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  • Title: A study of oxidative phosphorylative activity and calcium-induced respiration of rat liver mitochondria following living Escherichia coli injection.
    Author: Tanaka J, Kono Y, Shimahara Y, Sato T, Jones RT, Cowley RA, Trump BF.
    Journal: Adv Shock Res; 1982; 7():77-90. PubMed ID: 6753540.
    Abstract:
    Mechanisms of subcellular dysfunction of the liver in sepsis are still obscure. The present study investigates changes in oxidative phosphorylative activity and calcium-induced respiration of rat liver mitochondria following live Escherichia coli injection (E coli, Serotype: 0--18. A 1.25--1.5 X 10(9)/100 gm body wt inoculum of E coli bacteria was injected via the tail vein, causing a 100% mortality rate within 24 hours after injection. In order to determine alteration of liver mitochondrial membrane permeability, serum ornithine carbamoyltransferase activity was measured following E coli injection. This activity increased ten to 100-fold over that of controls with time following injection. However, the yield of liver mitochondria from treated rats, estimated by the amount of collected mitochondrial protein and the recovery rate of succinate dehydrogenase activity in the final mitochondrial suspensions, was not significantly different from that of controls. Mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylative activity measured using glutamate as a substrate was enhanced throughout all period to death (P less than 0.01 at three and six hours, P less than 0.05 in the fatal stage) and was associated with concomitant increases in respiratory control ratios. Similar results were obtained using beta-hydroxybutyrate as a substrate. This enhancement was accompanied by an increase in 2-4-dinitrophenol-stimulated ATPase activity (160% at three hours and 130% in the fatal stage). Calcium-induced stimulation of mitochondrial respiration as well as initial calcium uptake rate linked to respiration, using glutamate as a substrate, were higher in liver mitochondria from rats with E coli treatment than in those of controls throughout all periods (P less than 0.01 or less). These results suggest the coexistence of hyperfunctioning as well as deteriorated mitochondria following lethal treatment with E coli.
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