Turturro A, Shafiq S A
Mech Ageing Dev. 1981 Jun;16(2):191-204. doi: 10.1016/0047-6374(81)90095-6.
Morphometric comparison of freeze-fractured mitochondria in flight muscles of adult (37-day-old) and old (68-day-old) houseflies revealed a 28% decrease of cristae in the old flies. The major membrane change with age was an increase in the 90-120-A particles in the inner membrane external face concomitant with a loss of particle clusters associated with the openings of the cristae on to the inner membrane. In vitro treatment of flight muscle with 2,4-dinitrophenol, and uncoupler of mitochondrial respiration, did not produce this change but resulted in the formation of smooth particle-free vesicular swellings in the mitochondria. Such swelling were infrequent in the old muscle. The cause for the aging change is not clear, but a reduction in the ability of the intramembranous particles to aggregate, either through modification of altered synthesis, is indicated.