Interactions between the thiol-group reagent N-ethylmaleimide and neutral and basic amino acid transporter-related amino acid transport.
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- Vol. 343, 169-76
Abstract
The neutral and basic amino acid transport protein (NBAT) expressed in renal and jejunal brush-border membranes is involved in amino acid and cystine absorption. NBAT mutations result in Type 1 cystinuria. A C-terminal myc-tagged NBAT (NBATmyc) retains the amino acid transport and protein-protein interaction properties of NBAT when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Neutral amino acid (Ala, Phe)-cationic amino acid (Arg) heteroexchanges related to NBATmyc expression in oocytes are inactivated by treatment with the thiol-group reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), although significant Arg-Arg and Ala-Ala homoexchanges persist. Inactivation of heteroexchange activity by NEM is accompanied by loss of >85% of alanine and cystine uptake, with smaller (<50%) inhibition of arginine and phenylalanine uptake. NEM-sensitive cystine uptake and arginine-alanine heteroexchange (system b(0,+) activity) are not expressed by an NBAT truncation mutant (NBATmyc-Sph1) lacking the 13 C-terminal amino acid residues, but the mutant expresses NEM-resistant transport activity (system y(+)L-like) equivalent to that of full-length NBATmyc. The deleted region of NBATmyc-Sph1 contains two cysteine residues (671/683) which may be the targets of NEM action. The synthetic amino acid 2-trifluoromethylhistidine (TFMH) stimulated alanine efflux at pH 7.5 and arginine at pH 5.5, but not vice versa, establishing the existence of distinct pathways for cationic and neutral amino acid homoexchange (TFMH is zwitterionic at pH 7.5 and cationic at pH 5.5). We suggest that NBAT expresses a combination of system b(0,+) and y(+)L-like activities, possibly by interacting with different light-chain subunits endogenous to oocytes (as does the homologous 4F2hc protein). The C-terminus of NBAT may also have an additional, direct role in the mechanism of System b(0,+) transport (the major transport activity that is defective in Type 1 cystinuria).This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- 4F2 (CD98) Heavy Chain Is Associated Covalently with an Amino Acid Transporter and Controls Intracellular Trafficking and Membrane Topology of 4F2 HeterodimerJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- A New Family of Proteins (rBAT and 4F2hc) Involved in Cationic and Zwitterionic Amino Acid Transport: a Tale of Two Proteins in Search of a Transport FunctionJournal of Experimental Biology, 1994
- Membrane topology of the rat kidney neutral and basic amino acid transporterThe FASEB Journal, 1994
- Characterization of the promoter region of the gene for the rat neutral and basic amino acid transporter and chromosomal localization of the human gene.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Cystinuria caused by mutations in rBAT, a gene involved in the transport of cystineNature Genetics, 1994
- Ultrastructural localization of a neutral and basic amino acid transporter in rat kidney and intestine.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Expression cloning of a cDNA from rabbit kidney cortex that induces a single transport system for cystine and dibasic and neutral amino acids.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Cloning of a rat kidney cDNA that stimulates dibasic and neutral amino acid transport and has sequence similarity to glucosidases.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Transport and membrane binding of the glutamine analogue 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine (DON) in Xenopus laevis oocytesThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1992
- Purified DNAs are transcribed after microinjection into Xenopus oocytes.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1977