Register
All
News
People
Objects
Country Information
Poland
Canada
England
Ireland
Germany
Australia
USA
India
China
General
Ginfo.pl FORUM
FAQ
People
Polish Scientists
World Scientists
Actors
Objects
Publications
Movies
Search
Recent Search Queries
YOU CAN NOW DISCUSS THIS OBJECT ON OUR FORUM JUST
CLICK HERE!
High and low affinity binding of [3H]cholate to rat liver plasma membranes.
People related with this object:
M Vore
S Durham
A Takacs
A Auansakul
Object description
The transport of bile acids across sinusoidal and canalicular membranes of hepatocytes is characterized as carrier mediated. Such a carrier should specifically bind bile acids at physiological concentrations. We examined the binding of [3H]cholate to rat liver plasma membranes using a microcentrifugation technique and detected high (KD = 1.23 +/- 0.44 microM, Bmax = 21.8 +/- 3.3 pmol/mg protein) and low (KD = 1.97 +/- 1.33 mM, Bmax = 41.5 +/- 25.3 nmol/mg protein) affinity binding sites. Maximal binding was achieved within 15-45 sec and was stable for 2 min at 37 degrees. Binding to the high affinity site was reversible, was not Na+ dependent or attributable to vesicular uptake, and exhibited a broad pH optimum. Binding to this site was negligible or not detected in liver mitochondrial and microsomal fractions, was saturable, and was inhibited by other bile acids. The IC50 values for bile acids as inhibitors of [3H]cholate binding at the high affinity site were: taurocholate, 1.9 nM; glycodeoxycholate, 3.1 nM; chenodeoxycholate, 5.6 nM; taurochenodeoxycholate, 7.3 nM; glycochenodeoxycholate, 11 nM; lithocholate, 13 nM; taurodeoxycholate, 20 nM; glycocholate, 3.6 microM; and deoxycholate, 5.6 microM. [3H]Cholate specific binding was inhibited by 10(-5) M bromosulfophthalein, bilirubin and indocyanin green. These data support the hypothesis that the high affinity binding site represents a carrier which is shared by bile acids and nonbile acid organic anions.
00062952
Biochem Pharmacol. 1987 Aug 1;36 (15):2547-55
Created
1987-08-01 00:00:00
Comments
Hits
0