Abstract

The mercurial mersalyl has little effect either on rapid Mg++ binding by isolated rat liver mitochondria or on the total Mg++ content of these organelles measured after 0.75 min of incubation at 20 degrees C. The data do not support the previous suggestion that the increased permeability to K+ of mitochondria treated with mersalyl results from release of endogenous Mg++. An increased pH-dependence of unidirectional Mg++ flux into respiring rat liver mitochondria is suggested to arise indirectly from inhibition by mersalyl of pH shifts associated with exchanges of endogenous phosphate. In addition, mersalyl appears to have a stimulatory effect on Mg++ influx. Mersalyl also increases the average rate of unidirectional efflux of endogenous Mg++. The stimulatory effects of mersalyl on Mg++ flux are similar to, although quantitatively less than, the previously reported effects of mersalyl on mitochondrial K+ flux.

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