Renal transtubular transport of mercapturic acid in vivo
- PMID: 7213708
- DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(81)90575-7
Renal transtubular transport of mercapturic acid in vivo
Abstract
When S-benzyl-N-acetyl-L-[U-14C]cysteine, a mercapturic acid, was administered to rats intravenously, the plasma level of radioactivity decreased very rapidly with a concomitant increase in the renal level of radioactivity. The renal radioactivity reached its maximum within 2 min and then decreased rapidly with concomitant appearance of the radioactive mercapturic acid in the urine. Bilateral ligation of the ureters resulted in only a slight decrease in the rate of disappearance of mercapturic acid from the plasma, while bilateral nephrectomy caused a marked retardation of its clearance from the plasma. Intravenous administration of probenecid, a well known inhibitor of a renal transtubular transport system for organic acids, caused a significant retardation of mercapturate clearance from the plasma in both of the control and ureter-ligated animals. The renal accumulation of this mercapturic acid as well as its excretion into urine was inhibited by probenecid. All these data suggested that a mercapturic acid in the plasma was preferentially taken up by renal tubule cells from the basolateral side of plasma membranes via the probenecid-sensitive transtubular transport system and then excreted rapidly into the lumenal space. This transtubular transport of a mercapturic acid seems to constitute an important process in the hepato-renal cooperation in the mercapturic acid biosynthesis in vivo.
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