Abstract

Mitochondria isolated from rat liver and heart were made permeable to normally nonpentrating substrates and cofactors by treatment with toluene. The optimal conditions for preparing stable, permeable mitochondria were 2% toluene for 2 min at 4 °C in a buffered, isotonic medium containing 8.5% polyethylene glycol ( Mr 6000–7500). Without polyethylene glycol, the toluene-treated mitochondria were unstable and released their matrix enzymes. The treated mitochondria were particularly unstable in dilute suspension under normal assay conditions of their enzyme activities. The levels of matrix enzyme activities unmasked by toluene treatment of mitochondria were very close to those of sonicated mitochondria under identical assay conditions. Mitochondria made permeable with toluene lost only small amounts of their protein and retained a major fraction of the nucleotides and coenzymes. Electron microscopic examination of toluenetreated mitochondria indicated that they were relatively intact with swollen and vesiculated cristae membranes. Such preparations will allow the study of mitochondrial enzymes at approximate in vivo concentrations.

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