Abstract
The passive membrane conductance LH1 of rat liver mitochondria has been measured and compared with the quantity nJesh/delta microHsh (n = H+/e stoichiometry; Jesh = rate of electron transfer in static head) over a delta microH range. The two curves approach each other only in the lower part of the range, while they sharply diverge at large values of delta microH. Thus nJesh/delta microHsh cannot be considered to be a measure of LH1 in the upper delta microH region. Only a fraction of the static head electron flow is accounted for by futile proton cycling via leaks. Contaminating open membrane fragments or completely leaky mitochondria can be responsible for only a small part of the residual rate of oxygen consumption. We conclude that a large part of static head respiration must have yet another cause and propose it to be intrinsic uncoupling of the respiratory chain enzymes.
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