Widdows Kate L, Panitchob Nuttanont, Crocker Ian P, Please Colin P, Hanson Mark A, Sibley Colin P, Johnstone Edward D, Sengers Bram G, Lewis Rohan M, Glazier Jocelyn D
*Maternal and Fetal Health Research Centre, Institute of Human Development, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom; St. Mary's Hospital and Central Manchester University Hospitals National Health Service Foundation Trust, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, United Kingdom; Bioengineering Science Research Group, Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom; Mathematical Institute, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom; and Faculty of Medicine, and Institute for Life Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
*Maternal and Fetal Health Research Centre, Institute of Human Development, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom; St. Mary's Hospital and Central Manchester University Hospitals National Health Service Foundation Trust, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, United Kingdom; Bioengineering Science Research Group, Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom; Mathematical Institute, Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom; and Faculty of Medicine, and Institute for Life Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom
FASEB J. 2015 Jun;29(6):2583-94. doi: 10.1096/fj.14-267773. Epub 2015 Mar 11.
Uptake of system L amino acid substrates into isolated placental plasma membrane vesicles in the absence of opposing side amino acid (zero-trans uptake) is incompatible with the concept of obligatory exchange, where influx of amino acid is coupled to efflux. We therefore hypothesized that system L amino acid exchange transporters are not fully obligatory and/or that amino acids are initially present inside the vesicles. To address this, we combined computational modeling with vesicle transport assays and transporter localization studies to investigate the mechanisms mediating [(14)C]L-serine (a system L substrate) transport into human placental microvillous plasma membrane (MVM) vesicles. The carrier model provided a quantitative framework to test the 2 hypotheses that l-serine transport occurs by either obligate exchange or nonobligate exchange coupled with facilitated transport (mixed transport model). The computational model could only account for experimental [(14)C]L-serine uptake data when the transporter was not exclusively in exchange mode, best described by the mixed transport model. MVM vesicle isolates contained endogenous amino acids allowing for potential contribution to zero-trans uptake. Both L-type amino acid transporter (LAT)1 and LAT2 subtypes of system L were distributed to MVM, with L-serine transport attributed to LAT2. These findings suggest that exchange transporters do not function exclusively as obligate exchangers.
在不存在反向侧氨基酸(零转运摄取)的情况下,系统L氨基酸底物进入分离的胎盘质膜囊泡的过程与强制交换的概念不相符,在强制交换中氨基酸的流入与流出相偶联。因此,我们推测系统L氨基酸交换转运体并非完全强制,和/或氨基酸最初存在于囊泡内部。为了解决这个问题,我们将计算建模与囊泡运输测定以及转运体定位研究相结合,以研究介导[(14)C]L-丝氨酸(一种系统L底物)转运至人胎盘微绒毛质膜(MVM)囊泡的机制。载体模型提供了一个定量框架,以测试两个假设,即L-丝氨酸转运通过强制交换或与易化转运偶联的非强制交换(混合转运模型)发生。当转运体并非仅处于交换模式时,计算模型才能解释实验性的[(14)C]L-丝氨酸摄取数据,可以用混合转运模型最好地描述这种情况。MVM囊泡分离物含有内源性氨基酸,这可能对零转运摄取有贡献。系统L的L型氨基酸转运体(LAT)1和LAT2亚型均分布于MVM,L-丝氨酸转运归因于LAT2。这些发现表明,交换转运体并非仅作为强制交换体发挥作用。