cougem
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As probably a lot of you know, dinitrophenol is a mitochondrial uncoupler that works via dissipating the proton gradient over the mitochondrial membrane.
The thing is, wouldn't this also effect pH? I'm doing experiments with DNP that affect channel activation, and I assume it's via oxidative stress but actually, now I think about it, it could act via minor changes in pH (the channels are very pH sensitive).
Thing is, I'm not totally sure how DNP, if at all, would effect pH, when there's multiple layers of mitochondrial membrane etc., and how much it would effect it.
Does anyone have any ideas? Or know of anyone who's investigated this before?
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Dinitrophenol
in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Posted
Also, I believe DNP effects are very much voltage dependent, so I believe it's quite complex in that respect! pH doesn't necessarily equilibrate because its ability to shuttle protons varies with pH.
I haven't actually got any data to back this up though, it's just what I've been told! Any DNP experts out there?