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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The transport of L-threonine was studied in cultured human fibroblasts. A kinetic analysis of L-threonine transport in a range of extracellular concentrations from 0.01 to 20 mM indicated that this amino acid enters cells through both Na(+)-independent and Na(+)-dependent routes. These routes are: (1) a non-saturable, Na(+)-independent route formally indistinguishable from diffusion; (2) a saturable, Na(+)-independent route inhibitable by the analog BCH and identifiable with system L; (3) a low-affinity, Na(+)-dependent component (Km = 3 mM) which can be attributed to the activity of system A since it is adaptively enhanced by amino acid
starvation
and suppressed by the characterizing analog MeAIB and (4) a high-affinity, Na(+)-dependent route (Km = 0.05 mM). This latter route is identifiable with system
ASC
since it is insensitive to adaptive regulation, uninhibited by MeAIB, trans-stimulated by intracellular substrates of system
ASC
, markedly stereoselective, and relatively insensitive to changes in external pH. At an external concentration of 0.05 mM more than 90% of L-threonine transport is referrable to the activity of system
ASC
; in these conditions, the transport of the amino acid exhibits typical
ASC
-features even in the absence of inhibitors of other transport agencies, and, therefore, it can be employed as a reliable indicator of the activity of transport system
ASC
in cultured human fibroblasts.
...
PMID:The preferential interaction of L-threonine with transport system ASC in cultured human fibroblasts. 168 12
Substrate-dependent regulation of amino acid transport by System A occurs by both direct action at the carrier (trans-inhibition) and transcriptional control (adaptive regulation). While experiments with intact cells have led to working models that describe these regulatory phenomena, the use of subcellular approaches will serve to refine the present hypotheses. Adaptive induction of System A transport following amino acid
starvation
of cells was shown to be dependent on de novo RNA and protein synthesis, and the stimulated activity was shown to be retained in isolated plasma membrane vesicles. This stimulated transport activity was tightly associated with the plasma membrane, but could be solubilized by 4 M urea and 2.5% cholate, and recovered following reconstitution of the protein into artificial proteoliposomes. These data support the working hypothesis that adaptive induction of transport is the result of de novo synthesis and insertion into the plasma membrane of System A carrier protein. In contrast, the activity of System
ASC
in the vesicles from the amino acid starved cells was actually reduced by 2-5-fold when compared to amino acid-fed cells. A more rapid form of regulation of System A activity is trans-inhibition. The use of isolated plasma membrane vesicles demonstrated that trans-inhibition in whole cells did not survive membrane isolation. However, substrate loading of isolated membrane vesicles containing high levels of System A activity, produced trans-inhibition in a very specific manner in that System A substrates resulted in decreased transport activity, while those amino acids which are poor substrates for the System A carrier did not. Thus, trans-inhibition is not the result of a recycling process involving an intracellular pool of carriers, but rather can be accounted for by differences in the kinetics for amino acid binding and/or translocation on the two sides of the membrane.
...
PMID:Substrate-dependent adaptive regulation and trans-inhibition of System A-mediated amino acid transport. Studies using rat hepatoma plasma membrane vesicles. 169 May 72
The characteristics of the uptake of L-homocysteine by cultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells have been examined. Uptake occurred by Na(+)-dependent and Na(+)-independent systems, but was essentially independent of the pH of the uptake medium. The Na(+)-independent system corresponded to system L, being totally inhibited by the presence of beta-2-aminobicyclo(2,2,1)heptane-2-carboxylic acid (BCH) a system L analogue. It was concluded on the basis of
starvation
experiments coupled with failure to detect any inhibition in the presence of 2-methylaminoisobutyric acid (MeAIB), a system A analogue, that the Na(+)-dependent uptake was wholly accounted for by system
ASC
. The kinetic properties of systems L and
ASC
were determined by omitting Na+ from the uptake medium and incorporating BCH in the medium, respectively. It has been concluded on the basis of the inhibitory effects of a number of amino acids that uptake of homocysteine occurs by those systems which transport cysteine.
...
PMID:Homocysteine uptake by human umbilical vein endothelial cells in culture. 220 77
Neutral amino acid transport by system A was investigated in the epithelial cell lines MDCK and MDCK-T1. The latter line is a chemically induced, oncogenically transformed line derived from MDCK. Inducers of differentiation, sodium butyrate and 5-azacytidine, and a tumor promoter, TPA, were used as probes to delineate pathways of regulation involved in system A response to a variety of physiological conditions and agents. Azacytidine, an inhibitor of DNA methylation, and butyrate, an enhancer of histone acetylation, inhibited expression of system A, had little effect on system
ASC
, and slightly stimulated system L. Inhibition of system A expression by butyrate and azacytidine occurred under different conditions. Increases in system A activity due to amino acid
starvation
or transformation were inhibited by butyrate but not by azacytidine. Repressed system A activity, normally observed in the presence of high levels of amino acids, was more sensitive to azacytidine than to butyrate. The tumor promoter, TPA, stimulated system A activity in MDCK cells under normal growth conditions but did not stimulate activity in amino acid-starved MDCK cells or in MDCK-T1 cells. Stimulation of system A activity by TPA was prevented by prior exposure to butyrate but not to azacytidine. These results suggest 1) that system A expression observed in growing amino-acid-repressed MDCK cells is modulated by an azacytidine-sensitive mechanism and 2) that the elevated expression of system A activity induced by amino acid
starvation
, by chemical transformation to MDCK-T1, and by TPA is modulated by a butyrate-sensitive mechanism.
...
PMID:Effects of 5-azacytidine, sodium butyrate, and phorbol esters on amino acid transport system A in a kidney epithelial cell line, MDCK: evidence for multiple mechanisms of regulation. 245 37
Substrate regulation of System A transport activity in rat H4 hepatoma cells is described. The uptake of several amino acids was tested in the presence of system-specific inhibitors. System A activity was increased in a RNA- and protein synthesis-dependent manner by amino acid deprivation of the cells (adaptive regulation), whereas transport by Systems
ASC
, N, y+, and L was unaffected. Unlike human fibroblasts, the H4 cells did not require serum to exhibit the depression of System A. At cell densities between 88 X 10(3) and 180 X 10(3) cells/cm2, the degree of adaptive regulation was inversely related to cell density. Both transport of AIB and adaptive regulation of System A were nearly abolished if either K+ or Li+ was substituted for Na+ in the medium. The presence of cycloheximide or tunicamycin blocked further increases in
starvation
-induced activity within 1 hr of addition, suggesting the involvement of a plasma membrane glycoprotein. In contrast, if the medium was supplemented with actinomycin after the stimulation of System A had begun, the activity continued to increase for an additional 2 hr before being slowed by the inhibitor. The contributions of trans-inhibition and repression to the amino acid-induced decay of System A activity were estimated for several representative amino acids. In general, the System A activity in normal rat hepatocytes was much less sensitive to trans-inhibition than the corresponding activity in H4 hepatoma cells. The half-life values for the amino acid-dependent decay of System A ranged from 0.5 to 2.0 hr.
...
PMID:Adaptive regulation of neutral amino acid transport System A in rat H4 hepatoma cells. 257 76
Neutral amino acid transport was characterized in human synovial cells. The amino acids tested are transported by all three major neutral amino acid transport systems, that is, A, L, and
ASC
. The model amino acid 2-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) was found to be a strong specific substrate for system A in synovial cells. When cells were starved of amino acids, the activity of AIB transport increased, reaching a maximum within 1 h. The stimulation of transport activity was not blocked by cycloheximide and would thus appear to be related to a release from transinhibition. Similarly, the decrease in the activity of AIB transport observed after the addition of alpha-methyl-aminoisobutyric acid (meAIB) appeared to be related to transinhibition. However, using a different approach, that is, amino acid
starvation
followed by incubation with 10 mM meAIB and transfer to an amino acid-free medium with or without cycloheximide supplementation, a clear increase in AIB uptake, due both to derepression and a release from transinhibition, was observed. Unlike human fibroblasts, the depression of system A in these synovial cells was not serum-dependent. The process of derepression was observed only after preloading with meAIB. Neither AIB nor alanine produced this phenomenon. Moreover, alanine preloading led to a large increase in AIB transport activity due to a release from transinhibition. These observations indicate that the process of derepression and release from transinhibition are specific to the substrates present in the culture medium prior to amino acid
starvation
.
...
PMID:Neutral amino acid transport in human synovial cells: substrate specificity of adaptative regulation and transinhibition. 277 95
Amino acid transport was studied in C1 cells which contain amplified levels of sodium- and potassium-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Na,K-ATPase), in C4 cells which are ouabain-sensitive revertants, and in parental HeLa S3. Sodium-dependent uptake of aminoisobutyric acid and alanine was increased 2-fold in the amplified C1 cells. After a 6 h amino acid
starvation
period, the rate of sodium-dependent uptake of methylaminoisobutyric acid was 70-90% greater for C1 than for C4 and HeLa. This uptake was inhibitable by ouabain and the apparent Km values for high affinity uptake were similar in all three lines. Overall, neutral amino acid uptake through Systems A,
ASC
, and L was 2-fold higher in the Na,K-ATPase amplified C1 cells relative to C4 or HeLa. The induction of System A uptake of methylaminoisobutyric acid after
starvation
was more rapid in both the amplified C1 cells and the revertant C4 when compared to HeLa, which suggests that the selection for amplification of the Na,K-ATPase produced membrane alterations affecting the adaptive regulation of System A.
...
PMID:Alterations in amino acid transport in Na,K-ATPase amplified HeLa cells. 300 Oct 56
1. The occurrence and characterization of acidic amino acid transport in the plasma membrane of a variety of cells and tissues of a number of organisms is reviewed. 2. Several cell types, especially in brain, possess both high- and low-affinity transport systems for acidic amino acids. 3. High-affinity systems in brain may function to remove neurotransmitter amino acid from the extracellular environment. 4. Many cell systems for acidic amino acid transport are energized by an inwardly directed Na+ gradient. Moreover, certain cell types, such as rat brain neurons, human placental trophoblast and rabbit and rat kidney cortex epithelium, respond to an outwardly directed K+ gradient as an additional source of energization. This simultaneous action may account for the high accumulation ratios seen with acidic amino acids. 5. Rabbit kidney has been found to have a glutamate-H+ co-transport system which is subject to stimulation by protons in the medium. 6. Acidic amino acid transport in rat brain neurons occurs with a stoichiometric coupling of 1 mol of amino acid to 2 mol of Na+. For rabbit intestine, one Na+ is predicted to migrate for each mol of amino acid. 7. Uptake in rat kidney cortex and in high-K+ dog erythrocytes is electrogenic. However, uptake in rabbit and newt kidney and in rat and rabbit intestine is electroneutral. 8. Na+-independent acidic amino acid transport systems have been described in the mouse lymphocyte, the human fibroblast, the mouse Ehrlich cell and in rat hepatoma cells. 9. In a number of cell systems, D-acidic amino acids have substantial affinity for transport; D-glutamate, in a number of systems, however, appears to have little reactivity. 10. Acidic amino acid transport in some cell systems appears to occur via the "classical" routes (Christensen, Adv. Enzymol. Relat. Areas Mol. Biol. 49, 41-101, 1979). For example, uptake in the Ehrlich cell is partitioned between the Na+-dependent A system (which transports a wide spectrum of neutral amino acids), the Na+-dependent
ASC
system (which transports alanine, serine, threonine, homoserine, etc.), and the Na+-independent L system (which shows reactivity centering around neutral amino acids such as leucine and phenylalanine). Also, a minor component of uptake in mouse lymphocytes occurs by a route resembling the A system. 11. Human fibroblasts possess a Na+-independent adaptive transport system for cystine and glutamate that is enhanced in activity by cystine
starvation
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acidic amino acid transport in animal cells and tissues. 330 25
Plasma membrane vesicles prepared from intact rat liver or isolated hepatocytes retain transport activity by systems A,
ASC
, N, and Gly. Selective substrates for these systems showed a Na+-dependent overshoot indicative of energy-dependent transport, in this instance, driven by an artificially-imposed Na+ gradient. Greater than 85% of Na+-dependent 2-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) uptake was blocked by an excess of 2-(methylamino)isobutyric acid (MeAIB) with an apparent Ki of 0.6 mM. Intact hepatocytes obtained from glucagon-treated rats exhibited a stimulation of system A activity and plasma membrane vesicles isolated from those same cells partially retained the elevated activity. Transport activity induced by substrate
starvation
of cultured hepatocytes was also evident in membrane vesicles prepared from those cells. The membrane-bound glucagon-stimulated system A activity decays rapidly during incubation of vesicles at 4 degrees C (t1/2 = 13 h), but not at -75 degrees C. Several different inhibitors of proteolysis were ineffective in blocking the decay of transport activity. Hepatic system N transport activity was also elevated in plasma membrane vesicles from glucagon-treated rats, whereas system
ASC
was essentially unchanged. The results indicate that both glucagon and adaptive regulation cause an induction of amino acid transport through a plasma membrane-associated protein.
...
PMID:Maintenance of glucagon-stimulated system A amino acid transport activity in rat liver plasma membrane vesicles. 396 88
Starvation
of CHO-K1 cells for leucine leads to a 3-4-fold increase in transport system L activity, without modification of transport through systems A and
ASC
. The concentration of leucine must be below 10 microM before the enhancement of transport can be clearly seen. To achieve low concentrations of leucine such as 10 microM, extensive dialysis of fetal calf serum was required. The enhancement of transport was completed after 12-24 h of
starvation
and was fully reversed within 1 h of re-feeding with leucine.
Starvation
for isoleucine, valine or phenylalanine also produced an increase in system L transport activity, but the effect was only one half of that seen following leucine
starvation
.
...
PMID:Regulation of amino acid transport system L by amino acid availability in CHO-K1 cells. A special role for leucine. 404 60
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