XB-ART-42846
Cell Physiol Biochem
2011 Jan 01;271:79-90. doi: 10.1159/000325208.
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Substrate-dependent interference of carbonic anhydrases with the glutamine transporter SNAT3-induced conductance.
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The glutamine transporter SNAT3 (SLC38A3), which also transports asparagine and histidine, exchanges sodium for protons, and displays a non-stoichiometrical conductance, which is suppressed by the catalytic activity of carbonic anhydrase II (CAII). In this study, we show that this conductance of rat SNAT3, expressed in Xenopus oocytes, is also suppressed following co-expression with CAI, CAIII, CAIV, and CAII-H64A (mutant with impaired intramolecular H(+) shuttling). All CA isoforms and the CAII mutant displayed catalytic activity in intact oocytes, although in vitro studies had reported only very low catalytic activity of CAIII and CAII-H64A. The CA-mediated suppression of conductance was only observed, however, when glutamine, but not when asparagine, was the substrate. We hypothesized that this substrate specificity of the CA action might be due to the different ion selectivity induced by the different amino acid substrates, which induce currents carried by sodium and/or protons. The ion selectivity and conductance was dependent on both pH and extracellular sodium concentration for glutamine and asparagine; however the sodium dependence of the conductance, when asparagine was the substrate, was significantly greater at higher sodium concentrations, which might explain the difference in the sensitivity of the conductance to CAs. Given the presence of CAs in most cells, substrate sensing of SNAT3 would be indicated by different membrane potential changes.
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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: ca2 ca4 slc38a3