Abstract

The heterodimeric complex composed of rBAT (related to b(0,+) amino acid transporter), a single-membrane-spanning glycosylated heavy chain, and b(0,+)AT, a putative 12-membrane-spanning non-glycosylated light chain, is an amino acid transporter that mediates the activity of system b(0,+), a major apical transport system for cystine and dibasic amino acids in renal proximal tubule and small intestine. The C-terminus of b(0,+)AT has been proposed to play an important role in the functional expression of the heterodimeric transporters. In the present study, to reveal the roles of the C-terminus, we analysed b(0,+)AT mutants whose C-termini were sequentially deleted or replaced by site-directed mutagenesis in polarized MDCKII (Madin-Darby canine kidney II), non-polarized HEK-293 (human embryonic kidney-293) and HeLa cells. Although the deletion of C-terminus of b(0,+)AT did not affect the formation of a heterodimer with rBAT, it resulted in the loss of apparent transport function, owing to the failure of the plasma-membrane targeting of rBAT-b(0,+)AT heterodimeric complex associated with incomplete glycosylation of rBAT. A motif-like sequence Val(480)-Pro(481)-Pro(482) was identified in the C-terminus of b(0,+)AT to be responsible for the C-terminus action in promoting the trafficking of rBAT-b(0,+)AT heterodimeric complex from the ER (endoplasmic reticulum) to Golgi apparatus. This is, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of the active contribution of the C-terminus of a light-chain subunit to the intracellular trafficking of heterodimeric transporters. Because the motif-like sequence Val(480)-Pro(481)-Pro(482) is well conserved among the C-termini of light-chain subunits, common regulatory mechanisms could be proposed among heterodimeric amino acid transporters.

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