Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The band 3 anion exchanger is located in the apical membrane of a beta-intercalated clonal cell line, whereas the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase is present in the basolateral membrane. When these cells were seeded at confluent density, they converted to an alpha-phenotype, localizing each of these proteins to the opposite cell membrane domain. The reversal of polarity is induced by hensin, a 230-kDa extracellular matrix protein. Rabbit kidney hensin is a multidomain protein composed of eight SRCR ("scavenger receptor, cysteine rich"), two CUB ("C1r/C1s Uegf Bmp1"), and one ZP ("zona pellucida") domain. Other proteins known to have these domains include CRP-ductin, a cDNA expressed at high levels in mouse intestine (8 SRCR, 5 CUB, 1 ZP), ebnerin, a protein cloned from a rat taste bud library (4 SRCR, 3 CUB, 1 ZP), and DMBT1, a sequence in human chromosome 10q25-26 frequently deleted in malignant gliomas (9 SRCR, 2 CUB, 1 ZP). Rabbit and mouse hensin genomic clones contained a new SRCR that was not found in hensin cDNA but was homologous to the first SRCR domain in DMBT1. Furthermore, the 3'-untranslated regions and the signal peptide of hensin were homologous to those of DMBT1. Mouse genomic hensin was localized to chromosome 7 band F4, which is syntenic to human 10q25-26. These data suggest that hensin and DMBT1 are alternatively spliced forms of the same gene. The analysis of mouse hensin bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) genomic clone by sequencing and Southern hybridization revealed that the gene also likely encodes CRP-ductin. A new antibody against the mouse SRCR1 domain recognized a protein in the mouse and rabbit brain but not in the immortalized cell line or kidney, whereas an antibody to SRCR6 and SRCR7 domains which are present in all the transcripts, recognized proteins in intestine, kidney, and brain from several species. The most likely interpretation of these data is that one gene produces at least three transcripts, namely, hensin, DMBT1, and CRP-ductin. Hensin may participate in determining the polarized phenotype of other epithelia and brain cells.
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PMID:Hensin, the polarity reversal protein, is encoded by DMBT1, a gene frequently deleted in malignant gliomas. 1044 83

A low-bicarbonate concentration and an acidic pH in the luminal fluid of the epididymis and vas deferens are important for sperm maturation. These factors help maintain mature sperm in an immotile but viable state during storage in the cauda epididymidis and vas deferens. Two proton extrusion mechanisms, an Na(+)/H(+) exchanger and an H(+)ATPase, have been proposed to be involved in this luminal acidification process. The Na(+)/H(+) exchanger has not yet been localized in situ, but we have reported that H(+)ATPase is expressed on the apical membrane of apical (or narrow) and clear cells of the epididymis. These cells are enriched in carbonic anhydrase II, indicating the involvement of bicarbonate in the acidification process and suggesting that the epididymis is a site of bicarbonate reabsorption. Previous unsuccessful attempts to localize the Cl/HCO(3) anion exchanger AE1 in rat epididymis did not investigate other anion exchanger (AE) isoforms. In this report, we used a recently described SDS antigen unmasking treatment to localize the Cl/HCO(3) exchanger AE2 in rat and mouse epididymis. AE2 is highly expressed in the initial segment, intermediate zone, and caput epididymidis, where it is located on the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells. The cauda epididymidis and vas deferens also contain basolateral AE2, but in lower amounts. The identity of the AE2 protein was further confirmed by the observation that basolateral AE2 expression was unaltered in the epididymis of AE1-knockout mice. Basolateral AE2 may participate in bicarbonate reabsorption and luminal acidification, and/or may be involved in intracellular pH homeostasis of epithelial cells of the male reproductive tract.
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PMID:Immunolocalization of AE2 anion exchanger in rat and mouse epididymis. 1049 32

A major obstacle for the effective treatment of cancer is the phenomenon of multidrug resistance (MDR) exhibited by many tumor cells. Many, but not all, MDR cells exhibit membrane-associated P-glycoprotein (P-gp), a drug efflux pump. However, most mechanisms of MDR are complex, employing P-gp in combination with other, ill-defined activities. Altered cytosolic pH (pHi) has been implicated to play a role in drug resistance. In the current study, we investigated mechanisms of pHi regulation in drug-sensitive (MCF-7/S) and drug-resistant human breast cancer cells. Of the drug-resistant lines, one contained P-gp (MCF-7/DOX; also referred to as MCF-7/D40) and one did not (MCF-7/MITOX). The resting steady-state pHi was similar in the three cell lines. In addition, in all the cell lines, HCO3- slightly acidified pHi and increased the rates of pHi recovery after an acid load, indicating the presence of anion exchanger (AE) activity. These data indicate that neither Na+/H+ exchange nor AE is differentially expressed in these cell lines. The presence of plasma membrane vacuolar-type H+-ATPase (pmV-ATPase) activity in these cell lines was then investigated. In the absence of Na+ and HCO3-, MCF-7/S cells did not recover from acid loads, whereas MCF-7/MITOX and MCF-7/DOX cells did. Furthermore, recovery of pHi was inhibited by bafilomycin A1 and NBD-Cl, potent V-ATPase inhibitors. Attempts to localize V-ATPase immunocytochemically at the plasma membranes of these cells were unsuccessful, indicating that V-ATPase is not statically resident at the plasma membrane. Consistent with this was the observation that release of endosomally trapped dextran was more rapid in the drug-resistant, compared with the drug-sensitive cells. Furthermore, the drug-resistant cells entrapped doxorubicin into intracellular vesicles whereas the drug-sensitive cells did not. Hence, it is hypothesized that the measured pmV-ATPase activity in the drug-resistant cells is a consequence of rapid endomembrane turnover. The potential impact of this behavior on drug resistance is examined in a companion manuscript.
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PMID:pH and drug resistance. I. Functional expression of plasmalemmal V-type H+-ATPase in drug-resistant human breast carcinoma cell lines. 1079 74

The Golgi complex and the trans-Golgi network are critical cellular organelles involved in the endocytic and biosynthetic pathways of protein trafficking. Lipids have been implicated in the regulation of membrane-protein trafficking, vesicular fusion, and targeting. We have explored the role of cytosolic group IV phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)) in membrane-protein trafficking in kidney epithelial cells. Adenoviral expression of cPLA(2) in LLC-PK(1) kidney epithelial cells prevents constitutive trafficking to the plasma membrane of an aquaporin 2-green fluorescent protein chimera, with retention of the protein in the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Plasma membrane Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase alpha-subunit localization is markedly reduced in cells expressing cPLA(2), whereas the trafficking of a Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) anion exchanger to the plasma membrane is not altered in these cells. Expression of cPLA(2) results in dispersion of giantin and beta-COP from their normal, condensed Golgi localization, and in marked disruption of the Golgi cisternae. cPLA(2) is present in Golgi fractions from noninfected LLC-PK(1) cells and rat kidney cortex. The distribution of tubulin and actin was not altered by cPLA(2), indicating that the microtubule and actin cytoskeleton remain intact. Total cellular protein synthesis is unaffected by the increase in cPLA(2) activity. Thus cPLA(2) plays an important role in determining Golgi architecture and selective control of constitutive membrane-protein trafficking in renal epithelial cells.
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PMID:Cytosolic phospholipase A(2) regulates golgi structure and modulates intracellular trafficking of membrane proteins. 1103 58

HGT-1 is a human cell line sharing a number of physiological features with gastric parietal cells. HGT-1 cell monolayers were able to secrete H+ when stimulated with histamine (calculated external pH variation, deltapH(e) 0.46+/-0.05) as assessed using the impermeant, pH-sensitive fluorescence dye 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulphonic acid, trisodium salt (HPTS). Treatment with 100 microM omeprazole inhibited the histamine-induced apical acidification by about 60%. Intracellular pH (pH(i)) measurements using the fluorescent pH-sensitive dye 2',7'-bis-carboxyethyl-5(6)-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) demonstrated the expression of a functional, omeprazole-sensitive H+/K+-pump. A monoclonal antibody directed against the alpha subunit of the H+/K+-ATPase immunoprecipitated a 95-kDa protein from HGT-1 cells and human stomach which corresponds to the expected molecular size of the native protein. HGT-1 cells were also positive for the anion exchanger AE2 that is expressed in gastric parietal cells. In addition, we identified a histamine- and pH(i)-sensitive Na+/H+ exchanger in HGT-1 cells, which might correspond to the functional expression of the NHE4 isoform that has been detected in gastric epithelial cells as well as in primary cultured parietal cells. HGT-1 cells therefore display the principal features of parietal cells and might represent an interesting cell culture model for studying the regulatory mechanisms involved in acid secretion.
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PMID:The cultured human gastric cells HGT-1 express the principal transporters involved in acid secretion. 1104 53

The kidneys play pivotal roles in acid-base homeostasis, and the acid-secreting (alpha-type) and bicarbonate-secreting (beta-type) intercalated cells in the collecting ducts are major sites for the final modulation of urinary acid secretion. Since the H(+)-ATPase and anion exchanger activities in these two types of intercalated cells exhibit opposite polarities, it has been suggested that the alpha- and beta-intercalated cells are interchangeable via a cell polarity change. Immunohistological studies, however, have failed to confirm that the apical anion exchanger of beta-intercalated cells is the band 3 protein localized to the basolateral membrane of alpha-intercalated cells. In the present study, we show the evidence that a novel member of the anion exchanger and sodium bicarbonate cotransporter superfamily is an apical anion exchanger of beta-intercalated cells. Cloned cDNA from the beta-intercalated cells shows about 30% homology with anion exchanger types 1-3, and functional expression of this protein in COS-7 cells and Xenopus oocytes showed sodium-independent and 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid-insensitive anion exchanger activity. Furthermore, immunohistological studies revealed that this novel anion exchanger is present on the apical membrane of beta-intercalated cells, although some beta-intercalated cells were negative for AE4 staining. We conclude that our newly cloned transporter is an apical anion exchanger of the beta-intercalated cells, whereas our data do not exclude the possibility that there may be another form of anion exchanger in these cells.
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PMID:A new member of the HCO3(-) transporter superfamily is an apical anion exchanger of beta-intercalated cells in the kidney. 1110 37

Factors regulating the differentiated phenotype of principal cells (PC) and A- and B-intercalated cells (IC) in kidney collecting ducts are poorly understood. However, we have shown previously that carbonic anhydrase II (CAII)-deficient mice have no IC in their medullary collecting ducts, suggesting a potential role for this enzyme in determining the cellular composition of this tubule segment. We now report that the cellular profile of the collecting ducts of adult rats can be remodeled by inhibiting CA activity in rats by using osmotic pumps containing acetazolamide. The 31-kDa subunit of the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase, the sodium/hydrogen exchanger regulatory factor NHE-RF, and the anion exchanger AE1 were used to identify IC subtypes by immunofluorescence staining, while aquaporin 2 and aquaporin 4 were used to identify PC. In the cortical collecting ducts of animals treated with acetazolamide for 2 wk, the percentage of B-IC decreased significantly (18 +/- 2 vs. 36 +/- 4%, P < 0.01) whereas the percentage of A-IC increased (82 +/- 2 vs. 64 +/- 4%, P < 0.01) with no change in the percentage of total IC in the epithelium. In some treated rats, B-IC were virtually undetectable. In the inner stripe of the outer medulla, the percentage of IC increased in treated animals (48 +/- 2 vs. 37 +/- 3%, P < 0.05) and the percentage of PC decreased (52 +/- 2 vs. 63 +/- 3%, P < 0.05). Moreover, IC appeared bulkier, protruded into the lumen, and showed a significant increase in the length of their apical (20.8 +/- 0.5 vs. 14.6 +/- 0.4 microm, P < 0.05) and basolateral membranes (25.8 +/- 0.4 vs. 23.8 +/- 0.5 microm, P < 0.05) compared with control rats. In the inner medullary collecting ducts of treated animals, the number of IC in the proximal third of the papilla was reduced compared with controls (11 +/- 4 vs. 40 +/- 11 IC/mm(2), P < 0.05). These data suggest that CA activity plays an important role in determining the differentiated phenotype of medullary collecting duct epithelial cells and that the cellular profile of collecting ducts can be remodeled even in adult rats. The relative depletion of cortical B-IC and the relative increase in number and hyperplasia of A-IC in the medulla may be adaptive processes that would tend to correct or stabilize the metabolic acidosis that would otherwise ensue following systemic carbonic anhydrase inhibition.
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PMID:Remodeling the cellular profile of collecting ducts by chronic carbonic anhydrase inhibition. 1118 5

The purpose of this study is to develop a numerical model that simulates acid-base transport in rat distal tubule. We have previously reported a model that deals with transport of Na(+), K(+), Cl(-), and water in this nephron segment (Chang H and Fujita T. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 276: F931-F951, 1999). In this study, we extend our previous model by incorporating buffer systems, new cell types, and new transport mechanisms. Specifically, the model incorporates bicarbonate, ammonium, and phosphate buffer systems; has cell types corresponding to intercalated cells; and includes the Na/H exchanger, H-ATPase, and anion exchanger. Incorporation of buffer systems has required the following modifications of model equations: new model equations are introduced to represent chemical equilibria of buffer partners [e.g., pH = pK(a) + log(10) (NH(3)/NH(4))], and the formulation of mass conservation is extended to take into account interconversion of buffer partners. Furthermore, finite rates of H(2)CO(3)-CO(2) interconversion (i.e., H(2)CO(3) &rlharr; CO(2) + H(2)O) are taken into account in modeling the bicarbonate buffer system. Owing to this treatment, the model can simulate the development of disequilibrium pH in the distal tubular fluid. For each new transporter, a state diagram has been constructed to simulate its transport kinetics. With appropriate assignment of maximal transport rates for individual transporters, the model predictions are in agreement with free-flow micropuncture experiments in terms of HCO reabsorption rate in the normal state as well as under the high bicarbonate load. Although the model cannot simulate all of the microperfusion experiments, especially those that showed a flow-dependent increase in HCO reabsorption, the model is consistent with those microperfusion experiments that showed HCO reabsorption rates similar to those in the free-flow micropuncture experiments. We conclude that it is possible to develop a numerical model of the rat distal tubule that simulates acid-base transport, as well as basic solute and water transport, on the basis of tubular geometry, physical principles, and transporter kinetics. Such a model would provide a useful means of integrating detailed kinetic properties of transporters and predicting macroscopic transport characteristics of this nephron segment under physiological and pathophysiological settings.
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PMID:A numerical model of acid-base transport in rat distal tubule. 1145 14

The mass-dense granules of Dictyostelium discoideum were shown to contain large amounts of phosphorus, magnesium, and calcium, as determined by x-ray microanalysis, either in situ or when purified using iodixanol gradient centrifugation. The high phosphorus content was due to the presence of pyrophosphate and polyphosphate, which were also present in the contractile vacuoles. Both organelles also possessed a vacuolar H(+)-ATPase, an H(+)-pyrophosphatase, and a Ca(2+)-ATPase, as determined by biochemical methods or by immunofluorescence microscopy. The H(+)-pyrophosphatase activity of isolated mass-dense granules was stimulated by potassium ions and inhibited by the pyrophosphate analogs aminomethylenediphosphonate and imidodiphosphate and by KF and N-ethylmaleimide in a dose-dependent manner. The mass-dense granules and the contractile vacuole appeared to contact each other when the cells were submitted to hyposmotic stress. Acetazolamide inhibited the carbonic anhydrase activity of the contractile vacuoles and prolonged their contraction cycle in a dose-dependent manner. Similar effects were observed with the anion exchanger inhibitor 4,4' -diisothiocyanatodihydrostilbene-2, 2' -disulfonic acid and the vacuolar H(+)-ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A(1). Together, these results suggest that the mass-dense granules of D. discoideum are homologous to the acidocalcisomes described in protozoan parasites and are linked to the function of the contractile vacuole.
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PMID:Acidocalcisomes are functionally linked to the contractile vacuole of Dictyostelium discoideum. 1174 43

The objective was to further test the hypothesis that aluminum (Al) citrate transport across the blood-brain barrier is mediated by a monocarboxylate transporter (MCT). Speciation calculations showed that Al citrates were the predominant Al species under the conditions employed. Al citrate did not inhibit lactate uptake and was not taken up by the rat erythrocyte, suggesting it does not serve as an effective substrate for either MCT1 or the anion exchanger. Studies were conducted with b.End5 cells derived from mouse brain endothelial cells to identify the properties of the carrier(s) mediating Al citrate transport. Western blot analysis of b.End5 cells showed expression of the transferrin receptor and MCT1, but not MCT2 or MCT4. Uptake of Al citrate was approximately 70% faster than citrate. Citrate and Al citrate uptake were sodium independent. Citrate uptake increased at pH 6.9 compared to 7.4, whereas Al citrate uptake did not. Al citrate uptake was reduced by inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration and oxidative phosphorylation, suggesting ATP dependence, but not by ouabain, suggesting no role for Na/K-ATPase. Uptake was not affected by alpha-ketoglutarate or malonate, substrates for the dicarboxylate carrier. Many substrates and inhibitors of MCT1 and organic anion transporters reduced Al citrate uptake into b.End5 cells. BSP and fluorescein, organic anion transporter substrates/inhibitors, inhibited Al citrate uptake. We conclude that Al citrate transport across the blood-brain barrier is carrier-mediated, involving either an uncharacterized MCT isoform expressed in the brain such as MCT7 or MCT8 and/or one of the many members of the organic anion transporting protein family, some of which are known to be expressed at the blood-brain barrier.
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PMID:Aluminum citrate uptake by immortalized brain endothelial cells: implications for its blood-brain barrier transport. 1187


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