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- Title
Sodium-dependent amino acid transport in the chlorophyte Platymonas subcordiformis.
- Authors
Qafaiti, M.; Stephens, G.
- Abstract
Sodium-dependent transport of alanine and serine by Platymonas subcordiformis was demonstrated by evaluating the kinetics of entry of these substrates over a range of concentrations of ambient sodium. The reciprocal of the concentration at which entry rate was half maximal ( K) was linearly related to ambient sodium concentration; maximum entry ( V) was not affected. Entry of labeled amino acids as measured by determining radioactivity in the medium was close to but slightly less than rates of net entry as determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. This difference presumably reflects extrusion of labeled carbon by the cells in a form not detectable by the chromatographic techniques employed. The coupling coefficient (sodium ions per amino acid molecule) for entry of alanine and serine was evaluated and determined to be 2. Methylaminoisobutyric acid was not taken up by P. subcordiformis and had no inhibitory effect on uptake of alanine or serine. B-2-aminobicycloheptane-2-carboxylic acid competitively inhibited uptake of both substrates. The internal sodium concentration of P. subcordiformis was measured, and the maximum gradient energetically favorable for amino acid transport was calculated from data in the present work and drawn from the literature. Assuming that uptake of amino acids is strictly sodium-dependent, an amino acid concentration gradient of the order of 10 (cell:medium) can be achieved. This concentration differential permits net uptake of amino acids by P. subcordiformis from ambient amino acid levels in the nanomolar range.
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL classification; AMINO acid transport; CLASSIFICATION of algae; CHROMATOGRAPHIC analysis; RADIOACTIVITY &; the environment
- Publication
Marine Biology, 1989, Vol 101, Issue 4, p437
- ISSN
0025-3162
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/BF00541644