Evidence for the Existence of a Distinct SO–4-OH–Exchange Mechanism in the Human Proximal Colonic Apical Membrane Vesicles and Its Possible Role in Chloride Transport

2001 ◽  
Vol 226 (10) ◽  
pp. 912-918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sangerta Tyagip ◽  
Reena J. Kavilaveettil ◽  
Waddah A. Alrefai ◽  
Shadwan Alsafwah ◽  
Krishnamurthy Ramaswamy ◽  
...  
1996 ◽  
Vol 1280 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ravish J. Mahajan ◽  
Melissa L. Baldwin ◽  
James M. Harig ◽  
Krishnamurthy Ramaswamy ◽  
Pradeep K. Dudeja

1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (2) ◽  
pp. C478-C485 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. J. Racette ◽  
S. E. Gabriel ◽  
K. J. Gaspar ◽  
G. W. Forsyth

Conductive chloride transport in the small intestine is an important factor controlling fluid movement from the blood to the lumen of the gut. Several proteins with potential conductive chloride ion channel activity are expressed in the enterocyte cell population. However, it is not clear whether one or more than one protein species is normally responsible for mediating conductive chloride transport. We have raised monoclonal antibodies that inhibit conductive chloride transport in apical membrane vesicles prepared from porcine ileal enterocytes. These monoclonal antibodies have been used to identify a unique protein involved with this conductive chloride transport. Here, we report that anti-chloride conductance monoclonal antibodies did not detect any antigen in Western blots of enterocyte apical membrane protein. Dot blotting and immunoprecipitation experiments indicated that the antigen recognized by these monoclonal antibodies was not the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator. The antigen was localized to both villus and crypt regions of ileum on immunohistochemistry. A 90-kDa protein species was immunoprecipitated from a primary enterocyte cell line by these monoclonal antibodies. This 90-kDa protein may be a chloride ion channel or may play some regulatory role in conductive chloride transport in enterocyte apical membrane vesicles.


1987 ◽  
Vol 90 (6) ◽  
pp. 779-798 ◽  
Author(s):  
D W Landry ◽  
M Reitman ◽  
E J Cragoe ◽  
Q Al-Awqati

Chloride channels are present in the majority of epithelial cells, where they mediate absorption or secretion of NaCl. Although the absorptive and secretory channels are well characterized in terms of their electrophysiological behavior, there is a lack of pharmacological ligands that can aid us in further functional and eventually molecular characterization. To obtain such ligands, we prepared membrane vesicles from bovine kidney cortex and apical membrane vesicles from trachea and found that they contain a chloride transport process that is electrically conductive. This conductance was reduced by preincubating the vesicles in media containing ATP or ATP-gamma-S, but not beta-methylene ATP, which suggests that the membranes contain a kinase that can close the channels. We then screened compounds derived from three classes: indanyloxyacetic acid (IAA), anthranilic acid (AA), and ethacrynic acid. We identified potent inhibitors from the IAA and the AA series. We tritiated IAA-94 and measured binding of this ligand to the kidney cortex membrane vesicles and found a high-affinity binding site whose dissociation constant (0.6 microM) was similar to the inhibition constant (1 microM). There was a good correlation between the inhibitory potency of several IAA derivatives and their efficacy in displacing [3H]IAA-94 from its binding site. Further, other chloride channel inhibitors, including AA derivatives, ethacrynic acid, bumetanide, and DIDS, also displaced the ligand from its binding site. A similar conductance was found in apical membrane vesicles from bovine trachea that was also inhibited by IAA-94 and AA-130B, but the inhibitory effects of these compounds were weaker than their effects on the renal cortex channel. The two drugs were also less potent in displacing [3H]IAA-94 from the tracheal binding site.


1999 ◽  
Vol 276 (1) ◽  
pp. G132-G137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vazhaikkurichi M. Rajendran ◽  
Henry J. Binder

Na depletion inhibits electroneutral Na-Cl absorption in intact tissues and Na/H exchange in apical membrane vesicles (AMV) of rat distal colon. Two anion (Cl/HCO3 and Cl/OH) exchanges have been identified in AMV from surface cells of rat distal colon. To determine whether Cl/HCO3 and/or Cl/OH exchange is responsible for vectorial Cl movement, this study examined the spatial distribution and the effect of Na depletion on anion-dependent 36Cl uptake by AMV in rat distal colon. These studies demonstrate that HCO3 concentration gradient-driven36Cl uptake (i.e., Cl/HCO3 exchange) is 1) primarily present in AMV from surface cells and 2) markedly reduced by Na depletion. In contrast, OH concentration gradient-driven36Cl uptake (i.e., Cl/OH exchange) present in both surface and crypt cells is not affected by Na depletion. In Na-depleted animals HCO3 also stimulates36Cl via Cl/OH exchange with low affinity. These results suggest that Cl/HCO3 exchange is responsible for vectorial Cl absorption, whereas Cl/OH exchange is involved in cell volume and/or cell pH homeostasis.


1993 ◽  
Vol 264 (5) ◽  
pp. G874-G879 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. M. Rajendran ◽  
H. J. Binder

This study describes Cl-HCO3 and Cl-OH exchanges as the mechanism for Cl uptake by apical membrane vesicles (AMV) of rat distal colon. Although HCO3 gradient-stimulated 36Cl uptake was additionally stimulated by the additional presence of a pH gradient, pH gradient-stimulated 36Cl uptake was not further enhanced by a HCO3 gradient. HCO3 gradient-stimulated and OH gradient-stimulated 36Cl uptake was not inhibited by voltage clamping, with K and its ionophore valinomycin, but was inhibited by 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid, an anion exchange inhibitor, with an apparent inhibitory constant of 7.8 and 106.0 microM, respectively. Increasing intravesicular OH concentration in the absence of HCO3 (with fixed extravesicular Cl concentration) yielded a sigmoidal curve for 36Cl uptake. In contrast, increasing intravesicular OH concentration in the presence of equimolar intra- and extravesicular HCO3 (25 mM) yielded a saturable hyperbolic curve. Increasing extravesicular Cl concentration saturated both HCO3 gradient-stimulated and OH gradient-stimulated 36Cl uptake, with a kinetic constant for Cl of approximately 11.9 and 22.6 mM, respectively. We conclude that Cl uptake in AMV of rat distal colon occurs via two separate anion (Cl-HCO3 and Cl-OH) exchange processes. We speculate that one of these two anion exchanges may be responsible for transcellular Cl movement, while the other may be important in the regulation of intracellular pH homeostasis.


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