Hamster brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria. The role of fatty acids in the control of the proton conductance of the inner membrane.

The specific ability of fatty acids to increase the proton conductance of the inner membrane of mitochondria from the liver and brown adipose tissue of cold-adapted hamsters was compared. The liver and brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria had their effective proton conductances increased by respectively 0.028 and 0.94 nmol H+- min-1. (mV of proton electrochemical gradient)-1 for each nmol of palmitate bound. No difference could be detected between the abilities of liver and brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria to bind fatty acids. Purine nucleotides did not displace farry acids from the brown-adipase-tissue mitochondria. The endogenous fatty acid content of hamster brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria prepared in the absence of album was found to be equivalent to 17 +/- 7 nmol of palmitate/mg protein. The fatty acid content was reduced to 1 nmol/mg after preincubation of the mitochondria with CoA, ATP and carnitine. No inert pool of fatty acids could be detected. The endogenous fatty acids of hamster liver mitochondria were less than 4 nmol of palmitate equivalent/mg protein. Some of the fatty acid associated with the brown-adipose-tissue mitochondria originates during preparation of the mitochondria. In the light of these results, the physiological role of the fatty acids in controlling the proton conductance of the brown-adipose-tissue mitochondrial inner membrane, and hence- non-shivering thermogenesis, is re-evaluated.