Abstract

Adrenal ferredoxin, the iron-sulfur protein associated with cytochromes P-450 in adrenocortical mitochondria, has been localized immunohistochemically at the light microscopic level in rat adrenals by employing rabbit antiserum to bovine adrenal ferredoxin in both an unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase method and an indirect fluorescent antibody method. When sections of rat adrenals were exposed to the adrenal ferredoxin antiserum in both procedures, positive staining for adrenal ferredoxin was observed in parenchymal cells of the three cortical zones but not in medullary chromaffin cells. Marked differences in the intensity of staining, however, where observed among the three cortical zones: the most intense staining being found in the zona fasciculata, less in the zona reticularis, and least in the zona glomerulosa. Furthermore, differences in staining intensity were also observed among cells within both the zona fasciculata and the zona reticularis. In agreement with these immunohistochemical observations, determinations of adrenal ferredoxin contents by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry in homogenates prepared from capsular and decapsulated rat adrenals revealed that the concentration of adrenal ferredoxin in the zona glomerulosa was lower than that in the zona fasciculata-reticularis. Similar results were obtained when the contents of cytochrome P-450 were determined in capsular adn decapsulated rat adrenal homogenates. These observations indicate that adrenal ferrodoxin and cytochrome P-450 are not distributed uniformly throughout the rat adrenal cortex.

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