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1.
G E Fagg  B Riederer  A Matus 《Life sciences》1984,34(18):1739-1745
The regulatory effects of Na+ on C1-/Ca2+-dependent and C1-/Ca2+-independent L-glutamate binding sites were examined. In Tris-C1-/Ca2+ buffer, the binding of L-[3H]-glutamate to rat brain synaptic membranes was 5-fold higher than in Tris-acetate buffer. Low concentrations of Na+ (less than 5 mM) markedly depressed L-glutamate binding when assayed in Tris-C1/Ca2+ buffer, and this effect was attenuated by the selective blocker of C1-/Ca2+-dependent binding sites, DL-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate (APB). Scatchard analyses indicated that the effect of Na+ was due to a decrease in the number of C1-/Ca2+-dependent binding sites with no change in affinity. In Tris-acetate buffer, low concentrations of Na+ had little effect on L-glutamate binding. Dose-response curves for the inhibition of L-glutamate binding by DL-APB indicated a predominant high-affinity (Ki 5-10 microM) inhibitory component in Tris-C1-/Ca2+ buffer, but mainly a low-affinity component (Ki 1-2 mM) in Tris-acetate buffer and in Tris-C1-/Ca2+ buffer containing Na+. These data indicate that low concentrations of Na+ regulate specifically the C1-/Ca2+-dependent, APB-sensitive class of L-glutamate binding sites.  相似文献   

2.
Strain OKM-9 is a mesophilic, mixotrophic iron-oxidizing bacterium that absolutely requires ferrous iron as its energy source and L-amino acids (including L-glutamate) as carbon sources for growth. The properties of the L-glutamate transport system were studied with OKM-9 resting cells, plasma membranes, and actively reconstituted proteoliposomes. L-Glutamate uptake into resting cells was totally dependent on ferrous iron that was added to the reaction mixture. Potassium cyanide, an iron oxidase inhibitor, completely inhibited the activity at 1 mM. The optimum pH for Fe2+-dependent uptake activity of L-glutamate was 3.5-4.0. Uptake activity was dependent on the concentration of the L-glutamate. The Km and Vmax for L-glutamate were 0.4 mM and 11.3 nmol x min(-1) x mg(-1), respectively. L-Aspartate, D-aspartate, D-glutamate, and L-cysteine strongly inhibited L-glutamate uptake. L-Aspartate competitively inhibited the activity, and the apparent Ki for this amino acid was 75.9 microM. 2,4-Dinitrophenol, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, gramicidin D, valinomycin, and monensin did not inhibit Fe2+-dependent L-glutamate uptake. The OKM-9 plasma membranes had approximately 40% of the iron-oxidizing activity of the resting cells and approximately 85% of the Fe2+-dependent uptake activity. The glutamate transport system was solubilized from the membranes with 1% n-octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside and reconstituted into a lecithin liposome. The L-glutamate transport activity of the reconstituted proteoliposomes was 8-fold than that of the resting cells. The Fe2+-dependent L-glutamate uptake observed here seems to explain the mixotrophic nature of this strain, which absolutely requires Fe2+ oxidation when using amino acids as carbon sources.  相似文献   

3.
We characterized swelling of rat cultured astrocytes induced by L-glutamate and its analogues. Among L-glutamate receptor agonists, L-glutamate, L-aspartate, L-cysteic acid, DL-homocysteic acid, quisqualate and (+/-)-1-aminocyclopentane-trans-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (trans-ACPD) increased astrocytic intracellular volume (3H-OMG space), while kainate, and N-methyl-D-aspartate did not. Threo-beta-hydroxyaspartate (TBHA), D-aspartate and L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylic acid, high-affinity substrates for Na+-dependent L-glutamate transporters, increased astrocytic 3H-OMG space. L-Glutamate (0.5 mM) increased astrocytic 3H-OMG space to 300% of control in 40-60 min. The increase in 3H-OMG space by 1 mM TBHA was comparable to the L-glutamate-induced one. After a 10 min-exposure to 0.5 mM L-glutamate, astrocytic 3H-OMG space was further increased to 200% even in the absence of L-glutamate. Astrocytes transiently exposed to L-glutamate did not increase their cell volume in K+-free medium and in the presence of 1 mM ouabain, a Na+-K+ ATPase inhibitor. The increase after a transient exposure was also observed by a treatment of 1 mM TBHA, but not by 0.5 mM quisqualate. These results suggest that the volume increases after a transient treatment are mediated by activation of Na+-dependent L-glutamate transporter.  相似文献   

4.
The existence of an endogenous Na(+)-glutamate cotransporter in the oocytes of Xenopus laevis is demonstrated. The transporter does not accept D-glutamate as substrate. The dependence on substrate displays two saturating components with low (K1/2 = 9 mM) and high (K1/2 = 0.35 microM) affinities for L-glutamate. The dependence on external Na+ exhibits a saturating component with a K1/2 value of about 5 mM and a component that has not saturated up to 110 mM Na+. In voltage-clamped oocytes, it is possible to demonstrate that Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate transport is directly coupled to countertransport of Rb+. The analysis of the voltage dependence of the Na+,K(+)-dependent L-glutamate uptake suggests that positive charges are moved inwardly during the transport cycle.  相似文献   

5.
Glutamate transporters are essential for terminating synaptic transmission. Glutamate is translocated together with three sodium ions. In the neuronal glutamate transporter EAAC1, lithium can replace sodium. To address the question of whether the coupling ion interacts with the 'driven' substrate during co-transport, the kinetic parameters of transport of the three substrates, L-glutamate and D- and L-aspartate by EAAC-1 in sodium- and lithium-containing media were compared. The major effect of the substitution of sodium by lithium was on Km. In the presence of sodium, the values for Km and Imax of these substrates were similar. In the presence of lithium, the Km for L-aspartate was increased around 13-fold. Remarkably, the corresponding increase for L-glutamate and D-aspartate was much larger, around 130-fold. In marked contrast, the Ki values for a non-transportable substrate analogue were similar in the presence of either sodium or lithium. The preference for L-aspartate in the presence of lithium was also observed when electrogenic transport of radioactive substrates was monitored in EAAC1-containing proteoliposomes. Our results indicate that, subsequent to substrate binding, the co-transported solutes interact functionally in the binding pocket of the transporter.  相似文献   

6.
V J Balcar  Y Li 《Life sciences》1992,51(19):1467-1478
Characteristics of high affinity uptake of L-glutamate are examined in order to evaluate the possible use of the uptake of [3H]L-glutamate, [3H]L-aspartate or any other suitable [3H]-labelled substrate as a marker for glutamatergic and aspartergic synapses in autoradiographic studies in the mammalian brain. Review of data on substrate specificity indicates the presence of at least two high affinity uptake systems specific for acidic amino acids in the central nervous tissue; one which takes up L-glutamate and L-aspartate and the other which is selective for L-glutamate only. Studies on ionic requirements, too, point to the existence of at least two distinct uptake systems with high affinity for L-glutamate. The Na(+)-dependent uptake system(s) handle(s) both L-glutamate and L-aspartate whereas the Na(+)-independent uptake system(s) show(s) selectivity for L-glutamate only. Available data do not favour the Na(+)-dependent binding of [3H]D-aspartate to thaw-mounted sections of frozen brain tissue as a suitable marker for glutamatergic/aspartergic synaptic nerve endings. However, there are reasons--such as the results of lesion studies and the existence of uptake sites which have a higher affinity for L-aspartate than for D-aspartate--to suggest that Na(+)-dependent binding of [3H]L-aspartate, rather than that of [3H]D-aspartate, should be further investigated as a possible marker for the glutamatergic/aspartergic synapses in the autoradiographic studies using sections of frozen brain.  相似文献   

7.
Osteoclasts are involved in the catabolism of the bone matrix and eliminate the resulting degradation products through transcytosis, but the molecular mechanism and regulation of transcytosis remain poorly understood. Upon differentiation, osteoclasts express vesicular glutamate transporter 1 (VGLUT1), which is essential for vesicular storage and subsequent exocytosis of glutamate in neurons. VGLUT1 is localized in transcytotic vesicles and accumulates L-glutamate. Osteoclasts secrete L-glutamate and the bone degradation products upon stimulation with KCl or ATP in a Ca2+-dependent manner. KCl- and ATP-dependent secretion of L-glutamate was absent in osteoclasts prepared from VGLUT1-/- knockout mice. Osteoclasts express mGluR8, a class III metabotropic glutamate receptor. Its stimulation by a specific agonist inhibits secretion of L-glutamate and bone degradation products, whereas its suppression by a specific antagonist stimulates bone resorption. Finally, it was found that VGLUT1-/- mice develop osteoporosis. Thus, in bone-resorbing osteoclasts, L-glutamate and bone degradation products are secreted through transcytosis and the released L-glutamate is involved in autoregulation of transcytosis. Glutamate signaling may play an important role in the bone homeostasis.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the dependence of the rate of lactic acid production on the rate of Na(+) entry in cultured transformed rat Müller cells and in normal and dystrophic (RCS) rat retinas that lack photoreceptors. To modulate the rate of Na(+) entry, two approaches were employed: (i) the addition of L-glutamate (D-aspartate) to stimulate coupled uptake of Na(+) and the amino acid; and (ii) the addition of monensin to enhance Na(+) exchange. Müller cells produced lactate aerobically and anaerobically at high rates. Incubation of the cells for 2-4 h with 0.1-1 mM L-glutamate or D-aspartate did not alter the rate of production of lactate. ATP content in the cells at the end of the incubation period was unchanged by addition of L-glutamate or D-aspartate to the incubation media. Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate uptake was observed in the Müller cells, but the rate of uptake was very low relative to the rate of lactic acid production. Ouabain (1 mM) decreased the rate of lactic acid production by 30-35% in Müller cells, indicating that energy demand is enhanced by the activity of the Na(+)-K(+) pump or depressed by its inhibition. Incubation of Müller cells with 0.01 mM monensin, a Na(+) ionophore, caused a twofold increase in aerobic lactic acid production, but monensin did not alter the rate of anaerobic lactic acid production. Aerobic ATP content in cells incubated with monensin was not different from that found in control cells, but anaerobic ATP content decreased by 40%. These results show that Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate/D-aspartate uptake by cultured retinal Müller cells causes negligible changes in lactic acid production, apparently because the rates of uptake are low relative to the basal rates of lactic acid production. In contrast, the marked stimulation of aerobic lactic acid production caused by monensin opening Na(+) channels shows that glycolysis is an effective source of ATP production for the Na(+)-K(+) ATPase. A previous report suggests that coupled Na(+)-L-glutamate transport stimulates glycolysis in freshly dissociated salamander Müller cells by activation of glutamine synthetase. The Müller cell line used in this study does not express glutamine synthetase; consequently these cells could only be used to examine the linkage between Na(+) entry and the Na(+) pump. As normal and RCS retinas express glutamine synthetase, the role of this enzyme was examined by coapplication of L-glutamate and NH(4) (+) in the presence and absence of methionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase. In normal retinas, neither the addition of L-glutamate alone or together with NH(4) (+) caused a significant change in the glycolytic rate, an effect linked to the low rate of uptake of this amino acid relative to the basal rate of retinal glycolysis. However, incubation of the RCS retinas in media containing L-glutamate and NH(4)(+) did produce a small (15%) increase in the rate of glycolysis above the rate found with L-glutamate alone and controls. It is unlikely that this increase was the result of conversion of L-glutamate to L-glutamine, as it was not suppressed by inhibition of glutamine synthetase with 5 mm methionine sulfoximine. It appears that the magnitude of Müller cell glycolysis required to sustain the coupled transport of Na(+) and L-glutamate and synthesis of L-glutamine is small relative to the basal glycolytic activity in a rat retina.  相似文献   

9.
The Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate transporters GLAST (EAAT1) and GLT-1 (EAAT2), were expressed in rat lactating mammary gland, but EAAC1 (EAAT3) was not. GLT-1 expression in rat lactating mammary gland was constant in all the physiological situations studied; however, the GLAST expression is under tight regulation. Fasting for 24 h decreased the GLAST expression which returned to control values after refeeding. Weaning for 24 h produced a decrease in GLAST expression through a mechanism independent of prolactin deficiency. Resuckling for 6 h returned the expression of this transporter to control values. There is a correlation between the levels of GLAST (mRNA and protein) and the in vivo uptake of L-glutamate by the lactating mammary gland during the starvation/refeeding cycle and milk accumulation process.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: There is increasing evidence that levels of glutamate are elevated in certain brain regions immediately prior to and during induction and propagation of seizures. Modulation of high-affinity glutamate uptake is a potential mechanism responsible for the elevated levels observed with seizures. To date, three distinct Na+-dependent glutamate transporters have been cloned from rat and rabbit: GLT-1, GLAST, and EAAC-1. We performed a series of experiments to determine whether levels of these transporters are altered in amygdala-kindled rats. Levels of GLT-1, GLAST, and EAAC-1 were examined in three brain regions (hippocampus, piriform cortex/amygdala, and limbic forebrain) by quantitative immunoblotting using subtype-specific antibodies. GLAST protein was down-regulated in the piriform cortex/amygdala region of kindled rats as early as 24 h after one stage 3 seizure and persisting through multiple stage 5 seizures. In contrast, kindling induced an increase in EAAC-1 levels in piriform cortex/amygdala and hippocampus once the animals had reached the stage 5 level. No changes in GLT-1 were observed in any region examined. Changes in transporter levels could contribute to the changes in glutamate levels seen with kindling.  相似文献   

11.
Endogenous glycogen stores are essential to maintain cell functions during myocardial ischemia.. Fasting and L-glutamate improve left ventricular function after an ischemic episode. We studied their effects on myocardial glycogen depletion during ischemia and on left ventricular function and glycogen resynthesis during reperfusion. We allocated 185 Wistar rats to 4 groups: 1) Control, 2) Fasting, 16-20 hours (Fast) 3) L-glutamate supplementation [100 mM] (Glt) or 4) Fasting + L-glutamate supplementation [100 mM]. n = 8-10 in each group. Hearts were mounted in an isolated perfused rat hearts model for 20 min stabilisation, 10/20/30 min ischemia and 60 min reperfusion. At each time point hearts were frozen in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C) within 2 seconds and myocardial contents of glycogen, lactate, alanine and glutamate were determined. Left ventricular pressure was measured continuously. Fasting and L-glutamate supplementation improved LV function after ischemia (Fast: p < 0.05, Glt: p < 0.01) and delayed myocardial glycogen depletion (Fast: p < 0.05, Glt: p < 0.01) compared to control. Decreased lactate accumulation and increased alanine content during ischemia were found in fasted (lactate: p < 0.05, alanine: p < 0.05) and L-glutamate supplemented (lactate: p < 0.01, alanine: p < 0.01) hearts compared to control. We did not find any additive effects of fasting and L-glutamate supplementation. In conclusion fasting and L-glutamate supplementation improve left ventricular function during reperfusion and delay myocardial glycogen depletion during ischemia. There were no additive effects of Fasting and L-glutamate supplementation. These finding suggest common metabolic pathways underlying the effects of L-glutamate supplementation and fasting.  相似文献   

12.
Kang  Tae-Cheon  Hwang  In Koo  Park  Seung-Kook  An  Sung-Jin  Yoon  Dae-Kun  Moon  Seung Myung  Lee  Yoon-Bok  Sohn  Heon-Soo  Cho  Sa Sun  Won  Moo Ho 《Brain Cell Biology》2001,30(12):945-955
We investigated changes of immunoreactivities of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NR) and of excitatory amino acid carrier 1 (EAAC-1), the neuronal glutamate transporter, in the vulnerable CA1 area and the less vulnerable subiculum of the gerbil hippocampus at various times following transient forebrain ischemia. At 30 min after ischemia-reperfusion, the intensity of NR immunoreactivity increased markedly in neurons of CA1 and subiculum, particularly NR2A/B, while EAAC-1 immunoreactivity was reduced in CA1. At 3 hr after reperfusion, the density of NR1 immunoreactivity markedly decreased in CA1. In contrast EAAC-1 immunoreactivity increased in CA1 and in the subiculum. At 12 hr after reperfusion, the decrease of NR1 immunoreactivity was not detected whereas EAAC-1 immunoreactivities in the CA1 area were intensified. In the subiculum, both NR subunits immunoreactivities decreased significantly, in contrast to the maintenance of EAAC-1 immunoreactivity. At 24 hr after reperfusion, both NR2A/B and EAAC-1 immunoreactivities decreased markedly in CA1 and subiculum. We tentatively suggest that the increase of NR immunoreactivity in CA1 at early times after ischemia-reperfusion may increase the delayed neuronal death, and that the increase or maintenance of EAAC-1 immunoreactivity at early times after ischemia-reperfusion may be an important factor in survival of neurons.  相似文献   

13.
V J Balcar 《FEBS letters》1992,300(3):203-207
Uptake of 1 microM [3H]L-glutamate by cultured 3T3 fibroblasts was strongly dependent on extracellular Na+; it was reduced by elevated concentrations of K+ (60 mM) but it was not influenced by variations in the concentration of Ca2+ (0-9.6 mM). D- and L-Asparate, D- and L-threo-3-hydroxyaspartate DL-threo-3-methylaspartate and a few other glutamate derivatives and analogues inhibited the uptake but several close analogues of L-glutamate (including D-glutamate) had no effect, implying that the uptake system is highly structurally selective. The recently identified inhibitor of glutamate uptake in synaptosomal preparations, L-trans-pyrrolidine-2,4-dicarboxylate, was also among the inhibitors. Apparent Km of the uptake was found to be less than 10 microM. The present observations indicate that Na(+)-dependent 'high-affinity' uptake of L-glutamate may appear in structures which are apparently unrelated to glutamatergic synaptic transmission in the CNS.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract: Synaptic membrane (SPM) and postsynaptic density (PSD) fractions isolated from cerebral cortex (CTX) and cerebellum (CL) of canine brain, either fresh or frozen and isolated from either fresh or frozen tissue, were found to contain L-[3H]glutamate binding sites. It was found that there was a concentration of L-glutamate binding sites in CTX-PSD and CL-PSD over the respective membrane fractions, and the Bmax value of CL-PSD (92.0 pmol/mg protein) was about three times that of CTX-PSD (28.9 pmol/mg). The results, together with those of others, suggest that the thin CL-PSD are probably derived from the excitatory synapses in the molecular layer. The ion dependency of L-glutamate binding to canine CTX-SPM fraction was found to be similar to that reported for a rat brain SPM fraction: (a) Cl? increased the number of L-glutamate binding sites and the effect was enhanced by Ca2+; Ca2+ alone had no significant effect; (b) the Cl?/Ca2+ -sensitive binding sites were abolished by 2-amino-4-phosphonobutyrate (APB) or freezing and thawing: (c) the effect of Na+ ion was biphasic: low concentration of Na+ (< 5 mM) decreased Cl?7Ca2+ -de-pendent L-glutamate binding sites, whereas at higher concentrations of Na+ the binding of glutamate was found to increase either in the presence or absence of Ca2+ and Cl?. In addition, the K+ ion (50 mM) was found to decrease the Na+-independent and Cl?/Ca2--independent binding of L-glutamate to fresh CTX-SPM by 18%, but it decreased the Na?-dependent and Cl?/Ca2+-independent L-glutamate binding by 93%; in the presence of Cl, ?/Ca2+, the K+ ion decreased the Na+-dependent binding by 78%. Freezing and thawing of CTX-SPM resulted in a 50% loss of the Na+-dependent L-glutamate binding sites assayed in the absence of Ca2+ and Cl?. The CL-SPM fraction showed similar ion dependency of L-glutamate binding except for the absence of Na?-dependent glutamate binding sites. The CTX-PSD fraction contained neither Na+-dependent nor APB (or Cl?/Ca2+)-sensitive L-glutamate binding sites and its L-glutamate binding was unaffected by freezing and thawing, in agreement with the reported findings using rat brain PSD preparation. L-Glutamate binding to CTX-SPM or CTX-PSD fraction was not affected by pretreatment with 10 mM L-glutamate, nor by simultaneous incubations with calmodulin. Also, phosphorylation of CTX-SPM or CTX-PSD fraction, whether incubated simultaneously or after removal of the phosphorylating reagents, had no effect on binding of L-glutamate. Furthermore, binding of L-glutamate to CTX-SPM or CTX-PSD was found to have no significant effect on subsequent phosphorylation of the fractions. Treatment of the CTX-PSD fraction with 0.5% deoxycholate, 1.0% N-lauroyl sarcosinate, 4 M guanidine-HCl, pH 7.0, 0.5 M KCl, and 1.0 M KCl removed the L-glutamate receptors from the PSD by 25%, 44%, 40%, 8%, and 11%. respectively. The respective percentages of total protein solubilized by these reagents were similar, indicating no preferential dissociation of the receptors, and suggesting that the L-glutamate receptor is an intrinsic PSD component. The present findings, together with the earlier ones showing the presence of γ-aminobutyric acid and flunitrazepam binding sites, of the Ca2+-dependent K+ channel, and of the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel proteins in the isolated PSD fraction, suggest that many, if not all, neurotransmitter receptor proteins and ion channel proteins are anchored in the PSD at the synapse, and thus the PSD may play an important role in neurotransmission at the postsynaptic site.  相似文献   

15.
A cDNA encoding a Na(+)-dependent glutamate transporter has been cloned from the brain of the cockroach Diploptera punctata. The cDNA encodes a transporter protein of 481 amino acids, designated DipEAAT1, which when expressed in baculovirus infected insect cells, resulted in a 40-50 fold increase in [(3)H]L-glutamate uptake. DipEAAT1 mRNA is expressed in the brain, as is the RNA encoding TrnEAAT1, a related transporter recently isolated from the caterpillar Trichoplusia ni. The affinity of these transporters for L-glutamate and several structural analogues was compared. Both have a high affinity for L-glutamate, their presumed primary substrate, but quite different affinities for D-aspartate. TrnEAAT1 was found to be similar to other glutamate transporters in that its ability to transport [(3)H]L-glutamate into cells was inhibited strongly by D- and L- isomers of aspartate and its analogues. DipEAAT1, by contrast, was inhibited weakly by all D- isomers tested. The affinity of DipEAAT1 for [(3)H]D-aspartate was found to be an order of magnitude lower than that of TrnEAAT1, revealing an unusual stereoselectivity for aspartate substrates by the cockroach transporter. The activity of DipEAAT1 was also unaffected by the presence of Zn(++) in the bathing solution, despite the presence of a putative Zn(++)-binding motif conferring Zn(++)-sensitivity on some mammalian glutamate transporters.  相似文献   

16.
J. W. Anderson  D. A. Walker 《Planta》1983,159(3):247-253
(Ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution by intact chloroplasts was enhanced three- to five fold by 2 mM L- and D-malate, attaining rates of 9–15 μmol mg-1 Chl h-1. Succinate and fumarate also promoted activity but D-aspartate and, in the presence of aminooxyacetate, L-aspartate inhibited the malate-promoted rate. A reconstituted chloroplast system supported (ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution at rates of 6-11 μmol mg-1 Chl h-1 in the presence of MgCl2, NADP(H), ADP plus Pi (or ATP), ferredoxin and L-glutamate. The concentrations of L-glutamate and ATP required to support 0.5 V max were 5 mM and 0.25 mM, respectively. When the reaction was initiated with NH4Cl, O2 evolution was preceded by a lag phase before attaining a constant rate. The lag phase was shortened by addition of low concentrations of L-glutamine or by preincubating in the dark in the presence of glutamate, ATP and NH4Cl. Oxygen evolution was inhibited by 2 mM azaserine and, provided it was added initially, 2 mM methionine sulphoximine. The (ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution was attributed to the synthesis of glutamine from NH4Cl and glutamate which reacted with 2-oxoglutarate in a reaction catalysed by ferredoxin-specific glutamate synthase using H2O as the ultimate electron donor. The lag phase was attributed to the establishment of a steady-state pool of glutamine. L-Malate did not affect the activity of the reconstituted system.  相似文献   

17.
G Pines  B I Kanner 《Biochemistry》1990,29(51):11209-11214
Membrane vesicles from rat brain exhibit sodium-dependent uptake of L-[3H]glutamate in the absence of any transmembrane ion gradients. The substrate specificity of the process is identical with (Na+ + K+)-coupled L-glutamate accumulation. Although these vesicles are prepared after osmotic shock and are washed repeatedly, they contain about 1.5 nmol/mg of protein endogenous L-glutamate, apparently located inside the vesicles. The affinity of the process (Km approximately 1 microM) is similar to that of (Na+ + K+)-dependent accumulation by the L-glutamate transporter. Membrane vesicles have been disrupted by the detergent cholate, and the solubilized proteins have been subsequently reconstituted into liposomes. The reconstituted proteoliposomes also exhibit the above uptake--with the same characteristics--provided they contain entrapped cold L-glutamate. Counterflow is optimal when sodium is present on both sides of the membrane, but partial activity is still observed when sodium is present either on the inside or on the outside. Increasing the L-glutamate concentration above the Km results in counterflow completely independent of cis sodium. The initial rate of counterflow is 100-200-fold lower than that of net trans potassium dependent flux. The rate of net flux in the presence of trans sodium or lithium is about 10-fold lower than when choline or Tris are used instead. However, the rate of counterflow (no internal potassium present) was not stimulated by replacing internal sodium or lithium by internal choline. Therefore, optimal functioning of the transporter requires internal potassium while internal sodium and lithium are inhibitory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
19.
[3H]gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) was taken up by cultured embryonic retina cells during the initial stages of cell differentiation. The accumulated GABA was released in the bathing medium and a transient increase in the efflux of GABA was observed when cultures were pulse-stimulated (2 min) with 0.1 mM L-glutamate but not with D-glutamate. The EC50 for L-glutamate to evoke [3H]GABA release was approximately 15 microM. This value is close to the Km for high-affinity uptake of L-glutamate by retina cells. When Na+ ions were replaced by Li+ ions, L-glutamate-induced release of GABA was abolished. Moreover, L-[14C]glutamate uptake by retina cells was significantly reduced when NaCl was replaced by LiCl in the incubation medium. L-Glutamate elicited release of GABA was Ca2+ independent, and was observed when Ca2+ was replaced by Co2+ or when Mg2+ ions were increased to 10 mM concentration. D-Aspartate, which is taken up by the same high-affinity uptake mechanism as L-glutamate, induced an increase in [3H]GABA efflux comparable to L-glutamate. The addition of unlabeled GABA to the medium also promoted the release of accumulated [3H]GABA. However, GABA was twofold less effective than L-glutamate in eliciting [3H]GABA release. The addition of both GABA and L-glutamate to the incubation medium indicated that [3H]GABA efflux due to L-glutamate and GABA was additive. L-Aspartate also promoted an increase in the efflux of [3H]GABA accumulated by retina cells. However, L-aspartate effect was significantly decreased in the absence of Ca2+ or when Na+ ions were replaced by Li+. Our results indicate that at least three releasable pools of GABA are present in the chick embryo retina cells: (a) a GABA-promoted GABA release-homoexchange, (b) a Ca2+-dependent L-aspartate-promoted release, and (c) a Ca2+-independent, Na+-dependent L-glutamate-evoked release. In addition, our data strongly suggest that the L-glutamate-promoted GABA release is due to a process of exchange of L-glutamate with GABA, which may play a fundamental role in the fine control of the excitability of local circuits in the retina.  相似文献   

20.
Vesicular glutamate transporter is present in neuronal synaptic vesicles and endocrine synaptic-like microvesicles and is responsible for vesicular storage of L-glutamate. A brain-specific Na(+)-dependent inorganic phosphate transporter (BNPI) functions as a vesicular glutamate transporter in synaptic vesicles, and the expression of this BNPI defines the glutamatergic phenotype in the central nervous system (Bellocchio, E. E., Reimer, R. J., Fremeau, R. T., Jr., and Edwards, R. H. (2000) Science 289, 957-960; Takamori, S., Rhee, J. S., Rosenmund, C., and Jahn, R. (2000) Nature 407, 189-194). However, since not all glutamatergic neurons contain BNPI, an additional transporter(s) responsible for vesicular glutamate uptake has been postulated. Here we report that differentiation-associated Na(+)-dependent inorganic phosphate cotransporter (DNPI), an isoform of BNPI (Aihara, Y., Mashima, H., Onda, H., Hisano, S., Kasuya, H., Hori, T., Yamada, S., Tomura, H., Yamada, Y., Inoue, I., Kojima, I., and Takeda, J. (2000) J. Neurochem. 74, 2622-2625), also transports L-glutamate at the expense of an electrochemical gradient of protons established by the vacuolar proton pump when expressed in COS7 cells. Molecular, biological, and immunohistochemical studies have indicated that besides its presence in neuronal cells DNPI is preferentially expressed in mammalian pinealocytes, alphaTC6 cells, clonal pancreatic alpha cells, and alpha cells of Langerhans islets, these cells being proven to secrete L-glutamate through Ca(2+)-dependent regulated exocytosis followed by its vesicular storage. Pancreatic polypeptide-secreting F cells of Langerhans islets also expressed DNPI. These results constitute evidence that DNPI functions as another vesicular transporter in glutamatergic endocrine cells as well as in neurons.  相似文献   

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