Control of oxidation is the key mechanism in the regulation of energy metabolism. In glycolysis the oxidation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate is controlled by DPNH, which inhibits glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. In oxidative phosphorylation the inhibition of electron flow from DPNH to oxygen, called "respiratory control," is the subject of this paper. After a discussion of the physiological significance of the "tight coupling" between phosphorylation and oxidation, studies on "loosely coupled" submitochondrial particles are reported. These particles are capable of oxidative phosphorylation in the presence of a suitable phosphate acceptor system, but in contrast to controlled, intact mitochondria they oxidize DPNH in the absence of phosphate and ADP. The addition of o-phenanthroline to submitochondrial particles gives rise to an inhibition of respiration, which is partly reversed by phosphate and ADP or by dinitrophenol. The properties of this model system of respiratory control will be described.
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September 01 1965
On the Mechanism of Respiratory Control
Ronald A. Butow,
Ronald A. Butow
From the Department of Biochemistry, The Public Health Research Institute of The City of New York, Inc.
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Efraim Racker
Efraim Racker
From the Department of Biochemistry, The Public Health Research Institute of The City of New York, Inc.
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Ronald A. Butow
From the Department of Biochemistry, The Public Health Research Institute of The City of New York, Inc.
Efraim Racker
From the Department of Biochemistry, The Public Health Research Institute of The City of New York, Inc.
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
Copyright © 1965 by The Rockefeller University Press
1965
J Gen Physiol (1965) 49 (1): 149–162.
Citation
Ronald A. Butow, Efraim Racker; On the Mechanism of Respiratory Control . J Gen Physiol 1 September 1965; 49 (1): 149–162. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.49.1.149
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