Abstract

Adenosine diphosphatase (ADPase) activity was studied in rat liver with [ β- 32 P] ADP as a substrate. Mitochondria and outer mitochondrial membrane fractions were isolated and assayed for ADPase and various marker enzymes. ADPase activity was strikingly reduced when the outer membranes were removed from the mitochondria whether by digitonin treatment or osmotic shock. Addition of the inter-membrane space subfraction to the purified outer membranes resulted in enhanced ADPase activity. Addition of the inter-mitochondrial membrane enzyme adenylate kinase to outer membranes also produced a large stimulation of activity. The ADPase activity could also be reconstituted in vitro with adenylate kinase and either mitoplast ATPase or ouabain-sensitive ( Na + + K + + Mg 2+)- ATPase . Chloroform-released ATPase, however, was not capable of producing an ADPase activity when combined with adenylate kinase. Gel permeation chromatography of Triton-solubilised outer mitochondrial membranes was unable to resolve ADPase activity from contaminating ATPase. These results suggest that the majority of ADPase activity in rat liver mitochondria consists of the coupled activity of adenylate kinase and ATPase.

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