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Hypoxanthine transport through the blood-brain barrier
Authors:Reynold Spector
Institution:(1) Departments of Internal Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Iowa College of Medicine, 52242 Iowa City, IA
Abstract:The unidirectional influx of hypoxanthine across cerebral capillaries, the anatomical locus of the blood=brain barrier, was measured with an in situ rat brain perfusion technique employing 3H]hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine was transported across the blood-brain barrier by a saturable system with a one-half saturation concentration of approximately 0.4 mM. The permeability-surface area product was 3×10–4 sec–1 with a hypoxanthine concentration of 0.02 mgrM in the perfusate. Adenine (4 mM) and uracil and theophylline (both 10 mM), but not inosine (10 mM) or leucine (1 mM), inhibited hypoxanthine transfer through the blood-brain barrier. Thus, hypoxanthine is transported through the blood-brain barrier by a high-capacity, saturable transport system with a half-saturation concentration about 100 times the plasma hypoxanthine concentration. Although involved in the transport hypoxanthine from blood into brain, this system is not powerful enough to transfer important quantities of hypoxanthine from blood into brain.
Keywords:Cerebral capillaries  blood-brain barrier  purines  hypoxanthine
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