Se. Joyner et K. Kirk, 2 PATHWAYS FOR CHOLINE TRANSPORT IN EEL ERYTHROCYTES - A SATURABLE CARRIER AND A VOLUME-ACTIVATED CHANNEL, The American journal of physiology, 267(3), 1994, pp. 180000773-180000779
Choline transport in eel (Anguilla anguilla) erythrocytes was investig
ated in cells suspended in isotonic and hypotonic media. In cells in i
sosmotic solution choline transport was mediated by a saturable system
with a Michaelis constant (K-m; 62 +/- 6 mu M) similar to that of the
choline carrier of human erythrocytes but a maximal transport rate (V
-max; 4.5 +/- 0.4 mmol.l red blood cells(-1) h(-1)) almost two orders
of magnitude higher than that in human red blood cells. This pathway w
as inhibited by hemicholinium-3 and dodecyltrimethylammonium, but not
by any of a range of anion transport inhibitors tested. Swelling the c
ells by suspending them in hyposmotic media activated a second choline
transport component that was kinetically and pharmacologically distin
ct from the saturable system. The volume-activated component was nonsa
turable (up to 50 mM choline). It was not inhibited by hemicholinium-3
or dodecyltrimethylammonium but was inhibited by anion transport inhi
bitors, the most potent of which was 5-nitro-2-(3-phenylpropylamino)be
nzoic acid (NPPB; half-maximal inhibitory concentration = 14 mu M). Do
se-response curves for the effect of NPPB on swelling-activated cholin
e transport and the swelling-activated transport of taurine, a sulfoni
c amino acid, were superimposable. It is postulated that the transport
of choline and taurine (as well as that of other small organic solute
s) in osmotically swollen fish erythrocytes is mediated by a volume-ac
tivated, anion-selective channel.