Abstract: | Recent studies of Fe2+ uptake by mouse proximal intestine brush-border membrane vesicles revealed low-affinity, NaCl-sensitive and high-affinity, NaCl-insensitive, components of uptake (Simpson, R.J. and Peters, T.J. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 814, 381-388). In this study, the former component is demonstrated to show a strong pH dependence with an optimum of pH 6.8-6.9. Studies at pH 6.5, where the low affinity component is inhibited by more than 25-fold compared with pH 7.2, suggest that the pH-sensitive component represents transport across the brush-border membrane followed by intravesicular binding. Cholate extracts of brush-border membrane vesicles contain pH- and NaCl-sensitive Fe2+ binding moieties which may be involved in the transfer of Fe2+ across the intestinal brush-border membrane and subsequent binding inside the vesicles. Fe2+ uptake by brush-border membrane vesicles from the duodenum of hypoxic mice is higher than uptake by vesicles from control-fed animals, suggesting the existence of a regulable brush-border membrane Fe2+ carrier. |