Mitochondrial respiratory control is lost during growth factor deprivation

E Gottlieb, SM Armour… - Proceedings of the …, 2002 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002National Acad Sciences
The ability of cells to maintain a bioenergetically favorable ATP/ADP ratio confers a tight
balance between cellular events that consume ATP and the rate of ATP production.
However, after growth factor withdrawal, the cellular ATP/ADP ratio declines. To investigate
these changes, mitochondria from growth factor-deprived cells isolated before the onset of
apoptosis were characterized in vitro. Mitochondria from growth factor-deprived cells have
lost their ability to undergo matrix condensation in response to ADP, which is accompanied …
The ability of cells to maintain a bioenergetically favorable ATP/ADP ratio confers a tight balance between cellular events that consume ATP and the rate of ATP production. However, after growth factor withdrawal, the cellular ATP/ADP ratio declines. To investigate these changes, mitochondria from growth factor-deprived cells isolated before the onset of apoptosis were characterized in vitro. Mitochondria from growth factor-deprived cells have lost their ability to undergo matrix condensation in response to ADP, which is accompanied by a failure to perform ADP-coupled respiration. At the time of analysis, mitochondria from growth factor-deprived cells were not depleted of cytochrome c and cytochrome c-dependent respiration was unaffected, demonstrating that the inhibition of the respiratory rate is not due to loss of cytochrome c. Agents that disrupt the mitochondrial outer membrane, such as digitonin, or maintain outer membrane exchange of adenine nucleotide, such as Bcl-xL, restored ADP-dependent control of mitochondrial respiration. Together, these data suggest that the regulation of mitochondrial outer membrane permeability contributes to respiratory control.
National Acad Sciences