Unidirectional arginine transport in reconstituted plasma-membrane vesicles from yeast overexpressing CAN1
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In: European Journal of Biochemistry, Vol. 211, No. 3, 01.02.1993, p. 683-8.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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T1 - Unidirectional arginine transport in reconstituted plasma-membrane vesicles from yeast overexpressing CAN1
AU - Opekarová, M
AU - Caspari, Thomas
AU - Tanner, Widmar
PY - 1993/2/1
Y1 - 1993/2/1
N2 - Amino acids are accumulated in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by strictly unidirectional influx systems. To see whether cellular compartmentation causes this unusual amino-acid-transport behaviour, arginine transport was studied in plasma-membrane vesicles. The arginine permease gene CAN1 was overexpressed in S. cerevisiae RH218a and in a permease-deficient mutant RS453 (can1). Reconstituted plasma-membrane vesicles from these transformants, energized by incorporated cytochrome-c oxidase, showed 3-4-fold increased rates of arginine uptake compared to vesicles from wild-type cells. The KT values were 32.5 microM in vesicles from wild-type and 28.6 microM in vesicles from transformed cells; the corresponding in vivo values were 17.5 microM and 11.4 microM, respectively. It could be demonstrated that unidirectional arginine transport and accumulation also exist in vesicles; thus, unidirectional influx is not related to cellular compartmentation.
AB - Amino acids are accumulated in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by strictly unidirectional influx systems. To see whether cellular compartmentation causes this unusual amino-acid-transport behaviour, arginine transport was studied in plasma-membrane vesicles. The arginine permease gene CAN1 was overexpressed in S. cerevisiae RH218a and in a permease-deficient mutant RS453 (can1). Reconstituted plasma-membrane vesicles from these transformants, energized by incorporated cytochrome-c oxidase, showed 3-4-fold increased rates of arginine uptake compared to vesicles from wild-type cells. The KT values were 32.5 microM in vesicles from wild-type and 28.6 microM in vesicles from transformed cells; the corresponding in vivo values were 17.5 microM and 11.4 microM, respectively. It could be demonstrated that unidirectional arginine transport and accumulation also exist in vesicles; thus, unidirectional influx is not related to cellular compartmentation.
KW - Amino Acid Transport Systems
KW - Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic
KW - Arginine
KW - Biological Transport
KW - Cell Membrane
KW - Gene Expression
KW - Kinetics
KW - Liposomes
KW - Membrane Transport Proteins
KW - Plasmids
KW - Saccharomyces cerevisiae
KW - Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
KW - Transformation, Genetic
KW - Journal Article
KW - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
U2 - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb17596.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1993.tb17596.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 8436127
VL - 211
SP - 683
EP - 688
JO - European Journal of Biochemistry
JF - European Journal of Biochemistry
SN - 0014-2956
IS - 3
ER -