Involvement of mitochondrial inner membrane anion carriers in the uncoupling effect of fatty acids.
Biochemistry (Mosc)
; 70(2): 159-63, 2005 Feb.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-15807654
This paper considers stages of the search (initiated by V. P. Skulachev) for a receptor protein for fatty acids that is involved in their uncoupling effect. Based on these studies, mechanism of the ADP/ATP antiporter involvement in the uncoupling induced by fatty acids was proposed. New data (suppression by carboxyatractylate of the SDS-induced uncoupling, pH-dependence of the ADP/ATP and the glutamate/aspartate antiporter contributions to the uncoupling, etc.) led to modification of this hypothesis. During discussion of the uncoupling effect of fatty acids caused by opening of the Ca(2+)-dependent pore, special attention is given to the effects of carboxyatractylate added in the presence of ADP. The functioning of the uncoupling protein UCP2 in kidney mitochondria is considered, as well as the diversity observed by us in effects of 200 microM GDP on decrease in Deltapsi under the influence of oleic acid added after H(2)O(2) (in the presence of succinate, oligomycin, malonate). A speculative explanation of the findings is as follows: 1) products of lipid and/or fatty acid peroxidation (PPO) modify the ADP/ATP antiporter in such a way that its involvement in the fatty acid-induced uncoupling is suppressed by GDP; 2) GDP increases the PPO concentration in the matrix by suppression of efflux of fatty acid hydroperoxide anions through the UCP and/or of efflux of PPO anions with involvement of the GDP-sensitive ADP/ATP antiporter; 3) PPO can potentiate the oleate-induced decrease in Deltapsi due to inhibition of succinate oxidation.
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Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Uncoupling Agents
/
Mitochondrial ADP, ATP Translocases
/
Fatty Acids
/
Intracellular Membranes
/
Mitochondria
Language:
En
Journal:
Biochemistry (Mosc)
Year:
2005
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Russia
Country of publication:
United States