Anthony C Illing
University of Cincinnati
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Featured researches published by Anthony C Illing.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Anthony C Illing; Ali Shawki; Christopher L. Cunningham; Bryan Mackenzie
Background: DMT1 plays essential roles in iron homeostasis, but questions remain about which other metals this transporter serves. Results: DMT1 exhibits substrate selectivity Cd2+ > Fe2+ > Co2+, Mn2+ ≫ Ni2+, VO2+, Zn2+. Conclusion: DMT1 is an iron-preferring transporter that does not transport copper. Significance: These findings will help in predicting the contribution of DMT1 to absorption and cellular uptake of metal ions. Divalent metal-ion transporter-1 (DMT1) is a H+-coupled metal-ion transporter that plays essential roles in iron homeostasis. DMT1 exhibits reactivity (based on evoked currents) with a broad range of metal ions; however, direct measurement of transport is lacking for many of its potential substrates. We performed a comprehensive substrate-profile analysis for human DMT1 expressed in RNA-injected Xenopus oocytes by using radiotracer assays and the continuous measurement of transport by fluorescence with the metal-sensitive PhenGreen SK fluorophore. We provide validation for the use of PhenGreen SK fluorescence quenching as a reporter of cellular metal-ion uptake. We determined metal-ion selectivity under fixed conditions using the voltage clamp. Radiotracer and continuous measurement of transport by fluorescence assays revealed that DMT1 mediates the transport of several metal ions that were ranked in selectivity by using the ratio Imax/K0.5 (determined from evoked currents at −70 mV): Cd2+ > Fe2+ > Co2+, Mn2+ ≫ Zn2+, Ni2+, VO2+. DMT1 expression did not stimulate the transport of Cr2+, Cr3+, Cu+, Cu2+, Fe3+, Ga3+, Hg2+, or VO+. 55Fe2+ transport was competitively inhibited by Co2+ and Mn2+. Zn2+ only weakly inhibited 55Fe2+ transport. Our data reveal that DMT1 selects Fe2+ over its other physiological substrates and provides a basis for predicting the contribution of DMT1 to intestinal, nasal, and pulmonary absorption of metal ions and their cellular uptake in other tissues. Whereas DMT1 is a likely route of entry for the toxic heavy metal cadmium, and may serve the metabolism of cobalt, manganese, and vanadium, we predict that DMT1 should contribute little if at all to the absorption or uptake of zinc. The conclusion in previous reports that copper is a substrate of DMT1 is not supported.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2011
Jorge J. Pinilla-Tenas; Brian K. Sparkman; Ali Shawki; Anthony C Illing; Colin J. Mitchell; Ningning Zhao; Robert J. Cousins; Mitchell D. Knutson; Bryan Mackenzie
Recent studies have shown that overexpression of the transmembrane protein Zrt- and Irt-like protein 14 (Zip14) stimulates the cellular uptake of zinc and nontransferrin-bound iron (NTBI). Here, we directly tested the hypothesis that Zip14 transports free zinc, iron, and other metal ions by using the Xenopus laevis oocyte heterologous expression system, and use of this approach also allowed us to characterize the functional properties of Zip14. Expression of mouse Zip14 in RNA-injected oocytes stimulated the uptake of (55)Fe in the presence of l-ascorbate but not nitrilotriacetic acid, indicating that Zip14 is an iron transporter specific for ferrous ion (Fe(2+)) over ferric ion (Fe(3+)). Zip14-mediated (55)Fe(2+) uptake was saturable (K(0.5) ≈ 2 μM), temperature-dependent (apparent activation energy, E(a) = 15 kcal/mol), pH-sensitive, Ca(2+)-dependent, and inhibited by Co(2+), Mn(2+), and Zn(2+). HCO(3)(-) stimulated (55)Fe(2+) transport. These properties are in close agreement with those of NTBI uptake in the perfused rat liver and in isolated hepatocytes reported in the literature. Zip14 also mediated the uptake of (109)Cd(2+), (54)Mn(2+), and (65)Zn(2+) but not (64)Cu (I or II). (65)Zn(2+) uptake also was saturable (K(0.5) ≈ 2 μM) but, notably, the metal-ion inhibition profile and Ca(2+) dependence of Zn(2+) transport differed from those of Fe(2+) transport, and we propose a model to account for these observations. Our data reveal that Zip14 is a complex, broad-scope metal-ion transporter. Whereas zinc appears to be a preferred substrate under normal conditions, we found that Zip14 is capable of mediating cellular uptake of NTBI characteristic of iron-overload conditions.
Neurochemical Research | 2008
Bryan Mackenzie; Anthony C Illing; Marie Morris; Hélène Varoqui; Jeffrey D. Erickson
VGLUT2 is one of three vesicular glutamate transporters that play crucial roles in glutamatergic excitatory neurotransmission. We explored the functional properties of the rat VGLUT2 by heterologous expression of VGLUT2 in Xenopus oocytes. Immunocytochemical analysis indicated that most VGLUT2 protein was expressed in intracellular compartments but that some expression occurred also on the plasma membrane. Functional analysis revealed VGLUT2 to be active in two independent modes, namely, uptake into intracellular organelles and efflux at the plasma membrane. VGLUT-specific transport was identified based on the strong preference for glutamate over aspartate—in contrast to plasma-membrane or mitochondrial glutamate transporters—and sensitivity to known VGLUT blockers. VGLUT2 expression in oocytes (1) stimulated the influx of l-[3H]glutamate, but not d-[3H]aspartate, into digitonin-permeabilized oocytes and (2) stimulated efflux of l-glutamate, but not l-aspartate, from intact oocytes preinjected with 3H-labeled amino acids. In the latter assay, cellular efflux of glutamate (which was blocked by rose bengal and trypan blue) may be analogous to vesicular packaging of glutamate. Our data are consistent with VGLUT2-mediated H+/l-glutamate antiport, but not antiport with chloride. Expression of mammalian VGLUT1 and VGLUT3 also stimulated l-[3H]glutamate efflux from Xenopus oocytes, suggesting that this phenomenon is a general feature of vesicular glutamate transporters. Our findings support the idea that vesicular glutamate transporters, when transiently expressed on the neuronal plasma membrane, may mediate Ca2+-independent glutamate leakage in addition to their traditional role of packaging glutamate into synaptic vesicles for Ca2+-dependent exocytosis.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2008
Bryan Mackenzie; Anthony C Illing; Matthias A. Hediger
The FASEB Journal | 2007
Anthony C Illing; Ali Shawki; Christopher L. Cunningham; Bryan Mackenzie
The FASEB Journal | 2008
Ali Shawki; Anthony C Illing; Bryan Mackenzie
The FASEB Journal | 2006
Ali Shawki; Anthony C Illing; Bryan Mackenzie
The FASEB Journal | 2009
Jorge J Pinilla Tenas; Brian K. Sparkman; Anthony C Illing; Robert J. Cousins; Mitchell D. Knutson; Bryan Mackenzie
The FASEB Journal | 2008
Ali Shawki; Anthony C Illing; Roger T. Worrell; Bryan Mackenzie
The FASEB Journal | 2014
Ali Shawki; Anthony C Illing; Bryan Mackenzie