Effect of vitamin E on characteristics of liver mitochondrial fractions from cold-exposed rats

2011 
In cold exposed rats, it is known that vitamin E induces an increase in the respiration of the whole mitochondrial population isolated from liver. To obtain information on the effects of cold exposure and vitamin E treatment on the dynamics of mitochondrial population, we determined characteristics of rat liver mitochondrial fractions, resolved at 1,000 (M1), 3,000 (M3), and 10,000 g (M10). We found that cold exposure increased the liver content of total mitochondrial proteins irrespective of vitamin E treatment. Conversely, protein distribution among the mitochondrial subpopulations was differentially affected by cold and antioxidant integration. In a cold environment, the M1 fraction, characterized by the highest O2 consumption and H2O2 production rates, underwent a remarkable protein content reduction, which was attenuated by vitamin E. These changes were dependent on the opposite effects of the two treatments on mitochondrial oxidative damage and susceptibility to swelling. The proteins of the other fractions, in which the above effects were lower, underwent smaller (M3) or no change (M10) in the treatment groups. The cold also led to an increase in O2 consumption of the M1 fraction which was accentuated by vitamin E treatment. This phenomenon and the vitamin-induced recovery of the M1 proteins supply an explanation of the previously reported increase in the respiration of the whole mitochondrial population induced by vitamin E in the liver from cold exposed rats.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    37
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []