Abstract
Under defined conditions liver mitochondria from hypothyroid rats show an apparent lowering of the ADP/O ratio, which can be corrected by addition in vitro of 0.1 nM-tri-iodothyronine (T3). Nicotinamide prevents this restoration by hormone, lowers the ADP/O ratio of euthyroid-rat mitochondria to hypothyroid-rat values and induces T3-sensitivity in euthyroid-rat mitoplasts indistinguishable from that found with hypothyroid-rat preparations. Incorporation into the trichloroacetic-acid insoluble fraction of mitoplasts and hypothyroid-rat mitochondria of radiolabel from [adenine-14C]-NAD+ was stimulated by T3: this stimulation was abolished by nicotinamide. The findings strongly suggest that this incorporation occurs external to the matrix. Confirming the work of others, PAGE of radiolabelled mitoplasts shows alkali-labile modification of a major species of approx. 30 kDa: both nicotinamide and T3 abolish this modification. By contrast, T3 promotes incorporation of label into a single major 11 kDa species: this incorporated label is somewhat acid-labile, and the incorporation is abolished by nicotinamide. Comparative electrophoresis of purified sub-mitoplast fractions show that the 11 kDa species is in the inner membrane and absent from the matrix. The findings are consistent with a receptor-mediated ADP-ribosylation mechanism for the rapid action of T3 on mitochondria.