Abstract
To characterize the amino acid transport system in basolateral membranes and to test for possible intracellular loci of amino acid transport activity, we surveyed the distribution of L-alanine transport activity in rabbit proximal tubular cells and LLC-PK1/Cl4 cells. A three-dimensional separation procedure based on differential sedimentation, density gradient centrifugation, and counter-current distribution resolved 21 physically and biochemically distinct membrane populations from rabbit cortex. Inhibition of L-alanine transport by phenylalanine and N-(methylamino)isobutyric acid was used to delineate parallel amino acid transport pathways. Population n was identified as brush border membranes by virtue of its 16-fold maltase enrichment; 94% of its Na(+)-dependent alanine transport activity was mediated by systems previously shown to be characteristic of brush border membranes. Two populations, c' and c", which accounted for 25% of the total Na,K-ATPase activity, were identified as basalateral membranes on the basis of Na,K-ATPase cumulative enrichment factors of 15 and 21; 82% of the total alanine transport in these populations was mediated by a Na(+)-independent system similar to the classical system L. Na,K-ATPase, Na(+)-independent and Na(+)-dependent alanine transport activities were associated with intracellular membrane populations as well as with the plasma membranes. The major intracellular locus of Na,K-ATPase activity, population i accounted for roughly 31% of the Na,K-ATPase, maximally enriched ninefold; it contained 29% of the total system L transport activity. Population l, which was identified as endoplasmic reticulum because it was the major locus of membrane-bound NADPH cytochrome c reductase activity, contained 44% of the total system A transport. Three distinct Golgi-derived populations, m', m", and o, accounted for 39% of the total system A transport. A survey of the amino acid transport systems in LLC-PK1/Cl4 cells showed that the majority of system A-mediated amino acid transport was present in membranes of intracellular and possibly apical origin. The presence of large intracellular pools of amino acid transport activities might reflect newly synthesized transport proteins, ongoing membrane recycling or, perhaps, intracellular reserves available for rapid recruitment to the plasma membrane.
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