Abstract: | Isolated rat liver mitochondria accumulate iron from fully saturated transferrin at neutral pH. With 5 microM iron as diferric transferrin, accumulation at 30 degrees C amounts to approx. 40 pmol/mg protein per h. With access to a suitable porphyrin substrate, 70-80% of the amount of iron accumulated is recovered in heme. Mobilization of iron and synthesis of heme both depend on a functioning respiratory chain. Vacant iron-binding sites on mono- and apotransferrin compete with the mitochondria for iron mobilized from transferrin. Pyrophosphate at concentrations in the range 10-50 microM enhances mobilization of iron, counterbalances the inhibitory effect of mono- and apotransferrin and enhances metallochelatase activity. The results emphasize the putative suitability of pyrophosphate as an intracellular iron-transport ligand in situ. |