Abstract

Protein synthesis was investigated in isolated mitochondria under conditions which either inhibited electron transport or uncoupled oxidative phosphorylation. In a medium containing an exogenous source of ATP and oligomycin, an inhibitor of the ATP synthase complex, incorporation of [35S]methionine into proteins is stimulated in the presence of inhibitors of the electron transport chain; substituting uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation for the latter leads, in contrast, to a decrease in the rate of incorporation of the labeled amino acid into mitochondrial translation products. Studies on the metabolic stability of mitochondrial translation products revealed that "mature" polypeptides made in isolated mitochondria are stable as indicated by the absence of degradation during a 50 min "chase" period. Under conditions which reduce or dissipate the membrane potential, 50-60% of the newly made polypeptides (pulse) are degraded within 50 min. The kinetics of the degradation process for individual mitochondrial gene products reveal that the largest proportion of polypeptides degraded to an acid-soluble form during the chase period are abnormal proteins, likely the result of premature chain termination. Emerging as a common denominator in these studies is a role for a transmembrane potential across the inner membrane in the production of mature "stable" mitochondrial gene products.

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