Bile Acid Uptake via the Human Apical Sodium-Bile Acid Cotransporter Is Electrogenic
Intestinal absorption of bile acids depends on a sodium-bile acid cotransport protein in the apical membrane of the ileal epithelial cell. Transport is Na + -dependent, but the Na + -bile acid stoichiometry and electrogenicity of transport are not known. Studies in whole intestine, isolated cells, a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1998-12, Vol.273 (52), p.34691-34695 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Intestinal absorption of bile acids depends on a sodium-bile acid cotransport protein in the apical membrane of the ileal
epithelial cell. Transport is Na + -dependent, but the Na + -bile acid stoichiometry and electrogenicity of transport are not known. Studies in whole intestine, isolated cells, and ileal
membrane vesicles have been unable to resolve this issue because transport currents are small and can be obscured by other
ionic conductances and transport proteins present in these membranes. In this study, the human apical sodium-bile acid transporter
was expressed in stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells that lack other bile acid transporters. The Na + -dependent transport of a fluorescent bile acid analog, chenodeoxycholyl- N ε-nitrobenzoxadiazol-lysine, was monitored by fluorescence microscopy in single, voltage-clamped cells. Bile acid movement
was bidirectional and voltage-dependent with negative intracellular voltage-stimulating influx. A 3-fold reduction in extracellular
Na + produced a negative 52 mV shift of the flux-voltage relationship, consistent with a 2:1 Na + :bile acid coupling stoichiometry. No Na + - or voltage-dependent uptake was observed in nontransfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. These results indicate that the
cotransport of bile acids and Na + by human apical sodium-bile acid transporter is electrogenic and bidirectional and is best explained by a 2:1 Na + :bile acid coupling stoichiometry. These results suggest that membrane potential may regulate bile acid transport rates under
physiological and pathophysiological conditions. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.273.52.34691 |