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1.
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) B-lymphocytes have a unique and specific diminution of L-system (leucine favoring) amino acid uptake; the maximal velocity is approximately 10% of normal B-lymphocytes. Treatment of CLL B-cells with the maturational agent, tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate, results in restoration of L-system amino acid uptake to normal velocity. To further characterize the effect of phorbol ester on the L-system of CLL B-cells, we have examined the ability of normal and CLL lymphocytes to exchange intracellular for extracellular amino acids by the L-system (trans-stimulation). A 60% increase in L-system uptake was noted in normal B- and T-lymphocytes in the presence of a high intracellular concentration of 2-amino-2-carboxy-bicycloheptane (BCH), a largely L-system-specific substrate. L-system transport was not trans-stimulated in CLL B-lymphocytes. Phorbol ester treatment restored L-system uptake in CLL to a normal Vmax of 900 mumol/liter cell water per minute in the absence of BCH loading. The Vmax could be increased further to 2,400 if phorbol ester-treated CLL cells were loaded with BCH. Hence, phorbol esters result not only in a normalization of L-system uptake in CLL B-cells but the transport system demonstrates exchange rates comparable to normal lymphocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Hypoxia and amino acid deprivation downregulate expression of extracellular matrix genes in lung fibroblasts. We examined the effect of hypoxia on amino acid uptake and protein formation in human lung fibroblasts. Low O(2) tension (0% O(2)) suppressed incorporation of [(3)H]proline into type I collagen without affecting [(35)S]methionine labeling of other proteins. Initial decreases in intracellular [(3)H]proline incorporation occurred after 2 h of exposure to 0% O(2), with maximal suppression of intracellular [(3)H]proline levels at 6 h of treatment. Hypoxia significantly inhibited the uptake of radiolabeled proline, 2-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), and 2-(methylamino)isobutyric acid (methyl-AIB) while inducing minor decreases in leucine transport. Neither cycloheximide nor indomethacin abrogated hypoxia-related suppression of methyl-AIB uptake. Efflux studies demonstrated that hypoxia inhibited methyl-AIB transport in a bidirectional fashion. The downregulation of amino acid transport was not due to a toxic effect; function recovered on return to standard O(2) conditions. Kinetic analysis of AIB transport revealed a 10-fold increase in K(m) accompanied by a small increase in maximal transport velocity among cells exposed to 0% O(2). These data indicate that low O(2) tension regulates the system A transporter by decreasing transporter substrate affinity.  相似文献   

3.
Neutral amino acid uptake into mammalian cells occurs predominantly through the L, A, and ASC carrier-mediated transport systems. The proteins responsible for transport by these systems have not been isolated, and the three pathways presently are defined by their amino acid specificity and physiologic parameters. We have found that the amino acid derivative, O-diazoacetyl-L-serine (azaserine), is a potentially useful probe for identification of the L-(leucine-favoring) system transporter in human T-lymphocytes. Uptake of azaserine competitively inhibits the uptake of the prototype L-system amino acid, 2-amino-2-carboxybicycloheptane (BCH). Azaserine undergoes photolytic cleavage with 365 nm incident light to yield a highly reactive carbene intermediate and free N2. Following photolysis of [14C]azaserine in a suspension of lymphocytes, the 14C label is detectable within a crude cytoplasmic membrane preparation, and this process is inhibited by a 50-fold excess of unlabeled azaserine or 2-amino-2-carboxybicycloheptane, suggesting that the 14C-product is associated with the membranes at or near the L-system transport site. Furthermore, photolysis of azaserine in the presence of lymphocytes results in specific irreversible inhibition of L-system transport. Thus, photolysis of azaserine provides an initial step toward the identification of the L-system transporter.  相似文献   

4.
Growth factors, mitogens, and malignant transformation can alter the rate of amino acid uptake in mammalian cells. It has been suggested that the effects of these stimuli on proliferation are mediated by activation of Na+/H+ exchange. In lymphocytes, Na+/H+ exchange can also be activated by phorbol esters and by hypertonic media. To determine the relationship between the cation antiport and amino acid transport, we tested the effects of these agents on the uptake of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), methyl-AIB, proline, and leucine in rat thymocytes. Both 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and hypertonicity stimulated amino acid uptake through system A (AIB, proline, and methyl-AIB). In addition, TPA, but not hypertonicity, also elevated leucine uptake. The stimulation of the Na+ -dependent system A was not due to an increased inward electrochemical Na+ gradient. The effects of TPA and hypertonic treatment were not identical: Stimulation of AIB uptake by TPA was observed within minutes, whereas at least 1 hr was required for the effect of hypertonicity to become noticeable. Moreover, stimulation by hypertonicity but not that by TPA, was partially inhibited by cycloheximide, suggesting a role of protein synthesis. That stimulation of Na+/H+ exchange does not mediate the effects on amino acid transport is suggested by two findings: 1) the stimulation of AIB uptake was not prevented by concentrations of amiloride or of 5-(N,N-disubstituted) amiloride analogs that completely inhibit the Na+/H+ antiport and 2) conditions that mimic the effect of the antiport, namely, increasing [Na+]i or raising pHi failed to stimulate amino acid uptake. Thus, in lymphocytes, activation of Na+/H+ exchange and stimulation of amino acid transport are not casually related.  相似文献   

5.
Three major pathways mediate amino acid transport into mammalian cells: the A-system and the ASC-system, which require a sodium gradient across the plasma membrane, and the L-system, which has no requirement for a sodium gradient. We have found that the lymphocytes from patients with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) have a marked reduction in the L-system of amino acid transport when compared to normal human B-lymphocytes from blood or tonsils. Transport by the A- and ASC-systems was not decreased in CLL B-lymphocytes. Because of the specific defect of the sodium-independent L-system amino acid transport in CLL cells, we have examined the activity of another sodium-independent transport system, the Y+-system, in human lymphocytes. The Y+-system favors the transport of dibasic, cationic amino acids such as lysine, ornithine, and arginine, which carry a positively charged group on their side chains. Our studies indicate that there is a large nonsaturable component of amino acid transport by the Y+-system in human lymphocytes. Using a multicomponent mathematical analysis, we have determined that the saturable component of Y+-transport is similar in T- (thymus-derived) and B- (bone-marrow-derived) lymphocytes and is unimpaired in CLL B-lymphocytes. Further, fluoronitrophenylazide, which was thought to be a specific inhibitor of the Y+-system when photoactivated, also inhibits A-, and L-system transport in CLL, T-, and B-lymphocytes.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The polar long-chain amino acids glutamine and methionine can be transported across the endothelial cells of brain microvessels either by an L-system which operates by a facilitated diffusion, exchanging mechanism, or by a concentrating, energy-dependent A-system. The presence of glutamine and/or of methionine can induce a synergism between the two transport systems which results, by a transstimulation mechanism, in a net increased uptake of neutral hydrophobic aminoacids. The methionine analog S-methylthiocysteine, which is the mixed disulfide resulting from the combination of methanethiol with cysteine, behaves similarly to methionine in stimulating the uptake of neutral hydrophobic amino acids. The same transstimulating effect can even be obtained in collagenase-treated, A-system-deprived microvessels by inducing the direct formation of S-methylthiocysteine within the cytoplasmic compartment of the endothelial cells.Abbreviations MeAIB -methylaminoisobutyric acid - BCH DL--aminobicyclo-2,2,1-heptanecarboxylic acid - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The uptake of a number of amino acids by the developing small intestine of the rat was investigated in vitro. L-valine, L-leucine, L-methionine, L-phenylalanine, L-arginine and L-lysine were all taken up by active transport and concentrated within the jejunal mucosa. GABA was not actively transported by the jejunum. The kinetics of carrier transport of amino acids was determined from birth to maturity. The Michaelis constant (Km) of the L-leucine, L-methionine, L-arginine and l-lysine transport systems was found to be low postnatally and increased with age, particularly after the time of weaning. The rate of l-leucine, L-methionine, L-phenylalanine and L-lysine transport (Vmax) was high postnatally but decreased after weaning. Neutral amino acids were transported at higher rates than basic amino acids. l-arginine was poorly transported by the jejunum. The specificity of transport systems for amino acids was investigated in inhibition studies. Amino acid transport systems appeared to be polyfunctional in the postnatal period but were more specific in post-weaned animals. The changes in kinetics and specificity of amino acid transport in the small intestine are discussed with reference to their possible functional significance and to the maturational changes in the jejunum, particularly with the appearance of a functionally distinct absorptive cell lining the intestinal villi during the third postnatal week (the time of weaning).  相似文献   

9.
Entry of certain free amino acids (alpha aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), alanine and proline), but not of leucine into rat thymic lymphocytes increased progressively when the cells were incubated in amino acid deficient medium. Actinomycin D, cycloheximide, or a high concentration of AIB abolished the time-related increase in AIB accumulation, whereas exposure to a high concentration of leucine had no effect. This phenomenon could not be attributed to a progressive alteration in the nature of the incubation medium nor to reduced transinhibition of AIB uptake. The exodus of AIB also increased with time, but to a smaller degree than AIB entry. Initial rates of AIB entry and exodus increased with increases in the pH of the incubation medium over the range 6.5-8.0. The effects of pH on entry and exodus were time-related, increasing progressively oveb nullified the magnified time related increments in AIB transport caused by prolonged incubation at pH 8.0. The influence of a given pH on transport of AIB decreased rapidly when the cells were transferred to medium of another pH, but this tendency diminished the longer the cells were exposed to the initial pH. pH influenced the entry of alanine and proline in the same fashion as that of AIB, but did not affect leucine entry. These results indicate that thymic lymphocytes exhibit adaptive enhancement in the accumulation of free amino acids that are transported largley by the A or alanine-preferring system, and that the adaptive process involves both entry and exodus. Moreover, alterations in pH modify entry and exodus of these same amino acids, profoundly affect the magnitude of time-released increases, and may induce fundamental changes in the mechanism(s) serving amino acid transport.  相似文献   

10.
Melphalan, l-phenylalanine mustard, is transported by the L1210 cell through carriers of the leucine (L) type. Its initial rate of transport is inhibited by both l-leucine, a naturally occurring L system amino acid and 2-aminobicyclo[2,2,1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid (BCH), a synthetic amino acid which is transported by the L system in the Ehrlich ascites tumor cell. Both amino acids inhibited melphalan transport comparably in sodium-free medium. However, BCH, in medium containing sodium, was unable to reduce a component of melphalan transport which was readily inhibited by leucine but not by α-aminoisobutyric acid. Inhibition analysis indicated that leucine competes with BCH for transport but that a portion of leucine transport is not readily inhibited by BCH. These results suggest that in the L1210 cell melphalan is transported equally by a BCH-sensitive, sodium-independent L system and a BCH-insensitive, sodium-dependent L system.  相似文献   

11.
Neutral amino acid transport was characterized in the pluripotent embryonal carcinoma (EC) cell line, OC15. Ten of the thirteen amino acids tested are transported by all three of the major neutral amino acid transport systems--A, L, and ASC--although one system may make a barely measurable contribution in some cases. The characterization of N-methyl-aminoisobutyric acid (meAIB) transport points to this model amino acid as a definitive substrate for System A transport by OC15 cells. Thus, high concentrations of meAIB can be used selectively to block System A transport, and the transport characteristics of meAIB represent system A transport. Kinetic analysis of System A, with a Km = 0.79mM and Vmax = 14.4 nmol/mg protein/5 min, suggests a single-component transport system, which is sensitive to pH changes. While proline transport in most mammalian cells is largely accomplished through System A, it is about equally divided between Systems A and ASC in OC15 cells, and System A does not contribute at all to proline transport by F9 cells, an EC cell line with limited developmental potential. Kinetic analysis of System L transport, represented by Na+-independent leucine transport, reveals a high-affinity, single-component system. This transport system is relatively insensitive to pH changes and has a Km = 0.0031 mM and Vmax = 0.213 nmol/mg protein/min. The putative System L substrate, 2-aminobicyclo-[2,2,1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid (BCH), inhibits Systems A and ASC as well as System L in OC15 cells. Therefore, BCH cannot be used as a definitive substrate for System L in OC15 cells. Phenylalanine is primarily transported by Na+-dependent Systems A and ASC (83% Na+-dependent; 73% System ASC) in OC15 cells, while it is transported primarily by the Na+-independent System L in most other cell types, including early cleavage stage mouse embryos and F9 cells. We have also found this unusually strong Na+-dependency of phenylalanine transport in mouse uterine blastocysts (82% Na+-dependent). There is no evidence for System N transport by OC15 cells, since histidine is transported primarily by a Na+-independent, BCH-inhibitable mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
The regulation of amino acid transport in L6 muscle cells by amino acid deprivation was investigated. Proline uptake was Na+-dependent, saturable and concentrative, and was predominantly through system A. Proline uptake was inhibited by alanine, α-amino isobutyric acid (AIB), and by α-methylamino isobutyric acid, but not by lysine or valine. At 25°C, Km of proline uptake was 0.5 mM. Amino acid-deprivation resulted in a progressive increase in the rate of proline uptake, reaching up to 6-fold stimulation after 6 hours. The basal and stimulated transport were equally Na+-dependent, and both were inhibited by competition with the same amino acids. Kinetic analysis showed that Km decreased by a factor of 2.4 and Vmax increased 1.9-fold in deprived cells. Amino acid-deprivation did not stimulate amino acid uptake through systems other than system A. This suggests that the higher Km in proline-supplemented cells is not due to release of intracellular amino acids into unstirred layers surrounding the cells. The presence of amino acids which are substrates of system A (including AIB) during proline-deprivation, prevented stimulation of proline uptake, whereas those transported by systems Ly+ or L exclusively were ineffective. The stimulation of the transport-rate in deprived cells could be reversed by subsequent exposure to proline or other substrates of system A. L6 cells, deprived of proline for 6 hours, retained the stimulation of transport after detachment from the monolayers with trypsin. Uptake rates were comparable in suspended and attached cells in monolayer culture. Thus, amino acid-depreivation of L6 cells results in an adaptive increase in proline uptake, which is not due to unstirred layers but appears to be mediated by other mechanisms of selective transport regulation.  相似文献   

13.
Vesicles prepared from Halobacterium halobium cell envelopes accumulate amino acids in response to light-induced electrical and chemical gradients. Nineteen of 20 commonly occurring amino acids have been shown to be actively accumulated by these vesicles in response to illumination or in response to an artificially created Na-gradient. Sodium-activated amino acid transport for 18 of these amino acids has been shown to occur in direct response to the protonmotive force generated. Glutamate is transported only in response to a sodium gradient. Michaelis constants for the uptake of these amino acids are close or identical whether the amino acids are accumulated in response to a sodium gradient or a protonmotive force (i.e., electrical gradient). On the basis of shared common carriers the transport systems can be divided into eight classes, each responsible for the transport of one or several amino acids, i.e., arginine, lysine, histidine; asparagine, glutamine; alanine, glycine, threonine, serine; leucine, valine, isoleucine, methionine; phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan; aspartate; glutamate; proline. Available evidence suggests that these carriers are symmetrical in that amino acids can be transported equally well in both directions across the vesicle membranes. A tentative working model to account for these observations is presented.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanism of stimulation of amino acid transport system A caused by amino acid deprivation in L6 cells was investigated. In cells loaded with alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), amino acid deprivation increased the rate of proline uptake only after the intracellular [AIB] dropped below 7 mM. Efflux of proline was not sensitive to the presence of proline in the outer medium (with or without external Na+), suggesting that efflux through system A (and possibly uptake) is not susceptible to transinhibition. Transport (stimulated uptake) into amino acid-deprived cells and that into amino acid-supplemented cells differed in several chemical properties: 1) In the former group, transport was higher at lower pH values than in the latter, and the optimum pH values were 7.5 and 7.8, respectively. 2) Unlike proline uptake in supplemented cells, uptake in deprived cells was inhibited by 50% with N-ethylmaleimide (1 mM) or by 50 microM p-chloromercuribenzoate (PCMBS). Inhibition by PCMBS was not due to collapse of the Na+ gradient. The mercurial inhibited only the deprivation-induced stimulation of transport, bringing the rate of proline uptake to the "basal" uptake level observed in amino acid-supplemented cells. Proline uptake was not stimulated by a second deprivation following treatment with PCMBS and a supplementation-deprivation cycle. However, in untreated cells, or by reversing mercaptide formation with dithiotreitol, the second deprivation stimulated transport. Deprivation at 4 degrees C did not elicit stimulation of proline uptake. Cycloheximide prevented the stimulation and decreased the rate of proline uptake in deprived cells more efficiently than in supplemented cells. Actinomycin D prevented stimulation when added at the onset of deprivation. The above data indicate that stimulation of transport by deprivation is protein synthesis-dependent and that the stimulated transport had chemical properties distinct from the "basal" transport in supplemented cells. The evidence presented is consistent with a model of activation of a finite pool of transporters upon deprivation, the chemical characteristics of which differ from those of the "basal" transport system.  相似文献   

15.
We report the characterization of an amino acid 2-aminoisobutyric acid was transported solely by the general amino acid permease and not by the neutral amino acid permease. Furthermore, this substrate was not metabolized after transport. The potential for a system-specific nonmetabolizable substrate as a tool in the analysis of amino acid transport and its regulation is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Basolateral amino acid transport systems have been characterized in the perfused exocrine pancreas using a high-resolution paired-tracer dilution technique. Significant epithelial uptakes were measured for L-alanine, L-serine, alpha-methylaminoisobutyric acid, glycine, methionine, leucine, phenylalanine, tyrosine and L-arginine, whereas L-tryptophan and L-aspartate had low uptakes. alpha-Methylaminoisobutyric acid transport was highly sodium dependent (81 +/- 3%), while uptake of L-serine, L-leucine and L-phenylalanine was relatively insensitive to perfusion with a sodium-free solution. Cross-inhibition experiments of L-alanine and L-phenylalanine transport by twelve unlabelled amino acids indicated overlapping specificities. Unidirectional L-phenylalanine transport was saturable (Kt = 16 +/- 1 mM, Vmax = 12.3 +/- 0.4 mumol/min per g), and weighted non-linear regression analysis indicated that influx was best described by a single Michaelis-Menten equation. The Vmax/Kt ratio (0.75) for L-phenylalanine remained unchanged in the presence of 10 mM L-serine. Although extremely difficult to fit, L-serine transport appeared to be mediated by two saturable carriers (Kt1 = 5.2 mM, Vmax1 = 7.56 mumol/min per g; Kt2 = 32.8 mM, Vmax2 = 22.9 mumol/min per g). In the presence of 10 mM L-phenylalanine the Vmax/Kt ratio for the two L-serine carriers was reduced, respectively, by 79% and 50%. Efflux of transported L-[3H]phenylalanine or L-[3H]serine was accelerated by increasing perfusate concentrations of, respectively, L-phenylalanine and L-serine, and trans-stimulated by other amino acids. In the pancreas neutral amino acid transport appears to be mediated by Na+-dependent Systems A and ASC, the classical Na+-independent System L and another Na+-independent System asc recently identified in erythrocytes. The interactions in amino acid influx and efflux may provide one of the mechanisms by which the supply of extracellular amino acids for pancreatic protein synthesis is regulated.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of cycloleucine on kinetic parameters of uptake of L-alanine, L-proline and L-leucine into cultured human fibroblasts was examined under initial-rate conditions with substrate concentrations of 0.05-10 mM and 5 mM-cycloleucine. Kinetic data obtained by computer analysis showed that, in the absence of cycloleucine, cell uptake was heterogeneous for each amino acid. L-Alanine and L-leucine entered by two transport systems with different affinities; L-proline was taken up by one saturable transport system plus a diffusion-like process. This heterogeneity disappeared in the presence of cycloleucine, since the high-affinity systems were no longer detectable. The remaining process had the same kinetic constants as the low-affinity system for alanine and leucine and a KD similar to the diffusion constant for proline. The influence of cycloleucine on the amino acid uptake was not specific either to the amino acid concerned or to a particular transport system, since the three neutral amino acid-transport systems, A, ASC and L, were involved in these experiments. This influence was shown to be unaffected by the absence of Na+ (for leucine uptake). ATP content of the cells was identical in the presence or in the absence of cycloleucine.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanisms by which adult male Schistosoma mansoni transport amino acids have been investigated using radioactive amino acids during 2-min incubation times. The transport constants (Kt) for mediated uptake of glycine, proline, methionine, arginine, glutamate, and tryptophan were calculated to be 0.60-1.05, 1.67-1.98, 2.0, 0.10-0.35, 0.30-0.50, and 0.5-1.0 mM, respectively. Maximal velocities (Vmax) were 5.5–7.5, 25, 6.4, 1.5-2.0, 2.5, and 3.0–6.0 μmoles absorbed/g worm protein/2 min, respectively. Cysteine is taken up solely by diffusion. Proline uptake is unique in that no significant diffusion component was found. The other amino acids studied were absorbed by diffusion as well as by specific transport systems. In the 2-min incubation periods employed glycine, proline, glutamate, and methionine were not significantly metabolized indicating that the uptake studies using these substrates reflect transport. Metabolism of the other amino acids used in these studies was not examined. The specificity of the transport systems was studied by testing the inhibitory effects of various amino acids on the uptake of each of the amino acids studied. The results suggest the presence of at least five transport systems. There is a highly specific transport locus for proline, and one for acidic amino acids. There are probably at least two transport systems, each of broad and overlapping specificity, for most of the neutral amino acids. Basic amino acids also appear to be taken up by complex transport systems, at least one of which overlaps with the neutral sites. The results are discussed with respect to the nutrition of the parasite and the host-parasite relationship.  相似文献   

19.
Amino acid transport in right-side-out membrane vesicles of Acinetobacter johnsonii 210A was studied. L-Alanine, L-lysine, and L-proline were actively transported when a proton motive force of -76 mV was generated by the oxidation of glucose via the membrane-bound glucose dehydrogenase. Kinetic analysis of amino acid uptake at concentrations of up to 80 microM revealed the presence of a single transport system for each of these amino acids with a Kt of less than 4 microM. The mode of energy coupling to solute uptake was analyzed by imposition of artificial ion diffusion gradients. The uptake of alanine and lysine was driven by a membrane potential and a transmembrane pH gradient. In contrast, the uptake of proline was driven by a membrane potential and a transmembrane chemical gradient of sodium ions. The mechanistic stoichiometry for the solute and the coupling ion was close to unity for all three amino acids. The Na+ dependence of the proline carrier was studied in greater detail. Membrane potential-driven uptake of proline was stimulated by Na+, with a half-maximal Na+ concentration of 26 microM. At Na+ concentrations above 250 microM, proline uptake was strongly inhibited. Generation of a sodium motive force and maintenance of a low internal Na+ concentration are most likely mediated by a sodium/proton antiporter, the presence of which was suggested by the Na(+)-dependent alkalinization of the intravesicular pH in inside-out membrane vesicles. The results show that both H+ and Na+ can function as coupling ions in amino acid transport in Acinetobacter spp.  相似文献   

20.
Transport of amino acids into 3T3 and SV3T3 (SV40 virus-transformed 3T3) cells was measured on glass cover slips. The 3T3 and SV3T3 cells contain both A (alanine preferring) and L (leucine preferring) systems for neutral amino acid transport. Initial rates of uptake of amino acids are about twofold higher in SV3T3 than in 3T3 cells. Other parameters measured, however, do not indicate marked differences in the transport of amino acids by the two cell types. L-system amino acids, such as leucine, are subject to trans-stimulation in both cell lines, whereas A-system amino acids, such as alanine and glycine, are not. Leucine was transported to higher levels in confluent cells than in nonconfluent cells. Glycine, however, shows distinctly less transport activity as the cells become confluent. Ehrlich ascites cell plasma membranes were prepared and assayed for amino acid-binding activity. Leucine-binding activity was detected by equilibrium dialysis in Triton X-100-treated membrane preparations.  相似文献   

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