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. 1976 May 21;433(3):583-96.
doi: 10.1016/0005-2736(76)90283-2.

Sugar transport and potassium permeability in yeast plasma membrane vesicles

Sugar transport and potassium permeability in yeast plasma membrane vesicles

G F Fuhrmann et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Plasma membrane vesicles were isolated from homogenised yeast cells by filtration, differential centrifugation and aggregation of the mitochondrial vesicles at pH 4. As judged by biochemical, cell electrophoretic and electron microscopic criteria a pure plasma membrane vesicle preparation was obtained. The surface charge density of the plasma membrane vesicles is similar to that of intact yeast cells with an isoelectric point below pH 3. The mitochondrial vesicles have a higher negative surface charge density in the alkaline pH range. Their isoelectric point is near pH 4.5, where aggregation is maximal. The yield of vesicles sealed to K+ was maximal at pH 4 and accounted for about one third of the total vesicle volume. The plasma membrane vesicles demonstrate osmotic behaviour, they shrink in NaCl solutions when loosing K+. As in intact yeast cells the entry and exit of sugars like glucose or galactose in plasma membrane vesicles is inhibited by UO22+. Counter transport in plasma membrane vesicles with glucose and mannose and iso-counter transport with glucose suggests that a mobile carrier for sugar transport exists in the plasma membrane. After galactose pathway induction in the yeast cells and subsequent preparation of plasma membrane vesicles the uptake of galactose into the vesicles increased by almost 100% over the control value without galactose induction. This increase is explained by the formation of a specific galactose carrier in the plasma membrane.

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