Accumulation of D-arginine by rat liver mitochondria
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Biochemistry and Cell Biology
- Vol. 65 (12) , 1057-1063
- https://doi.org/10.1139/o87-138
Abstract
The permeability of the inner mitochondrial membrane from rat liver to D-arginine was studied. By using safranin as a probe of the membrane potential, depolarization of energized liver mitochondria occurred in a dose-dependent fashion starting at 3.3 mmol/L of D- or DL-arginine. When ethidium bromide fluorescence was employed, a decrease in the membrane potential due to D- or DL-arginine was observed. A parallel significant change in succinate-induced respiration in rat liver mitochondria was found in response to osmotic swelling in 125 mmol/L of D-arginine salts. L-Arginine, L-glutamine, L-asparagine, L-ornithine, D-ornithine, and L-lysine did not modify the membrane potential at the concentrations tested. D-Arginine was not transformed into citrulline, but 1.0 mmol/L of the D-amino acid inhibited, by 42%, the state 3 of mitochondrial respiration using succinate as substrate. When D-arginine was used in combination with nigericin, a 40% inhibition of mitochondrial respiration in state 3 was recorded with succinate and with glutamate–malate as substrates.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Influence of Isolation Media on the Preservation of Mitochondrial FunctionsHoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift Für Physiologische Chemie, 1983
- Arginine, mitochondrial arginase, and the control of carbamyl phosphate synthesisArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1981
- Optimization of conditions for the colorimetric determination of citrulline, using diacetyl monoximeAnalytical Biochemistry, 1980