| Literature DB >> 21835054 |
Anita Kinne1, Ralf Schülein, Gerd Krause.
Abstract
Thyroid hormones (TH) are essential for the development of the human brain, growth and cellular metabolism. Investigation of TH transporters became one of the emerging fields in thyroid research after the discovery of inactivating mutations in the Monocarboxylate transporter 8 (MCT8), which was found to be highly specific for TH transport. However, additional transmembrane transporters are also very important for TH uptake and efflux in different cell types. They transport TH as secondary substrates and include the aromatic amino acid transporting MCT10, the organic anion transporting polypeptides (e.g. OATP1C1, OATP1A2, OPTP1A4) and the large neutral amino acid transporters (LAT1 and LAT2). These TH transporters characteristically possess 12 transmembrane spanners but due to the strong differing sequences between the three transporter families we assume an identical conformation is not very likely. In contrast to the others, the LAT family members form a heterodimer with the escort protein 4F2hc/CD98. A comparison of sequence proportions, locations and types of functional sensitive features for TH transport discovered by mutations, revealed that transport sensitive charged residues occur as conserved amino acids only within each family of the transporter types but not in all putative TH transporters. Based on the lack of highly conserved sensitive charged residues throughout the three transporter families as a common counterpart for the amino acid moiety of the substrates, we conclude that the molecular transport mechanism is likely organized either a) by different molecular determinants in the divergent transporter types or b) the counterparts for the substrates` amino acid moiety at the transporter are not any charged side chains but other proton acceptors or donators. However, positions of transport sensitive residues coincide at transmembrane helix 8 in the TH transporter MCT8, OATP1C1 and another amino acid transporter, the L-cystine and L-glutamate exchanger xCT, which is highly homologous to LAT1 and LAT2. Here we review the data available and compare similarities and differences between these primary and secondary TH transporters regarding sequences, topology, potential structures, trafficking to the plasma membrane, molecular features and locations of transport sensitive functionalities. Thereby, we focus on TH transporters occurring in the blood-brain barrier.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21835054 PMCID: PMC3155113 DOI: 10.1186/1756-6614-4-S1-S7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thyroid Res ISSN: 1756-6614
Tissue distribution of TH transporters from the MCT (MCT8 and MCT10), OATP (OATP1C1, OATP1A2, OATP1A4), and LAT (LAT1 and LAT2) family and of the xCT transporter and the escort protein 4F2hc.
| Gene | Protein | Localization | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| SLC16A2 | MCT8 | liver, kidney, brain, heart, skeletal muscle, placenta, thyroid, testis | [ |
| SLC16A10 | MCT10 | intestine, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle, heart, placenta, pancreas | [ |
| SLCO1C1 | OATP1C1 | brain, testis, cochlea | [ |
| SLCO1A2 | OATP1A2 | brain, liver, kidney, intestine | [ |
| SLCO1A4 | OATP1A4 | liver, brain, testis, ovaries, retina | [ |
| SLC7A5 | LAT1 | multiple (tumours, brain, spleen, placenta, testis, colon, kidney, intestine, stomach, ovary, thymus, not liver) | [ |
| SLC7A8 | LAT2 | kidney, placenta, brain, intestine, testis, ovary, liver, heart, skeletal muscle, lung, stomach | [ |
| SLC7A11 | xCT | brain, kidney, activated macrophages, duodenum | [ |
| SLC3A2 | 4F2hc (CD98) | multiple (tumours, brain, intestine, kidney, liver, skeletal muscle, ovary, placenta, testis…) | [ |
Figure 1Illustration of the TH transporters expressed at the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The TH transporters MCT8, OATP1C1, LAT1, and LAT2 are expressed at the BBB, whereby LAT2 shows lower expression levels than the LAT1. The prohormone T4 enters the astrocyte and is converted to the active form T3 by an outer ring deiodination. According to current concepts, T3 enters the neurons by the TH transporter MCT8.
Uptake of iodothyronines by TH transporters expressed at the blood-brain barrier. The levels of TH transport are indicated as follows: +++ high uptake rate, ++ modest uptake rate, and + low uptake rate; n.d., not determined.
| Protein | Iodothyronines | Species | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MCT8 | +/+ | +++/+++ | +/++ | ++/++ | human/rat | [ |
| OATP1C1 | n.d. | + | +++ | +++ | human, rat, mouse | [ |
| LAT1 | +++ | ++ | ++ | + | human | [ |
| LAT2 | +++ | ++ | ++ | + | mouse | [ |
Figure 2Comparison of sequence proportions and functional sensitive features of primary and secondary TH transporters. Sequence scheme of TH transporters expressed at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) is aligned according to the sequences of common 12 transmembrane spanners (pale grey boxes). Sequence lengths, proportions and known sensitive features of transport differ between the three TH transporter families (MCT, OATP, and LAT). The xCT sequences are very homologous to LATs and are therefore added. The human MCT8 possesses a very large N-terminal tail at the intracellular portion. Intra- and extracellularly conserved cysteines are marked in yellow bars. N-glycosylation sites of the OATP family are conserved at large extracellular loops EL2 and EL5 (magenta bars). The proven disulfide bridge formed by the LAT and xCT family to the escort protein 4F2hc are conserved in the EL2 (C165-LAT1_human [49] or C158-xCT_human [50] marked by red dot * at yellow bar). Sensitive positions for TH transport identified by mutations are highlighted: MCT8_human: R445A(# blue bar, TMH8 [26]) and D498A (& red bar, TMH10 [26]), the sensitive arginine and aspartate are conserved at the MCT8 and MCT10 group; Oatp1c1_rat: W277A and W278A (§ green bars, TMH6 [27]), G400A and G410A (■ and ▼green bars, TMH8 [30]), R601A (// blue bar, TMH11 [27]); OATP1A2_human: I13T (◊ N-terminal tail [63]), R168C (▲ blue bar, TMH4 [58]), E172D (◊ red bar, TMH4 [63]). The isoleucine at position 13 (green bar, N-terminal tail) is only conserved at the OATP1A2 group, while the sensitive tryptophan (green bars), arginines (blue bars) and glutamate (red bar) are conserved within the OATP family. At the human xCT may lie close to the substrate binding site H110 (+ blue bar [21]) and T112 (○ green bar [21]) in IL1 and the C327 (~ yellow bar [62]) at TMH8. The accession numbers of these proteins are NM_006517.3 (MCT8_human), NM_009197.2 (MCT8_mouse), NM_147216.1 (MCT8_rat), NM_018593.4 (MCT10_human), NM_001114332.1 (MCT10_mouse), Q91Y77 (MCT10_rat), NM_017435.4 (OATP1C1_human), NM_021471.2 (OATP1C1_mouse), NM_053441.1 (OATP1C1_rat), NM_134431.3 (OATP1A2_human), NM_174654.2 (OATP1A2_bovine), AF205071.1 (OATP1A4_human), NM_030687.1 (OATP1A4_mouse), NM_131906.1 (OATP1A4_rat), BC039692.2 (LAT1_human), BC026131.1 (LAT1_mouse), CH473972.1 (LAT1_rat), NM_001082120.1 (LAT1_rabbit), BC052250.1 (LAT2_human), BC059004.1 (LAT2_mouse), NM_053442.1 (LAT2_rat), NM_001082682.1 (LAT2_rabbit), NM_014331.3 (xCT_human), NM_011990.2 (xCT_mouse), NM_001107673.2 (xCT_rat).