The malate-aspartate, fatty acid, and α-glycerophosphate shuttles for the transport of reducing equivalents into mitochondria were reconstituted, using isolated hepatic mitochondria and the extramitochondrial components of the shuttles. Clofibrate and thyroxin increased, while propylthiouracil treatment decreased, the activity of mitochondrial α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase. Despite these changes, the activity of the reconstituted α-glycerophosphate shuttle was similar in mitochondria from control rats and those from rats treated with clofibrate and propylthiouracil. There was an increase in the activity of the shuttle using mitochondria from thyroxin-treated rats. Rotenone caused 60–90% inhibition of this shuttle, suggesting that rotenone-sensitive NADH dehydrogenase participates in the pathway of oxidation of extramitochondrial hydrogen. Palmitate, oleate, and octanoate were equally effective in reconstituting a cyclic fatty acid shuttle. The shuttle was inhibited by various compounds affecting mitochondrial metabolism, including oligomycin, dinitrophenol, cyanide, rotenone, atractyloside, and α-bromopalmitate. Carnitine and several dicarboxylic and tricarboxylic acids which stimulate fatty acid elongation, augmented fatty acid shuttle activity. The malate-aspartate shuttle was inhibited by cycloserine, amino-oxyacetic acid, and hydrazine, and stimulated by pyridoxal phosphate, at the same concentrations which affected the activities of cytoplasmic and mitochondrial glutamic oxalacetic transaminase. This shuttle was inhibited by uncouplers, antimycin, azide, cyanide, rotenone, amobarbital, oligomycin, and several inhibitors of anion transport including iodobenzylmalonate and avenaciolide. The reconstituted shuttle is sufficiently active to provide about 70–80% of the oxalacetate required for maximal rates of gluconeogenesis. Extrapolations based on the rates of mitochondrial oxidation of acetaldehyde and the activity of the microsomal ethanol oxidizing system suggest that any one of the shuttles could account for the rate of ethanol metabolism in vitro by the alcohol dehydrogenase pathway.