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1.
Three parallel pathways of l-lactate transport across the membrane of human red blood cells can be discriminated: (a) by nonionic diffusion; (b) via the band 3 anion exchange protein; and (c) via a specific monocarboxylate carrier system. Influx of lactate via the latter system leads to alkalinization of the medium, suggesting lactate-proton symport. Kinetic analysis of initial lactate influx via the monocarboxylate carrier indicates a symport system with ordered binding of the two ligands, in the sense that a proton binds first to the translocator, followed by lactate binding to the protonated carrier. The influence of varying trans-pH under conditions of net (zero-trans) flux with constant cis-pH indicates that the monocarboxylate translocator should be considered as a mobile carrier, with the ligand-binding sites exposed alternately to the outside and the inside of the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Transport of lactate, pyruvate, and other monocarboxylates across the sarcolemma of skeletal and cardiac myocytes occurs via passive diffusion and by monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) mediated transport. The flux of lactate and protons through the MCT plays an important role in muscle energy metabolism during rest and exercise and in pH regulation during exercise. The MCT isoforms 1 and 4 are the major isoforms of this transporter in skeletal and cardiac muscle. The current consensus on the mechanism of these transporters, based on experimental measurements of labeled lactate fluxes, is that monocarboxylate-proton symport occurs via a rapid-equilibrium ordered mechanism with proton binding followed by monocarboxylate binding. This study tests ordered and random mechanisms by fitting experimental measurements of tracer exchange fluxes from MCT1 and MCT4 isoforms to theoretical predictions derived using relationships between one-way fluxes and thermodynamic forces. Analysis shows that: 1), the available kinetic data are insufficient to distinguish between a rapid-equilibrium ordered and a rapid-equilibrium random-binding model for MCT4; 2), MCT1 has a higher affinity to lactate than does MCT4; 3), the theoretical conditions for the so-called trans-acceleration phenomenon (e.g., increased tracer efflux from a vesicle caused by increased substrate concentration outside the vesicle) do not necessarily require the rate constant for the lactate and proton bound transporter to reorient across the membrane to be higher than that for the unbound transporter; and finally, 4), based on model analysis, additional experiments are proposed to be able to distinguish between ordered and random-binding mechanisms.  相似文献   

3.
The intraerythrocytic human malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum produces lactate at a rate that exceeds the maximal capacity of the normal red cell membrane to transport lactate. In order to establish how the infected cell removes this excess lactate, the transport of lactate across the host cell and the parasite membranes has been investigated. Transport of radiolabeled L-lactate across the host cell membrane was shown to increase ca. 600-fold compared to uninfected erythrocytes. It showed no saturation with [L-lactate] and was inhibited by inhibitors of the monocarboxylate carrier, cinnamic acid derivatives (CADs), but not by the SH-reagent p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonic acid (PCMBS). These results suggest that L-lactate is translocated through CAD-inhibitable new pathways induced in the host cell membrane by parasite activity, probably by diffusion of the acid form and through a modified native monocarboxylate:H+ symporter. Continuous monitoring of extracellular pH changes occurring upon suspension of infected cells in isoosmotic Na-lactate solutions indicates that part of the lactate egress is mediated by anionic exchange through the constitutive, but modified, anion exchanger. The transport of L-lactate across the parasite membrane is rapid, nonsaturating, and insensitive to either CADs or PCMBS, or to the presence of pyruvate. L-lactate uptake increased transiently when external pH was lowered and decreased when delta pH was dissipated by the protonophore carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP). These results are compatible with L-lactate crossing the parasite membrane either as the undissociated acid or by means of a novel type of lactate-/H+ symport.  相似文献   

4.
The L-lactate/proton symport system of the red blood cell membrane was studied under conditions of alternative-substrate inhibition by glycolate. At constant pH of the medium glycolate caused competitive inhibition of L-lactate transport. In Lineweaver-Burk plots of 1/v against 1/[H], on the other hand, glycolate caused an uncompetitive inhibition. These observations indicate, that the monocarboxylate carrier exhibits ordered substrate binding, with the proton binding first.  相似文献   

5.
Sorbose transport in Saccharomyces fragilis takes place both via an active sugar-H+ symport system and via facilitated diffusion. To establish whether the two modes of transport proceed via the same transporter or via two different carriers, the kinetic consequences of both models were investigated. The kinetic equations for initial transport were derived for three possible reaction sequences with respect to sugar and H+ binding to the symport carrier: random binding and obligatory ordered binding with either sugar or H+ binding first, yielding six sets of kinetic parameters. Analysis of experimental data of sorbose transport in S. fragilis showed the existence of separate carriers for active, sorbose-H+ symport and facilitated diffusion. Furthermore, it could be concluded that the symport carrier shows random binding of sugar and H+. In recent literature, a similar combination of active and passive sugar transport in Rhodotorula gracilis and Chlorella vulgaris was interpreted as two modes of action of the same carrier, viz., active symport via the protonated, and facilitated diffusion via the unprotonated carrier. Analysis of the experimental data according to the criteria presented in this paper showed, however, that this supposition is untenable and that two different carriers must also be involved in these micro-organisms.  相似文献   

6.
Sorbose transport in Saccharomyces fragilis takes place both via an active sugar-H+ symport system and via facilitated diffusion.To establish whether the two modes of transport proceed via the same transporter or via two different carriers, the kinetic consequences of both models were investigated. The kinetic equations for initial transport were derived for three possible reaction sequences with respect to sugar and H+ binding to the symport carrier: random binding and obligatory ordered binding with either sugar or H+ binding first, yielding six sets of kinetic parameters.Analysis of experimental data of sorbose transport in S. fragilis showed the existence of separate carriers for active, sorbose-H+ symport and facilitated diffusion. Furthermore, it could be concluded that the symport carrier shows random binding of sugar and H+.In recent literature, a similar combination of active and passive sugar transport in Rhodotorula gracilis and Chlorella vulgaris was interpreted as two modes of action of the same carrier, viz., active symport via the protonated, and facilitated diffusion via the unprotonated carrier. Analysis of the experimental data according to the criteria presented in this paper showed, however, that this supposition is untenable and that two different carriers must also be involved in these micro-organisms.  相似文献   

7.
8.
A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae deficient in the lactate-proton symport was isolated. Transformation of the mutant with a yeast genomic library allowed the isolation of the gene JEN1 that restored lactate transport. Disruption of JEN1 abolished uptake of lactate. The results indicate that, under the experimental conditions tested, no other monocarboxylate permease is able to efficiently transport lactate in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The substrate and inhibitor specificity of the lactic acid (Lac) transport system of human neutrophils was investigated. The ability of a variety of compounds to inhibit the influx of [14C]lactate, presumably reflecting competition by substrate analogues for binding at the external translocation site, was taken as an index of affinity for the Lac carrier. pH-stat techniques were utilized to assess transportability. Results indicate a relatively low order of selectivity, the neutrophil H+ + lactate cotransport system demonstrating a broad acceptance of short-chain unsubstituted and substituted alkyl monocarboxylates as well as aromatic monocarboxylates. There was a slight preference for oxo, Cl, and OH substituents over other groups at the two-position of short chain alkyl fatty acids: all were readily transported across the plasma membrane at rates approaching that ofl-lactate itself. Aromatic acids were not transported inward by the carrier although these compounds did permeate via simple nonionic diffusion. The neutrophil Lac carrier can be blocked by a number of cyanocinnamate derivatives, the classical inhibitors of monocarboxylate transport in mitochondria, and by dithiol compounds and sulfhydryl-reactive agents. This constellation of biochemical properties is similar to the features that characterize other well described H+ + lactate cotransport systems in red blood cells, Ehrlich ascites tumor cells, hepatocytes, and cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles, although significant differences exist when comparisons are made to the Na+-dependent lactate transporter of the kidney proximal tubule.  相似文献   

10.
Specific inhibition of 2H+/proline symport by syn-coupled ions (Na+, Li+, and H+) was investigated using cytoplasmic membrane vesicles prepared from the proline carrier-overproducing strain MinS/ pLC4 -45 of Escherichia coli K12. The 2H+/proline symport driven by the membrane potential generated via respiration with 20 mM ascorbate/Tris, 0.1 mM phenazine methosulfate was specifically inhibited by Na+. The inhibition by Na+ was described by a fully noncompetitive mechanism, and the apparent Ki for Na+ was 15 mM. A linear correlation between the apparent Vmax and the apparent Kd was observed. Li+ stimulated the transport activity 2-fold at 10 mM and inhibited it at concentrations above 50 mM. H+ caused fully noncompetitive inhibition of 2H+/proline symport, and its apparent Ki was 0.6 microM. These results indicate that the concentrations of Na+ and H+ strictly and independently regulate the amount of the active C state carrier responsible for 2H+/proline symport driven by the membrane potential by inhibiting the transition from the C* state carrier which exhibits Na+- and H+-dependent binding of proline and is predominant in nonenergized conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The transport of D-leucine was compared with that of L-leucine in Halobacterium salinarum. When a high-outside/low-inside Na+ gradient was imposed, D-leucine as well as L-leucine accumulated in envelope vesicles, supporting the hypothesis that D-leucine is transported via a symport system along with Na+. Kinetic analyses, including inhibition experiments, indicated that both enantiomers are transported via a common carrier. However, a Hill plot indicated a single binding site for Na+ during L-leucine transport, but dual binding sites for Na+ during D-leucine transport. Furthermore, D-leucine transport was dependent on electrical membrane potential, suggesting that a transporter bound with D-leucine is positively charged. L-leucine transport was slightly, if at all, dependent on membrane potential, suggesting that a transporter bound with L-leucine is electrically neutral. These results indicate that the leucine carrier in Halobacterium salinarum translocates two moles of Na+ per mole of D-leucine, and one mole of Na+ per mole of L-leucine.  相似文献   

12.
Blood-brain barrier transport of the alpha-keto acid analogs of amino acids   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A number of alpha-keto acid analogs of amino acids have been found to penetrate the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Pyruvate, alpha-ketobutyrate, alpha-ketoisocaproate, and alpha-keto-gamma-methiolbutyrate all cross the BBB by a carrier-mediated process and by simple diffusion. Under normal physiological conditions, diffusion accounts for roughly 15% or less of total transport. Aromatic alpha-keto acids, phenylpyruvate, and p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate do not penetrate the BBB, nor do they inhibit the transport of other alpha-keto acids. Evidence based primarily on inhibition studies indicates that the carrier-mediated transport of alpha-keto acids occurs via the same carrier demonstrated previously for propionate, acetoacetate, and beta-hydroxybutyrate transport, commonly referred to as the monocarboxylate carrier. As a group, the alpha-keto acid analogs of the amino acids have the highest affinity for the carrier, followed by propionate and beta-hydroxybutyrate. Starvation for 4 days induces transport of alpha-keto acids, but transport is suppressed in rats fed commercial laboratory rations and subjected to portacaval shunts. The mitochondrial pyruvate translocator inhibitor alpha-cyanocinnamate has no effect on the BBB transport of alpha-keto acids.  相似文献   

13.
The regulation of the gluconeogenic pathway from the 3-carbon precursors pyruvate, lactate, and alanine was investigated in the isolated perfused rat liver. Using pyruvate (less than 1 mM), lactate, or alanine as the gluconeogenic precursor, infusion of the acetoacetate precursors oleate, acetate, or beta-hydroxybutyrate stimulated the rate of glucose production and, in the case of pyruvate (less than 1 mM), the rate of pyruvate decarboxylation. alpha-Cyanocinnamate, an inhibitor of the monocarboxylate transporter, prevented the stimulation of pyruvate decarboxylation and glucose production due to acetate infusion. With lactate as the gluconeogenic precursor, acetate infusion in the presence of L-carnitine stimulated the rate of gluconeogenesis (100%) and ketogenesis (60%) without altering the tissue acetyl-CoA level usually considered a requisite for the stimulation of gluconeogenesis by fatty acids. Hence, our studies suggest that gluconeogenesis from pyruvate or other substrates which are converted to pyruvate prior to glucose synthesis may be limited or controlled by the rate of entry of pyruvate into the mitochondrial compartment on the monocarboxylate translocator.  相似文献   

14.
Lactate transport by skeletal muscle sarcolemmal vesicles   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Recent studies have indicated that lactate traversal of the sarcolemmal membrane of skeletal muscle could be a carrier mediated process. In the present study, the initial rates of L(+)-lactate flux (Jlact) were measured in highly purified rat hindlimb skeletal muscle sarcolemmal vesicles. Fluxes were determined by the vesicle uptake of L(+)-[U-14C] lactate from the extra-vesicular medium. Jlact was saturable with respect to increasing concentrations of L(+)-lactate. Regression of these data to the Michaelis-Menten equation yielded a Km of 12.5 mM. Jlact was inhibited 81% by 10 mM pyruvate and 83% by 5mM alpha-cyano 4 hydroxycinnamate (p<0.05), but not by D-lactate indicating the presence of a stereoselective monocarboxylate transporter in the sarcolemmal membrane. Preincubation of the vesicles with the protein modifier, N-ethylmaleimide (20mM), inhibited Jlact by 86% (p<0.05). An inhibitor of the inorganic anion exchanger, SITS (1mM), had no effect on Jlact. However, Jlact was markedly sensitive to an inwardly directed proton gradient (p<0.05), and the flux was more closely related to the concentration of external ionic L(+)-lactate than to the protonated (HLa) form. These studies suggest that skeletal muscle sarcolemmal membranes possess a specific transport system for L-lactate and other monocarboxylates, which has similar properties to the lactate carrier described for several other tissues.  相似文献   

15.
The rate of uptake and the distribution ratio between intra- and extracellular compartments of L- and D-lactate were studied in hepatocyte preparations from fed rats. L- and D-lactate uptake apparently depended on both passive diffusion and carrier-mediated components. The apparent Km of the high-affinity carrier for L-lactate was in the range of 1.8 mM. The reciprocal competitive inhibitions between isomers of lactate suggest that L- and D-lactate might be transported by distinct carriers. Lactate transport was inhibited by various anions; pyruvate was the most potent anion, whereas only high concentrations of ketone bodies were effective. Acidic extracellular pH enhanced lactate uptake, this effect being more pronounced for L-lactate. At low pH, L-lactate was concentrated into hepatocytes, but its affinity for the carrier appeared unchanged, suggesting the existence of a process gaining energy from the pH gradient across the cell membrane. In the hypothesis of a lactate/H+ symport, the affinity for H+ was not dependent on lactate concentration and the apparent Km for H+ corresponded to a pH of 7.34. No trans-stimulation of lactate uptake after prior loading of the cells with pyruvate or lactate was observed. The present data suggest that, at physiological concentrations, lactate uptake by the liver might be largely carrier-mediated and the rate of transport across the liver cell membrane may be of a magnitude relatively comparable to the rate of metabolism.  相似文献   

16.
A family of specific carrier protein designated as monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) has been known to transport the lactate and other moncarboxylates in mammalian cells. We hypothesized the presence of serum protein in human circulation that may works as a lactate carrier and that biochemical structure would possesses common structure with MCT on the plasma membrane.Immunoblot analysis with an anti-MCT1 polyclonal antibody suggested the presence of a 44-kDa protein in human circulation and N-terminal amino acid sequencing exhibited a stretch of 14 amino acids which is completely identical to MCT1. The unbound fractions from the GST-MCT1 fusion protein-immobilized glutathione sepharose 4B column demonstrated that lactic acid concentration began to increase with one fraction delay compared to Sepharose 4B and GST-immobilized column. When lactic acid was washed away with PBS, lactic acid concentrations in the effuluent constantly decreased in both Sepharose 4B and GST-immobilized column. However, GST-MCT1-immobilized column showed specific convex curve from fraction approximately 3 mM of lactate and demonstrated wash out delay compared to Sepharose 4B and GST-immobilized column.These observations demonstrated biochemical and immunological similarities between a 44-kDa protein purified from human serum and MCT1 present on the plasma membrane. The studies on MCT1-fusion protein suggested possible functional properties of a 44-kDa protein as a lactate buffer by holding and unhand a lactate according to the lactate concentration in human blood. The experiments described herein have suggested the existence of lactate carrier in human circulation which is free from plasma membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Studies on the intact avascular cornea reveal two types of lactate effluxes: exogenous glucose-elicited and spontaneous. The former type exhibits characteristics resembling the proton-lactate symport system previously found in tumor cells and erythrocytes, including an enhanced lactate efflux at a higher extracellular pH and in the presence of H+ and K+ ionophores, and an inhibition by mersalyl with subsequent lactate accumulation in the tissue and cessation of glycolytic activity. The latter type occurs immediately following the incubation of freshly isolated cornea in a medium containing no exogenous glucose, with a rate about 10 times that of exogenous glucose-elicited lactate efflux. It is insensitive to 10 mM iodoacetate and lacks the characteristics of the proton-lactate symport system. Findings reveal that about 50% of corneal glucose utilization occurs in the epithelium, with the stroma and endothelium sharing the other 50% approximately equally. Of the glucose utilized, the lactate formation to pyruvate oxidation rate ratios are approximately 1:1 in the epithelium, 2:1 in the stroma, and 1:2 in the endothelium. About 79% of total tissue lactate is formed in the epithelium and stroma, and in vivo, this is probably pumped into the stromal extracellular space (about 90% of total tissue volume) via the proton-lactate symport system, with spontaneous release into the aqueous humor via a simple diffusion process. The H+ and K+ ionophores facilitate lactate efflux at the expense of the cellular pyruvate pool, without significant effect on the glucose uptake and glycolytic activity. These findings suggest that the ionophore-mediated lactate efflux favors the reduction of low pyruvate concentration in the tissue, rather than parallel increases in glycolytic activity.  相似文献   

18.
Various modulating influences of negative and positive membrane charges on binding and transport properties of the reconstituted ADP/ATP carrier from mitochondria were investigated. The results are interpreted in terms of functional and structural asymmetries of the adenine nucleotide carrier embedded in the liposomal membrane. The surface potential of liposomes was measured directly either by potential-dependent adsorption of the fluorescent dye 2-p-toluidinylnaphthalene 6-sulfonate (TNS) or by the pK shift of the lipophilic pH indicator pentadecylumbelliferone. These results were correlated with the following observations. (1) Negative surface potentials increase the apparent dissociation constant, Kd, for binding of the negatively charged inhbitor carboxyatractylate to the reconstituted carrier protein. (2) Surface potentials modulate the apparent transport affinity, Km, of the reconstituted adenine nucleotide carrier for ADP and ATP. The interaction of surface charges with the transport function was investigated with carrier proteins oriented both right-side-out and inside-out. Thus the influence of the surface potential on the function of the ADP/ATP carrier could be determined for the internal and external active sites of the translocator on the outer side of the membrane. Large discrepancies were observed not only between the potentials measured directly (fluorescent dyes) and those measured indirectly (binding and transport affinities), but also between the different surface potentials determined from the influence on the alternatively oriented carrier proteins. The effect of surface charges was rather weak on the cytosolic side of the translocator, whereas there was a strong influence of surface charges on the active site at the matrix side. The most obvious explanation, i.e., screening of negative membrane charges by positively charged amino acid residues at the protein surface, could be ruled out. Besides the modulation of binding affinities for substrates and inhibitors, an additional side-specific effect of surface charges on the transport velocity was observed. Again, the influence on the internal active site of the ADP/ATP carrier was found to be much higher than that on the cytosolic site. The observed effects can be explained by a definite structural asymmetry of the carrier embedded in the liposomal membrane. That site which is physiologically exposed to the cytosol is located at a considerable distance from the plane of the membrane, whereas the opposite site seems to be in close proximity to the membrane surface. Moreover, a spatial equivalence of carboxyatractylate binding site and nucleotide binding site at the external side of the carrier protein was concluded.  相似文献   

19.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae IGC4072 grown in lactic acid medium transported lactate by an accumulative electroneutral proton-lactate symport with a proton-lactate stoichiometry of 1:1. The accumulation ratio measured with propionate increased with decreasing pH from ca. 24-fold at pH 6.0 to ca. 1,400-fold at pH 3.0. The symport accepted the following monocarboxylates (Km values at 25 degrees C and pH 5.5): D-lactate (0.13 mM), L-lactate (0.13 mM), pyruvate (0.34 mM), propionate (0.09 mM), and acetate (0.05 mM), whereas apparently a different proton symport accepted formate (0.13 mM). The lactate system was inducible and was subject to glucose repression. Undissociated lactic acid entered the cells by simple diffusion. The permeability of the plasma membrane for undissociated lactic acid increased exponentially with pH, and the diffusion constant increased 40-fold when the pH was increased from 3.0 to 6.0.  相似文献   

20.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae IGC4072 grown in lactic acid medium transported lactate by an accumulative electroneutral proton-lactate symport with a proton-lactate stoichiometry of 1:1. The accumulation ratio measured with propionate increased with decreasing pH from ca. 24-fold at pH 6.0 to ca. 1,400-fold at pH 3.0. The symport accepted the following monocarboxylates (Km values at 25 degrees C and pH 5.5): D-lactate (0.13 mM), L-lactate (0.13 mM), pyruvate (0.34 mM), propionate (0.09 mM), and acetate (0.05 mM), whereas apparently a different proton symport accepted formate (0.13 mM). The lactate system was inducible and was subject to glucose repression. Undissociated lactic acid entered the cells by simple diffusion. The permeability of the plasma membrane for undissociated lactic acid increased exponentially with pH, and the diffusion constant increased 40-fold when the pH was increased from 3.0 to 6.0.  相似文献   

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