Abstract

Uptake of iopanoic acid (IOP) was studied in 3-day primary cultures of rat hepatocytes isolated by the collagenase perfusion method. 125I activity of cells after incubation with 125I-IOP (1.0-100 microM) was used as a measure of uptake. At each IOP concentration uptake was linear for the first 45 s. The initial uptake velocity was directly proportional to IOP concentration and was nonsaturable up to 100 microM. The calculated uptake rate constant was 0.67 nmol . mg prot-1 . min-1 . microM-1. Uptake was only slightly reduced when the incubation was performed at 4 degrees C and was independent of sodium concentration. Albumin in the medium reduced IOP uptake. Uptake, however, was always greater than that predicted from the unbound IOP concentration alone. The data indicate that the hepatocyte uptake of IOP occurs by both a passive process and a saturable process. The saturable uptake component depends on an albumin-IOP-hepatocyte interaction. The influence of albumin on uptake occurs possibly by an undefined specific cell surface phenomenon of albumin that promotes uptake of IOP or by enhancement of the diffusibility of IOP across the unstirred layer.

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