Voltage-Dependent Channels Found in the Membrane Fraction of Corn Mitochondria

  • Smack D
  • Colombini M
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Abstract

Transmembrane channels have been found in the membrane fraction of corn (Zea mays W64AN) mitochondria that exhibit a remarkable resemblance to the voltage dependent anion-selective channels (VDAC) located in the outer membrane of animal (Rattus norvegicus), protist (Paramecium aurelia), and fungal (Neurospora crassa) mitochondria. The channels in corn were demonstrated to be essentially identical to VDAC channels in three characteristic properties: (a) single channel conductance magnitude, (b) weak anion selectivity, and (c) nature of voltage dependence. These findings led us to conclude that the channels present in corn mitochondria are VDAC channels. This discovery may have repercussions concerning the regulation and function of higher plant mitochondria, and the causation of higher plant excitability.

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Smack, D. P., & Colombini, M. (1985). Voltage-Dependent Channels Found in the Membrane Fraction of Corn Mitochondria. Plant Physiology, 79(4), 1094–1097. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.79.4.1094

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