Wd. Stein et Mb. Hoshen, THE ROLE OF LIGAND-BINDING PROTEINS IN INCREASING THE TRANSCELLULAR FLUX OF METABOLITES, IN PARTICULAR THAT OF CALCIUM, BILIRUBIN, AND FATTY-ACIDS, Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B. Comparative biochemistry, 115(3), 1996, pp. 307-312
Both for transcellular transport and intracellular transport, low intr
acellular concentrations of a diffusing molecule or ion will result in
low fluxes and hence in a low rate of delivery of substrate across th
e cell or within the cell, respectively. For both situations, the pres
ence of ligand-binding proteins will speed up transport, and hence met
abolism, by co-diffusion, provided that the binding-protein is present
at a reasonably high concentration, has a small size and hence a rela
tively high diffusion coefficient, and has a high affinity for the lig
and. These conditions seem to be met both for the calcium binding prot
eins involved in transport of calcium across the intestinal and kidney
epithelia and for the proteins that bind hydrophobic substrates such
as fatty acids and bilirubin in the liver cell. Copyright (C) 1996 Els
evier Science Inc.