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Vol. 293, Issue 3, 822-828, June 2000
Agricultural and Environmental Chemistry Group and Department of
Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of
California, Berkeley, California
Primary aliphatic alcohols from hexanol to pentadecanol were tested for
their effects on the succinate-supported respiration of intact
mitochondria isolated from rat liver. Alkanols were found to inhibit
State 3 and uncoupled respiration. The ADP/oxygen ratios, a measure of
the efficiency of oxidative phosphorylation, also were lowered, but to
a lesser degree when compared on the basis of percentage of controls.
Given each alkanol's nearly identical effect on State 3 and uncoupled
respiration, action is not directly on ATP synthase, but earlier in the
respiratory process. In agreement with many other studies of the
homologous series of alkanols, potency increased with number of carbons
in the chain until reaching a peak, in this case at undecanol, then
tapered off to tridecanol before reaching a cutoff, at tetradecanol. If
tetradecanol or longer homologs have activity, it is only after a lag
phase of >15-min preincubation. All alkanols up to tridecanol also
acted as uncouplers. At higher doses, hexanol inhibited State 4 rates, whereas longer chain alkanols did not, even at doses that completely eliminated respiratory control. Hexanol and decanol also were assayed
against freeze-thawed (broken) mitochondria to distinguish effects on
the mitochondrial substrate carrier from those on the electron
transport chain. Both compounds were only weak inhibitors of
respiration in broken mitochondria, suggesting that inhibition originates from interference with the dicarboxylate carrier, which must
transport succinate across the mitochondrial membranes before it can be
fed into complex II, rather than affecting the electron transport chain itself.