Plant Physiology 1987-08-01

Pontentiometric cyanine dyes are sensitive probes for mitochondria in intact plant cells : kinetin enhances mitochondrial fluorescence.

Z Liu, W R Bushnell, R Brambl

Index: Plant Physiol. 84 , 1385, (1987)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Selected fluorescent dyes were tested for uptake by mitochrondria in intact cells of barley, maize, and onion. The cationic cyanine dye 3,3'-diheptyloxacarbocyanine iodide [DiOC(7)(3)] accumulated in mitochondria within 15 to 30 minutes without appreciable staining of other protoplasmic constituents. The number, shape, and movement of the fluorescent mitochondria could be seen readily, and the fluorescence intensity of the mitochondria could be monitored with a microscope photometer. Fluorescence was eliminated in 1 to 5 minutes by the protonophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) indicating that maintenance of dye concentration was dependent on the inside-negative transmembrane potential maintained by functional mitochondria. Fluorescence of prestained mitochondria was enhanced within 5 to 10 minutes after addition of 0.1 millimolar kinetin to cells. The fluorescence in kinetintreated cells was dissipated by CCCP. These results suggest that kinetin interacted with respiratory processes resulting in higher potential across the mitochondrial membrane.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Tissue penetration and activity of camptothecins in solid tumor xenografts.

2014-11-01

[Mol. Cancer Ther. 13(11) , 2727-37, (2014)]

Use of a carbocyanine dye as a marker of functional vasculature in murine tumours.

1989-05-01

[Br. J. Cancer 59 , 706, (1989)]

Targeting the tumour vasculature: exploitation of low oxygenation and sensitivity to NOS inhibition by treatment with a hypoxic cytotoxin.

2013-01-01

[PLoS ONE 8 , e76832, (2013)]

More Articles...