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Non-competitive inhibition of myo-inositol transport in cultured bovine retinal capillary pericytes by glucose and reversal by Sorbinil
Authors:W Li  L S Chan  M Khatami  J H Rockey
Abstract:myo-Inositol transport by retinal capillary pericytes in culture was characterized. The major myo-inositol transport process was sodium-dependent, ouabain-sensitive, and saturable at 40 mM, indicating a carrier-mediated process. The sodium ion concentration required to produce one-half the maximal rate of myo-inositol uptake (Na+]0.5) did not show dependence on the external myo-inositol concentration (22.3 mM sodium for 0.005 mM myo-inositol; 18.2 mM sodium for 0.05 mM myo-inositol). myo-Inositol transport was an energy-dependent, active process functioning against a myo-inositol concentration gradient. The kinetics of the sodium-dependent system fitted a 'velocity type' co-transport model where binding of sodium ion to the carrier increased the velocity (Vmax 28 to 313 pmol myo-inositol/micrograms DNA per 20 min when Na+] varied from 9 to 150 mM) but not the affinity for myo-inositol (Km 0.92 to 0.83 mM when Na+] varied from 9 to 150 mM). Metabolizable hexoses (D-glucose or D-galactose; greater than 5 mM) inhibited myo-inositol uptake. Dixon-plot analysis indicated that the inhibition was non-competitive with a Ki of 22.7 mM for D-glucose and 72.6 mM for D-galactose. The inhibition was significantly reversed by Sorbinil (0.1 mM), an aldose reductase inhibitor. In contrast, high concentrations of non-metabolizable hexoses (L-glucose, 3-O-methyl-D-glucose), or partially metabolizable 2-deoxy-D-glucose, did not significantly inhibit myo-inositol uptake. The inhibitory effect of D-glucose or D-galactose on myo-inositol transport appeared to be related to glucose or galactose metabolism via the polyol pathway.
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