Abstract

The uptake of adenosine in brush border vesicles of the proximal tubule of the rat kidney has been studied with a filtration technique. The initial rate of uptake was almost 6 times greater in the presence of NaCl than in the presence of KCl. The stimulatory effect of Na+ was strictly dependent on a gradient of Na+ (out greater than in). The time course of uptake showed an overshoot with a maximum at 20 s with a gradient of NaCl, but not with KCl. Inosine and 5'-AMP were produced from adenosine within the vesicles. In the presence of an inhibitor or adenosine deaminase adenosine was not significantly metabolized during the first 20 s of uptake. Thus, kinetic parameters of transport could be studied in the absence of interferences with metabolism. A Km of 1.1 microM and a Vmax of 232 pmol X min-1 X mg protein-1 were calculated for the Na+ gradient-dependent transport. The dependency on a Na+ gradient, the capacity for uphill transport and the high affinity for adenosine situate this transport system apart from the mechanisms of transport of nucleosides described so far. It may be relevant in regard to the role of adenosine in the regulation of glomerular filtration.

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