25. Alcoholic Liver Disease and the Mitochondrial Ribosome: Methods of Analysis
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Chronic alcohol consumption has been shown to severely compromise mitochondrial protein synthesis. Hepatic mitochondria isolated
from alcoholic animals contain decreased levels of respiratory complexes and display depressed respiration rates when compared
to pair-fed controls. One underlying mechanism for this involves ethanol-elicited alterations in the structural and functional
integrity of the mitochondrial ribosome. Ethanol feeding results in ribosomal changes that include decreased sedimentation
rates, larger hydrodynamic volumes, increased levels of unassociated subunits and changes in the levels of specific ribosomal
proteins. The methods presented in this chapter detail how to isolate mitochondrial ribosomes, determine ribosomal activity,
separate ribosomes into nucleic acid and protein, and perform two-dimensional nonequilibrium pH gradient electrophoretic polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis to separate and subsequently identify mitochondrial ribosomal proteins.
Affiliation(s): (3) Department of Pathology, Anatomy and Cell Biology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Book Title: Alcohol: Methods and Protocols
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology | Volume: 447 | Pub. Date: May-02-2008 | Page Range: 381-394 | DOI: 10.1007/978-1-59745-242-7_25
Subject: Biochemistry
Key Words: Ethanol, liver - mitochondrial protein synthesis - mitochondrial ribosomes - ribosomal proteins - NEPHGE
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