From the chemiosmotic hypothesis it follows that no change is expected in potency of an uncoupler to inhibit an energy-driven reaction in an energy-transducing membrane if the energy-requiring part of the reaction, the so-called secondary proton pump, is partially inhibited by a specific, tightly bound inhibitor. An increase in potency upon inhibition of the primary pump may be expected, due to a lower rate of the total proton flow that can be used by the secondary pump and dissipated by the uncoupler. Contrary to this prediction several uncouplers (S13, SF6847, 2,4-dinitrophenol, valinomycin + nigericin) show an increase in uncoupling efficiency in ATP-driven reverse electron transfer (reversal) upon inhibition of the secondary pump in this reaction, the NADH:Q oxidoreductase, by rotenone. The increase in uncoupling efficiency is proportional to the decrease in the rate of reversal, that is to the decrease in concentration of active secondary pump. Similarly, upon inhibition of the primary pump, the ATPase, with oligomycin, an increase in uncoupling efficiency was found, also proportional to the decrease in the rate of reversal. When the pore-forming uncoupler gramicidin was used, no change in uncoupling potency was found upon inhibition of NADH:Q oxidoreductase. Inhibition of the ATPase, however, resulted in a proportionally lower uncoupling titre for gramicidin, just as was found for S13 in the presence of oligomycin. A difference was also found in the relative concentrations of S13 and gramicidin required to stimulate ATP hydrolysis or to inhibit reversal. The amount of S13 needed to stimulate ATP hydrolysis was clearly higher than the amount needed to inhibit reversal. On the contrary, the titre of gramicidin for both actions was about the same. To explain these results we propose that gramicidin uncouples via dissipation of the bulk delta mu H+, whereas the carrier-type uncouplers preferentially interfere with the direct energy transduction between the ATPase and redox enzymes. This is in accordance with the recently developed collision hypothesis.

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