Mechanism of urate and p-aminohippurate transport in rat renal microvillus membrane vesicles

1983 ◽  
Vol 245 (2) ◽  
pp. F151-F158 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. M. Kahn ◽  
S. Branham ◽  
E. J. Weinman

The transport of urate and p-aminohippurate (PAH) was evaluated in brush border membrane vesicles from the rat renal cortex. The binding of urate to the membranes was 6% of total uptake and no conversion of urate to allantoin was detected. The binding of PAH to the membranes was 24% of total uptake. In the presence of an outwardly directed hydroxyl ion gradient (pHi = 7.5, pHo = 6.0), the uptake of urate and PAH was stimulated relative to the absence of a hydroxyl ion gradient (pHi = pHo = 7.5) and the influx of urate resulted in a transient overshoot of the equilibrium value. The hydroxyl ion gradient-stimulated uptake of urate and PAH was not solely due to a change in membrane potential. Probenecid, DIDS, furosemide, and pyrazinoate inhibited the hydroxyl ion gradient-stimulated uptake of urate and PAH in a dose-dependent manner. The uptake of [14C]urate and [3H]PAH could be cis-inhibited and trans-stimulated by either unlabeled urate or PAH. In the presence of an outwardly directed bicarbonate gradient and 10% CO2 (outside HCO-3 = 5.4 mM, inside HCO-3 = 54 mM, pHo = 6.5, pHi = 7.5), the initial rate of urate uptake was faster and the initial rate of urate efflux was slower compared with vesicles that had the same pH gradient without bicarbonate or CO2. The effects of bicarbonate gradients on organic anion transport were not dependent on diffusion potentials. Finally, 100 mM extravesicular Na+, K+, Li+, or Cs+ did not affect urate or PAH uptake. These results indicate that brush border membrane vesicles from the rat kidney contain an anion exchange transport system with affinity for urate, PAH, hydroxyl ions, and bicarbonate. In addition there is no evidence for a sodium-urate or sodium-PAH cotransport mechanism in these membranes.

1979 ◽  
Vol 236 (6) ◽  
pp. F519-F525 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. F. Boumendil-Podevin ◽  
R. A. Podevin ◽  
C. Priol

The transport of uric acid was studied in brush border membrane vesicles isolated from rabbit kidney. The uptake of uric acid by the vesicles was osmotically sensitive and occurred in the absence of significant uric acid degradation. Under the conditions used to evaluate transport, urate binding to the membranes represented only 10––15% of the total uptake. The initial rate of uptake was linear over the concentration range 0.04––8 mM urate. Uptake of urage was Na+ gradient independent. It was dependent on external pH and temperature with Q10 near 3. The urate uptake was inhibited reversibly by p-chloromercuribenzoate. Probenecid, ouabain, cyclic adenosine 3',5'--monophosphate, and its dibutyryl derivative had no appreciable effects. Pyrazinoic acid and pyrazinamide stimulated urate uptake. Experiments performed with osmotically shocked vesicles demonstrated that this stimulatory effect resulted from increased binding of urate to the membranes. These results indicate that in several ways urate transport in vesicles resembles that observed with more physiologically intact preparations.


1985 ◽  
Vol 249 (3) ◽  
pp. F400-F408 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Manganel ◽  
F. Roch-Ramel ◽  
H. Murer

Pyrazinoate (PZA) is an organic anion actively reabsorbed and secreted in the mammalian kidney. In experiments with rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles, we characterized a sodium-PZA cotransport mechanism that could be involved in reabsorption. An inwardly directed sodium gradient stimulated the influx of PZA. The sodium-dependent transport was electroneutral, suggesting a 1:1 stoichiometry. The kinetic constants for sodium-PZA cotransport were measured under initial linear flux and zero trans conditions for both sodium and PZA. The apparent Km for sodium was about 60 mM. At 90 mM sodium the apparent Km for PZA was about 1.1 mM; increasing the sodium concentration augmented the apparent affinity for PZA. Cis inhibition of sodium-dependent PZA uptake was observed by the addition of nicotinate, lactate, probenecid, succinate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, and salicylate. Urate had no effect. [14C]PZA uptake was trans stimulated by PZA itself, lactate, and nicotinate. PZA shares a transport system(s) involved in the proximal tubular reabsorption of these two anions.


1991 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 885-893
Author(s):  
R W Chesney ◽  
I Zelikovic ◽  
A Budreau ◽  
D Randle

Proline accumulation by renal proximal tubule brush border membrane vesicles is Na+ dependent, but little is known about the role of anions or membrane potential on proline uptake. Recent studies in a variety of transport systems, including rat renal brush border membrane vesicles, indicate that halide anions chloride (Cl-) and bromide (Br-) are essential for glycine, beta-alanine, gamma-aminobutyric acid, and taurine uptake, so the possibility that Na(+)-proline symport is Cl- dependent was explored. Also, the role of membrane potential on transport was assessed by determining the effect of external anions with different membrane permeabilities. The ratio of initial rate Cl- stimulated to thiocyanate (SCN)(-)-stimulated uptake values serves to measure Cl- dependence. The initial rate of proline uptake to equilibrium value was 3.11 +/- 0.5 (SE) in the presence of Cl- versus SCN-. The ratio for D-glucose, whose uptake is governed only by electrogenic status of the membrane, was 0.61 +/- 0.47 (P less than 0.001 versus proline). In another series of experiments, uptake values for various anions as a percent of equilibrium (I/E x 100) were: SCN-, 84.9 +/- 10.9; NO3, 49.9 +/- 11.0; SO4(2-), 27.3 +/- 4.4; F-, 68.5 +/- 18.3; Cl-, 164.1 +/- 44.6; Br-, 150.6 +/- 30.2; I-, 56.7 +/- 13.5. The stoichiometry of uptake by Hill plot analysis of proline uptake in the presence of varying concentrations of Na+ (0 to 100 mM) and Cl- (0 to 100 mM) was 2Na+:1Cl-:1 proline.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1989 ◽  
Vol 257 (5) ◽  
pp. C971-C975 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. A. Skopicki ◽  
K. Fisher ◽  
D. Zikos ◽  
G. Flouret ◽  
D. R. Peterson

These studies were performed to determine if a low-affinity carrier is present in the luminal membrane of proximal tubular cells for the transport of the dipeptide, pyroglutamyl-histidine (pGlu-His). We have previously described the existence of a specific, high-affinity, low-capacity [transport constant (Kt) = 9.3 X 10(-8) M, Vmax = 6.1 X 10(-12) mol.mg-1.min-1] carrier for pGlu-His in renal brush-border membrane vesicles. In the present study, we sought to demonstrate that multiple carriers exist for the transport of a single dipeptide by determining whether a low-affinity carrier also exists for the uptake of pGlu-His. Transport of pGlu-His into brush-border membrane vesicles was saturable over the concentration range of 10(-5)-10(-3) M, yielding a Kt of 6.3 X 10(-5) M and a Vmax of 2.2 X 10(-10) mol.mg-1.min-1. Uptake was inhibited by the dipeptides glycyl-proline, glycyl-sarcosine, and carnosine but not by the tripeptide pyroglutamyl-histidyl-prolinamide. We conclude that 1) pGlu-His is transported across the luminal membrane of the proximal tubule by multiple carriers and 2) the lower affinity carrier, unlike the higher affinity carrier, is nonspecific with respect to other dipeptides.


2021 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 109940
Author(s):  
Lesbia Cristina Julio-Gonzalez ◽  
F. Javier Moreno ◽  
María Luisa Jimeno ◽  
Elisa G. Doyagüez ◽  
Agustín Olano ◽  
...  

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