Publications (7)25.35 Total impact
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Article: Sodium-coupled electrogenic transport of pyroglutamate (5-oxoproline) via SLC5A8, a monocarboxylate transporter.
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ABSTRACT: Pyroglutamate, also known as 5-oxoproline, is a structural analog of proline. This amino acid derivative is a byproduct of glutathione metabolism, and is reabsorbed efficiently in kidney by Na(+)-coupled transport mechanisms. Previous studies have focused on potential participation of amino acid transport systems in renal reabsorption of this compound. Here we show that it is not the amino acid transport systems but instead the Na(+)-coupled monocarboxylate transporter SLC5A8 that plays a predominant role in this reabsorptive process. Expression of cloned human and mouse SLC5A8 in mammalian cells induces Na(+)-dependent transport of pyroglutamate that is inhibitable by various SLC5A8 substrates. SLC5A8-mediated transport of pyroglutamate is saturable with a Michaelis constant of 0.36+/-0.04mM. Na(+)-activation of the transport process exhibits sigmoidal kinetics with a Hill coefficient of 1.8+/-0.4, indicating involvement of more than one Na(+) in the activation process. Expression of SLC5A8 in Xenopuslaevis oocytes induces Na(+)-dependent inward currents in the presence of pyroglutamate under voltage-clamp conditions. The concentration of pyroglutamate necessary for induction of half-maximal current is 0.19+/-0.01mM. The Na(+)-activation kinetics is sigmoidal with a Hill coefficient of 2.3+/-0.2. Ibuprofen, a blocker of SLC5A8, suppressed pyroglutamate-induced currents in SLC5A8-expressing oocytes; the concentration of the blocker necessary for causing half-maximal inhibition is 14+/-1microM. The involvement of SLC5A8 can be demonstrated in rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles by showing that the Na(+)-dependent uptake of pyroglutamate in these vesicles is inhibitable by known substrates of SLC5A8. The Na(+) gradient-driven pyroglutamate uptake was stimulated by an inside-negative K(+) diffusion potential induced by valinomycin, showing that the uptake process is electrogenic.Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 03/2010; 1798(6):1164-71. · 4.66 Impact Factor -
Article: Spontaneous development of intestinal and colonic atrophy and inflammation in the carnitine-deficient jvs (OCTN2(-/-)) mice.
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ABSTRACT: Carnitine is essential for transport of long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria for their subsequent beta-oxidation, but its role in the gastrointestinal tract has not been well described. Recently several genetic epidemiologic studies have shown strong association between mutations in carnitine transporter genes OCTN1 and OCTN2 and a propensity to develop Crohn's disease. This study aims to investigate role of carnitine and beta-oxidation in the GI tract. We have studied the gastrointestinal tract effects of carnitine deficiency in a mouse model with loss-of-function mutation in the OCTN2 carnitine transporter. juvenile visceral steatosis (OCTN2(-/-)) mouse spontaneously develops intestinal villous atrophy, breakdown and inflammation with intense lymphocytic and macrophage infiltration, leading to ulcer formation and gut perforation. There is increased apoptosis of jvs (OCTN2(-/-)) gut epithelial cells. We observed an up-regulation of heat shock factor-1 (HSF-1) and several heat shock proteins (HSPs) which are known to regulate OCTN2 gene expression. Intestinal and colonic epithelial cells in wild type mice showed high expression and activity of the enzymes of beta-oxidation pathway. These studies provide evidence of an obligatory role for carnitine in the maintenance of normal intestinal and colonic structure and morphology. Fatty acid oxidation, a metabolic pathway regulated by carnitine-dependent entry of long-chain fatty acids into mitochondrial matrix, is likely essential for normal gut function. Our studies suggest that carnitine supplementation, as a means of boosting fatty acid oxidation, may be therapeutically beneficial in patients with inflammation of the intestinal tract.Molecular Genetics and Metabolism 01/2008; 92(4):315-24. · 3.19 Impact Factor -
Article: Transport of butyryl-L-carnitine, a potential prodrug, via the carnitine transporter OCTN2 and the amino acid transporter ATB(0,+).
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ABSTRACT: L-carnitine is absorbed in the intestinal tract via the carnitine transporter OCTN2 and the amino acid transporter ATB(0,+). Loss-of-function mutations in OCTN2 may be associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), suggesting a role for carnitine in intestinal/colonic health. In contrast, ATB(0,+) is upregulated in bowel inflammation. Butyrate, a bacterial fermentation product, is beneficial for prevention/treatment of ulcerative colitis. Butyryl-L-carnitine (BC), a butyrate ester of carnitine, may have potential for treatment of gut inflammation, since BC would supply both butyrate and carnitine. We examined the transport of BC via ATB(0,+) to determine if this transporter could serve as a delivery system for BC. We also examined the transport of BC via OCTN2. Studies were done with cloned ATB(0,+) and OCTN2 in heterologous expression systems. BC inhibited ATB(0,+)-mediated glycine transport in mammalian cells (IC(50), 4.6 +/- 0.7 mM). In Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing human ATB(0,+), BC induced Na(+) -dependent inward currents under voltage-clamp conditions. The currents were saturable with a K(0.5) of 1.4 +/- 0.1 mM. Na(+) activation kinetics of BC-induced currents suggested involvement of two Na(+) per transport cycle. BC also inhibited OCTN2-mediated carnitine uptake (IC(50), 1.5 +/- 0.3 microM). Transport of BC via OCTN2 is electrogenic, as evidenced from BC-induced inward currents. These currents were Na(+) dependent and saturable (K(0.5), 0.40 +/- 0.02 microM). We conclude that ATB(0,+) is a low-affinity/high-capacity transporter for BC, whereas OCTN2 is a high-affinity/low-capacity transporter. ATB(0,+) may mediate intestinal absorption of BC when OCTN2 is defective.AJP Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology 12/2007; 293(5):G1046-53. · 3.43 Impact Factor -
Article: Expression and functional features of NaCT, a sodium-coupled citrate transporter, in human and rat livers and cell lines.
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ABSTRACT: In this article, we report on the expression and function of a Na(+)-coupled transporter for citrate, NaCT, in human and rat liver cell lines and in primary hepatocytes from the rat liver. We also describe the polarized expression of this transporter in human and rat livers. Citrate uptake in human liver cell lines HepG2 and Huh-7 was obligatorily dependent on Na+. The uptake system showed a preference for citrate over other intermediates of the citric acid cycle and exhibited a Michaelis constant of approximately 6 mM for citrate. The transport activity was stimulated by Li+, and the activation was associated with a marked increase in substrate affinity. Citrate uptake in rat liver cell line MH1C1 was also Na+ dependent and showed a preference for citrate. The Michaelis constant for citrate was approximately 10 microM. The transport activity was inhibited by Li+. Primary hepatocytes from the rat liver also showed robust activity for Na+-coupled citrate uptake, with functional features similar to those described in the rat liver cell line. Immunolabeling with a specific anti-NaCT antibody showed exclusive expression of the transporter in the sinusoidal membrane of hepatocytes in human and rat livers. This constitutes the first report on the expression and function of NaCT in liver cells.AJP Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology 02/2007; 292(1):G402-8. · 3.43 Impact Factor -
Article: Cloning and functional identification of slc5a12 as a sodium-coupled low-affinity transporter for monocarboxylates (SMCT2).
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ABSTRACT: We report in the present paper, on the isolation and functional characterization of slc5a12, the twelfth member of the SLC5 gene family, from mouse kidney. The slc5a12 cDNA codes for a protein of 619 amino acids. Heterologous expression of slc5a12 cDNA in mammalian cells induces Na+-dependent transport of lactate and nicotinate. Several other short-chain monocarboxylates compete with nicotinate for the cDNA-induced transport process. Expression of slc5a12 in Xenopus oocytes induces electrogenic and Na+-dependent transport of lactate, nicotinate, propionate and butyrate. The substrate specificity of slc5a12 is similar to that of slc5a8, an Na+-coupled transporter for monocarboxylates. However, the substrate affinities of slc5a12 were much lower than those of slc5a8. slc5a12 mRNA is expressed in kidney, small intestine and skeletal muscle. In situ hybridization with sagittal sections of mouse kidney showed predominant expression of slc5a12 in the outer cortex. This is in contrast with slc5a8, which is expressed in the cortex as well as in the medulla. The physiological function of slc5a12 in the kidney is likely to mediate the reabsorption of lactate. In the intestinal tract, slc5a12 is expressed in the proximal parts, whereas slc5a8 is expressed in the distal parts. The expression of slc5a12 in the proximal parts of the intestinal tract, where there is minimal bacterial colonization, suggests that the physiological function of slc5a12 is not to mediate the absorption of short-chain monocarboxylates derived from bacterial fermentation but rather to mediate the absorption of diet-derived short-chain monocarboxylates. Based on the functional and structural similarities between slc5a8 and slc5a12, we suggest that the two transporters be designated as SMCT1 (sodium-coupled monocarboxylate transporter 1) and SMCT2 respectively.Biochemical Journal 01/2006; 392(Pt 3):655-64. · 4.90 Impact Factor -
Article: Serine racemase and D-serine transport in human placenta and evidence for a transplacental gradient for D-serine in humans.
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ABSTRACT: To investigate the possible role of human placenta in providing D-serine to the developing fetus. Expression of serine racemase in placenta was determined by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and northern analysis and confirmed by subsequent cloning. The transport of D-serine by human ATB(0) was characterized by expressing the cloned cDNA transiently in mammalian cells using the vaccinia virus expression system. D-serine levels in maternal and fetal blood were measured by fluorescence high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) after derivatization of the amino acids with o-phthaldialdehyde and N-tertiary-butyloxycarbonyl-L-cysteine. mRNA for serine racemase was detected in placenta. ATB(0) was capable of d-serine transport, and the transport process is obligatorily dependent on sodium (Na+) with a Na(+):substrate stoichiometry of 1:1 and saturable with a Michaelis-Menten constant of 310 +/- 30 microM. Furthermore, studies have shown that ATB(0) is not expressed in the maternal-facing brush border membrane of human placental syncytiotrophoblast. The circulating concentration of D-serine in maternal serum is 5.8 +/- 0.5 microM, and the corresponding value in the fetal serum is 14.6 +/- 1.2 microM, indicating a two- to three-fold higher concentration of D-serine in the fetus than in the mother. We speculate that D-serine is synthesized in human placenta by the racemization of L-serine and that ATB(0), expressed on the basal membrane of the syncytiotrophoblast, mediates the efflux of D-serine into the fetal circulation in exchange for other amino acids in fetal blood.Journal of the Society for Gynecologic Investigation 08/2004; 11(5):294-303. · 2.26 Impact Factor -
Article: Inhibition of system A amino acid transport activity by ethanol in BeWo choriocarcinoma cells.
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ABSTRACT: Our purpose was to investigate the influence of ethanol on system A amino acid transporter in BeWo cells. BeWo cells were cultured in the absence or presence of ethanol. The function of system A was monitored by the transport of alpha-(methylamino)isobutyric acid. Messenger RNA levels for system A were assessed by Northern analysis. Treatment of BeWo cells with ethanol reduced the activity of system A. The effect was dose and treatment time dependent. The decrease in system A activity was 38% +/- 3% at 0.75% ethanol with a 16-hour treatment time. The activities of several other transporters tested were not affected. The effect on system A activity was associated with a decrease in the maximal velocity of the transport system without affecting the substrate affinity. Ethanol did not alter the messenger RNA levels for system A. Exposure of BeWo cells to ethanol significantly reduces the function of system A. This finding has potential implications that may be relevant to the pathogenesis of the fetal alcohol syndrome.American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 08/2002; 187(1):209-16. · 3.47 Impact Factor
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Institutions
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2002–2010
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Georgia Health Sciences University
- • Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- • Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Augusta, GA, USA
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