Renal sugar transport in the winter flounder. III. Two glucose transport systems
- PMID: 842670
- DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.1977.232.3.F227
Renal sugar transport in the winter flounder. III. Two glucose transport systems
Abstract
Teased renal tubules of the winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus) were employed to investigate the structural requirements for two pathways of D-glucose transport which take place preponderantly across the basal (antiluminal) face of renal cells. 1) An inhibition analysis of the equilibrating, Na-independent and phlorizin-sensitive transport of the nonmetabolizable methyl-alpha-D-glucoside (0.1 and 0.5 mM), with 20 glucose analogs (5 mM), was employed to establish the structural requirements for the substrate-carrier interaction: a (pyranose) ring, oxygen, or F at C1, C2-OH, C3-OH, and C4-OH (all axial, 1C model). Some interaction may also occur at C6-OH. D-Glucose shares this transport system. Hydrogen bonding between the oxygens and the carrier is suggested. 2) The phloretin- and phlorizin-sensitive, ouabain-insensitive transport of D-glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, and D-mannose is associated with considerable phosphorylation. The three sugars mutually compete for a shared transport site. The specificity pattern characterizing the transport system defines the following structural requirements: a (pyranose) ring, a free C1-OH, C3-OH, and C4-OH (both axial) and possibly C6-OH. Hydrogen bonding between the carrier and the oxygens at C3, C4, and C6, and covalent bonding at C1 is suggested.
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