Effect of calcium(ion) uptake by rat adrenal mitochondria on pregnenolone formation and spectral properties of cytochrome P-450.

Biochim Biophys Acta, 1975/10/09;404(2):309-20.

Simpson ER, Williams-Smith DL

PMID: 170977

Abstract
The effect of calcium on pregnenolone formation from endogenous precursors has been studied in mitochondria from rat decapsulated and capsular adrenal glands. In the presence of succinate, addition of calcium chloride in the concentration range 20-150 muM caused an inhibition of pregnenolone formation in both decapsulated and capsular adrenal mitochondria. 11beta-hydroxylation of added deoxycosticosterone in decapsulated adrenal mitochondria was also inhibited. Under these conditions, calcium inhibited the reduction of adrenodoxin, a component of the cytochrome P-450 reductase system, presumably because uptake of calcium by the mitochondria competes with energy-linked transhydrogenase for high-energy intermediates. For this reason, incubations were carried out in the presence of succinate plus isocitrate plus NADP+. Under these conditions, calcium chloride in the concentration range 120-875 muM caused a 2-4-fold stimulation of pregnenolone formation, but had no effect on corticosterone formation from added deoxycorticosterone. The effect of calcium on the optical spectra of cytochrome P-450 has also been examined in mitochondria from decapsulated and capsular rat adrenals. In the presence of succinate, calcium induced a spectral change resembling a type I difference spectrum of cytochrome P-450. Thus it appears that uptake of calcium by adrenal mitochondria can stimulate pregnenolone formation by increasing the interaction of mitochondrial cytochrome P-450 with endogenous substrate.
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