Abstract: | This study examined the possibility that generation of heme within mitochondria may provide a local concentration sufficient to inhibit the activity of delta-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) synthase, the enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in hepatic heme biosynthesis. This was accomplished by simultaneously running ALA synthase and heme synthase activities in intact mitochondria isolated from rat liver. Radiochemical assays were used to measure the enzyme activities. ALA synthase activity did not decrease as the rate of heme formation was increased by varying the concentration of substrates for heme synthase. Even at a rate of heme generation estimated to be at least 75 times the rate occuring in vivo, ALA synthase activity was unchanged. We conclude that end product inhibition of ALA synthase activity by heme is not an important physiological mechanism for regulation of hepatic heme biosynthesis. |