Abstract

A method for preparing submitochondrial fractions from adrenocortical cells was developed by adapting a procedure that has been successful with yeast mitochondria. The method is based upon osmotic swelling, sonication and centrifugation in sucrose. The preparation yields highly purified fractions of outer membrane, intermembrane space, inner membrane and a less purified fraction of matrix. Recoveries are good so that 10 7 cells yield approximately 170 μg of inner membrane protein and 12 μg of outer membrane protein. Electron microscopy shows that the outer membrane fraction consists of vesicles (0.2–0.6 μm diameter) while inner membrane appears as densely packed sheets of membranous material. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels (isoelectric focusing followed by electrophoresis) of all the fractions give highly reproducible patterns of protein spots with Coomassie staining. Steroidogenic proteins were found only in inner membrane fractions which were shown to contain cytochrome P-450 C 27 side-chain cleavage and P-450 111β-hydroxylase together with adrenodoxin and adrenodoxin reductase. Inner membrane catalyzes side-chain cleavage of cholesterol (conversions to pregnenolone) and 11β-hydroxylation (DOC → corticosterone) when substrate and NADPH are added. The preparation yields highly purified submitochondrial fractions from Y-1 mouse adrenal tumor cells and from porcine and bovine adrenocortical mitochondria. The method has the virtue of yielding highly purified intermembrane fluid which is not true of other methods for fractionation of adrenal mitochondria. The procedure also yields cleaner preparations of the two membranes than two other published methods currently used to prepare submitochondrial fractions from adrenocortical cells.

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