Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2554413 | Life Sciences | 2006 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The present study evaluated the hypothesis of whether increases in vectorial Na+ transport translate into facilitation of Na+-dependent l-DOPA uptake in cultured renal epithelial tubular cells. Increases in vectorial Na+ transport were obtained in opossum kidney (OK) cells engineered to overexpress Na+-K+-ATPase after transfection of wild type OK cells with the rodent Na+-K+-ATPase α1 subunit. The most impressive differences between wild type and transfected OK cells are that the latter overexpressed Na+-K+-ATPase accompanied by an increased activity of the transporter. Non-linear analysis of the saturation curve for l-DOPA uptake revealed a Vmax value (in nmol mg protein/6 min) of 62 and 80 in wild type and transfected cells, respectively. The uptake of a non-saturating concentration (0.25 μM) of [14C]-l-DOPA in OK-WT cells was not affected by Na+ removal, whereas in OK-α1 cells accumulation of [14C]-l-DOPA was clearly dependent on the presence of extracellular Na+. When Na+ was replaced by choline, the inhibitory profile of neutral l-amino acids, but not of basic and acidic amino acids, upon [14C]-l-DOPA uptake in both cell types, was significantly greater than that observed in the presence of extracellular Na+. It is concluded that enhanced ability of OK cells overexpressing Na+-K+-ATPase to translocate Na+ from the apical to the basal cell side correlates positively with their ability to accumulate l-DOPA, which is in agreement with the role of Na+ in taking up the precursor of renal dopamine.
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Authors
E. Silva, P. Gomes, P. Soares-da-Silva,