CORTISONE-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION AND STRUCTURE

Author:

Kimberg Daniel V.1,Loud Alden V.1,Wiener Joseph1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Medicine and Pathology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York 10032

Abstract

The effects of cortisone treatment on oxygen consumption, oxidative phosphorylation, and fine structure of rat liver mitochondria have been studied. Male rats weighing 125 g were treated for 6 days with 5 mg of cortisone acetate or isotonic saline. On the 7th day, sections of liver were excised and processed for light and electron microscopy. Mitochondrial respiration and oxidative phosphorylation were studied with mitochondria isolated from these livers. Cortisone treatment is responsible for a 14–40% decrease in the amount of oxygen consumed per mg of mitochondrial protein when succinate, α-ketoglutarate, or ß-hydroxybutyrate are used as substrates, or with ascorbate and N,N,N1,N1-tetramethyl p-phenylenediamine as electron donors. In addition, oxidative phosphorylation is uncoupled with a lowering of the P:O ratios. Randomly selected liver cells have been analyzed by quantitative morphometric techniques. The average mitochondrial volume is increased fourfold in the peripheral and midzonal regions with a commensurate decrease in the number of mitochondria per cell. These alterations are present throughout the hepatic lobule, but are most marked in midzonal cells. The total mitochondrial volume per cell and the per cent of the total cytoplasmic volume occupied by mitochondria remains relatively unaltered, as does the total amount of cristae surface per cell. While the mitochondria are enlarged, they are not "swollen." The relationships between the steroid hormone treatment and the alterations in mitochondrial function and structure are discussed.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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