Interaction of phosphate with monovalent cation uptake in yeast
- PMID: 20145
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(77)90063-3
Interaction of phosphate with monovalent cation uptake in yeast
Abstract
The uptake of monovalent cations by yeast via the monovalent cation uptake mechanism is inhibited by phosphate. The inhibition of Rb+ uptake shows saturation kinetics and the phosphate concentration at which half-maximal inhibition is observed is equal to the Km of phosphate for the sodium-independent phosphate uptake mechanism. The kinetic coefficients of Rb+ and TI+ uptake are affected by phosphate: the maximal rate of uptake is decreased and the apparent affinity constants for the translocation sites are increased. In the case of Na+ uptake, the inhibition by phosphate may be partly or completely compensated by stimulation of Na+ uptake via a sodium-phosphate cotransport mechanism. Phosphate effects a transient stimulation of the efflux of the lipophilic cation dibenzyldimethylammonium from preloaded yeast cells and a transient inhibition of dibenzyldimethylammonium uptake. Possibly, the inhibition of monovalent cation uptake in yeast can be explained by a transient depolarization of the cell membrane by phosphate.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
