1. Very low concentrations of Pb2+ decrease the capacity of rat heart mitochondria, oxidizing pyruvate plus malate, to remove Ca2+ from the medium. 2. The primary effect is on the rate of Ca2+ sequestration; this is reflected in the overall extent of Ca2+ removal. 3. Pb2+ has at least two separate actions. Below about 0.5 nmol/mg of protein, it acts solely by competing with Ca2+ (Ki = 0.4 muM); above this concentration it also inhibits the production or use of respiratory energy, so that at 1 nmol of Pb2+/mg of protein, Ca2+ removal is almost completely abolished. 4. Pb2+ inhibits coupled and uncoupled respiratory O2 use by mitochondria oxidizing pyruvate plus malate, but at higher concentrations than those that affect Ca2+ removal; similar concentrations of Pb2+ inhibit pyruvate uptake, but not malate uptake, by the mitochondria. 5. Mg2+ only decreases Ca2+ removal by competition, and is a far-less effective competitor than Pb2+ (Ki = 0.15 mM). It is possible that the primary cause of the second effect of Pb2+ is displacement of membrane Mg2+. 6. The consequences of these results are discussed in terms of the possible involvement of heart mitochondria in excitation-contraction coupling, and the Pb2+ levels that might occur in heart tissue in vivo.
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August 1976
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Research Article|
August 15 1976
The effect of lead on the calcium-handling capacity of rat heart mitochondria Available to Purchase
Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Online ISSN: 1470-8728
Print ISSN: 0264-6021
© 1976 London: The Biochemical Society
1976
Biochem J (1976) 158 (2): 289–294.
Citation
D R Parr, E J Harris; The effect of lead on the calcium-handling capacity of rat heart mitochondria. Biochem J 15 August 1976; 158 (2): 289–294. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1580289
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