Immunochemical characterization of the adenine nucleotide translocator

Abstract
Antibodies were prepared against purified preparations of the heart and kidney nucleotide translocator in the c-conformation. The results show organ-specific antigenic determinants on the translocator proteins isolated from heart, kidney and liver although a partial cross-reactivity between these 3 proteins was demonstrable. The organ specificity was observed both with the solubilized and with the membrane-bound translocator protein indicating organ-specific determinants on exposed regions of the carrier. An organ-specific inhibition of the nucleotide transport in heart mitochondria by the heart carboxyatractylate-protein antiserum leads to the conclusion that the organ specificity is at least partially conditioned by the binding site for the substrate and/or the closely linked gate of the carrier protein. Apart from the organ specificity the results also demonstrate a specificity of the antibodies for the translocational conformations of the carrier; the c-conformation stabilized in the carboxyatractylate-protein complex and the m-conformation present in the bongkrekate-protein complex. However, after denaturation of the carboxytraktylate-protein and bongkrekate-protein complexes the binding of the anti-(carboxyatractylate-protein) antiserum to both inhibitor-protein complexes was nearly identical. The conformation specificity was also expressed by the inhibition of the conformation transition from the c- to the m-state. This side-specific inhibition of the nucleotide transport and the identical binding activity of the carboxyatractylate-protein antiserum against the denatured carboxyatractylate-protein and bongkrekate-protein complexes suggested that the conformation-specific antigenic determinants are topographic surface regions which are determined by the chain by the chain folding.