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EGTA Inhibits Reverse Uniport-dependent Ca2+ Release from Uncoupled Mitochondria. Possible Regulation of the Ca2+ Uniporter by a Ca2+ Binding Site on the Cytoplasmic Side of the Inner Membrane

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1988 Jan 25
PMID 2447088
Citations 24
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Abstract

When rat liver mitochondria are allowed to accumulate Ca2+, treated with ruthenium red to inhibit reverse activity of the Ca2+ uniporter, and then treated with an uncoupler, they release Ca2+ and endogenous Mg2+ and undergo large amplitude swelling with ultrastructural expansion of the matrix space. These effects are not produced by Ca2+ plus uncoupler alone. Like other "Ca2+-releasing agents" (i.e. N-ethylmaleimide, t-butylhydroperoxide, oxalacetate, etc.), the development of nonspecific permeability produced by ruthenium red plus uncoupler requires accumulated Ca2+ specifically and is antagonized by inhibitors of phospholipase A2. The permeability responses are also antagonized by ionophore A23187, indicating that a rapid pathway for Ca2+ efflux from deenergized mitochondria is necessary to prevent the development of nonspecific permeability. EGTA can be substituted for ruthenium red to produce the nonspecific permeability change in Ca2+-loaded, uncoupler-treated mitochondria. The permeability responses to EGTA plus uncoupler again require accumulated Ca2+ specifically and are antagonized by inhibitors of phospholipase A2 and by ionophore A23187. The equivalent effects of ruthenium red and EGTA on uncoupled, Ca2+-containing mitochondria indicate that reducing the extramitochondrial Ca2+ concentration to the subnanomolar range produces inhibition of reverse uniport activity. It is proposed that inhibition reflect regulation of the uniporter by a Ca2+ binding site which is available from the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane. EDTA cannot substitute for EGTA to induce nonspecific permeability in Ca2+-loaded, uncoupled mitochondria. Furthermore, EDTA inhibits the response to EGTA with an I50 value of approximately 10 microM. These data suggest that the uniporter regulatory site also binds Mg2+. The data suggest further that Mg2+ binding to the regulatory site is necessary to inhibit reverse uniport activity, even when the site is not occupied by Ca2+.

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