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. 1987 May;39(5):725-30.

[Human placental glutathione transport mechanism]

[Article in Japanese]
  • PMID: 2885385

[Human placental glutathione transport mechanism]

[Article in Japanese]
H Iioka et al. Nihon Sanka Fujinka Gakkai Zasshi. 1987 May.

Abstract

The placental transport mechanism of glutathione (GSH) was investigated using microvillous membrane vesicles prepared from human term placenta. Using (3H-glycine)-labeled-GSH, it was clarified that GSH in the extravesicular compartment of placental microvillous membranes was rapidly degraded by gamma-GTP (gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase) and resulting amino acid, and 3H-labeled-glycine was actively transported via a sodium cotransport system. AT-125 treated microvillous membrane vesicles almost entirely lost its gamma-GTP activity, and showed intact GSH transport. Using AT-125 treated microvillous membrane vesicles, it was revealed that GSH was transported across the microvillous membrane as an anion via a membrane potential-dependent mechanism. These results indicated that gamma-GTP which existed in microvillous membrane played a role in GSH metabolism and that intracellular GSH was translocated out of the syncythiotrophoblast cell into the maternal blood space via a specific carrier in microvillous membrane because the GSH concentration was higher in intracellular than extracellular and extracellular membrane potential was positively charged.

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