CHARACTERIZATION OF THE ENDOGENOUS CARNITINE TRANSPORT AND EXPRESSIONOF A RAT RENAL NA-DEPENDENT CARNITINE TRANSPORT-SYSTEM IN XENOPUS-LAEVIS OOCYTES()
S. Berardi et al., CHARACTERIZATION OF THE ENDOGENOUS CARNITINE TRANSPORT AND EXPRESSIONOF A RAT RENAL NA-DEPENDENT CARNITINE TRANSPORT-SYSTEM IN XENOPUS-LAEVIS OOCYTES(), Biochemical journal, 309, 1995, pp. 389-393
L-Carnitine transport was characterized in Xenopus laevis oocytes befo
re and after injection of mRNA isolated from rat renal cortex. Non-inj
ected oocytes revealed endogenous Na+-dependent transport of L-carniti
ne. After injection of 15 ng of rat kidney mRNA, the Na+-dependent L-c
arnitine transport increased 2-3-fold, reaching maximal activity after
5-6 days. The expressed carnitine transport was maximal at pH 7.5, wh
ereas the endogenous transport showed no clear maximum between pH 6.0
and 8.5. Kinetic analysis revealed apparent K-m values for L-carnitine
of 66 mu M for the endogenous and 149 mu M for the expressed transpor
t. Trimethyl-lysine and D-carnitine inhibited both the endogenous and
the expressed transport. In contrast, L-acetylcarnitine, L-isovalerylc
arnitine, L-palmitoylcarnitine and butyrobetaine inhibited predominant
ly the expressed transport, whereas glycinebetaine had no inhibitory e
ffect on either transport system. Size-fractionated rat renal-cortex m
RNA (median size 2 kb) induced a 3-fold higher L-carnitine transport t
han did unfractionated mRNA. These studies demonstrate that Xenopus la
evis, oocytes exhibit Na+-dependent L-carnitine transport and provide
the basis for expression-cloning of a rat renal Na+-dependent L-carnit
ine transport system.