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1.
Amino acid transport in horse erythrocytes is regulated by three co-dominant allelomorphic genes coding for high-affinity transport activity (system asc1), low-affinity transport activity (system asc2) and transport-deficiency, respectively. The asc systems are selective for neutral amino acids of intermediate size, but unlike conventional system ASC, do not require Na+ for activity. In the present series of experiments we have used a combined kinetic and genetic approach to establish that dibasic amino acids are also asc substrates, systems asc1 and asc2 representing the only mediated routes of cationic amino acid transport in horse erythrocytes. Both transporters were found to exhibit a strong preference for dibasic amino acids compared with neutral amino acids of similar size. Apparent Km values (mM) for influx via system asc1 were L-lysine (9), L-ornithine (27), L-arginine (27), L-alanine (0.35). Corresponding Vmax estimates (mmol/l cells per h, 37 degrees C) were L-lysine (1.65), L-ornithine (2.15), L-arginine (0.54), L-alanine (1.69). Apparent Km values for L-lysine and L-ornithine influx via system asc2 were approximately 90 and greater than 100 mM, respectively, with Vmax values greater than 2 and greater than 1 mmol/l cells per h, respectively. Apparent Km and Vmax values for L-alanine uptake by system asc2 were 14 mM and 6.90 mmol/l cells per h. In contrast, L-arginine was transported by system asc2 with the same apparent Km as L-alanine (14 mM), but with a 77-fold lower Vmax. This dibasic amino acid was shown to cause cis- and trans-inhibition of system asc2 in a manner analogous to its interaction with system ASC, where the side-chain guanidinium group is considered to occupy the Na+-binding site on the transporter. Concentrations of extracellular L-arginine causing 50% inhibition of zero-trans L-alanine influx and half-maximum inhibition of L-alanine zero-trans efflux were 14 mM (extracellular L-alanine concentration 15 mM) and 3 mM (intracellular L-alanine concentration 15.5 mM), respectively. We interpret these observations as evidence of structural homology between the horse erythrocyte asc transporters and system ASC. Physiologically, intracellular L-arginine may function as an endogenous inhibitor of system asc2 activity.  相似文献   

2.
The energetics of amino acid uptake by the developing small intestine was investigated in vitro. L-valine, L-leucine, L-phenylalanine, L-methionine, L-lysine and L-arginine were all actively transported by the newborn rat jejunum. Metabolic inhibitors (e.g. 2,4-dinitrophenol) significantly reduced uptake of all amino acids but uptake against a concentration gradient was not totally abolished. Uptake of all amino acids was reduced at low[Na+]. Inhibition of transport of neutral amino acids by reduced luminal [Na+] was greater than that of basic amino acids, and the tissue was barely able to concentrate the neutral amino acids. [Na+] affected the Michaelis constant (Km) of neutral transport systems for their substrates; for the basic amino acids Km values were unaffected by the presence or absence of Na+. Ouabain significantly inhibited neutral amino acid uptake but had no effect on L-lysine or L-arginine uptake. These results are discussed in terms of the Na+ gradient hypothesis for amino acid transport, and the site of energy input to active transport. The role of glycolysis in providing energy for intestinal transport in the neonatal rat and the efficiency of Na+ dependent and independent transport mechanisms are considered. It is concluded that the energetics of amino acid transport systems in neonatal and adult rats are essentially similar.  相似文献   

3.
Neutral amino acid transport at the human blood-brain barrier   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The kinetics of human blood-brain barrier neutral amino acid transport sites are described using isolated human brain capillaries as an in vitro model of the human blood-brain barrier. Kinetic parameters of transport (Km, Vmax, and KD) were determined for eight large neutral amino acids. Km values ranged from 0.30 +/- 0.08 microM for phenylalanine to 8.8 +/- 4.6 microM for valine. The amino acid analogs N-methylaminoisobutyric acid and 2-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid were used as model substrates of the alanine- and leucine-preferring transport systems, respectively. Phenylalanine is transported solely by the L-system (which is sensitive to 2-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid), and leucine is transported equally by the L- and ASC-system (which is sodium-dependent and N-methylaminoisobutyric acid-independent). Dose-dependent inhibition of the high affinity transport system by p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid is demonstrated for phenylalanine, similar to the known sensitivity of blood-brain barrier transport in vivo. The Km values for the human brain capillary in vitro correlate significantly (r = 0.83, p less than 0.01) with the Km values for the rat brain capillary in vivo. The results show that the affinity of human blood-brain barrier neutral amino acid transport is very high, i.e. very low Km compared to plasma amino acid concentrations. This provides a physical basis for the selective vulnerability of the human brain to derangements in amino acid availability caused by a selective hyperaminoacidemia, e.g. hyperphenylalaninemia.  相似文献   

4.
The availability of amino acids in the brain is regulated by the blood-brain barrier (BBB) large neutral amino acid transporter type 1 (LAT1) isoform, which is characterized by a high affinity (low Km) for substrate large neutral amino acids. The hypothesis that brain amino acid transport activity can be altered with single nucleotide polymorphisms was tested in the present studies with site-directed mutagenesis of the BBB LAT1. The rabbit has a high Km LAT1 large neutral amino acid transporter, as compared to the low Km neutral amino acid transporter at the human or rat BBB. The rabbit LAT1 was cloned from a rabbit brain capillary cDNA library. Alignment of the amino acid sequences of rabbit, human, and rat LAT1 revealed two radical amino acid residues that differ in the rabbit relative to the rat or human LAT1. The G219D mutation had a modest effect on the Km and Vmax of tryptophan transport via cloned rabbit LAT1 in frog oocytes, but the W234L variant reduced the Km by 64% and the Vmax by 96%. Conversely, LAT1 transport of either tryptophan or phenylalanine was nearly normalized when the double mutation W234L/G219D variant was produced. These studies show that marked changes in the affinity and capacity of the LAT1 are caused by single nucleotide polymorphisms and that phenotype can be restored with a double mutation.  相似文献   

5.
Intestinal absorption of amino acids in the chicken occurs by way of processes which are concentrative, Na+-dependent and dependent upon metabolic energy in the form of ATP. Intestinal transport is carrier-mediated, subject to exchange transport (trans-membrane effects) and is inhibitable by sugars, reagents which inactivate sulfhydryl groups, potassium ion, and by deoxpyridoxine, an anti-vitamin B6 agent. It is stimulated by phlorizin, a potent inhibitor of sugar transport, and in Na+-leached tissue by modifiers of tissue cyclic AMP levels, e.g. theophylline, histamine, carbachol and secretin. Separate transport sites with broad, overlapping specificities function in the intestinal absorption of the various classes of common amino acids. A simple model for these sites includes one for leucine and other neutral amino acids, one for proline, beta-alanine and related imino and amino acids, one for basic amino acids, and one for acidic amino acids. Absorption of amino acids appears to be widespread in occurrence in the digestive tract of the domestic fowl; transport has been reported to be present in the crop, gizzard, proventriculus, small intestine and in the colon. By the end of the first week of life post-hatch, the caecum loses its ability to transport. Similarly, the yolk sac loses its ability by the second day post-hatch. Intestinal transport was noted before hatch and was found to be maximal immediately post-hatch. A requirement for Ca2+ appears to be lost after the first week of life post-hatch. The cationic amino acids appear to be reabsorbed by a common mechanism in the kidney. Transport rates of leucine measured in the intestine or in the erythrocyte were found to cluster about discrete values when many individual chickens were surveyed; such patterns may be an expression of gene differences between individuals. Two lines of chickens have been developed, one high and the other low uptake, through selective breeding based on the ability of individual birds to absorb leucine in erythrocytes. High leucine absorbing chickens were found to be more effective in absorbing lysine and glycine, were more effectively stimulated by Na+, had greater erythrocyte Na+, K+-ATPase activity, and their erythrocytes contained about 20% less Na+ than low line erythrocytes. The underlying genetic difference between these lines may reside at the level of the Na+, K+-ATPase and (or) with a regulatory gene determining carrier copies. Amino acid transport in erythrocytes was noted to be highest in pre-hatch chicks and to diminish during post-hatch development.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
1. Influx of leucine, lysine and glycine was found to be highest in prehatch (day -1) chicken red blood cells and to diminish during posthatch development when tested at two and four weeks of age. 2. The greatest decline in transport rate during development was seen with leucine; lysine showed a substantial age-related decline only at substrate concentrations greater than Km, the apparent Michaelis constant of transport. 3. Vmax, the maximal transport influx, of each amino acid tested declined during development. 4. Km of glycine and leucine appeared to increase slightly over the test period. 5. In contrast, a 7-fold decrease in Km for lysine transport was seen over the same period. 6. These results are discussed in context of changes in kinetic parameters of amino acid transport during development reported for various animal organs or tissues.  相似文献   

7.
Threonine content of brain decreases in young rats fed a threonine-limiting, low protein diet containing a supplement of small neutral amino acids (serine, glycine and alanine), which are competitors of threonine transport in other systems (Tews et al., 1977). Threonine transport by brain slices was inhibited more by a complex amino acid mixture resembling plasma from rats fed the small neutral amino acid supplement than by mixtures resembling plasma from control rats or from rats fed a supplement of large neutral amino acids. Greater inhibition was seen with mixtures containing only the small neutral amino acids than with mixtures containing only large neutral amino acids. On an equimolar basis, serine and alanine were the most inhibitory; large neutrals were moderately so; and glycine and lysine were without effect. Threonine transport was also strongly inhibited by α-amino-n-butyric acid and homoserine, less so by α-aminoisobutyric acid, and not at all by GABA. The complex amino acid mixtures strongly inhibited α-aminoisobutyric acid transport by brain or liver slices but, in contrast to effects in brain, the extent of the inhibition in liver was not much affected by altering the composition of the mixture. Tryptophan accumulation by brain slices was effectively inhibited by other large neutral amino acids in physiologically occurring concentrations. Threonine, or a mixture of serine, glycine and alanine only slightly inhibited tryptophan uptake; basic amino acids were without effect and histidine stimulated tryptophan transport slightly. These results support the conclusion that a diet-induced decrease in the concentration in brain of a specific amino acid may be related to increased inhibition of its transport into brain by increases in the concentrations of transport-related, plasma amino acids.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The exquisite sensitivity of brain amino acid availability to changes in plasma amino acid composition arises from the uniquely high affinity (low Km) of blood-brain barrier transport sites as compared to cell membrane transport systems in nonbrain tissues. The extension of this paradigm from rats to man assumes that the Km of blood-brain barrier amino acid transport in the human is low as in the rat. This hypothesis is tested in the present studies wherein isolated human brain capillaries are used as a model system for the human blood-brain barrier. Capillaries were obtained from autopsy brain between 20 and 45 h after death and were isolated in high yield and free of adjoining brain tissue. [3H]Phenylalanine transport into the isolated human, rabbit, or rat brain capillary was characterized by two saturable transport systems and a nonsaturable component. The Km values of phenylalanine transport into brain capillaries via the two saturable systems averaged 0.26 +/- 0.08 and 22.3 +/- 7.1 microM for five human subjects. These studies provide the first evidence for a very high affinity (Km = 0.26 microM) neutral amino acid transport system at the blood-brain barrier, and it is hypothesized that this system is selectively localized to the brain side of the blood-brain barrier. The results also show that the transport Km values for phenylalanine transport are virtually identical at both the rat and human blood-brain barrier.  相似文献   

10.
Initial rates of Na(+)-dependent L-glutamic and D-aspartic acid uptake were determined at various substrate concentrations using a fast sampling, rapid filtration apparatus, and the resulting data were analyzed by nonlinear computer fitting to various transport models. At pH 6.0, L-glutamic acid transport was best accounted for by the presence of both high (Km = 61 microM) and low (Km = 7.0 mM) affinity pathways, whereas D-aspartic acid transport was restricted to a single high affinity route (Km = 80 microM). Excess D-aspartic acid and L-phenylalanine served to isolate L-glutamic acid flux through the remaining low and high affinity systems, respectively. Inhibition studies of other amino acids and analogs allowed us to identify the high affinity pathway as the X-AG system and the low affinity one as the intestinal NBB system. The pH dependences of the high and low affinity pathways of L-glutamic acid transport also allowed us to establish some relationship between the NBB and the more classical ASC system. Finally, these studies also revealed a heterotropic activation of the intestinal X-AG transport system by all neutral amino acids but glycine through an apparent activation of Vmax.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetic constants for large neutral amino acid (LNAA) transport across the blood-brain barrier (BBB) of conscious rats were determined in four brain regions: cortex, caudate-putamen, hippocampus, and thalamus-hypothalamus. Indwelling external carotid artery catheters allowed for single-bolus (200 microliters) injections directly into the arterial system of unanesthetized and lightly restrained animals. Our results showed lower brain uptake index values for conscious rats compared to previous reports for anesthetized animals which are consistent with higher rates of cerebral blood flow in the conscious animals. Km values were lower in the conscious animals and ranged from 29% to 87% of the Km values in pentobarbital-anesthetized animals whereas the KD values were about twofold higher in the conscious animals. No apparent regional differences were observed. Influx rates were determined which take into consideration flow rates and plasma amino acid concentrations. Our results showed an average amino acid influx value of 5.2 nmol/min/g, which is 53% higher than the average influx in pentobarbital-anesthetized animals. The present results in conscious animals regarding the low Km of LNAA transport across the BBB lend further support to the importance of fluctuations in plasma amino acid concentrations and LNAA transport competitive effects on brain amino acid availability.  相似文献   

12.
Regional transport of 1-aminocyclohexanecarboxylic acid (ACHC), a nonmetabolizable amino acid, across the blood-brain barrier was studied in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats using an in situ brain perfusion technique. The concentration dependence of influx was best described by a model with a saturable and a nonsaturable component. Best-fit values for the kinetic constants of the frontal cortex equaled 9.7 X 10(-4) mumol/s/g for Vmax, 0.054 mumol/ml for Km, and 1.0 X 10(-4) ml/s/g for KD in the absence of competing amino acids. Saturable influx could be reduced by greater than 85% by either L-phenylalanine or 2-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid, consistent with transport by the cerebrovascular neutral amino acid transport system. The transport Km for ACHC was one-fifth that for the more commonly used homologue, 1-aminocyclopentanecarboxylic acid, and was similar to values for several natural amino acids, such as L-methionine, L-isoleucine, and L-tyrosine. The results indicate that ACHC may be a useful probe for in vivo studies of amino acid transport into brain.  相似文献   

13.
In thoroughbred horses, red blood cell amino acid transport activity is Na(+)-independent and controlled by three codominant genetic alleles (h, l, s), coding for high-affinity system asc1 (L-alanine apparent Km for influx at 37 degrees C congruent to 0.35 mM), low-affinity system asc2 (L-alanine Km congruent to 14 mM), and transport deficiency, respectively. The present study investigated amino acid transport mechanisms in red cells from four wild species: Przewalski's horse (Equus przewalskii), Hartmann's zebra (Zebra hartmannae), Grevy's zebra (Zebra grevyi), and onager (Equus hemonius). Red blood cell samples from different Przewalski's horses exhibited uniformly high rates of L-alanine uptake, mediated by a high-affinity asc1-type transport system. Mean apparent Km and Vmax values (+/- SE) for L-alanine influx at 37 degrees C in red cells from 10 individual animals were 0.373 +/- 0.068 mM and 2.27 +/- 0.11 mmol (L cells.h), respectively. As in thoroughbreds, the Przewalski's horse transporter interacted with dibasic as well as neutral amino acids. However, the Przewalski asc1 isoform transported L-lysine with a substantially (6.4-fold) higher apparent affinity than its thoroughbred counterpart (Km for influx 1.4 mM at 37 degrees C) and was also less prone to trans-stimulation effects. The novel high apparent affinity of the Przewalski's horse transporter for L-lysine provides additional key evidence of functional and possible structural similarities between asc and the classical Na(+)-dependent system ASC and between these systems and the Na(+)-independent dibasic amino acid transport system y+. Unlike Przewalski's horse, zebra red cells were polymorphic with respect to L-alanine transport activity, showing high-affinity or low-affinity saturable mechanisms of L-alanine uptake. Onager red cells transported this amino acid with intermediate affinity (apparent Km for influx 3.0 mM at 37 degrees C). Radiation inactivation analysis was used to estimate the target size of system asc in red cells from Przewalski's horse. The transporter's in situ apparent molecular weight was 158,000 +/- 2500 (SE).  相似文献   

14.
Leucine uptake into membrane vesicles from larvae of the midge Chironomus riparius was studied. The membrane preparation was highly enriched in typical brush border membrane enzymes and depleted of other membrane contaminants. In the absence of cations, there was a stereospecific uptake of l-leucine, which exhibited saturation kinetics. Parameters were determined both at neutral (Km 33 +/- 5 microM and Vmax 22.6 +/- 6.8 pmol/7s/mg protein) and alkaline (Km 46 +/- 5 microM and Vmax 15.5 +/- 2.5 pmol/7s/mg protein) pH values. At alkaline pH, external sodium increased the affinity for leucine (Km 17 +/- 1 microM) and the maximal uptake rate (Vmax 74.0 +/- 12.5 pmol/7s/mg protein). Stimulation of leucine uptake by external alkaline pH agreed with lumen pH measurements in vivo. Competition experiments indicated that at alkaline pH, the transport system readily accepts most L-amino acids, including branched, unbranched, and alpha-methylated amino acids, histidine and lysine, but has a low affinity for phenylalanine, beta-amino acids, and N-methylated amino acids. At neutral pH, the transport has a decreased affinity for lysine, glycine, and alpha-methylleucine. Taken together, these data are consistent with the presence in midges of two distinct leucine transport systems, which combine characters of the lepidopteran amino acid transport system and of the sodium-dependent system from lower neopterans.  相似文献   

15.
Two systems mediating the transport of amino acids were studied in vesicles derived from protein-depleted membranes of pigeon erythrocytes. One system (ASC system) catalysed the Na+-dependent exchange of small neutral amino acids, such as alanine, serine and cysteine. The other system, also Na+-dependent, mediated the active transport of glycine. The ASC and glycine systems were distinguished by the sensitivity of the latter to the anion present, by the former's requirement for an exchangeable amino acid and by the inability of alanine to inhibit the transport of glycine. Preliminary results indicated that the influx of glycine was electrically silent. The only major integral protein retained in the vesicles was the band 3 protein, but that could not be unequivocally identified as the transporter.  相似文献   

16.
Uptake of leucine by the marine pseudomonad B-16 is an energy-dependent, concentrative process. Respiratory inhibitors, uncouplers, and sulfhydryl reagents block transport. The uptake of leucine is Na+ dependent, although the relationship between the rate of leucine uptake and Na+ concentration depends, to some extent, on the ionic strength of the suspending assay medium and the manner in which cells are washed prior to assay. Leucine transport can be separated into at least two systems: a low-affinity system with an apparent Km of 1.3 X 10(-5) M, and a high-affinity system with an apparent Km of 1.9 X 10(-7) M. The high-affinity system shows a specificity unusual for bacterial systems in that both aromatic and aliphatic amino acids inhibit leucine transport, provided that they have hydrophobic side chains of a length greater than that of two carbon atoms. The system exhibits strict stereospecificity for the L form. Phenylalanine inhibition was investigated in more detail. The Ki for inhibition of leucine transport by phenylalanine is about 1.4 X 10(-7) M. Phenylalanine itself is transported by an energy-dependent process whose specificity is the same as the high-affinity leucine transport system, as is expected if both amino acids share the same transport system. Studies with protoplasts indicate that a periplasmic binding protein is not an essential part of this transport system. Fein and MacLeod (J. Bacteriol. 124:1177-1190, 1975) reported two neutral amino acid transport systems in strain B-16: the DAG system, serving glycine, D-alanine, D-serine, and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid; and the LIV system, serving L-leucine, L-isoleucine, L-valine, and L-alanine. The high-affinity system reported here is a third neutral amino acid transport system in this marine pseudomonad. We propose the name "LIV-II" system.  相似文献   

17.
Neutral amino acid transport at the human blood-brain barrier   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Transport regulates nutrient availability in the brain, and many pathways of brain amino acid metabolism are influenced by precursor supply. Therefore, amino acid transport through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) plays an important rate-affecting role in brain metabolism. Information on the Km of BBB amino acid transport provides the quantitative basis for understanding the physiological importance of BBB transport competition effects. For example, the uniquely low Km values of BBB amino acid transport as compared to other organs in the rat provides the basis for the selective vulnerability of the rat brain to changes in amino acid supply caused by nutritional factors. The development of amino acid imbalances in the human brain in parallel with amino acid imbalances in blood is likely to occur if the Km of BBB neutral amino acid transport in humans is low, e.g., 25-100 microM, as is the case for the rat. A new model system of the human BBB, the isolated human brain capillary, has been developed. Recent studies with this system indicate that the Km of phenylalanine transport into human brain microvessels is approximately the same as that found during in vivo studies with laboratory rats. These results support the emerging hypothesis that the human brain, like the rat brain, is subject to acute regulation by dietary-related amino acid imbalances, and that the major site of this regulation is the amino acid transport system at the BBB.  相似文献   

18.
Unidirectional L-phenylalanine transport into six brain regions of pentobarbital-anesthetized rats was studied using the in situ brain perfusion technique. This technique allows both accurate measurements of cerebrovascular amino acid transport and complete control of perfusate amino acid composition. L-Phenylalanine influx into the brain was sodium independent and could be described by a model with a saturable and a nonsaturable component. Best-fit values for the kinetic constants in the parietal cortex equaled 6.9 X 10(-4) mumol/s/g for Vmax, 0.011 mumol/ml for Km, and 1.8 X 10(-4) ml/s/g for KD during perfusion with fluid that did not contain competing amino acids. D-Phenylalanine competitively inhibited L-phenylalanine transport with a Ki approximately 10-fold greater than the Km for L-phenylalanine. There were no significant regional differences in Km, KD, or Ki, whereas Vmax was significantly greater in the cortical lobes than in the other brain regions. L-Phenylalanine influx during plasma perfusion was only 30% of that predicted in the absence of competing amino acids. Competitive inhibition increased the apparent Km during plasma perfusion by approximately 20-fold, to 0.21 mumol/ml. These data provide accurate new estimates of the kinetic constants that describe L-phenylalanine transport across the blood-brain barrier. In addition, they indicate that the cerebrovascular transfer site affinity (1/Km) for L-phenylalanine is three- to 12-fold greater than previously estimated in either awake or anesthetized animals.  相似文献   

19.
The intestinal absorption kinetics of three neutral amino acids, leucine, cycloleucine and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid, has been studied in rat jejunum in vivo, with luminal perfusion during successive periods, by measuring the passive component and the active transport. The mass-transfer coefficients of the passive process, are similar for the three amino acids and increase with the perfusion rate. The transport component, obtained from the difference between total absorption and passive diffusion, shows saturation kinetics and also increases with the perfusion rate. The apparent Michaelis constants, Km, and the maximal transport rates for the three amino acids have been determined. The Km values are greater than those reported for in vitro studies, a result imputable to greater thickness of the unstirred layers in vivo and to the unequal signification of the constant in both conditions. Passive flux has proved to be an important component for in vivo absorption, even at low substrate concentrations (1-5 mM), so that its evaluation cannot be neglected for the calculation ot the kinetic constants of the mediated transport.  相似文献   

20.
Transport systems y+, asc and ASC exhibit dual interactions with dibasic and neutral amino acids. For conventional Na(+)-dependent neutral amino acid system ASC, side chain amino and guanido groups bind to the Na+ site on the transporter. The topographically equivalent recognition site on related system asc binds harmaline (a Na(+)-site inhibitor) with the same affinity as asc (apparent Ki range 1-4 mM), but exhibits no detectable affinity for Ha. Although also classified as Na(+)-independent, dibasic amino acid transport system y+ accepts neutral amino acids when Na+ or another acceptable cation is also present. This latter observation implies that the y+ translocation site binds Na+ and suggests possible functional and structural similarities with ASC/asc. In the present series of experiments with human erythrocytes, system y(+)-mediated lysine uptake (5 microM, 20 degrees C) was found to be 3-fold higher in isotonic sucrose medium than in normal 150 mM NaCl medium. This difference was not a secondary consequence of changes in membrane potential, but resulted from Na+ functioning as a competitive inhibitor of transport. Apparent Km and Vmax values for lysine transport at 20 degrees C were 15.2 microM and 183 mumol/l cells per h, respectively, in sucrose medium and 59.4 microM and 228 mumol/l cells per h in Na+ medium. Similar results were obtained with y+ in erythrocytes of a primitive vertebrate, the Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stouti), indicating that Na(+)-inhibition is a general property of this class of amino acid transporter. At a permeant concentration of 5 microM, the IC50 value for Na(+)-inhibition of lysine uptake by human erythrocytes was 27 mM. Other inorganic and organic cations, including K+ and guanidinium+, also inhibited transport. In parallel with its actions on ASC/asc harmaline competitively inhibited lysine uptake by human cells in sucrose medium. As predicted from mutually competitive binding to the y+ translocation site, the presence of 150 mM Na+ increased the harmaline inhibition constant (Ki) from 0.23 mM in sucrose medium to 0.75 mM in NaCl medium. We interpret these observations as further evidence that y+, asc and ASC represent a family of closely related transporters with a common evolutionary origin.  相似文献   

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