Abstract

Membrane potential and currents were investigated with the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique in Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing hCAT-2A or hCAT-2B, the splice variants of the human cationic amino acid transporter hCAT-2. Both hCAT-2A- and hCAT-2B-expressing oocytes exhibited a negative extracellular L-arginine concentration ([L-Arg](o))-sensitive membrane potential, additive to the K(+) diffusion potential, when cells were incubated in Leibovitz medium (containing 1.45 mM L-Arg and 0.25 mM L-lysine). The two carrier proteins produced inward and outward currents, which were dependent on the L-Arg gradient and membrane potential. Ion substitution experiments showed that the hCAT-induced currents were independent of external Na(+), K(+), Ca(2+), or Mg(2+). The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant values at -60 mV, obtained from plots of L-Arg-induced currents against [L-Arg](o), were 0.97 and 0.13 mM in oocytes expressing hCAT-2A and hCAT-2B, respectively; maximal currents amounted to -194 +/- 8 and -84 +/- 2 nA, respectively. At saturating [L-Arg](o), the current-voltage relationships of hCAT-2A-expressing oocytes became steeper, yielding an additional conductance up to 2 microS/oocyte, whereas those of hCAT-2B-expressing oocytes were simply shifted to the right, resulting in voltage-independent difference currents. The distinct electrochemical properties of the two isoforms of hCAT-2 are assumed to contribute differentially to the membrane transport and the maintenance of cationic amino acids in various tissues.

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