Causes of differences in respiration rate of hepatocytes from mammals of different body mass.

Resting O2 consumption of hepatocytes isolated from mammals ranging in mass from 20-g mice to 200-kg horses decreases with increasing body mass. The substrate oxidation system increases in activity with increasing body mass and mitochondrial proton leak and phosphorylation system decrease in activity, resulting in a higher mitochondrial membrane potential in hepatocytes from larger mammals. The absolute rates of O2 consumption due to nonmitochondrial processes, substrate oxidation, mitochondrial proton leak, and the phosphorylation system decrease with increasing body mass. These decreases are due partly to a decrease in mitochondrial number per cell and partly to decrease in mitochondrial inner membrane proton leakiness and in ATP turnover by cells from larger mammals. Quantitatively, the proportion of total cell O2 consumption by nonmitochondrial processes (13%) and oxidation of substrates (87%) and the proportions used to drive mitochondrial proton leak (19%) and the phosphorylation system (68%) are the same for hepatocytes from all mammals investigated. The effect of matched decreases in the rates of proton leak and of ATP turnover is to keep the effective amount of ATP synthesized per unit of O2 consumed relatively constant with body mass, suggesting that the observed value is optimal.

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