Amino acid-dependent sodium transport in plasma membrane vesicles from rat liver

Abstract
Thel-alanine-dependent transport of sodium ions across the plasma membrane of rat-liver parenchymal cells was studied using isolated plasma membrane vesicles. Sodium uptake is stimulated specifically by thel-isomer of alanine and other amino acids, whose transport is sodium-dependent in rat-liver plasma membrane vesicles. Thel-alanine-dependent sodium flux across the membrane is inhibited by an excess of Li+ ions, but not by K+ or choline ions. Sodium transport is sensitive to-SH reagents and ionophores, and is an electrogenic process: a membrane potential (negative inside) can enhancel-alanine-dependent sodium accumulation. The data presented provide further evidence for a sodium-alanine cotransport mechanism.