Recommended
Experiments with Isolated Mitochondria
In our teaching lab we encourage students to work
with each other and to share insight, experience,
and even experimental results. To facilitate such
cooperation we have students work in teams
of two, with two teams working together on the
dissection and liver preparation and in conducting
the experiments. Each polarographic station includes
two chambers and recording systems. We assign one
team to each chamber and the two teams start by
conducting the same experiment. If one experiment
fails, chances are the other will succeed and both
teams can move on to the second experiment. If
both experiments succeed the teams may use the
better of the two records for data analysis.
Teams share respiratory medium and reagents and
are expected to pay attention to what is going
on in both chambers. Working this way should increase
the chances of working out issues with the experimental
methods. The philosophy is that four heads are
better than two. It is also a lot more efficient
for an instructor or teaching assistant to advise
or assist a team of four than one or two individuals
at a time. To begin a series of experiments with
isolated mitochondria, the oxygraph system should
be calibrated with the same respiration medium
that will be used throughout the study. Our medium
of choice consists of 70 mM sucrose, 220 mM mannitol,
2 mM HEPES buffer, 5 mM magnesium chloride, 5 mM
potassium phosphate, 1 mM EDTA, and 0.1% fatty
acid free bovine serum albumin, pH 7.4.
Unless noted, substrates
and ADP should be added in 20 µl volumes
and 10 µl volumes used for poisons. The optimum
volume of mitochondria varies from one substrate
to the next and with the quality of the preparation.
To compare rates among experiments you will need
to normalize for the volume of mitochondria added.
Therefore you must be careful to draw up, deliver,
and record the intended volume.
It is critical
that the systems be calibrated and experiments
conducted according to the principles described
for calibration and use of our polarographic system
for dissolved oxygen measurement. Following each
addition of reagent or combination of reagents,
record for a minute or two before adding the next
reagent, so that a slope can be measured from the
chart record. When you produce state III respiration
you should obtain two slopes.
Required experiments
Experiments 1-4 have been the most reliable of
the studies outlined here. They were designed to
be conducted in sequence. Knowledge/experience
gained from each experiment is applicable to conducting
the next experiment. Results from experiments 1-4
will provide the basis for the research paper.
After completing each experiment you are welcome
(encouraged!) to try other reagents before cleaning
out the chamber. If you plan ahead you may be able
to address additional questions rather than simply
try reagents randomly.
The pH of all aqueous reagents was adjusted to
7.
1. Respiratory control
on succinate and
inhibition of electron transport
After calibrating the system add
15-25 µl
mitochondria using a yellow tip pipettor, glass
stopper removed, and triturate to suspend mitochondria
without introducing air. Replace the stopper
and record for a minute or two. Start each
oxygraph run this way, varying only the amount
of mitochondria added. Now, there cannot
be respiration without a substrate, so if there
is a continuing decline in chamber oxygen then
something is providing fuel. Is
the rate of delivery of electrons from that fuel
efficient enough to maintain a chemiosmotic gradient? How
would you check to see if a gradient is present?
To produce state IV respiration,
add 20 µl 0.5M succinate using a Hamilton
syringe, by injection through the hole in the glass
stopper. For each such injection make sure
that the tip of the needle is well into the chamber
(usually as far as it can go) and firmly push the
liquid into the chamber. Injecting slowly
may result in poor mixing of reagent and yield
equivocal results. It should take no more than
a minute or two to obtain a measureable slope.
Produce state III respiration by
adding 20 µl 0.01M ADP. State III respiration
on a limiting amount of ADP is transient. After
the first slope change there should be a second
steady state. The
second slope change may not be as obvious as the
first - view down the trace or use a straightedge
to check. If you do not see an increase in oxygen
consumption within 10-20 sec of adding ADP or do
not see a definite reduction in oxygen consumption
following state III respiration, then something
is not right. For your paper you will need to calculate
an ADP:O ratio on succinate.
Add 10 µl
30 µM antimycin. There will
be an initial rise in oxygen content because the
vehicle (ethanol) raises the oxygen content in
the solution. Wait for a steady state. Add
10 µl
each 0.5M ascorbate and 20 µl 30 mM TMPD
in immediate succession (treat them as a single
reagent). Ascorbic acid maintains
TMPD (an artifical electron donor) in a reduced
state. Reduced
TMPD donates electrons to cytochrome c.
Wait for
a steady state, record long enough to get a measurable
slope, then stop the chart record. Clean
out the chamber and stopper, and prepare for a
second run.
Steady states are
reached within moments of addition of reagents. What
conclusion can you draw, then, about the time it
takes for mitochondria to establish a chemiosmotic
gradient?
2. Respiratory control on glutamate and
inhibition of electron transport
Add 30-40 µl
mitochondria, obtain a steady state. We use
a larger volume than for succinate-supported respiration
because oxygen consumption is slower via the NADH
pathway (think about why). Add 20 µl
0.5M glutamate, obtain a steady state. Oxygen
consumption may be high enough before adding substrate that you
won't see a measureable change. Adding glutamate,
however, provides a limitless source of substrate.
Whatever supports respiration before adding glutamate
does not likely allow maintenance of a gradient.
Add 20 µl
0.01M ADP, obtain a steady state, wait for a second
steady state as you did for succinate, and record
long enough to be able to measure the slope. You
will need an ADP:O ratio on glutamate for your
paper. Add 10 µl
10 µM rotenone – there will be an ethanol
artifact. Wait
a couple of minutes for a steady state.
Add ADP again. Record for about a minute. You
know that steady states are reached within moments. Is
there any reason to wait longer? Add 20 µl
0.5M succinate – a
steady state should be evident within a few seconds,
and within a minute or two you should see a second
slope change. Allow
enough time to see it, but don't let the chamber
run out of oxygen. What might be the reason
for the second steady state? Add 10 µl
0.2M KCN.
3. Uncoupling agents
Produce state IV
respiration on succinate, as you did for experiment
one. Add 10 µl
1 mM FCCP, a potent uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation.
Record the slope, for comparison with the slope
that you previously recorded for state III respiration
on succinate. For the research paper you
will need to compare state IV, III, and uncoupled
rates on succinate. Do you expect any change after
the mitochondria reach a steady state? Is
there any reason to let the record continue until
the oxygen is depleted?
***AFTER USING FCCP OR ANY UNCOUPLING AGENT, THOROUGHLY
RINSE THE SYRINGE, STOPPER, AND CHAMBER SEVERAL
TIMES*** Even a small concentration of uncoupling
agent will ruin the next experiment.
4. Inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation
You must thoroughly
rinse out the chamber, glass stopper, and syringes
before beginning this (or any) experiment. If
any uncoupling agent remains to contaminate the
medium, for example, you will not have a successful
experiment.
Produce state IV
respiration on succinate. Add 10 µl
0.1 mM oligomycin and record a slope after witnessing
the artifact. Is there any indication that
this antibiotic is either an uncoupling agent or
an electron transport inhibitor? Minor
changes in slope can be considered to be negligible.
Now design an experiment to determine if oligomycin
inhibits oxidative phosphorylation (hint: it
would inhibit ATP synthase, if that is the case).
Assuming that you
design and perform an appropriate experiment, what
sort of controls might be needed (hint: what
agent should you add to determine if the mitochondria
were exercising respiratory control? That
is, how can you confirm that there was an intact
gradient, and the ETS is restricted by it?
If you
are quick, or (better) if you thought about this
problem before you came to lab, you can complete
the experiment without having to start over.
Optional experiments
The following experiments need not be conducted
in sequence. Their success rate depends on the
quality of the mitochondria preparation and to
some extent the skill of the investigators.
5. Electron transport
inhibition continued
Add a volume of
mitochondria that produced good slopes with glutamate
as substrate. Add 5 µl
0.5M succinate, confirm the slope increase. Without
too much delay, add 10 µl 0.5M malonate,
obtain a slope. Malonate is a competitive
inhibitor. What would you expect to be the effect
of successive additions of small amounts of malonate
on the slope of oxygen consumption. Repeat the
malonate addition to ensure that you have obtained
near maximum inhibiton. Add 10 µl
0.01M ADP.
After determining
whether or not ADP sped up respiration, add 20 µl
0.1M NADH or 20 µl 0.5M glutamate (recall that
in an earlier experiment the addition of glutamate
did not speed up state IV respiration a great deal).
A little reflection will reveal that this part
of the study is the counterpart to the second experiment
in which NADH-supported respiration was blocked
and inhibition overcome by adding succinate. It
often gives us very good results, but just as often
the preparation does not respond to adding NADH
or glutamate.
Add 20 µl
0.01M ADP, record slope changes if evident. If
you obtain responses to glutamate and ADP additions,
then add 10 µl
30µM antimycin. Add ascorbate + TMPD.
6. ADP:O ratio on ascorbate
+ TMPD
This experiment
will work best with very well coupled mitochondria
(RCR for NADH supported respiration of 4 or better).
You may have noticed that the RCR was lower on
succinate than on glutamate. The trend continues
on the combination of ascorbate and TMPD, in fact
the mitochondria behave as if they are nearly uncoupled.
Knowing that TMPD
donates electrons to cytochrome c, what is the
expected ADP:O ratio on ascorbate + TMPD? Test
this expectation by putting 15 µl mitochondria
into state IV respiration on ascorbate + TMPD,
then adding 10 µl ADP. If possible, calculate
an ADP:O ratio. You may have to stretch your
imagination in order to detect a slope change. Use
a straightedge to line up the slopes.
7. Site of action of antimycin
This elegant little
experiment should narrow the possibilities for
the location at which antimycin binds the ETS.
Start with 15-25µl
mitochondria and add FCCP. The uncoupling
agent should put the mitochondria in a state of
rapid respiration once a substrate is added. Add
succinate, confirm a slope, then inhibit respiration
with malonate. Add glutamate,
confirm a slope, then inhibit respiration with
antimycin. Add ascorbate +
TMPD.
You already knew
that antimycin inhibits respiration on
succinate. With this new information, can you determine
with some precision where antimycin binds?
8. Mixed actions of 2,4-dinitrophenol
(DNP)
The mixed actions of DNP are sometimes evident
and sometimes not. It all depends on the quality
of the preparation.
Repeat the third
experiment, but substitute 10 µl 200 mM DNP
for FCCP. DNP has mixed effects
on mitochondria. One action should be apparent
right away, provided the mitochondria are still
exercising a significant degree of respiratory
control. The second will be delayed and gradually
take effect.
Still "alive?"
Feel free to try
anything else, especially if you have unanswered
questions. A typical mitochondria preparation
should give good results for 2 1/2 to 3 hours.
When they begin to deteriorate they uncouple. State
IV rates will increase and the preparation becomes
less responsive to ADP.
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