Hawkins Richard A, Viña Juan R
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, The Chicago Medical School, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, North Chicago, IL 60088, USA.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine and Odontology, Medical Research Institute-INCLIVA, University of Valencia, Valencia 46010, Spain.
Biology (Basel). 2016 Oct 8;5(4):37. doi: 10.3390/biology5040037.
A facilitative transport system exists on the blood-brain barrier (BBB) that has been tacitly assumed to be a path for glutamate entry to the brain. However, glutamate is a non-essential amino acid whose brain content is much greater than plasma, and studies in vivo show that glutamate does not enter the brain in appreciable quantities except in those small regions with fenestrated capillaries (circumventricular organs). The situation became understandable when luminal (blood facing) and abluminal (brain facing) membranes were isolated and studied separately. Facilitative transport of glutamate and glutamine exists only on the luminal membranes, whereas Na⁺-dependent transport systems for glutamate, glutamine, and some other amino acids are present only on the abluminal membrane. The Na⁺-dependent cotransporters of the abluminal membrane are in a position to actively transport amino acids from the extracellular fluid (ECF) into the endothelial cells of the BBB. These powerful secondary active transporters couple with the energy of the Na⁺-gradient to move glutamate and glutamine into endothelial cells, whereupon glutamate can exit to the blood on the luminal facilitative glutamate transporter. Glutamine may also exit the brain via separate facilitative transport system that exists on the luminal membranes, or glutamine can be hydrolyzed to glutamate within the BBB, thereby releasing ammonia that is freely diffusible. The γ-glutamyl cycle participates indirectly by producing oxoproline (pyroglutamate), which stimulates almost all secondary active transporters yet discovered in the abluminal membranes of the BBB.
血脑屏障(BBB)上存在一种易化转运系统,一直以来人们默认它是谷氨酸进入大脑的途径。然而,谷氨酸是一种非必需氨基酸,其脑内含量远高于血浆,体内研究表明,除了那些有窗孔毛细血管的小区域(室周器官)外,谷氨酸不会大量进入大脑。当分别分离并研究管腔(面向血液)膜和无管腔(面向大脑)膜时,情况就变得可以理解了。谷氨酸和谷氨酰胺的易化转运仅存在于管腔膜上,而谷氨酸、谷氨酰胺和其他一些氨基酸的钠依赖性转运系统仅存在于无管腔膜上。无管腔膜上的钠依赖性共转运体能够将氨基酸从细胞外液(ECF)主动转运到血脑屏障的内皮细胞中。这些强大的继发性主动转运体与钠梯度的能量耦合,将谷氨酸和谷氨酰胺转运到内皮细胞中,随后谷氨酸可以通过管腔易化谷氨酸转运体进入血液。谷氨酰胺也可以通过管腔膜上存在的单独易化转运系统离开大脑,或者谷氨酰胺可以在血脑屏障内水解为谷氨酸,从而释放出可自由扩散的氨。γ-谷氨酰循环通过产生氧脯氨酸(焦谷氨酸)间接参与其中,氧脯氨酸几乎能刺激血脑屏障无管腔膜中目前已发现的所有继发性主动转运体。