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Effects of equisetin on rat liver mitochondria: evidence for inhibition of substrate anion carriers of the inner membrane.

Journal of bioenergetics and biomembranes (1993-10-01)
T König, A Kapus, B Sarkadi
RESUMEN

The effect of equisetin, an antibiotic produced by Fusarium equiseti, has been studied on mitochondrial functions (respiration, ATPase, ion transport). Equisetin inhibits the DNP-stimulated ATPase activity of rat liver mitochondria and mitoplasts in a concentration-dependent manner; 50% inhibition is caused by about 8 nmol equisetin/mg protein. The antibiotic is without effect either on the ATPase activity of submitochondrial particles or on the purified F1-ATPase. It inhibits both the ADP- or DNP-activated oxygen uptake by mitochondria in the presence of glutamate+malate or succinate as substrates, but only the ADP-stimulated respiration is inhibited if the electron donors are TMPD+ascorbate. It does not affect the NADH or succinate oxidation of submitochondrial particles. Equisetin inhibits in a concentration-dependent manner the active Ca(2+)-uptake of mitochondria energized both by ATP or succinate without affecting the Ca(2+)-uniporter itself. The antibiotic inhibits the ATP-uptake by mitochondria (50% inhibition at about 8 nmol equisetin/mg protein) and the Pi and dicarboxylate carrier. It does not lower the membrane potential at least up to 200 nmol/mg protein concentration. The data presented in this paper indicate that equisetin specifically inhibits the substrate anion carriers of the mitochondrial inner membrane.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Equisetin, (Fusarium equiseti), ≥97% (HPLC)