Abstract
Glucocorticoid uptake by isolated placental membrane vesicles has been studied in an attempt to identify a membrane-mediated carrier mechanism. A preliminary communication from this laboratory has reported that uptake of the glucocorticoid corticosterone by these vesicles was a time-dependent, saturable, osmotically sensitive process (Fant, M.E., Harbison, R.D. and Harrison, R.W. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 6218–6221), but did not conclusively demonstrate a carrier mechanism. Further studies of labeled corticosterone uptake by placental vesicles are described herein which indicate that steroid uptake by these vesicles is a carrier-mediated process. We found that corticosterone uptake was temperature-sensitive, and an apparent phase-transition effect on the rate of uptake was seen to occur at approximately 16°C. Treatment of the vesicles with phospholipase A 2 and the sulfhydryl group attacker, p- chloromercuriphenylsulfonate , inhibited corticosterone uptake. In contrast to our previous findings in intact cells, neuraminidase treatment of membranes did not inhibit steroid uptake, perhaps indicating a species variation. Lastly, it was possible to show that corticosterone movement across the membrane exhibited countertransport, a phenomenon common only to carrier-mediated transport mechanisms. These studies show that placental vesicles accumulate corticosterone by a carrier-mediated mechanism.
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