Lon J. Van Winkle
Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine
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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1993
Lon J. Van Winkle
Oocyte amino acid transport has physiological significance to oocytes and practical importance to molecular biologists and transport physiologists. Expression of heterologous mRNA in Xenopus oocytes is currently being used to help clone cDNAs for amino acid transporters and their effectors. A major question to be resolved in many of these studies is whether the injected mRNA codes for a transporter or an activator of an endogenous system. Nevertheless, the cDNAs of several families of amino acid transporters or their activators appear already to have been cloned. One such transporter is the anion exchanger, band 3, which may also transport glycine and taurine under some important physiological conditions such as hypoosmotic stress. Site-directed mutagenesis of band 3 has already shown that an amino acid residue believed to be at or near the active site nevertheless does not appear to influence Cl- transport in Xenopus oocytes expressing the modified band 3 protein. Continuation of such studies along with examination of transport of all possible substrates of band 3 should yield insight into the relationship between the structure and function of this transporter. Each of three other families not only contains amino acid transporters, but also appears to contain members that serve as transporters of neurotransmitters or their metabolites. Because of the distinct structural differences in the preferred substrates of different transporters within some of these families, elucidation of the tertiary and possibly quaternary structural relationships among the members of such families may reveal transport mechanisms. In addition, the grouping of neurotransmitters or their metabolites according to the family to which their transport systems and transporters belong could yield insight into mechanisms of brain development, function and evolution. Another family of transporters for cationic amino acids also serves, at least in one case, as a viral receptor. Hence, these or other transporters also could conceivably function in eggs as receptors for sperm and, more broadly, in cell-cell interactions as well as in amino acid transport. Moreover, a family of apparent amino acid transport activators are homologous to a family of glycosidases, so these activators could also serve to recognize carbohydrate structures on other cells or the extracellular matrix. Some of these activators appear to increase more than one amino acid transport activity in Xenopus oocytes. In other studies, expression of heterologous mRNA in oocytes has led apparently to detection of inhibitors as well as activators of amino acid transport. Some amino acid transport systems also could conceivably contain nucleic acid as well as glycoprotein components.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione; Barbara H. Farrington
The nature and ontogeny of Na(+)-dependent L-alanine transport was examined in mouse eggs and preimplantation conceptuses. Mediated L-alanine uptake was not detected in fertilized or unfertilized eggs, but a small amount of Na(+)-dependent L-alanine transport was detected in 2-cell conceptuses. Na(+)-dependent alanine transport was more rapid at the 8-cell stage of development, and more than 10-fold faster in blastocysts than in 8-cell conceptuses. Analog inhibition analyses were consistent with the interpretation that L-lysine-sensitive and L-lysine-resistant components of transport were present at the 2-cell, 8-cell and blastocyst stages of development. The range of amino acids and their analogs that inhibited the most conspicuous component of alanine transport in blastocysts was consistent with the conclusion that system B0,+ is largely responsible for L-alanine uptake in these conceptuses. Moreover, system B0,+, but not other known systems in blastocysts, became susceptible to activation as these conceptuses approached the time of implantation, so this activation could be involved in implantation. Although the data are consistent with the possibility that system B0,+ is also present in 2-cell and 8-cell conceptuses, the relatively slow L-alanine transport in conceptuses at these earlier stages of development precluded more detailed study of their ability to take up alanine. Similarly, the less conspicuous L-lysine-resistant component of L-alanine transport in blastocysts also may be present in conceptuses as early as the 2-cell stage. The L-lysine-resistant component of L-alanine transport could not be attributed to residual system B0,+ activity, however, because it was inhibited more strongly by trans-OH-L-proline than L-arginine, whereas the reverse was the case for system B0,+. Similarly, L-tryptophan and L-leucine each inhibited system B0,+ more strongly than L-serine or L-cysteine, whereas all four of these amino acids inhibited the L-lysine-resistant component equally well. Moreover, a Hofstee plot for L-alanine influx was consistent with the interpretation that at least two mediated components of Na(+)-dependent L-alanine transport are present in blastocysts. The less conspicuous component of L-alanine transport in blastocysts was relatively susceptible to inhibition by L-leucine and L-tryptophan, but it resisted inhibition by the model system A substrate, MeAIB, and the system ASC inhibitors, L-penicillamine and cationic amino acids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1994
Lon J. Van Winkle; Meghana Patel; Howard G. Wasserlauf; Helen R. Dickinson; Allan L. Campione
Taurine was shown recently to increase the frequency at which 2-cell mouse conceptuses develop into blastocysts in vitro. For this reason and because taurine helps cells adapt to external stresses, we studied transport of this and related amino acids by preimplantation mouse conceptuses. The most conspicuous component of taurine transport in conceptuses at the 1-cell through blastocyst stages of development was both Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent. This Na(+)- and Cl(-)-dependent transport system interacted relatively strongly with beta- but not alpha-amino acids. By these criteria, transport system beta is responsible for Na(+)-dependent taurine transport in preimplantation mouse conceptuses. Moreover, detection of mRNA encoding the taurine transport protein (TAUT) in early conceptuses supports the theory that TAUT is a major component of system beta. Transport of taurine by system beta in 1-cell conceptuses was slower in hypotonic than in hypertonic media, whereas the reverse was true for system beta in blastocysts. In contrast, hypotonically stimulated Na(+)-independent taurine transport was, of course, more rapid in hypotonic than in hypertonic media in both 1-cell conceptuses and blastocysts. Transport via this hypotonically stimulated process also showed no sign of saturation by up to 10 mM taurine. Hypotonically stimulated taurine transport appeared transiently in 1-cell conceptuses under hypotonic conditions until they had recovered their initial volumes. Hence, we suggest that a decrease in taurine uptake via system beta and an increase in taurine exodus via the Na(+)-independent, nonsaturable transport process could contribute to the regulatory volume decrease in 1-cell conceptuses in hypotonic medium. Since taurine uptake by system beta in blastocysts is, however, higher in hypotonic than in hypertonic media, taurine uptake by system beta in blastocysts might intensify a tendency to increase cell volume in hypotonic medium. Such an increase in taurine uptake could further favor anabolic changes associated with cell swelling. In addition to contributing to regulation of cellular volume and perhaps metabolism, the hypotonically stimulated Na(+)-independent transport processes in early embryos have novel characteristics. Hypotonically stimulated Na(+)-independent taurine transport was inhibited by niflumate, N-ethylmaleimide and NaN3 but not by furosemide, iodoacetate, KCN, ouabain or alpha- or beta-amino acids. Furthermore, 4,4-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2-disulfonate inhibited this transport in 1-cell conceptuses but not in blastocysts. Hence, different hypotonically stimulated Na(+)-independent taurine transport processes appear to be present in 1-cell conceptuses vs. blastocysts. The functions of these and other instances of developmental regulation of expression of transport processes in preimplantation conceptuses remain largely to be elucidated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Developmental Biology | 1991
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione
The results of histochemical and immunocytochemical studies have been used elsewhere to support the hypothesis that Na+/K(+)-ATPase expression is initiated or increases dramatically in preimplantation mouse conceptuses just before they begin to cavitate. Moreover, localization of the enzyme in the inner membrane of the mural trophoblast is thought to be involved directly in formation and maintenance of the blastocyst cavity. Presumably, Na+/K(+)-ATPase extrudes the cation, Na+, and therefore water into the cavity. The cation transporting activity of the enzyme can be determined by measuring ouabain-sensitive Rb+ uptake by cells. Therefore, we measured Rb+ uptake in mouse eggs and preimplantation conceptuses at various stages of development. 86Rb+ uptake by conceptuses increased linearly with time for at least 60 min in medium containing 0.7 mM total Rb+ plus K+ in the absence or presence of 1.0 mM ouabain, and ouabain inhibited more than 70% of 86Rb+ uptake. The ouabain concentration at 1/2 of maximum inhibition of the ouabain-sensitive component of 86Rb+ uptake was about 10-20 microM in eggs and conceptuses at all stages of preimplantation development. Moreover, ouabain-sensitive Rb+ uptake had a twofold higher Vmax value in blastocysts than in eggs or conceptuses at earlier stages of development (i.e., approximately 173 vs 70-100 fmole.conceptus-1.min-1), although the total cell surface area also was probably about two times greater in blastocysts than in eggs or other conceptuses. Ouabain-sensitive Rb+ transport in eggs and conceptuses may have occurred via a single ouabain-sensitive Rb+ transporter with a Hill coefficient of 1.5-1.8 (Hill plots). When it was assumed that the Hill coefficient had a value of 2.0, however, eggs and conceptuses appeared to contain at least two forms of Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity. These studies are the first to show that the cation transporting activity of Na+/K(+)-ATPase can be measured quantitatively in mammalian eggs and preimplantation conceptuses. Inclusion of this assay in experiments designed to determine how Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity is controlled in oocytes and conceptuses should yield further insight into the role of this enzyme in oogenesis and preimplantation development.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione; James M. Gorman; Brian D. Weimer
Uptake of leucine, lysine, and arginine was predominantly Na(+)-independent in mouse conceptuses through the 8-cell stage of development, and two components of saturable transport were detected for each of these amino acids. Uptake of cationic substrates from solutions near 1 microM was inhibited most strongly by bulky cationic and zwitterionic amino acids whose carbon skeletons do not branch at the alpha or beta positions. By this criterion, system b0,+ accounted for most of the Na(+)-independent arginine and lysine transport in eggs and conceptuses throughout preimplantation development. A small, leucine-resistant, cation-preferring component of amino acid transport was also detected in these cells. Leucine uptake was inhibited most strongly by bicyclic, branched-chain or benzenoid, zwitterionic amino acids in eggs and conceptuses prior to formation of blastocysts. Therefore, it appeared to be taken up mainly by system L, while system b0,+ accounted for a smaller portion of leucine uptake during this developmental period. In blastocysts, in contrast, system L was less conspicuous, and system b0,+ was primarily responsible for Na(+)-independent leucine uptake. The Vmax values for transport of amino acids by system b0,+ increased by up to 30-fold in conceptuses between the 1-cell and blastocyst stages. In contrast, the Vmax value for leucine transport via system L decreased while the Km value increased between these two developmental stages. Although several explanations for these changes are possible, we favor the hypothesis that the density of system L transport sites in plasma membranes decreases while the number of system b0,+ sites increases during development of blastocysts from 1-cell conceptuses.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione
In a previous study, a Na(+)-independent, cation-preferring amino acid transport system was detected in preimplantation mouse blastocysts. The system resisted Na(+)-dependent inhibition by homoserine and so resembled the lysosomal system c more than it resembled the plasmalemmal system y+. We now report the presence of a cation-preferring system in unfertilized and fertilized eggs and cleavage-state conceptuses which also resists Na(+)-dependent inhibition by homoserine. The systems in 1-cell conceptuses and blastocysts are, however, insensitive to changes in pH in the interval of 6.0 to 8.0 and, thus, different from the pH-sensitive system c. Moreover, the relative strengths of the interactions of a variety of basic amino acids with the systems in conceptuses do not correspond well with the relative strengths of their interactions with either system c or system y+. Similarly, the system in 1-cell conceptuses can be distinguished from the system in blastocysts because L-arginine interacts about equally well with each of these systems, whereas the system in 1-cell conceptuses is inhibited more strongly than the system in blastocysts by most other basic amino acids. In addition, inhibition of the system in 1-cell conceptuses by some basic amino acids is Na(+)-stimulated, whereas Na+ does not affect inhibition of the system in blastocysts. Finally, L-tryptophan inhibits the system in blastocysts better than L-histidine or D-arginine do, but the reverse is true for the system in 1-cell conceptuses. Therefore, the relative activities of at least two forms of a novel, cation preferring amino acid transport process change during development of blastocysts from fertilized eggs. For convenience, the forms of the cation-preferring transport processes that seem to predominate at the 1-cell and blastocysts stages are provisionally designated systems b+1 and b+2, respectively, although these two systems need not represent entirely different gene products.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione; James M. Gorman
The most conspicuous, Na(+)-independent amino acid transport process in preimplantation mouse blastocysts was provisionally designated system b0,+ because it accepts some cationic and zwitterionic amino acids about equally well as substrates. Although system b0,+ is not Na(+)-stimulated, it has not been determined if it is inhibited by Na+, or if its activity is affected by most other ions. Therefore, we measured uptake of amino acids by blastocysts in isotonic solutions of different ionic and nonionic osmolites. Na(+)-independent L-leucine uptake was unaffected by the ion concentration, but L-lysine transport was several-fold faster in isotonic solutions of non-electrolytes than in similar solutions of inorganic and organic salts or zwitterions. The Km value for Na(+)-independent L-lysine transport was about 10-fold higher in isotonic salt solutions than in solutions of nonionic osmolites, whereas the Km value for L-leucine transport was about the same in either type of solution. Therefore, inorganic and organic cations and the cationic portions of zwitterions appear to compete with cationic but not zwitterionic amino acids for system b0,+ receptor sites. The cation, harmaline, was a particularly strong competitive inhibitor of Na(+)-independent L-lysine uptake by system b0,+, even in isotonic salt solutions, whereas it inhibited L-leucine uptake noncompetitively. Moreover, harmaline appeared to compete with inorganic cations for the lysine receptor sites of system b0,+. Harmaline also has been found by other investigators to competitively inhibit L-lysine uptake by the Na(+)-independent system asc1 in horse erythrocytes, whereas it noncompetitively inhibits alanine uptake by the same system. Similarly, harmaline noncompetitively inhibits L-alanine uptake by the Na(+)-dependent system ASC in human erythrocytes, but it appears to compete for binding with L-alanines cosubstrate, Na+. In addition, others have found that the positively-charged side chains of cationic amino acids seem to take the place of Na+ needed near side chains in order for zwitterionic amino acids to be transported by systems ASC and y+. We conclude that system b0,+ may be similar to systems asc1, ASC and y+, and that each of these systems may be a variant of the same ancestral transport process. We speculate that since it appears to accept a broader scope of substrates and to interact with a wider variety of cations than do systems asc1, ASC or y+, system b0,+ may more closely resemble the proposed ancestral transport process than any of the other contemporary systems.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987
Lon J. Van Winkle; Allan L. Campione
The capacity of preimplantation mouse blastocysts to express the novel amino acid transport activity provisionally designated system B0,+ increased approximately 3-fold 1 day after administration of estrogen to their progesterone-primed, ovariectomized mothers. Nevertheless, blastocysts obtained 22-25 h after estrogen administration (implanting blastocysts) had to be incubated in vitro for about 20 min before they fully expressed their B0,+ activity. No similar increase in B0,+ activity was observed upon incubation of blastocysts obtained before estrogen administration (diapausing blastocysts). Rapid metabolic changes can be induced in the uterus by massaging it with a blunt instrument while it is receptive to implantation, and this treatment was found to increase the apparent B0,+ activity in implanting but not diapausing blastocysts. In contrast, the activity of an incompletely characterized, Na+-independent system, which accepts L-lysine as a substrate, decreased more than 2-fold when implanting blastocysts were incubated in vitro. No change in Na+-independent lysine uptake was detected during incubation of diapausing blastocysts. It is suggested that both uteri and blastocysts develop the capacity to change rapidly some of their metabolic processes near the time of implantation, and one of the processes which may be subject to rapid change in blastocysts is amino acid transport. These developmental events appear to coincide with and could be required for the decidual cell response and implantation of blastocysts in the uterus.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1992
Lon J. Van Winkle; David F. Mann; Howard G. Wasserlauf; Meghana Patel
L-Glutamate and L-cystine appeared to compete for transport via a mediated Na(+)-independent transport process in 1- and 2-cell conceptuses. Not only did these substances competitively inhibit each others uptake by conceptuses, but their Ki values for inhibition were about equal to their Km values for transport in 1-cell conceptuses. Moreover, the transport process interacted strongly with L-amino acids that had 3-6 atoms in a chain between their negatively charged groups, whereas it interacted weakly or not at all with amino acids that did not have these characteristics or that were N-methylated. Transport of anionic amino acids was not altered greatly by pH in the range 4.5-8.0, but transport of L-cystine was much faster at higher pH values. The slower cystine transport at lower pH values was due primarily to protonation of its second amino group. A small increase in the degree of deprotonation of cystines carboxyl groups also probably contributed slightly to its faster transport at higher pH values. By all of these criteria, the transport process in conceptuses appears to be a form of amino acid transport system xc-. System xc- activity was several-fold higher in 1- than in 2-cell conceptuses. Similarly, L-glutamate uptake by unfertilized eggs was relatively rapid, whereas it was much slower in immature, fully-grown oocytes. System xc- activity in 1-cell conceptuses also appeared to increase in response to the oxidative stress of culture, whereas no such increase was observed for 2-cell conceptuses. We suggest that this transient increase in the activity of system xc- activity during development of 2-cell conceptuses from immature, fully-grown oocytes could help protect unfertilized and fertilized eggs from oxidative stresses in situ.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Lon J. Van Winkle; David F. Mann; Allan L. Campione; Barbara H. Farrington
We have studied transport of L-tryptophan, L-tyrosine and L-phenylalanine as factors contributing to homeostasis of these amino acids in preimplantation mouse conceptuses. Benzenoid amino acids were transported by the Na(+)-independent systems L and b0,+ in 1-cell conceptuses, and by these systems plus the Na(+)-dependent systems B0,+ and B in blastocysts. In addition, a component of Na(+)-independent tryptophan, tyrosine and phenylalanine transport in 1-cell and 2-cell conceptuses and in blastocysts resisted inhibition by L-leucine. The latter component of transport not only preferred benzenoid amino acids and in particular tryptophan as substrates, but it also was inhibited strongly and competitively by alpha-N-methyl-L-tryptophan. The leucine-resistant component of tryptophan transport also was inhibited strongly by N-ethylmaleimide and D-tryptophan, and it appeared to be inhibited weakly by 3-amino-endo-bicyclo[3.2.1]octane-3-carboxylic acid (BCO) but not by other amino acids tested as inhibitors. By these criteria, the leucine-resistant component of transport of benzenoid amino acids resembled system T in human red blood cells and rat hepatocytes. It is not entirely clear why preimplantation blastocysts have five good systems for transport of tryptophan. It is possible, however, that tryptophan homeostasis is particularly important during preimplantation development since it has been shown elsewhere that tryptophan availability in blood increases within one day after rat eggs are fertilized.