| Literature DB >> 3801470 |
S Davies, D D Maenz, C I Cheeseman.
Abstract
Basolateral membrane vesicles prepared from rat small intestinal epithelial cells were used to study the sodium-independent transport of L-proline. The uptake of L-proline was unaffected by the presence of sodium and showed saturation kinetics (Kt = 0.5 mM and Vmax = 23.3 pmol/mg protein per s). Competition experiments indicated that other amino acids had an affinity for the carrier system with L-leucine greater than L-alanine greater than sarcosine greater than glycine greater than L-lysine greater than OH-proline greater than taurine greater than beta-alanine greater than D-alanine greater than D-proline greater than L-serine greater than phenylalanine greater than valine greater than D-serine greater than phenylalanine greater than valine greater than D-serine greater than MeAIB greater than methionine greater than threonine. This pathway does not resemble those previously described either in the brush-border membrane of intestinal epithelial cells or the plasma membrane of other cell types. The lack of effect of methionine and threonine indicate that proline is not using the L-type system, while the very low affinity for MeAIB and the Na+ independence suggest that this is a novel system for imino acids. The relatively high capacity of this system and its low Kt, which is almost identical to the proline system in the brush-border membrane, strongly suggest that this is an important pathway in the final step for proline absorption by the small intestine.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3801470 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(87)90185-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002