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. 1975 Jan 25;250(2):570-6.

Effects of ethidium bromide on the respiratory chain and oligomycin-sensitive adenosine triphosphatase in purified mitochondria from the cellular slime mold Dicyostelium discoideum

  • PMID: 234433
Free article

Effects of ethidium bromide on the respiratory chain and oligomycin-sensitive adenosine triphosphatase in purified mitochondria from the cellular slime mold Dicyostelium discoideum

R N Stuchell et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Mitochondria were isolated from the cellular slime mold. Dictyoostelium discoideum, and partially purified by sucrose density gradient fractionation. The most purified mitochondrial fraction from the gradient contained essentially no contaminating lysosomes and minimal amounts of contaminating peroxisomes as determined by the marker enzymes N-acetyl-glucosaminidase and catalase. A mitochondrial fraction with the same amount of lysosomal and peroxisomal contamination was also isolated from cells which had been treated with ethidium bromide for 5 days. The most purified mitochondrial fraction from control and ethidium bromide-treated cells had an identical buoyant density of 1.181 to 1.182 g per ml, suggesting that treatment with the drug does not result in any drastic structural changes in the mitochondrial membrane which would affect its density. In the purified mitochondria from ethidium bromide-treated cells, the content of cytochromes a-a3 was decreased over 80% and that of cytochrome oxidase and oligomycin sensitive ATPase were reduced approximately 50%. By contrast, the specific activities of NADH and succinate dehydrogenases were identical in the purified mitochondria from control and ethidium bromide-treated cells. Previously, we had reported that the specific activities of these two enzymes had nearly doubled in whole cells maintained in ethidium bromide for a time equivalent to six or seven generations after growth had stopped (Stuchell, R. N., Weinstein, B. I., and Beattie, D. S. (1973) Fed. Eur. Biochem. Coc Lett. 37, 23-26). These results suggest that continued formation of new mitochondrial membranes, with an identical complement of succinate and NADH dehydrogenases, must occur despite the cessation of cell growth which occurs as a result of the ethidium bromide induced loss of mitochondrial enzymes. Consequently, the amount of mitochondria, or mitochondrial protein per cell, calculated from the activity of NADH and succinate dehydrogenases has increased nearly 50%. Possible models to explain the control of mitochondrial biogenesis are discussed to explain these results.

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