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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Kristine Meinild is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Kristine Meinild.


The Journal of Physiology | 1998

The human Na+–glucose cotransporter is a molecular water pump

Anne-Kristine Meinild; Dan A. Klaerke; Donald D. F. Loo; Ernest M. Wright; Thomas Zeuthen

1 The human Na+‐glucose cotransporter (hSGLT1) was expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The transport activity, given by the Na+ current, was monitored as a clamp current and the concomitant flux of water followed optically as the change in oocyte volume. 2 When glucose was added to the bathing solution there was an abrupt increase in clamp current and an immediate swelling of the oocyte. The transmembrane transport of two Na+ ions and one sugar molecule was coupled, within the protein itself, to the influx of 210 water molecules. 3 This stoichiometry was constant and independent of the external parameters: Na+ concentrations, sugar concentrations, transmembrane voltages, temperature and osmotic gradients. 4 The cotransport of water occurred in the presence of adverse osmotic gradients. In accordance with the Gibbs equation, energy was transferred within the protein from the downhill fluxes of Na+ and sugar to the uphill transport of water, indicative of secondary active transport of water. 5 Unstirred layer effects were ruled out on the basis of experiments on oocytes treated with gramicidin or other ionophores. Na+ currents maintained by ionophores did not lead to any initial water movements. 6 The finding of a molecular water pump allows for new models of cellular water transport which include coupling between ion and water fluxes at the protein level; the hSGLT1 could account for almost half the daily reuptake of water from the small intestine.


The Journal of Physiology | 1999

Passive water and ion transport by cotransporters.

Donald D. F. Loo; Bruce A. Hirayama; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Grischa Chandy; Thomas Zeuthen; Ernest M. Wright

1 The rabbit Na+‐glucose (SGLT1) and the human Na+‐Cl−‐GABA (GAT1) cotransporters were expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, and passive Na+ and water transport were studied using electrical and optical techniques. Passive water permeabilities (Lp) of the cotransporters were determined from the changes in oocyte volume in response to osmotic gradients. The specific SGLT1 and GAT1 Lp values were obtained by measuring Lp in the presence and absence of blockers (phlorizin and SKF89976A). In the presence of the blockers, the Lp values of oocytes expressing SGLT1 and GAT1 were indistinguishable from the Lp of control oocytes. Passive Na+ transport (Na+ leak) was obtained from the blocker‐sensitive Na+ currents in the absence of substrates (glucose and GABA). 3 Passive Na+ and water transport through SGLT1 were blocked by phlorizin with the same sensitivity (inhibitory constant (Ki), 3‐5 μM). When Na+ was replaced with Li+, phlorizin also inhibited Li+ and water transport, but with a lower affinity (Ki, 100 μM). When Na+ was replaced by choline, which is not transported, the SGLT1 Lp was indistinguishable from that in Na+ or Li+, but in this case water transport was less sensitive to phlorizin. 4 The activation energies (Ea) for passive Na+ and water transport through SGLT1 were 21 and 5 kcal mol−1, respectively. The high Ea for Na+ transport is comparable to that of Na+‐glucose cotransport and indicates that the process is dependent on conformational changes of the protein, while the low Ea for water transport is similar to that of water channels (aquaporins). 5 GAT1 also behaved as an SKF89976A‐sensitive water channel. We did not observe passive Na+ transport through GAT1. 6 We conclude that passive water and Na+ transport through cotransporters depend on different mechanisms: Na+ transport occurs by a saturable uniport mechanism, and water permeation is through a low conductance water channel. In the case of SGLT1, we suggest that both the water channel and water cotransport could contribute to isotonic fluid transport across the intestinal brush border membrane.


Biology of the Cell | 1997

WATER TRANSPORT BY THE NA+/GLUCOSE COTRANSPORTER UNDER ISOTONIC CONDITIONS

Thomas Zeuthen; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Dan A. Klaerke; Donald Df Loo; Ernest M. Wright; Bo Belhage; Thomas Litman

Abstract Solute cotransport in the Na + glucose cotransporter is directly coupled to significant water fluxes. The water fluxes are energized by the downhill fluxes of the other substrates by a mechanism within the protein itself. In the present paper we investigate the Na + glucose cotransporter expressed in Xenopus oocytes. We present a method which allows short-term exposures to sugar under voltage clamp conditions. We demonstrate that water is cotransported with the solutes despite no osmotic differences between the external and intracellular solutions. There is a fixed ratio of 195:1 between the number of water molecules and the number of Na+ ions transported, equivalent to 390 water molecules per glucose molecule. Unstirred layer effects are ruled out on the basis of experiments on native oocytes incubated with the ionophores gramicidin D or nystatin.


The Journal of Physiology | 2001

Isotonic transport by the Na+-glucose cotransporter SGLT1 from humans and rabbit

Thomas Zeuthen; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Donald D. F. Loo; Ernest M. Wright; D. A. Klaerke

1 In order to study its role in steady state water transport, the Na+‐glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) was expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes; both the human and the rabbit clones were tested. The transport activity was monitored as a clamp current and the flux of water followed optically as the change in oocyte volume. 2 SGLT1 has two modes of water transport. First, it acts as a molecular water pump: for each 2 Na+ and 1 sugar molecule 264 water molecules were cotransported in the human SGLT1 (hSGLT1), 424 for the rabbit SGLT1 (rSGLT1). Second, it acts as a water channel. 3 The cotransport of water was tightly coupled to the sugar‐induced clamp current. Instantaneous changes in clamp current induced by changes in clamp voltage were accompanied by instantaneous changes in the rate of water transport. 4 The cotransported solution was predicted to be hypertonic, and an osmotic gradient built up across the oocyte membrane with continued transport; this resulted in an additional osmotic influx of water. After 5‐10 min a steady state was achieved in which the total influx was predicted to be isotonic with the intracellular solution. 5 With the given expression levels, the steady state water transport was divided about equally between cotransport, osmosis across the SGLT1 and osmosis across the native oocyte membrane. 6 Coexpression of AQP1 with the SGLT1 increased the water permeability more than 10‐fold and steady state isotonic transport was achieved after less than 2 s of sugar activation. One‐third of the water was cotransported, and the remainder was osmotically driven through the AQP1. 7 The data suggest that SGLT1 has three roles in isotonic water transport: it cotransports water directly, it supplies a passive pathway for osmotic water transport, and it generates an osmotic driving force that can be employed by other pathways, for example aquaporins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Zinc potentiates an uncoupled anion conductance associated with the dopamine transporter

Anne-Kristine Meinild; Harald H. Sitte; Ulrik Gether

Binding of Zn2+ to an endogenous binding site in the dopamine transporter (DAT) leads to inhibition of dopamine (DA) uptake and enhancement of carrier-mediated substrate efflux. To elucidate the molecular mechanism for this dual effect, we expressed the DAT and selected mutants in Xenopus laevis oocytes and applied the two-electrode voltage clamp technique together with substrate flux studies employing radiolabeled tracers. Under voltage clamp conditions we found that Zn2+ (10 μm) enhanced the current induced by both DA and amphetamine. This was not accompanied by a change in the uptake rate but by a marked increase in the charge/DA flux coupling ratio as assessed from concomitant measurements of [3H]DA uptake and currents in voltage-clamped oocytes. These data suggest that Zn2+ facilitates an uncoupled ion conductance mediated by DAT. Whereas this required substrate in the wild type (WT), we observed that Zn2+ by itself activated such a conductance in a previously described mutant (Y335A). This signifies that the conductance is not strictly dependent on an active transport process. Ion substitution experiments in Y335A, as well as in WT, indicated that the uncoupled conductance activated by Zn2+ was mainly carried by Cl–. Experiments in oocytes under non-voltage-clamped conditions revealed furthermore that Zn2+ could enhance the depolarizing effect of substrates in oocytes expressing WT. The data suggest that by potentiating an uncoupled Cl– conductance, Zn2+ is capable of modulating the membrane potential of cells expressing DAT and as a result cause simultaneous inhibition of uptake and enhancement of efflux.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2006

Conformational Dynamics of hSGLT1 during Na+/Glucose Cotransport

Donald D. F. Loo; Bruce A. Hirayama; Movses H. Karakossian; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Ernest M. Wright

This study examines the conformations of the Na+/glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) during sugar transport using charge and fluorescence measurements on the human SGLT1 mutant G507C expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The mutant exhibited similar steady-state and presteady-state kinetics as wild-type SGLT1, and labeling of Cys507 by tetramethylrhodamine-6-maleimide had no effect on kinetics. Our strategy was to record changes in charge and fluorescence in response to rapid jumps in membrane potential in the presence and absence of sugar or the competitive inhibitor phlorizin. In Na+ buffer, step jumps in membrane voltage elicited presteady-state currents (charge movements) that decay to the steady state with time constants τmed (3–20 ms, medium) and τslow (15–70 ms, slow). Concurrently, SGLT1 rhodamine fluorescence intensity increased with depolarizing and decreased with hyperpolarizing voltages (ΔF). The charge vs. voltage (Q-V) and fluorescence vs. voltage (ΔF-V) relations (for medium and slow components) obeyed Boltzmann relations with similar parameters: zδ (apparent valence of voltage sensor) ≈ 1; and V0.5 (midpoint voltage) between −15 and −40 mV. Sugar induced an inward current (Na+/glucose cotransport), and reduced maximal charge (Qmax) and fluorescence (ΔFmax) with half-maximal concentrations (K0.5) of 1 mM. Increasing [αMDG]o also shifted the V0.5 for Q and ΔF to more positive values, with K0.5s ≈ 1 mM. The major difference between Q and ΔF was that at saturating [αMDG]o, the presteady-state current (and Qmax) was totally abolished, whereas ΔFmax was only reduced 50%. Phlorizin reduced both Qmax and ΔFmax (Ki ≈ 0.4 μM), with no changes in V0.5s or relaxation time constants. Simulations using an eight-state kinetic model indicate that external sugar increases the occupancy probability of inward-facing conformations at the expense of outward-facing conformations. The simulations predict, and we have observed experimentally, that presteady-state currents are blocked by saturating sugar, but not the changes in fluorescence. Thus we have isolated an electroneutral conformational change that has not been previously described. This rate-limiting step at maximal inward Na+/sugar cotransport (saturating voltage and external Na+ and sugar concentrations) is the slow release of Na+ from the internal surface of SGLT1. The high affinity blocker phlorizin locks the cotransporter in an inactive conformation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Cloning and Characterization of a Functional Human γ-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) Transporter, Human GAT-2

Bolette Christiansen; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Anders A. Jensen; Hans Bräuner-Osborne

Plasma membrane γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transporters act to terminate GABA neurotransmission in the mammalian brain. Intriguingly four distinct GABA transporters have been cloned from rat and mouse, whereas only three functional homologs of these transporters have been cloned from human. The aim of this study therefore was to search for this fourth missing human transporter. Using a bioinformatics approach, we successfully identified and cloned the full-length cDNA of a so far uncharacterized human GABA transporter (GAT). The predicted protein displays high sequence similarity to rat GAT-2 and mouse GAT3, and in accordance with the nomenclature for rat GABA transporters, we therefore refer to the transporter as human GAT-2. We used electrophysiological and cell-based methods to demonstrate that this protein is a functional transporter of GABA. The transport was saturable and dependent on both Na+ and Cl–. Pharmacologically the transporter is distinct from the other human GABA transporters and similar to rat GAT-2 and mouse GAT3 with high sensitivity toward GABA and β-alanine. Furthermore the GABA transport inhibitor (S)-SNAP-5114 displayed some inhibitory activity at the transporter. Expression analysis by reverse transcription-PCR showed that GAT-2 mRNA is present in human brain, kidney, lung, and testis. The finding of the human GAT-2 demonstrates for the first time that the four plasma membrane GABA transporters identified in several mammalian species are all conserved in human. Furthermore the availability of human GAT-2 enables the use of all human clones of the GABA transporters in drug development programs and functional characterization of novel inhibitors of GABA transport.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Elucidating Conformational Changes in the γ-Aminobutyric Acid Transporter-1

Anne-Kristine Meinild; Donald D. F. Loo; Soren Skovstrup; Ulrik Gether; Nanna MacAulay

The GABA transporter-1 (GAT-1) has three current-generating modes: GABA-coupled current, Li+-induced leak current, and Na+-dependent transient currents. We earlier hypothesized that Li+ is able to substitute for the first Na+ in the transport cycle and thereby induce a distinct conformation in GAT-1 and that the onset of the Li+-induced leak current at membrane potentials more negative than −50 mV was due to a voltage-dependent conformational change of the Li+-bound transporter. In this study, we set out to verify this hypothesis and seek insight into the structural dynamics underlying the leak current, as well as the sodium-dependent transient currents, by applying voltage clamp fluorometry to tetramethylrhodamine 6-maleimide-labeled GAT-1 expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. MTSET accessibility studies demonstrated the presence of two distinct conformations of GAT-1 in the presence of Na+ or Li+. The voltage-dependent fluorescence intensity changes obtained in Li+ buffer correlated with the Li+-induced leak currents, i.e. both were highly voltage-dependent and only present at hyperpolarized potentials (<−50 mV). The transient currents correlated directly with the voltage-dependent fluorescence data obtained in sodium buffer and the associated conformational changes were distinct from those associated with the Li+-induced leak current. The inhibitor potency of SKF89976A of the Li+- versus Na+-bound transporter confirmed the cationic dependence of the conformational occupancy. Our observations suggest that the microdomain situated at the external end of transmembrane I is involved in different conformational changes taking place either during the binding and release of sodium or during the initiation of the Li+-induced leak current.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Cell Volume Changes Regulate Slick (Slo2.1), but Not Slack (Slo2.2) K+ Channels

Maria de los Angeles Tejada; Kathleen Stople; Sofia Hammami Bomholtz; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Asser Nyander Poulsen; Dan A. Klaerke

Slick (Slo2.1) and Slack (Slo2.2) channels belong to the family of high-conductance K+ channels and have been found widely distributed in the CNS. Both channels are activated by Na+ and Cl− and, in addition, Slick channels are regulated by ATP. Therefore, the roles of these channels in regulation of cell excitability as well as ion transport processes, like regulation of cell volume, have been hypothesized. It is the aim of this work to evaluate the sensitivity of Slick and Slack channels to small, fast changes in cell volume and to explore mechanisms, which may explain this type of regulation. For this purpose Slick and Slack channels were co-expressed with aquaporin 1 in Xenopus laevis oocytes and cell volume changes of around 5% were induced by exposure to hypotonic or hypertonic media. Whole-cell currents were measured by two electrode voltage clamp. Our results show that Slick channels are dramatically stimulated (196% of control) by cell swelling and inhibited (57% of control) by a decrease in cell volume. In contrast, Slack channels are totally insensitive to similar cell volume changes. The mechanism underlining the strong volume sensitivity of Slick channels needs to be further explored, however we were able to show that it does not depend on an intact actin cytoskeleton, ATP release or vesicle fusion. In conclusion, Slick channels, in contrast to the similar Slack channels, are the only high-conductance K+ channels strongly sensitive to small changes in cell volume.


Biologics: Targets & Therapy | 2012

Clofilium inhibits Slick and Slack potassium channels

Maria de los Angeles Tejada; Kathleen Stolpe; Anne-Kristine Meinild; Dan A. Klaerke

Slick and Slack high-conductance potassium channels have been recently discovered, and are found in the central nervous system and in the heart. Both channels are activated by Na+ and Cl−, and Slick channels are also inhibited by adenosine triphospate (ATP). An important role of setting the resting membrane potential and controlling the basal excitability of neurons has been suggested for these channels. In addition, no specific blockers for these channels are known up to the present. With the purpose of studying the pharmacological characteristics of Slick and Slack channels, the effects of exposure to the antiarrhythmic compound clofilium were evaluated. Clofilium was able to modulate the activity of Slick and Slack channels effectively, with a stronger effect on Slack than Slick channels. In order to evaluate the pharmacological behavior of Slick and Slack channels further, 38 commonly used potassium channel blockers were tested. Screening of these compounds did not reveal any modulators of Slick and Slack channels, except for clofilium. The present study provides a first approach towards elucidating the pharmacological characteristics of Slick and Slack channels and could be the basis for future studies aimed at developing potent and specific blockers and activators for these channels.

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Thomas Zeuthen

University of Copenhagen

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Dan A. Klaerke

University of Copenhagen

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Ulrik Gether

University of Copenhagen

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Nanna MacAulay

University of Copenhagen

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Bo Belhage

University of Copenhagen

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