Abstract

The aim of this work was a thermodynamic and kinetic study of the influence of varying external osmolarity on overall oxidative phosphorylations in isolated rat liver mitochondria. When external osmolarity is increased from 100 to 400 mosM by using a non-penetrant sugar: (i) matrix volume diminishes, (ii) state 3 respiratory rate decreases when state 4 slightly varies, (iii) states 3 and 4 protonmotive force and NAD(P)H level increase, whereas oxidative phosphorylation efficiency (ATP/0) decreases. Indeed, respiratory flux versus protonmotive force relationships depend on the osmolarity considered: the lower the external osmolarity, the higher the span of overall driving force necessary for the same respiratory rate. To further investigate the mechanism of the decrease in respiratory and ATP synthesis flux leading to a lowering in oxidative phosphorylation efficiency, we determined the adenine nucleotide carrier control coefficient on respiratory and ATP synthesis rates respectively. The main result is that the adenine nucleotide carrier control coefficient on respiratory rate decreases, and conversely that adenine nucleotide carrier control on ATP synthesis rate increases, from iso- to hyperosmolarity. Furthermore, whatever the osmolarity, when state 3 respiratory rate is titrated with carboxyatractyloside, the same relationship is observed between ATP/0 ratio and respiratory flux. From many previous studies, it has been shown that an increase in external osmolarity and a consequent decrease in matrix volume inhibits almost all mitochondrial proton pumps (coupling site 1 and 2 of respiratory chain, ATPase) in different ways. In this work, we show that in phosphorylating mitochondria, the adenine nucleotide carrier plays a key role: its inhibition as the external osmolarity increases lowers the state 3 respiration close to state 4 level and consequently leads to a decrease in oxidative phosphorylation efficiency.

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