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Carnitine is known to accumulate in brain, therefore transport of carnitine through the blood-brain barrier was studied in an in vitro system using bovine brain capillary endothelial cells (BBCEC) grown on filter inserts in a co-culture system with glial cells. Long-term exposure of BBCEC to carnitine resulted in a high accumulation of long-chain acyl carnitines, which decreased dramatically upon removal of carnitine. Kinetic analysis of carnitine accumulation indicated a possibility of functioning of more than one transporter. BBCEC were incubated in the presence of substrates and inhibitors of known carnitine transporters added from either apical or basolateral side. Inhibition by replacement of sodium and expression of OCTN2 (RT-PCR) were in agreement with earlier reports on the functioning of OCTN2 in apical membrane. For the first time, functioning of OCTN2 was demonstrated in the basolateral membrane, as well as functioning in both membranes of a low affinity carnitine transporter B(0,+). Expression of B(0,+) in BBCEC was confirmed by RT-PCR. These results suggest that OCTN2 and B(0,+) could be involved in carnitine transport in both the apical and basolateral membrane.  相似文献   

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Carnitine β-hydroxy-γ-(trimethylammonio)butyrate – a compound necessary in the peripheral tissues for a transfer of fatty acids for their oxidation within the cell, accumulates in the brain despite low β-oxidation in this organ. In order to enter the brain, carnitine has to cross the blood–brain barrier formed by capillary endothelial cells which are in close interaction with astrocytes. Previous studies, demonstrating expression of mRNA coding two carnitine transporters – organic cation/carnitine transporter 2 (OCTN2) and B0,+ in endothelial cells, did not give any information on carnitine transporters polarity in endothelium. Therefore more detailed experiments were performed on expression and localization of a high affinity carnitine transporter OCTN2 in an in vitro model of the blood–brain barrier by real-time PCR, western blot analysis, and immunocytochemistry. The amount of mRNA was comparable in endothelial cells and kidney, when referred to house-keeping genes, it was, however, significantly lower in astrocytes. Polarity of OCTN2 localization was further studied in an in vitro model of the blood–brain barrier with use of anti-OCTN2 antibodies. Z -axis analysis of the confocal microscope pictures of endothelial cells, with anti-P-glycoprotein antibodies as the marker of apical membrane, showed OCTN2 localization at the basolateral membrane and in the cytoplasmic region in the vicinity of nuclei. Localization of OCTN2 suggest that carnitine can be also transported from the brain, playing an important role in removal of certain acyl esters.  相似文献   

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The purpose of the present study was to clarify the expression, transport properties and regulation of ATP-binding cassette G2 (ABCG2) transporter at the rat blood-brain barrier (BBB). The rat homologue of ABCG2 (rABCG2) was cloned from rat brain capillary fraction. In rABCG2-transfected HEK293 cells, rABCG2 was detected as a glycoprotein complex bridged by disulfide bonds, possibly a homodimer. The protein transported mitoxantrone and BODIPY-prazosin. In rat brain capillary fraction, rABCG2 protein was also detected as a glycosylated and disulfide-linked complex. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that rABCG2 was localized mainly on the luminal side of rat brain capillaries, suggesting that rABCG2 is involved in brain-to-blood efflux transport. For the regulation study, conditionally immortalized rat brain capillary endothelial (TR-BBB13), astrocyte (TR-AST4) and pericyte (TR-PCT1) cell lines were used as an in vitro BBB model. Following treatment of TR-BBB13 cells with conditioned medium of TR-AST4 cells, the Ko143 (an ABCG2-specific inhibitor)-sensitive transport activity and rABCG2 mRNA level were significantly increased, whereas conditioned medium of TR-PCT1 cells had no effect. These results suggest that rat brain capillaries express functional rABCG2 protein and that the transport activity of the protein is up-regulated by astrocyte-derived soluble factor(s) concomitantly with the induction of rABCG2 mRNA.  相似文献   

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The ATP-binding cassette transporter G1 (ABCG1) mediates free cholesterol efflux onto lipidated apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) and plays an important role in macrophage reverse cholesterol transport thereby reducing atherosclerosis. However, how ABCG1 mediates the efflux of cholesterol onto lipidated apoA-I is unclear. Since the crystal structure of ABCG family is not available, other approaches such as site-directed mutagenesis have been widely used to identify amino acid residues important for protein functions. We noticed that ABCG1 contains a single cysteine residue in its putative transmembrane domains. This cysteine residue locates at position 514 (Cys514) within the third putative transmembrane domain and is highly conserved. Replacement of Cys514 with Ala (C514A) essentially abolished ABCG1-mediated cholesterol efflux onto lipidated apoA-I. Substitution of Cys514 with more conserved amino acid residues, Ser or Thr, also significantly decreased cholesterol efflux. However, mutation C514A had no detectable effect on protein stability and trafficking. Mutation C514A also did not affect the dimerization of ABCG1. Our findings demonstrated that the sulfhydryl group of Cys residue located at position 514 plays a critical role in ABCG1-mediated cholesterol efflux. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Advances in High Density Lipoprotein Formation and Metabolism: A Tribute to John F. Oram (1945-2010).  相似文献   

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