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ATP-dependent bile-salt transport in canalicular rat liver plasma-membrane vesicles
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 167592
Author(s) Stieger, B; O'Neill, B; Meier, P J
Author(s) at UniBasel Meier-Abt, Peter J.
Year 1992
Title ATP-dependent bile-salt transport in canalicular rat liver plasma-membrane vesicles
Journal The biochemical journal
Volume 284 ( Pt 1)
Pages / Article-Number 67-74
Abstract

The present study identifies and characterizes a novel ATP-dependent bile-salt transport system in isolated canalicular rat liver plasma-membrane (cLPM) vesicles. ATP (1-5 mM) stimulated taurocholate uptake into cLPM vesicles between 6- and 8-fold above equilibrium uptake values (overshoot) and above values for incubations in the absence of ATP. The ATP-dependent portion of taurocholate uptake was 2-fold higher in the presence of equilibrated KNO3 as compared with potassium gluconate, indicating that the stimulatory effect of ATP was not due to the generation of an intravesicular positive membrane potential. Saturation kinetics revealed a very high affinity (Km approximately 2.1 microM) of the system for taurocholate. The system could only minimally be stimulated by nucleotides other than ATP. Furthermore, it was preferentially inhibited by conjugated univalent bile salts. Further strong inhibitory effects were observed with valinomycin, oligomycin, 4,4'-di-isothiocyano-2,2'-stilbene disulphonate, sulphobromophthalein, leukotriene C4 and N-ethylmaleimide, whereas nigericin, vanadate, GSH, GSSG and daunomycin exerted only weak inhibitory effects or none at all. These results indicate the presence of a high-affinity primary ATP-dependent bile-salt transport system in cLPM vesicles. This transport system might be regulated in vivo by the number of carriers present at the perspective transport site(s), which, in addition to the canalicular membrane, might also include pericanalicular membrane vesicles.

Publisher Portland Press
ISSN/ISBN 0264-6021
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5261766
Full Text on edoc No
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1599411
ISI-Number WOS:A1992HV22300010
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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