Abstract

SLC13A5 is a Na+-coupled transporter for citrate that is expressed in the plasma membrane of specific cell types in the liver, testis, and brain. It is an electrogenic transporter with a Na+:citrate3− stoichiometry of 4:1. In humans, the Michaelis constant for SLC13A5 to transport citrate is ~600 μM, which is physiologically relevant given that the normal concentration of citrate in plasma is in the range of 150–200 μM. Li+ stimulates the transport function of human SLC13A5 at concentrations that are in the therapeutic range in patients on lithium therapy. Human SLC13A5 differs from rodent Slc13a5 in two important aspects: the affinity of the human transporter for citrate is ~30-fold less than that of the rodent transporter, thus making human SLC13A5 a low-affinity/high-capacity transporter and the rodent Slc13a5 a high-affinity/low-capacity transporter. In the liver, SLC13A5 is expressed exclusively in the sinusoidal membrane of the hepatocytes, where it plays a role in the uptake of circulating citrate from the sinusoidal blood for metabolic use. In the testis, the transporter is expressed only in spermatozoa, which is also only in the mid piece where mitochondria are located; the likely function of the transporter in spermatozoa is to mediate the uptake of citrate present at high levels in the seminal fluid for subsequent metabolism in the sperm mitochondria to generate biological energy, thereby supporting sperm motility. In the brain, the transporter is expressed mostly in neurons. As astrocytes secrete citrate into extracellular medium, the potential function of SLC13A5 in neurons is to mediate the uptake of circulating citrate and astrocyte-released citrate for subsequent metabolism. Slc13a5-knockout mice have been generated; these mice do not have any overt phenotype but are resistant to experimentally induced metabolic syndrome. Recently however, loss-of-function mutations in human SLC13A5 have been found to cause severe epilepsy and encephalopathy early in life. Interestingly, there is no evidence of epilepsy or encephalopathy in Slc13a5-knockout mice, underlining the significant differences in clinical consequences of the loss of function of this transporter between humans and mice. The markedly different biochemical features of human SLC13A5 and mouse Slc13a5 likely contribute to these differences between humans and mice with regard to the metabolic consequences of the transporter deficiency. The exact molecular mechanisms by which the functional deficiency of the citrate transporter causes epilepsy and impairs neuronal development and function remain to be elucidated, but available literature implicate both dysfunction of GABA (γ-aminobutyrate) signaling and hyperfunction of NMDA (N-methyl-d-aspartate) receptor signaling. Plausible synaptic mechanisms linking loss-of-function mutations in SLC13A5 to epilepsy are discussed.

Highlights

  • As NaCT facilitates the utilization of circulating citrate for lipid synthesis in the liver, induction of this transporter in hepatocytes by pregnane X receptor (PXR) and aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligands at least partly contributes to this phenomenon

  • Citrate would produce energy only when present within the mitochondrial matrix; even though the citrate transporter in the inner mitochondrial membrane normally functions in the transfer of citrate from the matrix into the cytoplasm, it could mediate the entry of cytoplasmic citrate into the matrix for subsequent metabolism in the tricarboxylic acid cycle if the concentrations of citrate in the cytoplasm are sufficiently high

  • There is growing recognition that mutations in genes associated with energy metabolism, such as to Seizure Susceptibility mitochondrial proteins associated with the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, are associated with epilepsy [48,49]

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Summary

Identification and Molecular Characterization of the Plasma Membrane Citrate

The search for the first transporter for citrate in the plasma membrane of mammalian cells began with the identification of a transporter in D. melanogaster that showed a marked impact on the life span of the organism. The authors named the transporter Indy (I’m not dead yet) This original report did not identify the function of the transporter but found the transporter to be structurally similar to the two transporters in mammalian cells, namely NaDC1 (SLC13A2) and NaDC3 (SLC13A3), which mediate Na+ -coupled uptake of various dicarboxylate intermediates of the TCA cycle across the plasma membrane. If Drosophila Indy is a transporter for TCA cycle intermediates in the plasma membrane, heterozygous loss of its expression would result in decreased availability of substrates for mitochondrial metabolism, creating a cellular environment akin to caloric restriction and providing a molecular basis of life span extension in heterozygous mutants [10,11]. NaCT (SLC13A5) represents the first Na+ -coupled transporter selective for citrate that is expressed in the plasma membrane in mammalian tissues (Figure 1)

Cellular and Subcellular Localization of NaCT Protein
Functional Differences between Human and Rodent NaCTs
Transcriptional Regulation of NaCT Expression
Biochemical and Metabolic Phenotype of Slc13a5-Knockout Mouse
Functional Loss of SLC13A5 as a Cause of Epilepsy in Humans
Molecular Mechanisms Underlying SLC13A5-Associated Epilepsy
The Cytoplasmic Citrate Deficit Hypothesis
10. The Interneuron
The possible of zinc receptors loss-of-functionSLC13A5
Findings
12. Conclusions
Full Text
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