Amine fluorescamine compounds inhibit oxidative phosphorylation in rat liver mitochondria |
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Authors: | F Ramirez S I Tu P R Chatterji B McKeever J F Marecek |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Chemistry, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794, USA;2. Agricultural Research Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Eastern Regional Research Center, 600 East Mermaid Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19118 USA |
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Abstract: | The reaction of fluorescamine with ammonia, benzylamine, o,p-dimethylbenzylamine, 2-phenylethylamine, p-aminobenzoic acid, and the mycosamine-containing macrolide antibiotic, amphotericin B, yield compounds which induce significant effects on mitochondrial activities. From their effects on energy-yielding processes which lead to transmembranous proton movements, the compounds may be divided into three classes. While all modifiers significantly inhibit proton movement induced by both ATP hydrolysis and electron transfer in mitochondria, their influence on the primary energy yielding steps are quite different. Class I modifiers, e.g., the compound made from amphotericin B, inhibit electron transfer but have no effect on the Pi release associated with ATP hydrolysis. Class II modifiers, e.g., the compound made from benzylamine, inhibit respiration but stimulate Pi release. Class III modifiers, e.g., the compound made from p-aminobenzoic acid, on the other hand, only slightly increase Pi release but have no effect on redox reactions. These and other effects of the modifiers are taken to mean that the proton movements and their associated energy-yielding processes are only linked indirectly. The effects of the modifiers on State 3 mitochondrial activities were also investigated. Although all the modifiers decrease the rates of both State 3 respiration and its coupled ATP synthesis, the efficiency of energy conversion measured by the P/O ratio remains unaltered. |
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Keywords: | To whom correspondence should be addressed. |
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