Bi. Escher et al., A NEW METHOD FOR SIMULTANEOUS QUANTIFICATION OF UNCOUPLING AND INHIBITORY ACTIVITY OF ORGANIC POLLUTANTS IN ENERGY-TRANSDUCING MEMBRANES, Environmental toxicology and chemistry, 16(3), 1997, pp. 405-414
A new, mechanistically based approach is presented for the quantitativ
e determination of the uncoupling and inhibitory activity of compounds
interfering with energy transduction. Time-resolved spectroscopy of s
ingle-turnover events in the photosystem of the photosynthetic bacteri
um Rhodobacter sphaeroides can quantitatively distinguish uncoupling f
rom inhibition. The decay kinetics of the membrane potential after a s
ingle turnover flash are used as a measure of uncoupling activity, and
the redox kinetics of several components of the electron transfer cha
in are used as indicators of specific inhibition at various potential
inhibitory sites. Results are presented for 21 nitrated and chlorinate
d phenols, some reference uncouplers, and some anisoles. Inhibition wa
s exclusively detected at one specific quinone binding site, the quino
ne reductase site Qi. For most phenols, uncoupling was observed at low
er concentrations than inhibition with the exception of alkylated 2,6-
dinitrophenols and 2,4,6-trichlorophenol, where both effects occurred
in the same concentration range. No direct correlation was observed be
tween the uncoupling and inhibitory activity of a given compound. The
data obtained with this new method correlate well with data from vario
us bioassays on energy-transducing systems, indicating that this metho
d may also be well suited as a screening tool for compounds suspected
to interfere with energy transduction.