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1.
We report the kinetic characteristics for D-galactose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport in a galactokinase null-allele mutant of a Chinese hamster V79 cell line. GalKl cells exhibited a Km and Vmax for D-galactose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose transport of 8.6 +/- 2.6 mM and 26.1 +/- 7.2 nmol/mg p/min, 4.1 +/- 1.2 mM and 40.3 +/- 9.5 nmol/mg p/min, and 7.01 +/- .85 mM and 11.6 +/- 4.8 nmol/mg p/30 s, respectively. Nonsaturable hexose uptake was determined using cytochalasin B inhibition of galactose uptake (89.6 +/- 3.7% of galactose uptake was cytochalasin B inhibitable) and L-glucose uptake (7.5% of the galactose uptake). D-Galactose was not metabolized and effluxed rapidly from preloaded cells. The Kls for the inhibition of D-galactose transport were 4.5 +/- 2.5 mM for D-glucose, 7.0 +/- 2.0 mM for 2-deoxy-D-glucose, 6 mM for 2-deoxy-D-galactose and 6.0 +/- 0.6 mM for 3-O-methyl-D-glucose. This indicates the operation of a single common carrier. The hexose transport rate decreased 50-60% after 24 h serum deprivation. Addition of insulin was shown to increase hexose transport (more than twofold) in serum-deprived cells. Hexose transport rates increased substantially in glucose-deprived, D-fructose- or D-galactose-fed cells as compared to glucose-fed cells. Since GalKl does not metabolize galactose, the hexose transport increases induced by feeding cells galactose suggest that carrier interaction with ligand is not a significant factor in transport regulation in GalKl. The kinetic and regulatory characteristics of D-galactose transport in the GalKl cell line indicate that this system is a good model to study sugar transport from a mechanistic and regulatory point of view.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of insulin and glucose on parameters of metabolism were investigated in myoblast-like (MBL) cells, a human myoblast-like cell line derived from a Wilms' tumor. Insulin responses were studied after 4 hr pre-incubation in serum free media, with or without 5 mM glucose. Insulin was added during the last 2 hr. Glucose starvation markedly increased basal glucose transport (measured as 2-deoxyglucose uptake) as well as the net uptake of [14C]glucose and [14C]glucose incorporation into glycogen. Insulin stimulated net glucose uptake and incorporation into glycogen in a dose-dependent manner in glucose-fed and starved cells. These insulin responses were markedly enhanced in glucose-starved cells. Insulin accelerated 2-deoxyglucose transport in glucose-fed cells but did not further stimulate basal glucose transport in glucose-deprived cells. Insulin increased the incorporation of [3H]leucine into protein in glucose-fed or -starved MBL cells equally. The dose of insulin required for half-maximal insulin responses was similar for all parameters studied. Cycloheximide did not prevent the increased basal glucose incorporation in glucose-starved cells, but markedly inhibited the insulin response, while in glucose-fed cells, cycloheximide stimulated basal glucose incorporation. We conclude that MBL cells resemble fibroblasts in their insulin-independent stimulation of glucose transport in response to glucose-deprivation; when provided with glucose, they respond to insulin like fibroblasts. However, after brief glucose-starvation, the stimulated glucose transport system is no longer insulin-responsive in MBL cells, while pathways leading to the synthesis of macromolecules demonstrate preserved or enhanced stimulation by insulin, suggesting that these cells may serve as models to study the regulation of receptor-response coupling by the metabolic milieu.  相似文献   

3.
The importance of sulfhydryl groups for hexose transport in undifferentiated L6 rat myoblasts was investigated. N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and p-chloromer-curibenzenesulfonic acid (pCMBS) inhibited 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DOG) transport in a time and concentration-dependent manner. The inhibition produced by both reagents was virtually complete within 5 min, although neither reagent inhibited transport more than 70–80% regardless of the concentrations or incubation times used. Furthermore, the inhibition of 2-DOG transport by pCMBS or NEM could not be prevented by simultaneous preincubation of cells with 20 mM D-glucose or 20 mM 2-DOG. This suggests that sulfhydryl groups required for transport are separate from the hexose binding and transport site. By comparing the effects of the membrane impermeant pCMBS to those of the membrane permeant NEM, cell surface sulfhydryl groups were shown to be essential for hexose binding and transport. In contrast to the inhibition of 2-DOG transport, pCMBS and NEM had much less of an effect on 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (3-OMG) transport. For example, 1 mM NEM inhibited 2-DOG transport by 66%, whereas 3-OMG transport was inhibited by only 7%. This supports the suggestion that these hexose analogues may be transported by different carriers. Kinetic analysis of transport shows that treatment of cells with 1 mM NEM or 1 pCMBS results in inactivation of the high affinity 2-DOG transport system, whereas the low affinity transport system is unaffected. 3-OMG is preferentially transported by the low affinity system.  相似文献   

4.
The nature of the membrane compartments involved in the regulation by glucose of hexose transport is not well defined. The effect of inhibitors of lysosomal protein degradation on hexose transport (i.e., uptake of [3H]-2-deoxy-D-glucose) and hexose transporter protein GLUT-1 (i.e., immunoblotting with antipeptide serum) in glucose-fed and -deprived cultured murine fibroblasts (3T3-C2 cells) was studied. The acidotropic amines chloroquine (20 microM) and ammonium chloride (10 mM) cause accumulation (both approximately 4-fold) of GLUT-1 protein and a small increase (both approximately 25%) in hexose transport in glucose-fed fibroblasts (24 h). The endopeptidase inhibitor, leupeptin (100 microM) causes accumulation (approximately 4-fold) of GLUT-1 protein in glucose-fed fibroblasts (24 h) without changing hexose transport (less than or equal to 5%). These agents do not greatly alter the electrophoretic mobility of GLUT-1. Neither chloroquine nor leupeptin augment the glucose deprivation (24 h) induced increases in hexose transport (approximately 4-fold) and GLUT-1 content (approximately 7-fold). In contrast, chloroquine or leupeptin diminish the reversal by glucose refeeding of the glucose deprivation induced accumulation of GLUT-1 protein but fail to alter the return of hexose transport to control levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Like many cell types in culture, both undifferentiated and differentiated BALB/c 3T3 preadipose cells respond to glucose deprivation with an increased uptake of 2-deoxy-D-glucose (deoxyglucose) and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (methylglucose). Glucose readdition to glucose-deprived cultures resulted in a prompt fall in uptake activity; in undifferentiated cells, a half-maximally effective concentration of glucose was approximately 0.5 mM, while 0.1 mM was ineffective. Several hexoses differed in their efficacy of "deactivating" methylglucose transport in glucose-deprived cells; it appeared that a particular hexose must be metabolized beyond the 6-phosphate form to deactivate the transport system. Previous studies have shown that the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) stimulates hexose transport in undifferentiated and differentiated BALB/c 3T3 cells. In this study, it was found that TPA (and insulin in differentiated cells) prevented the glucose-induced deactivation of transport activity. Glucose-induced deactivation of transport activity was also prevented by cycloheximide or actinomycin D addition concomitantly with glucose. In glucose-starved cells, agents such as TPA and insulin appear to override a cellular control mechanism sensitive to the external concentration of glucose, so that elevated levels of transport activity are maintained under environmental conditions (i.e., a return to physiological glucose concentrations) that normally induce a fall in transport activity.  相似文献   

6.
A rapid filtration method was used to measure initial rates of 3-O-[3H]methylglucose uptake and thus estimate hexose transport system activity in isolated white fat cells. Insulin markedly stimulated the transport system activity and its effect was rapidly and completely reversible. In addition, such oxidants as vitamin K5 (50 muM), hydrogen peroxide (4mM), methylene blue (50 muM), and diamide (20 mM) also maximally activated 3-O-methylglucose transport and their effects were not additive to those of maximal concentrations of insulin. These oxidants had no effect on total cellular ATP levels under these conditions. Hexose transport system activity in either the presence or absence of these stimulatory agents was uniformly sensitive to inhibition by cytochalasin B. Treatment of fat cells with either 0.5 mM N-ethylmaleimide or 3 mM dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid abolished the ability of insulin or oxidants to activate hexose transport system activity. Control transport activity was not significantly influenced by these agents. Fat cells treated with dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid completely regained the ability to respond to insulin or vitamin K5 after removal of the agent by washing in low concentrations of reductant. Elevated rates of transport due to prior incubation of cells with insulin or vitamin K5 were completely resistant to inhibition by subsequent addition of N-ethylmaleimide or dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid. Deactivation of the hormone-stimulated transport system could be achieved by washing cells free of insulin or by destruction of insulin-receptor interaction by trypsin. N-Ethylmaleimide effectively blocked deactivation of insulin-stimulated transport system activity, while dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid was without effect. These results suggest that distinct cellular components mediate activation versus deactivation of the fat cell hexose transport system. N-Ethylmaleimide, which effectively penetrates fat cells, inhibits both processes while the layer, more polar dithio(bis)nitrobenzoic acid blocks activation but not deactivation of this transport system.  相似文献   

7.
Native vesicles isolated from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells accumulate glutamine by means of Na+-dependent transport systems; thiocyanate seems to be the more effective anion. The apparent affinity constant for the process was 0.38 mM. The Arrhenius plot gave an apparent activation energy of 12.3 kJ/mol. The structural analogs of glutamine, acivicin (2.5 mM) and azaserine (2.5 mM), inhibited the net uptake by 67 and 70%, respectively. The sulfhydryl reagents mersalyl, PCMBS, NEM, and DTNB also inhibited net uptake, suggesting that sulfhydryl groups may be involved in the activity of the carrier protein. A strong inhibition was detected when the vesicles were incubated in the presence of alanine, cysteine, or serine; in addition, histidine, but not glutamate or leucine, had a negative effect on glutamine transport.  相似文献   

8.
A method for the selection and isolation of hexose transport mutants in undifferentiated rat myoblast L6 cells is reported; 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DOG)-and 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose (2FG)-resistant mutants were selected after mutagenization of L6 cells with ethyl methanesulfonate. Of these, D18 and D23 (selected with 0.1 mM 2-DOG) and F72 and F76 (selected with 0.1 mM 2FG) exhibited the lowest hexose transport activity. Uptake of 0.06 mM 2-DOG, 2FG, or 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (3-OMG) by mutants grown in fructose medium supplemented with 0.05 mM 2FG was about four- to five-fold lower than the parental L6 cells. These mutants contain normal levels of ATP and glycolytic enzyme activities. They also exhibit normal transport activities for alpha-aminoisobutyric acid and fructose. Furthermore, hexose transport was observed to be decreased in plasma membrane vesicles prepared from these mutants. Kinetic analysis of 2-DOG and 3-OMG transport in mutant F72 demonstrated that the Vmax for 2-DOG uptake was significantly reduced, whereas the Vmax for 3-OMG transport was not affected. In all cases, the affinity for these hexose analogues was unaffected. In addition mutant F72 was found to be only slightly affected by treatment with various energy inhibitors and sulfhydryl reagents. The results suggest that this mutant is defective in, or has low levels of, a plasma membrane component(s) involved in the high-affinity hexose transport system.  相似文献   

9.
The importance of exofacial sulfhydryl groups for hexose transport and its regulation was studied by comparing the effects of plasma membrane-permeant maleimide (N-ethylmaleimide) to an impermeant maleimide (glutathione-maleimide I) on 3-O-methylglucose transport into isolated rat adipocytes. The impermeant nature of glutathione-maleimide was confirmed by the finding that after a 15-min incubation, concentrations as high as 10 mM had no effect on intracellular glutathione content, while 1.7 mM N-ethylmaleimide decreased intracellular glutathione by 61%. Although N-ethylmaleimide appeared to be a more potent inhibitor of transport below 5 mM and at incubation times of less than 5 min, neither agent at concentrations which did not cause significant cell breakage inhibited basal transport rates more than 60-70%. The inhibition of transport by both agents was unaffected by extensive washing, suggesting a possible covalent interaction with the carrier. Preincubation with p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonic acid protected against the transport inhibition induced by both agents. However, only the transport inhibition induced by glutathione-maleimide was prevented by preincubation with D-glucose (50 mM) and maltose (50 mM). Transport in cells pretreated with insulin was inhibited by both agents to a similar extent as basal transport. However, treatment of cells with the maleimides before insulin caused a greater degree of inhibition. Thus, the insulin-induced increase in transport was inhibited half-maximally by 1 mM glutathione-maleimide. These results show that exofacial sulfhydryl groups, perhaps on the hexose-binding site of the carrier, are important for both the function and regulation of hexose transport.  相似文献   

10.
The water diffusional permeability of human red blood cells following exposure to various sulfhydryl group (SH) reagents have been studied using a nuclear magnetic resonance technique. Exposure of red blood cells up to 12 mM N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) or 10 mM 5,5'-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNE) alone does not affect water diffusion. In contrast, when DTNB treatment follows a preincubation of the cells with NEM, a small (18% at 37 degrees C) but significant inhibition of water permeability occurs. The NEM and DTNB treatment of the cells caused no change of the cell shape and volume or of the cell water volume. Consequently, the inhibition observed after NEM and DTNB treatment has a real significance.  相似文献   

11.
At 5 μg/ml, insulin stimulates hexose, A-system amino acid, and nucleoside transport by serum-starved chick embryo fibroblasts (CEF). This stimulation, although variable, is comparable to that induced by 4% serum. The sulfhydryl oxidants diamide (1–20 μM). hydrogen peroxide (500 μM), and methylene blue (50 μM) mimic the effect of insulin in CEF. PCMB-S,1 a sulfhydryl-reacting compound which penetrates the membrane slowly, has a complex effect on nutrient transport in serum- and glucose-starved CEF. Hexose uptake is inhibited by 0.1–1 mM PCMB-S in a time- and concentration-dependent manner, whereas A-system amino acid transport is inhibited maximally within 10 min of incubation and approaches control rates after 60 min. A differential sensitivity of CEF transport systems is also seen in cells exposed to membrane-impermeant glutathione-maleimide I, designated GS-Mal. At 2 mM GS-Mal reduces the rate of hexose uptake 80–100% in serum- and glucose-starved CEF; in contrast A-system amino acid uptake is unaffected. D-glucose, but not L-glucose or cytochalasin B, protects against GS-Mal inhibition. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that sulfhydryl groups are involved in nutrient transport and that those sulfhydryls associated with the hexose transport system and essential for its function are located near the exofacial surface of the membrane in CEF.  相似文献   

12.
These experiments examined the effects of N-ethylmaleimide on insulin- and oxidant-stimulated sugar transport in soleus muscle in terms of the Thiol-Redox model for insulin-stimulated adipocyte sugar transport (Czech, M.P. (1976) J. Cell. Physiol. 89, 661-668). Brief exposure (1 min) to N-ethylmaleimide (0.3-10 mM) inhibited the stimulatory effect of insulin (0.1 U/ml) on D-[U-14C]xylose uptake by rat soleus muscle. N-Ethylmaleimide also inhibited the stimulatory effects of H2O2 (5 mM), diamide (0.2 mM) and vitamin K-5 (0.05 mM). This effect of N-ethylmaleimide on insulin action was paralleled by the inhibition of 125I-labelled insulin binding by the muscle. N-ethylmaleimide lowered muscle ATP; however, its effects on sugar transport and 125I-labelled insulin binding could be dissociated from its effect on ATP. Exposing muscles to insulin prior to N-ethylmaleimide did not abolish the inhibitory effect of sulphydryl blockade on insulin-stimulated sugar transport, but did reduce the effect of the inhibitor by 20-30%. Conversely, when muscles were first allowed to bind 125I-labelled insulin and then exposed to the inhibitor, there was no effect of N-ethylmaleimide on pre-bound insulin. Exposure to diamide or vitamin K-5 before N-ethylmaleimide (1 mM) attenuated the inhibitory effect of sulphydryl blockade but no protective effect was observed with H2O2. None of the oxidants protected against the inhibitory effect of 3 mM N-ethylmaleimide. It is concluded that there are two N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive sites involved in the activation of muscle sugar transport at the post-receptor level. One of these would appear to be similar to the Thiol-Redox site described in the adipocyte; the other site appears to be an essential sulphydryl group whose function does not involve oxidation to a disulphide.  相似文献   

13.
The regulation of hexose transport under glucose-starvation conditions was studied in cultured human skin fibroblasts. Glucose starvation enhanced the transport of 2-DG and 3-O-methyl-D-glucose (3-OMG) but not of L-glucose. Glucose-starvation enhanced transport was inhibited by cytochalasin B (10 μM). The starvation-induced change in 2-DG transport was due to an increase in the Vmax of both the high and low affinity transport sites (2.8- and 2.4-fold, respectively) with no effect on their Kms. The presence of 5.55 mM galactose, fructose, or L-glucose in the medium resulted in transport increases similar to those seen in glucose-starved cells, while the presence of 5.55 mM glucose, mannose, or 3-OMG repressed 2-DG transport. Glucose-starvation enhancement of 2-DG transport was blocked by cycloheximide (20 μg/ml) but not by actinomycin D (0.03 μg/ml) or α-amanitin (3.5 μM). Readdition of glucose (5.55 mM) for six hours to glucose-starved cells led to a rapid decrease in hexose transport that could be blocked by cycloheximide but not actinomycin D. Although readdition of 3-OMG to glucose-starved cells had little effect on reversing the transport increases, glucose plus 3-OMG were more effective than glucose alone. Serum containing cultures (10% v/v) of glucose-fed or glucose-starved cells exhibited rapid decreases in 2-DG transport when exposed to glucose-containing serum-free medium. These decreases were prevented by employing glucose-free, serum-free medium. The data indicate that hexose transport regulation in cultured human fibrob asts involves protein synthesis of hexose carriers balanced by interactions of glucose with a regulatory protein(s) and glucose metabolism as they affect the regulation and/or turnover of the carrier molecules.  相似文献   

14.
The cardioactive diterpene forskolin is a known activator of adenylate cyclase, but recently a specific interaction of this compound with the glucose transporter has been identified that results in the inhibition of glucose transport in several human and rat cell types. We have compared the sensitivity of basal and insulin-stimulated hexose transport to inhibition by forskolin in skeletal muscle cells of the L6 line. Forskolin completely inhibited both basal and insulin-stimulated hexose transport when present during the transport assay. The inhibition of basal transport was completely reversible upon removal of the diterpene. In contrast, insulin-stimulated hexose transport did not recover, and basal transport levels were attained instead. This effect of inhibiting (or reversing) the insulin-stimulated fraction of transport is a novel effect of the diterpene. Forskolin treatment also inhibited the stimulated fraction of transport when the stimulus was by 4 beta-phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate, reversing back to basal levels. Half-maximal inhibition of the above-basal insulin-stimulated transport was achieved with 35-50 microM-forskolin, and maximal inhibition with 100 microM. Forskolin did not inhibit 125I-insulin binding under conditions where it caused significant inhibition of insulin-stimulated hexose transport. Forskolin significantly elevated the cyclic AMP levels in the cells; however its inhibitory effect on the above basal, insulin-stimulated fraction of hexose transport was not mediated by cyclic AMP since: (i) 8-bromo cyclic AMP and cholera toxin did not mimic this effect of the diterpene, (ii) significant decreases in cyclic AMP levels caused by 2',3'-dideoxyadenosine in the presence of forskolin did not prevent inhibition of insulin-stimulated hexose transport, (iii) isobutylmethylxanthine did not potentiate forskolin effects on glucose transport but did potentiate the elevation in cyclic AMP, and (iv) 1,9-dideoxyforskolin, which does not activate adenylate cyclase, inhibited hexose transport analogously to forskolin. We conclude that forskolin can selectively inhibit the insulin- and phorbol ester-stimulated fraction of hexose transport under conditions where basal transport is unimpaired. The results are compatible with the suggestions that glucose transporters operating in the stimulated state (insulin or phorbol ester-stimulated) differ in their sensitivity to forskolin from transporters operating in the basal state, or, alternatively, that a forskolin-sensitive signal maintains the stimulated transport rate.  相似文献   

15.
We examined the effects of the membrane-impermeant amino-group-modifying agent fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) on the basal and insulin-stimulated hexose-transport activity of isolated rat adipocytes. Pre-treatment of cells with FITC causes irreversible inhibition of transport measured in subsequently washed cells. Transport activity was inhibited by approx. 50% with 2 mM-FITC in 8 min. The cells respond to insulin, after FITC treatment and removal, and the fold increase in transport above the basal value caused by maximal concentrations of insulin was independent of the concentration of FITC used for pre-treatment over the range 0-2 mM, where basal activity was progressively inhibited. The ability of FITC to modify selectively hexose transporters accessible only to the external milieu was evaluated by two methods. (1) Free intracellular FITC, and the distribution of FITC bound to cellular components, were assessed after dialysis of the homogenate and subcellular fractionation on sucrose gradients by direct spectroscopic measurement of fluorescein. Most (98%) of the FITC was associated with the non-diffusible fractions. Equilibrium sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation of the homogenate demonstrated that the subcellular distribution of the bound FITC correlated with the density distribution of a plasma-membrane marker, but not markers for Golgi, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria or protein. Exposing the cellular homogenate, rather than the intact cell preparation, to 2 mM-FITC resulted in a 4-5-fold increase in total bound FITC, and the density-distribution profile more closely resembled the distribution of total protein. (2) Incubation of hexokinase preparations with FITC rapidly and irreversibly inactivates this protein. However, both intracellular hexokinase total activity and its apparent Michaelis constant for glucose were unaffected in FITC-treated intact cells. Further control experiments demonstrated that FITC pre-treatment of cells had no effect on the intracellular ATP concentration or the dose-response curve of insulin stimulation of hexose transport. Since the fold increase of hexose transport induced by insulin is constant over the range of inhibition of surface-labelled hexose transporters, we suggest that insulin-induced insertion of additional transporters into the plasma membrane may not be the major locus of acceleration of hexose transport by the hormone.  相似文献   

16.
Insulin stimulation of hydrogen peroxide production by rat epididymal fat cells was investigated by studying the oxidation of formate to CO2 by endogenous catalase. Under optimal concentrations of formate (0.1 to 1 mM) and glucose (0.275 mM), insulin stimulated formate oxidation 1.5- to 2.0-fold. Inhibitors of catalase activity, including nitrite and azide, inhibited both basal and insulin-stimulated formate oxidation at concentrations that did not interfere with insulin effects on glucose C-1 oxidation or glucose H-3 incorporation into lipids. The addition of exogenous catalase increased formate oxidation only slightly, while exogenous H2O2 (0.5 mM) stimulated formate oxidation by endogenous catalase strongly. These data indicate that the insulin-stimulated H2O2 production was intracellular. Insulin dose-response curves for formate oxidation were identical with those for glucose H-3 incorporation into lipids. The dependence of relative insulin effects on the logarithm of the glucose concentration was bell-shaped for formate oxidation and correlated highly with the coresponding dependences of glucose C-1 oxidation and glucose H-3 incorporation into lipids. This suggests that insulin stimulation of intracellular H2O2 production is linked to glucose metabolism. Since it is known that extracellular H2O2 can mimic insulin in several respects, these observations suggest that H2O2 may act as a "second messenger" for the observed effects of insulin.  相似文献   

17.
Plasma membrane vesicles prepared from adipocytes incubated with insulin exhibited accelerated D-glucose transport activity characteristic of insulin action on intact fat cells. Both control and insulin-stimulated D-glucose transport activities were inhibited by cytochalasin B and thiol reagents. Extraction of plasma membranes with dimethylmaleic anhydride eluted 80% of the protein from plasma membrane vesicles. The two major glycoprotein bands (94,000 and 78,000 daltons) and small amounts of a 56,000-dalton band were retained in dodecyl sulfate gels of the extracted membranes. Both control and insulin-activated D-glucose transport activities were retained by plasma membrane vesicles extracted with dimethylmaleic anhydride. Cytochalasin B binding activity was also retained by extracted membrane vescles and D-glucose uptake into extracted vescles derived from untreated or insulin-treated fat cells was inhibited by cytochalasin B. These results suggest that the modification of the adipocyte hexose transport system elicited by insulin action is not altered by a major purification step which involves quantitative extraction of extrinsic membrane proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Inhibition of hexose transport by N-ethylmaleimide was studied with regard to alkylation of different types of sulfhydryl group on the hexose carrier of the human erythrocyte. Uptake of 3-O-methylglucose was progressively and irreversibly inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, with a half-maximal effect at 10-13 mM. A sulfhydryl group known to exist on the exofacial carrier was not involved in transport inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide, since reversible protection of this group by the impermeant sulfhydryl reagent 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) had no effect on the ability of N-ethylmaleimide to inhibit transport, or on its ability to decrease the affinity of the exofacial carrier for maltose. Nevertheless, the exofacial sulfhydryl was quite reactive with N-ethylmaleimide, since it was possible using a differential labeling technique to specifically label this group in protein-depleted ghosts with a half-maximal effect at 0.3 mM N-[3H]ethylmaleimide, and to localize it to the Mr 19,000 tryptic carrier fragment. Transport inhibition by N-ethylmaleimide correlated best with labeling of a single cytochalasin B-sensitive internal sulfhydryl group on the glycosylated Mr 23,000-40,000 tryptic fragment of the carrier, which was half-maximally labeled at about 4 mM reagent. Whereas N-ethylmaleimide readily alkylates the exofacial carrier sulfhydryl, it inhibits transport by reacting with at least one internal carrier sulfhydryl located on the glycosylated tryptic carrier fragment.  相似文献   

19.
The transport activity of the purified and reconstituted ornithine/citrulline carrier from rat liver mitochondria was correlated to modification of its sulfhydryl groups by various reagents. Both the ornithine/ornithine (antiport) and the ornithine/H(+) (unidirectional) transport modes catalysed by the ornithine/citrulline carrier were inhibited by methanethiosulfonates, mercurial reagents, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) (DTNB). The treatment of the ornithine/citrulline carrier with mercurial reagents, at concentrations above 5 microM, caused the induction of an additional (pore-like) transport mode, characterized by loss of substrate specificity and a transport activity higher than that of the unmodified carrier. The S-S forming reagent Cu(2+)-phenanthroline inhibited the transport catalysed by the carrier, indicating the presence of close sulfhydryl groups. The effect of consecutive addition of the various reagents revealed a peculiar aspect of the ornithine/citrulline carrier, i.e. the presence of three distinct populations of sulfhydryl groups. The first was responsible for the inhibition of the physiological transport modes by methanethiosulfonates, NEM and DTNB and low concentrations (<5 microM) of mercurials; the second population was responsible for the transition to the pore-like activity induced by higher concentrations (>5 microM) of mercurials; the third population was involved in S-S bridge formation.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of the non-penetrating reagent of -SH groups: acid 5,5'-dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoic), (DTNB), on 1 mM galactose absorption in rat intestine in vivo has been studied. DTNB inhibits sugar absorption in about 35%, which is due to an action on the mediated transport component, but without affecting the diffusional passive one. Consequently it does not modify galactose absorption in the presence of 0.5 mM phlorizin or that of the non-transportable sugar 2-deoxy-glucose. Galactose transport inhibition appears after a not longer than 5 min preexposure period and it remains constant at least up to 30 min. The inhibitory effect does not vary between 0.1 and 1 mM DTNB and it reverses completely with 0.5 mM dithioerythritol. Protection by excess of substrate has not been observed. Results show that DTNB affects sulfhydryl groups very probably located at the luminal side and related to the proteins of the cotransport system.  相似文献   

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