Abstract

Here we show that both Antimycin A, a respiratory chain inhibitor inducing apoptosis, and endotoxic shock, a syndrome accompanied by both necrosis and apoptosis, cause not only an increase but also the leakage of superoxide radicals (O 2 − ) from rat heart mitochondria (RHM), while O 2 − generated in intact RHM do not escape from mitochondria. This was shown by a set of O 2 − -sensitive spin probes with varying hydrophobicity. The levels of O 2 − detected in intact RHM gradually increase as the hydrophobicity of spin probes increases and were not sensitive to superoxide dismutase (SOD) added to the incubation medium. Both Antimycin A and endotoxic shock elevated O 2 − levels. Elevated O 2 − levels became sensitive to SOD but in a different manner. The determination of O 2 − with water-soluble PPH was fully sensitive to SOD, while the determination of O 2 − with the more hydrophobic CMH and CPH was only partially sensitive to SOD, suggesting the release of a portion of O 2 − into the surrounding medium.

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