Dipeptide uptake by adenohypophysial folliculostellate cells.
C Otto, S tom Dieck, K Bauer
Index: Am. J. Physiol. 271(1 Pt 1) , C210-7, (1996)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Dipeptide uptake was studied in primary cultures from rat anterior pituitaries by use of radiolabeled carnosine and the fluorescent dipeptide derivative beta-Ala-Lys-N epsilon-AMCA (AMCA is 7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetic acid). Fluorescence microscopic studies revealed that the reporter peptide specifically accumulated in the S-100 positive folliculostellate cells that do not produce any known hormone. The dipeptide derivative was taken up in unmetabolized form by an energy-dependent saturable process with apparent kinetic constants as follows: Michaelis constant, 19 microM; maximum velocity, 5.5 nmol.mg protein-1.h-1. This high-affinity transporter was strongly affected by inhibitors of sodium/proton exchangers and thus appeared to be driven by a proton gradient. Competition studies revealed that the peptide transporter exhibits broad substrate specificity with a preference for hydrophobic dipeptides. In contrast to free amino acids and the pseudotetrapeptide amastatin, tripeptides were also accepted. Compounds without an alpha- and beta-amino group, such as captopril, thiorphan, and benzylpenicillin, did not affect uptake of the reporter peptide, although they were substrates of the well-characterized intestinal and renal dipeptide transporters.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2015-03-01
[RNA 21(3) , 458-69, (2015)]
2015-07-15
[Am. J. Physiol. Renal Physiol. 309 , F120-36, (2015)]
2014-01-01
[Mol. Vis. 20 , 1777-95, (2015)]
2014-10-15
[J. Neurosci. 34(42) , 14128-46, (2014)]
Dynactin functions as both a dynamic tether and brake during dynein-driven motility.
2014-01-01
[Nat. Commun. 5 , 4807, (2014)]