, α-ketoglutarate, ATP, and inorganic phosphate was studied. Creatine phosphate formation was inhibited by oligomycin. This was most probably due to increased concentration of ADP favoring the reverse reaction (formation of creatine and ATP from phosphocreatine and ADP). The inhibitory effect of oligomycin disappeared in the presence of phosphoenolpyruvate and pyruvate kinase. The results do not indicate any direct coupling between mitochondrial creatine phosphokinase and ATP-ADP translocase as has been suggested for rat heart mitochondria.  相似文献   

6.
Defining how extramitochondrial high-energy phosphate acceptors influence the rates of heart oxidative phosphorylation is essential for understanding the control of myocardial respiration. When the production of phosphocreatine is coupled to electron transport via mitochondrial creatine kinase, the net reaction can be expressed by the balanced equation: creatine + Pi----phosphocreatine + H2O. This suggests that rates of oxygen consumption could be regulated by changes in [creatine], [Pi], or [phosphocreatine], alone or in combination. The effects of altering these metabolites upon mitochondrial rates of respiration were examined in vitro. Rat heart mitochondria were incubated in succinate-containing oxygraph medium (pH 7.2, 37 degrees C) supplemented with five combinations of creatine (1.0-20 mM), phosphocreatine (0-25 mM), and Pi (0.25-5.0 mM). In all cases, the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction was initiated by additions of 0.5 mM ATP. To emphasize the duality of control, the results are presented as three-dimensional stereoscopic projections. Under physiological conditions, with 5.0 mM creatine, increases in Pi or decreases in phosphocreatine had little influence upon mitochondrial respiration. When phosphocreatine was held constant (15 mM), changes in [creatine] modestly stimulated respiratory rates, whereas Pi again showed little effect. With 1.0 mM Pi, respiration clearly became dependent upon changes in [creatine] and [phosphocreatine]. Initially, respiratory rates increased as a function of [creatine]. However, at [phosphocreatine] values below 10 mM, product "deinhibition" was observed, and respiratory rates rapidly increased to 80% State 3. With 2.0 mM Pi or higher, respiration could be regulated from State 4 to 100% State 3. Overall, the data show how increasing [creatine] and decreasing [phosphocreatine] influence the rates of oxidative phosphorylation when mediated by mitochondrial creatine kinase. Thus, these changes may become secondary cytoplasmic signals regulating heart oxygen consumption.  相似文献   

7.
Fluxes catalyzed by soluble creatine kinase (MM) in equilibrium in vitro and by the creatine kinase system in perfused rat hearts were studied by 31P-NMR saturation transfer method. It was found that in vitro both forward and reverse fluxes through creatine kinase at equilibrium were almost equal and very stable to changes in ratio (from 0.2 to 3.0) as well as to changes in pH (from 7.4 to 6.5 or 8.1), free Mg2+ concentration and 2-fold decrease of total adenine nucleotides and creatine pools (from 8.0 to 4.0 mM and from 30 to 14 mM, respectively). In the rat hearts perfused by the Langendorff method the creatine kinase-catalyzed flux from phosphocreatine to ATP was increased by 50% when oxygen consumption grew from 8 to 55 μmol/min per g of dry wt. due to transition from rest to high workload. These changes could not be exclusively explained on the basis of the equilibrium model by activation of heart creatine kinase due to some decrease in ratio (from 1.8 to 0.8) observed during transition from rest to high workload. Analysis of our data showed that an increase in the flux via creatine kinase is correlated with an increase in the rate of ATP synthesis with a linearity coefficient higher than 1.0. These data are more consistent with the concept of energy channeling by phosphocreatine shuttle than with that of the creatine kinase equilibrium in the heart.  相似文献   

8.
Phosphocreatine production catalyzed by a cytosolic fraction from cardiac muscle containing all glycolytic enzymes and creatine kinase in a soluble form has been studied in the presence of creatine, adenine nucleotides and different glycolytic intermediates as substrates. Glycolytic depletion of glucose, fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate) and phosphoenolpyruvate to lactate was coupled to efficient phosphocreatine production. The molar ratio of phosphocreatine to lactate produced was close to 2.0 when fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate) was used as substrate and 1.0 with phosphoenolpyruvate. In these processes the creatine kinase reaction was not the rate-limiting step: the mass action ratio of the creatine kinase reaction was very close to its equilibrium value and the maximal rate of the forward creatine kinase reaction exceeded that of glycolytic flux by about 6-fold when fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate) was used as a substrate. Therefore, the creatine kinase raction was continuously in the state of quasiequilibrium and the efficient synthesis of phosphocreatine observed is a result of constant removal of ADP by the glycolytic system at an almost unchanged level of ATP ([ATP] ? [ADP]), this leading to a continuous shift of the creatine kinase equilibrium position.When phosphocreatine was added initially at concentrations of 5–15 mM the rate of the coupled creatine kinase and glycolytic reactions was very significantly inhibited due to a sharp decrease in the steady-state concentration of ADP. Therefore, under conditions of effective phosphocreatine production in heart mitochondria, which maintain a high phosphocreatine: creatine ratio in the myoplasm in vivo, the glycolytic flux may be suppressed due to limited availability of ADP restricted by the creatine kinase system. The possible physiological role of the control of the glycolytic flux by the creatine kinase system is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
A mathematical model of the compartmentalized energy transfer in cardiac cells is described and used for interpretation of novel experimental data obtained by using phosphorus NMR for determination of the energy fluxes in the isolated hearts of transgenic mice with knocked out creatine kinase isoenzymes. These experiments were designed to study the meaning and importance of compartmentation of creatine kinase isoenzymes in the cells in vivo. The model was constructed to describe quantitatively the processes of energy production, transfer, utilization, and feedback between these processes. It describes the production of ATP in mitochondrial matrix space by ATP synthase, use of this ATP for phosphocreatine production in the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction coupled to the adenine nucleotide translocation, diffusional exchange of metabolites in the cytoplasmic space, and use of phosphocreatine for resynthesis of ATP in the myoplasmic creatine kinase reaction. It accounts also for the recently discovered phenomenon of restricted diffusion of adenine nucleotides through mitochondrial outer membrane porin pores (VDAC). Practically all parameters of the model were determined experimentally. The analysis of energy fluxes between different cellular compartments shows that in all cellular compartments of working heart cells the creatine kinase reaction is far from equilibrium in the systolic phase of the contraction cycle and approaches equilibrium only in cytoplasm and only in the end-diastolic phase of the contraction cycle.Experimental determination of the relationship between energy fluxes by a 31P-NMR saturation transfer method and workload in isolated and perfused heart of transgenic mice deficient in MM isoenzyme of the creatine kinase, MM -/- showed that in the hearts from wild mice, containing all creatine kinase isoenzymes, the energy fluxes determined increased 3-4 times with elevation of the workload. By contrast, in the hearts in which only the mitochondrial creatine kinase was active, the energy fluxes became practically independent of the workload in spite of the preservation of 26% of normal creatine kinase activity. These results cannot be explained on the basis of the conventional near-equilibrium theory of creatine kinase in the cells, which excludes any difference between creatine kinase isoenzymes. However, these apparently paradoxical experimental results are quantitatively described by a mathematical model of the compartmentalized energy transfer based on the steady state kinetics of coupled creatine kinase reactions, compartmentation of creatine kinase isoenzymes in the cells, and the kinetics of ATP production and utilization reactions. The use of this model shows that: (1) in the wild type heart cells a major part of energy is transported out of mitochondria via phosphocreatine, which is used for complete regeneration of ATP locally in the myofibrils - this is the quantitative estimate for PCr pathway; (2) however, in the absence of MM-creatine kinase in the myofibrils in transgenic mice the contraction results in a very rapid rise of ADP in cytoplasmic space, that reverses the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction in the direction of ATP production. In this way, because of increasing concentrations of cytoplasmic ADP, mitochondrial creatine kinase is switched off functionally due to the absence of its counterpart in PCr pathway, MM-creatine kinase. This may explain why the creatine kinase flux becomes practically independent from the workload in the hearts of transgenic mouse without MM-CK. Thus, the analysis of the results of studies of hearts of creatine kinase-deficient transgenic mice, based on the use of a mathematical model of compartmentalized energy transfer, show that in the PCr pathway of intracellular energy transport two isoenzymes of creatine kinase always function in a coordinated manner out of equilibrium, in the steady state, and disturbances in functioning of one of them inevitably result in the disturbances of the other component of the PCr pathway. In the latter case, energy is transferred from mitochondria to myofibrils by alternative metabolic pathways, probably involving adenylate kinase or other systems.  相似文献   

10.
The paper reviews the current evidence on the role of thyroid hormones in regulating the creatine kinase energy transfer system at multiple structures in cardiac cells. 1) Thyroid hormones modulate the overall synthesis of phosphocreatine (PCr) by increasing the rate of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. 2) Thyroid hormones regulate the total activity of creatine kinase and its isoenzyme distribution. In comparison with normal thyroid state (euthyroidism), hypothyroidism is characterized by decreased total creatine kinase activity owing to diminished fraction of creatine kinase. On the other hand, hyperthyroidism, while causing no change in total creatine kinase activity, leads to increased fractions of neonatal isoforms of creatine kinase, and, in case of prolonged hyperthyroidism, to decreased fraction of mitochondrial creatine kinase. The latter change is associated with partial uncoupling between mitochondrial creatine kinase and adenine nucleotide translocase reflected by decreased PCr/O ratio. 3) Hyperthyroidism leads to increased passive sarcolemmal permeability due to which the leakage of creatine along its concentration gradient occurs. As a result of (i) increased sarcolemmal permeability for creatine, (ii) uncoupling of mitochondrial PCr synthesis, and (iii) increased energy utilization rate the steady state intracellular PCr content decreases under hyperthyroidism which, in turn, increases the myocardial susceptibility to hypoxic damage. Thyroid state also modulates the protective effects of exogenous PCr on energetically depleted myocardium.  相似文献   

11.
We describe a model of mitochondrial regulation in vivo which takes account of spatial diffusion of high-energy (ATP and phosphocreatine) and low-energy metabolites (ADP and creatine), their interconversion by creatine kinase (which is not assumed to be at equilibrium), and possible functional 'coupling' between the components of creatine kinase associated with the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocase and the myofibrillar ATPase. At high creatine kinase activity, the degree of functional coupling at either the mitochondrial or ATPase end has little effect on relationships between oxidative ATP synthesis rate and spatially-averaged metabolite concentrations. However, lowering the creatine kinase activity raises the mean steady state ADP and creatine concentrations, to a degree which depends on the degree of coupling. At high creatine kinase activity, the fraction of flow carried by ATP is small. Lowering the creatine kinase activity raises this fraction, especially when there is little functional coupling. All metabolites show small spatial gradients, more so at low cytosolic creatine kinase activity, and unless there is near-complete coupling, so does net creatine kinase flux. During workjump transitions, spatial-average responses exhibit near-exponential kinetics as expected, while concentration changes start at the ATPase end and propagate towards the mitochondrion, damped in time and space. (Mol Cell Biochem 174: 29–32, 1997)  相似文献   

12.
This review describes the recent experimental data on the importance of the VDAC-cytoskeleton interactions in determining the mechanisms of energy and metabolite transfer between mitochondria and cytoplasm in cardiac cells. In the intermembrane space mitochondrial creatine kinase connects VDAC with adenine nucleotide translocase and ATP synthase complex, on the cytoplasmic side VDAC is linked to cytoskeletal proteins. Applying immunofluorescent imaging and Western blot analysis we have shown that β2-tubulin coexpressed with mitochondria is highly important for cardiac muscle cells mitochondrial metabolism. Since it has been shown by Rostovtseva et al. that αβ-heterodimer of tubulin binds to VDAC and decreases its permeability, we suppose that the β-tubulin subunit is bound on the cytoplasmic side and α-tubulin C-terminal tail is inserted into VDAC. Other cytoskeletal proteins, such as plectin and desmin may be involved in this process. The result of VDAC-cytoskeletal interactions is selective restriction of the channel permeability for adenine nucleotides but not for creatine or phosphocreatine that favors energy transfer via the phosphocreatine pathway. In some types of cancer cells these interactions are altered favoring the hexokinase binding and thus explaining the Warburg effect of increased glycolytic lactate production in these cells. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: VDAC structure, function, and regulation of mitochondrial metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of mitochondrial creatine kinase on subcellular high energy systems has been investigated using isolated rat heart mitochondria, mitoplasts and intact heart and skeletal muscle tissue.In isolated mitochondria, the creatine kinase is functionally coupled to oxidative phosphorylation at active respiratory chain, so that it catalyses the formation of creatine phosphate against its thermodynamic equilibrium. Therefore the mass action ratio is shifted from the equilibrium ratio to lower values. At inhibited respiration, it is close to the equilibrium value, irrespective of the mechanism of the inhibition. The same results were obtained for mitoplasts under conditions where the mitochondrial creatine kinase is still associated with the inner membrane.In intact tissue increasing amounts of creatine phosphate are found in the mitochondrial compartment when respiration and/or muscle work are increased. It is suggested that at high rates of oxidative phosphorylation creatine phosphate is accumulated in the intermembrane space due to the high activity of mitochondrial creatine kinase and the restricted permeability of reactants into the extramitochondrial space. A certain amount of this creatine phosphate leaks into the mitochondrial matrix.This leak is confirmed in isolated rat heart mitochondria where creatine phosphate is taken up when it is generated by the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction. At inhibited creatine kinase, external creatine phosphate is not taken up. Likewise, mitoplasts only take up creatine phosphate when creatine kinase is still associated with the inner membrane. Both findings indicate that uptake is dependent on the functional active creatine kinase coupled to oxidative phosphorylation.Creatine phosphate uptake into mitochondria is inhibited with carboxyatractyloside. This suggests a possible role of the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocase in creatine phosphate uptake.Taken together, our findings are in agreement with the proposal that creatine kinase operates in the intermembrane space as a functional unit with the adenine nucleotide translocase in the inner membrane for optimal transfer of energy from the electron transport chain to extramitochondrial ATP-consuming reactions.  相似文献   

14.
1. The development of the total rat brain creatine kinase was studied in brain homogenates. Until approx. 14-15 days after birth, the activity remains less than one-third that of the adult activity (207+/-6 units/g wet wt. s.d.; n=3). Over the next 10 days the activity increases markedly to the adult value and thereafter remains essentially constant. 2. In the adult brain, approx. 5% (11.9+/-2.2 units/g wet wt. s.d.; n=5) of the total creatine kinase is associated with the mitochondrial fraction. This creatine kinase could not be solubilized by sodium acetate solutions of up to 0.8m concentration, whereas 66% of the hexokinase associated with brain mitochondria was released under these conditions. 3. Rat brain mitochondria incubated in the presence of various concentrations of creatine (1, 5 and 10mm) and ADP (100mum) synthesized phosphocreatine at rates of approx. 4.5, 11 and 17.5nmol/min per mg of mitochondrial protein. Atractyloside (50mum) or oligomycin (1.5mug/mg of mitochondrial protein) completely inhibited the synthesis of phosphocreatine. 4. The apparent K(m) and V(max.) values of the mitochondrially bound rat brain creatine kinase were determined in both directions. The V(max.) in the direction of phosphocreatine synthesis is 237nmol/min per mg of mitochondrial protein, with an apparent K(m) for creatine of 1.67mm and for MgATP(2-) of 0.1mm, and in the reverse direction V(max.) is 489nmol/min per mg of mitochondrial protein, with an apparent K(m) for phosphocreatine of 0.4mm and for MgADP(-) of 27mum. 5. The results are discussed with reference to the role that the mitochondrially bound creatine kinase may play in the development of brain energy metabolism.  相似文献   

15.
Fluxes catalyzed by soluble creatine kinase (MM) in equilibrium in vitro and by the creatine kinase system in perfused rat hearts were studied by 31P-NMR saturation transfer method. It was found that in vitro both forward and reverse fluxes through creatine kinase at equilibrium were almost equal and very stable to changes in phosphocreatinecreatine ratio (from 0.2 to 3.0) as well as to changes in pH (from 7.4 to 6.5 or 8.1), free Mg2+ concentration and 2-fold decrease of total adenine nucleotides and creatine pools (from 8.0 to 4.0 mM and from 30 to 14 mM, respectively). In the rat hearts perfused by the Langendorff method the creatine kinase-catalyzed flux from phosphocreatine to ATP was increased by 50% when oxygen consumption grew from 8 to 55 μmol/min per g of dry wt. due to transition from rest to high workload. These changes could not be exclusively explained on the basis of the equilibrium model by activation of heart creatine kinase due to some decrease in [phosphocreatine][creatine] ratio (from 1.8 to 0.8) observed during transition from rest to high workload. Analysis of our data showed that an increase in the flux via creatine kinase is correlated with an increase in the rate of ATP synthesis with a linearity coefficient higher than 1.0. These data are more consistent with the concept of energy channeling by phosphocreatine shuttle than with that of the creatine kinase equilibrium in the heart.  相似文献   

16.
The concept that creatine phosphokinase is bound to the outer surface of the heart mitochondrial inner membrane originated from observations that the enzyme is retained by water-swollen heart mitochondria and by digitonintreated heart mitochondria suspended in isotonic sucrose. The present study establishes that digitonin-treated mitochondria release creatine phosphokinase in isotonic KCl, and other investigators have reported an identical response for the water-swollen organelles. These observations suggest that mitochondrial creatine phosphokinase is not bound to the outer surface of the inner membrane at a site adjacent to the adenine nucleotide translocase under physiologic conditions.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of mitochondrial creatine kinase and ATP-ADP translocase with 2.3-dialdehyde derivatives of ADP and ATP (oADP and oATP) has been studied. It was shown that these compounds are irreversible and specific inhibitors of creatine kinase (KioADP = 0.6mM, KioATP = 1.12 mM) and ATP-ADP translocase (KioADP = 0.065mM, KioATP = 0.14 mM). The substrates protect both enzymes from inactivation by these compounds. The maximal pseudo-first order rate constants for the 2,3-dialdehyde nucleotide derivative interaction with creatine kinase are 0.2 min-1 for oADP (pH 6.5) and 0.11 min-1 for oATP (pH 7.0). A decrease in the creatine kinase activity correlates with the incorporation of the reagent into the protein. The completely inactivated, isolated and purified enzyme contains 1 mol of oADP per mole of active sites. A procedure for simultaneous determination of the creatine kinase and translocase content in mitochondria and mitoplasts has been developed, which is based on the application of [3H]oADP in combination with specific treatment of mitochondria (or mitoplasts) with carboxyatractyloside 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene and a mixture of creatine kinase substrates (MgADP + phosphocreatine). It has been found that for heart mitochondria from different animals the content of creatine kinase and translocase is 2.1-2.6 and 2.4-2.9 mol per mol of cytochrome c oxidase, respectively. Thus, the stoiochiometric ratio of creatine kinase and ATP-ADP translocase is close to 1.0 for all mitochondrial preparations under study (i.e. rat, dog, rabbit and chicken).  相似文献   

18.
To evaluate the energy-shuttle hypothesis of the phosphocreatine/creatine kinase system, diffusion rates for ATP, phosphocreatine and flux through the creatine kinase reaction were determined by 31P-NMR in resting bullfrog biceps muscle. The diffusion coefficient of phosphocreatine measured by 31P-pulsed gradient NMR was 1.4-times larger than ATP in the muscle, indicating the advantage of phosphocreatine molecules for the intracellular energy transport. The flux of the creatine kinase reaction measured by 31P-saturation transfer NMR was 3.6 mmol/kg wet wt. per s in the resting muscle. The flux is equal to the turnover rate of ATP, ADP, phosphocreatine and creatine molecules, therefore, the life-times of these substrates and the average distance traversed after the life-times by the diffusing molecules were calculated using the diffusion coefficients obtained by 31P-NMR. The mean square length of one-dimensional diffusion was 22 microns in ATP molecules and the minimum diffusion length was 1.8 microns in ADP molecules. The latter was calculated using free ADP concentration, 30 mumol/kg wet wt., obtained from the equilibrium constant of the creatine kinase reaction and the diffusion coefficient assumed to be the same of ATP in muscle. Similar diffusion lengths of ADP were calculated using the reported values for the flux of the creatine kinase reaction in heart and smooth-muscle. The diffusion lengths of all substrates involved in the creatine kinase reaction were larger than the radii of myofibrils. Therefore, in the muscles with an alternating arrangement of mitochondria and myofibrils, such as heart and certain skeletal muscles, ATP and ADP molecules can move freely between myofibrils and mitochondria without the aid of the creatine kinase reaction; thus, we conclude that the energy-shuttle hypothesis is not obligatory for energy transport between the mitochondria and the myofibrils.  相似文献   

19.
To define more clearly the interactions between mitochondrial creatine kinase and the adenine nucleotide translocase, the outer membrane of rat heart mitochondria was removed by digitonin, producing an inner membrane-matrix (mitoplast) preparation. This mitoplast fracton was well-coupled and contained a high specific activity of mitochondrial creatine kinase. Outer membrane permeabilization was documented by the loss of adenylate kinase, a soluble intermembrane enzyme, and by direct antibody inhibition of mitochondrial creatine kinase activity. With this preparation, we documented four important aspects of functional coupling. Kinetic studies showed that oxidative phosphorylation decreased the value of the ternary enzyme-substrate complex dissociation constant for MgATP from 140 to 16 microM. Two approaches were used to document the adenine nucleotide translocase specificity for ADP generated by mitochondrial creatine kinase. Exogenous pyruvate kinase (20 IU/ml) could not readily phosphorylate ADP produced by creatine kinase, since added pyruvate kinase did not markedly inhibit creatine + ATP-stimulated respiration. Additionally, when ADP was produced by mitochondrial creatine kinase, the inhibition of the translocase required 2 nmol of atractyloside/mg of mitoplast protein, while only 1 nmol/mg was necessary when exogenous ADP was added. Finally, the mass action ratio of the mitochondrial creatine kinase reaction exceeded the apparent equilibrium constant when ATP was supplied to the creatine kinase reaction by oxidative phosphorylation. Overall, these results are consistent with much data from intact rat heart mitochondria, and suggest that the outer membrane plays a minor role in the compartmentation of adenine nucleotides. Furthermore, since the removal of the outer membrane does not alter the unique coupling between oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial creatine kinase, we suggest that this cooperation is the result of protein-protein proximity at the inner membrane surface.  相似文献   

20.
Dystrophic chicken breast muscle mitochondria contain significantly less mitochondrial creatine kinase than normal breast muscle mitochondria. Breast muscle mitochondria from normal 16- to 40-day-old chickens contain approximately 80 units of mitochondrial creatine kinase per unit of succinate:INT (p-iodonitrotetrazolium violet) reductase, a mitochondrial marker, while dystrophic chicken breast muscle mitochondria contain 36-44 units. Normal chicken heart muscle mitochondria contain about 10% of the mitochondrial creatine kinase per unit of succinate:INT reductase as normal breast muscle mitochondria. The levels in heart muscle mitochondria from dystrophic chickens are not affected significantly. Evidence is presented which shows that the reduced level of mitochondrial creatine kinase in dystrophic breast muscle mitochondria is responsible for an altered creatine linked respiration. First, both normal and dystrophic breast muscle mitochondria respire with the same state 3 and state 4 respiration. Second, the post-ADP state 4 rate of respiration of normal breast muscle mitochondria in the presence of 20 mM creatine continues at the state 3 rate. However, the state 4 rate of dystrophic breast muscle mitochondria and mitochondria from other muscle types with a low level of mitochondrial creatine kinase, such as heart muscle and 5-day-old chicken breast muscle, is slower than the state 3 rate. Third, dystrophic breast mitochondria synthesize ATP at the same rate as normal breast muscle mitochondria but rates of creatine phosphate synthesis in 20-50 mM Pi are reduced significantly. Finally, increasing concentrations of Pi displace mitochondrial creatine kinase from mitoplasts of normal and dystrophic breast muscle mitochondria with the same apparent KD, indicating that the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane and the mitochondrial creatine kinase from dystrophic muscle are not altered.  相似文献   

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