Abstract
A new method is proposed for measuring the dynamic properties of a membrane transporter by means of steady-state fluxes. Any voltage-sensitive transporter will give a flow of substrate in the presence of a steady-state periodic membrane potential. The periodic steady-state flow, averaged over one period, is a flux that can be measured by traditional steady-state techniques, such as the radioactive tracer method. The average flux, solely due to the periodic field, is described by a set of Lorentzian functions that depend on the applied periodic field amplitude and frequency. The normal mode amplitudes and frequencies of these Lorentzians are model-independent parameters of the transport mechanism. Measurement of the average flux as a function of the applied periodic frequency permits determination of system relaxation times as the reciprocals of the midpoints of the Lorentzian curves, which in turn can be used to estimate individual rate constants of specific models. It was found by simulation of a six-state model of the electrogenic Na+/glucose cotransporter, using published estimates of the model rate constants, that the periodic field effects can be large and rich with measurable details that can be used to study the mechanism thoroughly. The new method serves in this case to complement and expand on the information obtainable by means of the voltage clamp method. It was also found by means of simulations of a nonelectrogenic six-state cotransporter model that experimentally measurable effects are expected and that results can be used to distinguished among alternative kinetic models as well as to estimate individual rate constants. The range of dynamic information available with this method is not accessible by voltage clamp or other pre-steady-state methods presently in use.
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