Isolation and Characterization of Metabolically Competent Mitochondria from Spinach Leaf Protoplasts 1

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Intact mitochondria were prepared from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. var. Kyoho) leaf protoplasts and purified by Percoll discontinuous gradient centrifugation. Assays of several marker enzymes showed that the final mitochondrial preparations obtained are nearly free from other contaminating organelles, e.g. chloroplasts, peroxisomes, and endoplasmic reticulum. These mitochondria oxidized malate, glycine, succinate, and NADH, tightly coupled to oxidative phosphorylation with high values of ADP to O ratio as well as respiratory control ratio. The rate of NADH oxidation was 331 nmoles O2 per milligram mitochondrial protein per minute, which is comparable to that obtained by highly purified potato or mung bean mitochondria. However, the activity of glutamine synthetase was barely detectable in the isolated mitochondrial fraction. This finding rules out a hypothetical scheme (Jackson, Dench, Morris, Lui, Hall, Moore 1971 Biochem Soc Trans 7: 1122) dealing with the role of the mitochondrial glutamine synthetase in the reassimilation of NH3, which is released during the step of photorespiratory glycine decarboxylation in green leaf tissues, but it is consistent with the photosynthetic nitrogen cycle (Keys, Bird, Cornelius, Lea, Wallsgrove, Miflin 1978 Nature (Lond) 275: 741), in which NH3 reassimilation occurs outside the mitochondria.

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