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Eur Respir J 1996; 9: 2306-2312
Copyright © ERS Journals Ltd 1996


Original Articles

Mitochondria act as a reservoir for the basic amine HIPDM in the lung

M Miniati, A Paci, F Cocci, G Ciarimboli, S Monti, and M Pistolesi

The lungs are a site for the uptake, accumulation, and storage of exogenous basic amines. The compound N-N-N'-trimethyl-N'-(2-hydroxy-3-methyl-5-iodobenzyl)-1,3 propanediamine (HIPDM) is a basic amine that can be labelled with radioactive iodine and detected by external counting. Intravenously injected 123I-HIPDM is extracted by the human lung, where it is retained in a slowly effluxable pool. In the present study, we measured HIPDM lung kinetics and subcellular distribution in rabbits given i.v. 125I-HIPDM. Rabbits were killed from 2 min to 5 h after injection, and the radioactivity retained in their lungs was measured. Subcellular lung fractions (nuclear, mitochondrial, lysosomal, microsomal and postmicrosomal supernatant) were assayed for HIPDM radioactivity, protein content, and distribution of specific marker enzymes. HIPDM lung clearance in rabbits was nearly identical to that of humans. Virtually all the HIPDM radioactivity in lungs (98+/-1%) was associated with subcellular membranous structures. The highest HIPDM specific radioactivity was found in the mitochondrial fraction, and the subcellular distribution profile closely resembled that of the mitochondrial marker enzyme succinate cytochrome c reductase. No redistribution of HIPDM among subcellular compartments was observed over a 5 h period after injection. The data indicate that mitochondria act as reservoir for HIPDM in the lungs and contribute to the pulmonary persistence of this compound. HIPDM can be used to investigate the pulmonary uptake of basic amines in health and in lung disease.


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