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Specificity of the Na+-dependent monocarboxylic acid transport pathway in rabbit renal brush border membranes
Authors:Edward P. Nord  Stephen H. Wright  Ian Kippen  Ernest M. Wright
Affiliation:1. Department of Physiology and Division of Nephrology, UCLA School of Medicine, 90024, Los Angeles, California
2. Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 90048, Los Angeles, California
Abstract:The substrate specificity of a Na+-dependent transport pathway for L-lactate was studied in rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles. Jmax for L-lactate transport was unaffected by the presence of a fixed concentration of two different short-chain monocarboxylic acids, while the apparent Kt(Ka) for L-lactate increased, and this is compatible with competitive inhibition. The inhibitor constants ("Ki"'s) for the transport pathway for the two solutes examined closely corresponded to the respective "Ki"'s derived from a Dixon plot. A broad range of compounds were then tested as potential inhibitors of L-lactate transport, and the "Ki"'s thereby derived yielded specific information regarding optimal substrate recognition by the carrier. A single carboxyl group is an absolute requirement for recognition, and preference is given to 3 to 6 C chain molecules. Addition of ketone, hydroxyl and, particularly, amine groups at any carbon position, diminishes substrate-carrier interaction. Intramolecular forces, notably the inductive effects of halogens, may play a role in enhancing substrate-carrier interaction; however, no correlation was found between pKa and "Ki" for the substrates examined. We conclude that a separate monocarboxylic acid transport pathway, discrete from either the D-glucose, alpha or beta neutral amino-acid, or dicarboxylic acid carriers, exists in the renal brush border, and this handles a broad range of monocarboxylates.
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