首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 565 毫秒
1.
The human erythrocyte sugar transporter presents two sugar import sites   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Hamill S  Cloherty EK  Carruthers A 《Biochemistry》1999,38(51):16974-16983
The human erythrocyte sugar transporter presents sugar import (e2) and sugar export (e1) sites simultaneously. This study asks whether the sugar transporter exposes only one or multiple import sites. We approached this question by analysis of cytochalasin B binding to the human erythrocyte sugar export site in the presence of sugars that bind to the sugar import site. Extracellular maltose does not enter human erythrocytes. High concentrations of maltose (1-100 mM) inhibit cytochalasin B binding to human red cells. Low concentrations (25-500 microM) increase the level of erythrocyte cytochalasin B binding. Maltose modulation of cytochalasin B binding is mediated by altered affinity of sugar export sites for cytochalasin B. Similar results are obtained with other cell-impermeant inhibitors of sugar uptake. Extracellular D-glucose (a transported sugar) stimulates cytochalasin B binding at low D-glucose concentrations (10-250 microM), but this effect is lost at higher concentrations. Intracellular D-glucose inhibits cytochalasin B binding. Low concentrations of extracellular maltose and other nontransported inhibitors stimulate 3-O-methylglucose uptake in erythrocytes. Higher sugar concentrations (1-100 mM) inhibit transport. These data support the hypothesis that the erythrocyte sugar transporter presents two sugar import sites and at least one sugar export site. This conclusion is consistent with the proposed oligomeric structure of the sugar transporter, a complex of four GluT1 proteins in which each subunit presents a translocation pathway.  相似文献   

2.
ATP regulation of the human red cell sugar transporter   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Purified human red blood cell sugar transport protein intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence is quenched by D-glucose and 4,6-ethylidene glucose (sugars that bind to the transport), phloretin and cytochalasin B (transport inhibitors), and ATP. Cytochalasin B-induced quenching is a simple saturable phenomenon with Kd app of 0.15 microM and maximum capacity of 0.85 cytochalasin B binding sites per transporter. Sugar-induced quenching consists of two saturable components characterized by low and high Kd app binding parameters. These binding sites appear to correspond to influx and efflux transport sites, respectively, and coexist within the transporter molecule. ATP-induced quenching is also a simple saturable process with Kd app of 50 microM. Indirect estimates suggest that the ratio of ATP-binding sites per transporter is 0.87:1. ATP reduces the low Kd app and increases the high Kd app for sugar-induced fluorescence quenching. This effect is half-maximal at 45 microM ATP. ATP produces a 4-fold reduction in Km and 2.4-fold reduction in Vmax for cytochalasin B-inhibitable D-glucose efflux from inside-out red cell membrane vesicles (IOVs). This effect on transport is half-maximal at 45 microM ATP. AMP, ADP, alpha, beta-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate, and beta, gamma-methyleneadenosine 5'-triphosphate at 1 mM are without effect on efflux of D-glucose from IOVs. ATP modulation of Km for D-glucose efflux from IOVs is immediate in onset and recovery. ATP inhibition of Vmax for D-glucose exit is complete within 5-15 min and is only partly reversed following 30-min incubation in ATP-free medium. These findings suggest that the human red cell sugar transport protein contains a nucleotide-binding site(s) through which ATP modifies the catalytic properties of the transporter.  相似文献   

3.
L A Sultzman  A Carruthers 《Biochemistry》1999,38(20):6640-6650
The human erythrocyte sugar transporter is thought to function either as a simple carrier (sugar import and sugar export sites are presented sequentially) or as a fixed-site carrier (sugar import and sugar export sites are presented simultaneously). The present study examines each hypothesis by analysis of the rapid kinetics of reversible cytochalasin B binding to the sugar export site in the presence and absence of sugars that bind to the sugar import site. Cytochalasin B binding to the purified, human erythrocyte glucose transport protein (GLUT1) induces quenching of GLUT1 intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. The time-course of GLUT1 fluorescence quenching reflects a second-order process characterized by simple exponential kinetics. The pseudo-first-order rate constant describing fluorescence decay (kobs) increases linearly with [cytochalasin B] while the extent of fluorescence quenching increases in a saturable manner with [cytochalasin B]. Rate constants for cytochalasin B binding to GLUT1 (k1) and dissociation from the GLUT1.cytochalasin B complex (k-1) are obtained from the relationship: kobs = k-1 + k1[cytochalasin B]. Low concentrations of maltose, D-glucose, 3-O-methylglucose, and other GLUT1 import-site reactive sugars increase k-1(app) and reduce k1(app) for cytochalasin B interaction with GLUT1. Higher sugar concentrations decrease k1(app) further. The simple carrier mechanism predicts that k1(app) alone is modulated by import- and export-site reactive sugars and is thus incompatible with these findings. These results are consistent with a fixed-site carrier mechanism in which GLUT1 simultaneously presents cooperative sugar import and export sites.  相似文献   

4.
Equilibrium [3H]cytochalasin B binding to class I sites of human red cell membranes (the sugar transporter) was examined in the presence and absence of intracellular or extracellular sugars known to interact with the transport system. D-Glucose, a transported sugar, is without effect on cytochalasin B binding when present in the extracellular medium but is an effective inhibitor of binding when present within the cell. Ethylidene glucose and maltose (reactive but nontransported sugars) inhibit cytochalasin B (CCB) binding when present either outside or inside the red cell. Inhibition by intracellular sugar (Si) is of the simple, linear competitive type. Inhibition by extracellular sugars (So) is more complex; the Kd(app) for cytochalasin B binding increases in a saturable fashion with [So]. These observations are compared with the predictions of the one-site, alternating conformer model and the two-site model for substrate binding to the sugar transporter, X. The experimental results are inconsistent with the one-site model but are explained by a two-site model in which the ternary complexes of So . X . Si or So . X . CCBi exist and where the binding sites for So and Si display negative cooperativity when occupied by nontransported substrate and little or no cooperativity when occupied by the transported species, D-glucose.  相似文献   

5.
A Carruthers 《Biochemistry》1986,25(12):3592-3602
Cytosolic adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) modifies the properties of human red cell sugar transport. This interaction has been examined by analysis of substrate-induced sugar transporter intrinsic fluorescence quenching and by determination of Michaelis and velocity constants for D-glucose transport in red cell ghosts and inside-out vesicles lacking and containing ATP. When excited at 295 nm, human erythrocyte ghosts stripped of peripheral proteins display an emission spectrum characterized by a scattering peak and a single emission peak centered at about 333 nm. Addition of sugar transport substrate or cytochalasin B and phloretin (sugar transport inhibitors) reduces emission peak height by 10% and 5%, respectively. Cytochalasin B induced quenching is a simple saturable phenomenon with an apparent Kd (app Kd) of 60 nM and a capacity of 1.4 nmol of sites/mg of membrane protein. Quenching by D-glucose (and other transported sugars) is characterized by at least two (high and low) app Kd parameters. Inhibitor studies indicate that these sites correspond to sugar efflux and influx sites, respectively, and that both sites can exist simultaneously. ATP induces quenching of stripped ghost fluorescence with half-maximal effects at 20-30 microM ATP. ATP reduces the low app Kd and increases the high app Kd for sugar-induced fluorescence quenching. D-Glucose transport in intact red cells is asymmetric (Km and Vmax for influx less than Km and Vmax for efflux). In addition, two operational Km parameters for efflux are detected in zero- and infinite-trans efflux conditions. Protein-mediated sugar transport in ghosts and inside-out vesicles (IOVs) is symmetric with respect to Km and Vmax for entry and exit, and only one Km for exit is detected. Addition of millimolar levels of ATP to the interior of ghosts or to the exterior of IOVs restores both transport asymmetry and two operational Km parameters for native efflux. A model for red cell hexose transport is proposed in which ATP modifies the catalytic properties of the transport system. This model mimics the behavior of the sugar transport systems of intact cells, ghosts, and inside-out vesicles.  相似文献   

6.
The presence of a reactive exofacial sulfhydryl on the human erythrocyte hexose carrier was used to test several predictions of the alternating conformation or one-site model of transport. The cell-impermeant glutathione-maleimide-I (GS-Mal) irreversibly inhibited hexose entry by decreasing the transport Vmax. This effect was potentiated by phloretin and maltose but decreased by cytochalasin B, indicating that under the one-site model the external sulfhydryl is on the outward-facing carrier but that it does not overlap with the exofacial substrate-binding site. Incubation of erythrocytes with maltose competitively inhibited the binding of [3H]cytochalasin B to the inward-facing carrier (Ki = 40 mM). Furthermore, both equilibrium cytochalasin B binding and its photolabeling of the band 4.5 carrier protein were decreased in ghosts prepared from GS-Mal-treated cells. Thus induction of an outward-facing carrier conformation with either maltose or GS-Mal caused the endofacial substrate-binding site to disappear. Dose-response studies of GS-Mal treatment of intact cells suggested that some functional carriers lack a reactive external sulfhydryl, which can be partially regenerated by pretreatment with excess cysteine. These data provide direct support for the one-site model of transport and further define the role of the external sulfhydryl in the transport mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
[3H]Cytochalasin B binding and its competitive inhibition by D-glucose have been used to identify, the glucose transporter in plasma and microsomal membranes prepared from intact rat diaphragm. Scatchard plot analysis of [3H]cytochalasin B binding yields a binding site with a dissociation constant of roughly 110 nM. Since the inhibition constant of cytochalasin B for D-glucose uptake by diaphragm plasma membranes is similar to this value, this site is identified as the glucose transporter. Plasma membranes prepared from diaphragms bind approx. 17 pmol of cytochalasin B/mg of membrane protein to the D-glucose-inhibitable site. If 280 nM (40000 microunits/ml) insulin is present during incubation, cytochalasin B binding is increased roughly 2-fold without alteration in the dissociation constant of this site. In addition, membranes in the microsomal fraction contain 21 pmol of D-glucose-inhibitable cytochalasin B binding sites/mg of membrane protein. In the presence of insulin during incubation the number of these sites in the microsomal fraction is decreased to 9 pmol/mg of membrane protein. These results suggest that rat diaphragm contain glucose transporters with characteristics identical to those observed for the rat adipose cell glucose transporter. In addition, insulin stimulates glucose transport in rat diaphragm through a translocation of functionally identical glucose transporters from an intracellular membrane pool to the plasma membrane without an alteration in the characteristics of these sites.  相似文献   

8.
Simulation shows that the four-state mobile carrier model for sugar transport in which the asymmetry arises from unequal rate constants of inward and outward translation of the free-carrier and carrier-sugar complex, does not fit with the observed data for pre-steady-state uptake recently obtained by A.G. Lowe and A.R. Walmsley [1987) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 903, 547-550). The main reason for this discrepancy is that pre-steady-state fluxes are determined mainly by the dissociation constants Ks of glucose and maltose for the external sites, rather than the Km (zero-transoi) of glucose and the Ki of maltose. The data are also inconsistent with other forms of asymmetric carrier but are fairly consistent with a symmetrical carrier with high-affinity sites for D-glucose or with a fixed site carrier model.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction of nucleosides with the glucose carrier of human erythrocytes was examined by studying the effect of nucleosides on reversible cytochalasin B-binding activity and glucose transport. Adenosine, inosine and thymidine were more potent inhibitors of cytochalasin B binding to human erythrocyte membranes than was D-glucose [IC50 (concentration causing 50% inhibition) values of 10, 24, 28 and 38 mM respectively]. Moreover, low concentrations of thymidine and adenosine inhibited D-glucose-sensitive cytochalasin B binding in an apparently competitive manner. Thymidine, a nucleoside not metabolized by human erythrocytes, inhibited glucose influx by intact cells with an IC50 value of 9 mM when preincubated with the erythrocytes. In contrast, thymidine was an order of magnitude less potent as an inhibitor of glucose influx when added simultaneously with the radioactive glucose. Consistent with this finding was the demonstration that glucose influx by inside-out vesicles prepared from human erythrocytes was more susceptible to thymidine inhibition than glucose influx by right-side-out vesicles. These data, together with previous suggestions that cytochalasin B binds to the glucose carrier at the inner face of the membrane, indicate that nucleosides are capable of inhibiting glucose-transport activity by interacting at the cytoplasmic surface of the glucose transporter. Nucleosides may also exhibit a low-affinity interaction at the extracellular face of the glucose transporter.  相似文献   

10.

Background

In mixed sugar fermentations with recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains able to ferment D-xylose and L-arabinose the pentose sugars are normally only utilized after depletion of D-glucose. This has been attributed to competitive inhibition of pentose uptake by D-glucose as pentose sugars are taken up into yeast cells by individual members of the yeast hexose transporter family. We wanted to investigate whether D-glucose inhibits pentose utilization only by blocking its uptake or also by interfering with its further metabolism.

Results

To distinguish between inhibitory effects of D-glucose on pentose uptake and pentose catabolism, maltose was used as an alternative carbon source in maltose-pentose co-consumption experiments. Maltose is taken up by a specific maltose transport system and hydrolyzed only intracellularly into two D-glucose molecules. Pentose consumption decreased by about 20 - 30% during the simultaneous utilization of maltose indicating that hexose catabolism can impede pentose utilization. To test whether intracellular D-glucose might impair pentose utilization, hexo-/glucokinase deletion mutants were constructed. Those mutants are known to accumulate intracellular D-glucose when incubated with maltose. However, pentose utilization was not effected in the presence of maltose. Addition of increasing concentrations of D-glucose to the hexo-/glucokinase mutants finally completely blocked D-xylose as well as L-arabinose consumption, indicating a pronounced inhibitory effect of D-glucose on pentose uptake. Nevertheless, constitutive overexpression of pentose-transporting hexose transporters like Hxt7 and Gal2 could improve pentose consumption in the presence of D-glucose.

Conclusion

Our results confirm that D-glucose impairs the simultaneous utilization of pentoses mainly due to inhibition of pentose uptake. Whereas intracellular D-glucose does not seem to have an inhibitory effect on pentose utilization, further catabolism of D-glucose can also impede pentose utilization. Nevertheless, the results suggest that co-fermentation of pentoses in the presence of D-glucose can significantly be improved by the overexpression of pentose transporters, especially if they are not inhibited by D-glucose.  相似文献   

11.
At any instant, the human erythrocyte sugar transporter presents at least one sugar export site but multiple sugar import sites. The present study asks whether the transporter also presents more than one sugar exit site. We approached this question by analysis of binding of [3H]cytochalasin B (an export conformer ligand) to the human erythrocyte sugar transporter and by analysis of cytochalasin B modulation of human red blood cell sugar uptake. Phloretin-inhibitable cytochalasin B binding to human red blood cells, to human red blood cell integral membrane proteins, and to purified human red blood cell glucose transport protein (GluT1) displays positive cooperativity at very low cytochalasin B levels. Cooperativity between sites and K(d(app)) for cytochalasin B binding are reduced in the presence of intracellular ATP. Red cell sugar uptake at subsaturating sugar levels is inhibited by high concentrations of cytochalasin B but is stimulated by lower (<20 nM) concentrations. Increasing concentrations of the e1 ligand forskolin also first stimulate then inhibit sugar uptake. Cytochalasin D (a cytochalasin B analogue that does not interact with GluT1) is without effect on sugar transport over the same concentration range. Cytochalasin B and ATP binding are synergistic. ATP (but not AMP) enhances [3H]cytochalasin B photoincorporation into GluT1 while cytochalasin B (but not cytochalasin D) enhances [gamma-32P]azidoATP photoincorporation into GluT1. We propose that the red blood cell glucose transporter is a cooperative tetramer of GluT1 proteins in which each protein presents a translocation pathway that alternates between uptake (e2) and export (e1) states but where, at any instant, two subunits must present uptake (e2) and two subunits must present exit (e1) states.  相似文献   

12.
Disaccharides (sucrose, lactose, melibiose, cellobiose, trehalose, maltose, and isomaltose) are not transported across the human erythrocyte membrane. Maltose alone is bound in appreciable amounts to the intact cell as well as ghost membranes and competes mutually for uptake with D-glucose. In (NH4)2-SO4-precipitated membrane preparations, maltose binds more strongly than other disaccharides (KD = 1.3 X 10(-5) M; maximum binding capacity, 71 pmol/mg protein) and again competes mutually with D-glucose. Phloretin inhibits the binding of glucose much more than that of maltose.  相似文献   

13.
By an optical method, cytochalasin B is shown to be a competitive inhibitor of D-glucose transport across the human erythrocyte membrane with Ki of 1.2 x 10(-7) M. A Drieding molecular model of cytochalasin B reveals an almost identical spatial distribution of four oxygen atoms to those found in the C1-conformation of beta-D-glucopyranose and implicated in hydrogen bonding to the carrier protein associated with D-glucose transport. The stereochemistry of this transport model is discussed. On the basis of the interoxygen distances found in cytochalasin B, hydrocortisone, prednisolone, corticosterone, and phenolphthalein are considered as analogues and are shown to be competitive inhibitors of D-glucose transport with Ki values of 2.2 x 10(-4) M, 3.0 x 10(-4) M, 4.0 x 10(-4) M, and 2.5 x 10(-5) M, respectively. These results are considered to be consistent with the proposed mode of action of cytochalasin B and also provide further support for the model of D-glucose stereospecifically hydrogen-bonded to a carrier protein.  相似文献   

14.
Hydrolysis of small substrates (maltose, maltotriose and o-nitrophenylmaltoside) catalysed by porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase was studied from a kinetic viewpoint over a wide range of substrate concentrations. Non-linear double-reciprocal plots are obtained at high maltose, maltotriose and o-nitrophenylmaltoside concentrations indicating typical substrate inhibition. These results are consistent with the successive binding of two molecules of substrate per enzyme molecule with dissociation constants Ks1 and Ks2. The Hill plot, log [v/(V-v)] versus log [S], is clearly biphasic and allows the dissociation constants of the ES1 and ES2 complexes to be calculated. Maltose and maltotriose are inhibitors of the amylase-catalysed amylose and o-nitrophenylmaltoside hydrolysis. The inhibition is of the competitive type. The (apparent) inhibition constant Kiapp varies with the inhibitor concentration. These results are also consistent with the successive binding of at least two molecules of maltose or maltotriose per amylase molecule with the dissociation constants Ki1 and Ki2. These inhibition studies show that small substrates and large polymeric ones are hydrolysed at the same catalytic site(s). The values of the dissociation constants Ks1 and Ki1 of the maltose-amylase complexes are identical. According to the five-subsite energy profile previously determined, at low concentration, maltose (as substrate and as inhibitor) binds to the same two sites (4,5) or (3,4), maltotriose (as substrate and as inhibitor) and o-nitrophenyl-maltoside (as substrate) bind to the same three subsites (3,4,5). The dissociation constants Ks2 and Ki2 determined at high substrate and inhibitor concentration are consistent with the binding of the second ligand molecule at a single subsite. The binding mode of the second molecule of maltose (substrate) and o-nitrophenylmaltoside remains uncertain, very likely because of the inaccuracy due to simplifications in the calculations of the subsite binding energies. No binding site(s) outside the catalytic one has been taken into account in this model.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Sodium tetrathionate reacts with the glucose carrier of human erythrocytes at a rate which is greatly altered in the presence of competitive inhibitors of glucose transport. Inhibitors bound to the carrier on the outer surface of the membrane, either at the substrate site (maltose) or at the external inhibition site (phloretin and phlorizin), more than double the reaction rate. Inhibitors bound at the internal inhibition site (cytochalasin B and androstenedione), protect the system against tetrathionate. After treatment with tetrathionate, the maximum transport rate falls to less than one-third, and the properties of the binding sites are modified in unexpected ways. The affinity of externally bound inhibitors rises: phloretin is bound up to seven times more strongly and phlorizin and maltose twice as strongly. The affinity of cytochalasin B, bound at the internal inhibition site, falls to half while that of androstenedione is little changed. The affinity of external glucose falls slightly. Androstenedione prevents both the fall in transport activity and the increase in phloretin affinity produced by tetrathionate. An inhibitor of anion transport has no effect on the reaction. The observations support the following conclusions: (1) Tetrathionate produces its effects on the glucose transport system by reacting with the carrier on the outer surface of the membrane. (2) The carrier assumes distinct inward-facing and outward-facing conformations, and tetrathionate reacts with only the outward-facing form. (3) The thiol group with which tetrathionate is presumed to react is not present in either the substrate site or the internal or external inhibitor site. (4) In binding asymmetrically to the carrier, a reversible inhibitor shifts the carrier partition between inner and outer forms and thereby raises or lowers the rate of tetrathionate reaction with the system. (5) Reaction with tetrathionate converts the carrier to an altered state in which the conformation at all three binding sites is changed and the rate of carrier reorientation is reduced.  相似文献   

16.
Plasma membrane vesicles isolated from nontransformed and Simian virus 40-transformed mouse fibroblast cultures catalyzed carrier-mediated D-glucose transport without detectable metabolic conversion to glucose 6-phosphate. Glucose transport activity was stereospecific, temperature-dependent, sensitive to inactivation by p-chloromercuriphenylsulfonate, and accompanied plasma membrane material during subcellular fractionation. D-Glucose efflux from vesicles was inhibited by phloretin, an inhibitor of glucose uptake in intact cells. Cytochalasin B, a potent inhibitor of glucose uptake when tested with the intact cells used for vesicle isolation did not inhibit glucose transport in vesicles despite the presence of high affinity cytochalasin binding sites in isolated membranes. The enhanced glucose uptake observed in intact cells after viral transformation was not expressed in vesicles: no significant differences in glucose transport specific activity could be detected in vesicle preparations from nontransformed and transformed mouse fibroblast cultures. These findings indicate that cellular components distinct from glucose carriers can mediate changes in glucose uptake in mouse fibroblast cultures in at least two cases: sensitivity to inhibition by cytochalasin B and the enhanced cellular sugar uptake observed after viral transformation.  相似文献   

17.
Cytochalasin B (CB) and forskolin (FSK) inhibit GLUT1-mediated sugar transport in red cells by binding at or close to the GLUT1 endofacial sugar binding site. Paradoxically, very low concentrations of each of these inhibitors produce a modest stimulation of sugar transport [ Cloherty, E. K., Levine, K. B., and Carruthers, A. ((2001)) The red blood cell glucose transporter presents multiple, nucleotide-sensitive sugar exit sites. Biochemistry 40 ((51)) 15549-15561]. This result is consistent with the hypothesis that the glucose transporter contains multiple, interacting, endofacial binding sites for CB and FSK. The present study tests this hypothesis directly and, by screening a library of cytochalasin and forskolin analogues, asks what structural features of endofacial site ligands determine binding site affinity and cooperativity. Like CB, FSK competitively inhibits exchange 3-O-methylglucose transport (sugar uptake in cells containing intracellular sugar) but noncompetitively inhibits sugar uptake into cells lacking sugar at 4 °C. This refutes the hypothesis that FSK binds at GLUT1 endofacial and exofacial sugar binding sites. Some forskolin derivatives and cytochalasins inhibit equilibrium [(3)H]-CB binding to red cell membranes depleted of peripheral proteins at 4 °C. Others produce a moderate stimulation of [(3)H]-CB binding when introduced at low concentrations but inhibit binding as their concentration is increased. Yet other analogues modestly stimulate [(3)H]-CB binding at all inhibitor concentrations applied. These findings are explained by a carrier that presents at least two interacting endofacial binding sites for CB or FSK. We discuss this result within the context of models for GLUT1-mediated sugar transport and GLUT1 quaternary structure, and we evaluate the major determinants of ligand binding affinity and cooperativity.  相似文献   

18.
J M May 《FEBS letters》1988,241(1-2):188-190
Depletion of ATP is known to inhibit glucose transport in human erythrocytes, but the kinetic mechanism of this effect is controversial. Selective ATP depletion of human erythrocytes by 10 micrograms/ml A23187 in the presence of extracellular calcium inhibited 3-O-methylglucose influx noncompetitively and efflux competitively. ATP depletion also decreased the ability of either equilibrated 3-O-methylglucose or extracellular maltose to inhibit cytochalasin B binding in intact cells, whereas neither total high-affinity cytochalasin B binding nor its Kd was affected. Under the one-site model of hexose transport these data indicate that ATP depletion decreases both the affinity of the inward-facing glucose carrier for substrate and its ability to reorient outwardly in intact cells.  相似文献   

19.
On a three-dimensional templated model of GLUT1 (Protein Data Bank code 1SUK), a molecular recognition program, AUTODOCK 3, reveals nine hexose-binding clusters spanning the entire "hydrophilic" channel. Five of these cluster sites are within 3-5 A of 10 glucose transporter deficiency syndrome missense mutations. Another three sites are within 8 A of two other missense mutations. D-glucose binds to five sites in the external channel opening, with increasing affinity toward the pore center and then passes via a narrow channel into an internal vestibule containing four lower affinity sites. An external site, not adjacent to any mutation, also binding phloretin but recognizing neither D-fructose nor L-glucose, may be the main threading site for glucose uptake. Glucose exit from human erythrocytes is inhibited by quercetin (K(i) = 2.4 mum) but not anionic quercetin-semiquinone. Quercetin influx is retarded by extracellular D-glucose (50 mm) but not by phloretin and accelerated by intracellular D-glucose. Quercetin docking sites are absent from the external opening but fill the entire pore center. In the inner vestibule, Glu(254) and Lys(256) hydrogen-bond quercetin (K(i) approximately 10 microm) but not quercetin-semiquinone. Consistent with the kinetics, this site also binds D-glucose, so quercetin displacement by glucose could accelerate quercetin influx, whereas quercetin binding here will competitively inhibit glucose efflux. Beta-D-hexoses dock twice as frequently as their alpha-anomers to the 23 aromatic residues in the transport pathway, suggesting that endocyclic hexose hydrogens, as with maltosaccharides in maltoporins, form pi-bonds with aromatic rings and slide between sites instead of being translocated via a single alternating site.  相似文献   

20.
The characterization of cytochalasin B binding and the resulting effect on hexose transport in rat liver parenchymal cells in primary culture were studied. The cells were isolated from adult rats by perfusing the liver in situ with collagenase and separating the hepatocytes from the other cell types by differential centrifugation. The cells were established in primary culture on collagen-coated dishes. The binding of [4-3H]cytochalasin B and transport of 3-O-methyl-D-[14C]glucose into cells were investigated in monolayer culture followed by digestion of cells and scintillation counting of radioactivity. The binding of cytochalasin B to cells was rapid and reversible with association and dissociation being essentially complete within 2 min. Analysis of the kinetics of cytochalasin B binding by Scatchard plots revealed that binding was biphasic, with the parenchymal cell being extremely rich in high-affinity binding sites. The high-affinity site, thought to be the glucose-transport carrier, exhibited a KD of 2.86 · 10?7 M, while the low-affinity site had a KD of 1.13 · 10?5M. Sugar transport was monitored by 3-O-methyl-D-glucose uptake and it was found that cytochalasin B (10?5M) drastically inhibited transport. However, D-glucose (10?5M) did not displace cytochalasin B, and cytochalasin E, which does not inhibit transport, was competitive for cytochalasin B at only the low-affinity site, demonstrating that the cytochalasin B inhibition of sugar transport occurs at the high-affinity site but that the inhibition is non-competitive in nature. Therefore, the liver parenchymal cells may represent an unusually rich source of glucose-transport system which may be useful in the isolation of this important membrane carrier.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号