Abstract

Using brush-border membranes prepared from rabbit small intestine by Ca2+ precipitation and KSCN treatment, we have studied the kinetics and conformational changes of the glucose carrier. Na+ behaves as a competitive activator of glucose transport under zero-trans conditions. Phenyl isothiocyanate and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) inhibit Na+-dependent transport in an irreversible but substrate-protectable manner. Vesicles pretreated with phenyl isothiocyanate in the presence of substrates were then selectively labeled at the glucose carrier with FITC. Competition experiments with Na+ and phlorizin or glucose indicated that FITC binds to the glucose site on the carrier. Carrier-bound FITC displays a saturable quenching of fluorescence in the presence of Na+. The K0.5 of the Na+-specific quench is 25 mM, which is similar to the apparent Km for Na+ activation of glucose transport. Two tyrosine group-specific reagents, N-acetylimidazole and tetranitromethane, inhibit glucose uptake and fluorescent quenching in a Na+-protectable fashion. FITC labeled a 75-kilodalton peptide on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in a substrate-sensitive manner. We conclude that Na+ binds to the glucose symporter of intestinal brush borders, a 75-kilodalton peptide, and this induces a rapid conformation change in the transporter which increases its affinity for D-glucose.

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