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Browsing by Subject "Symporters"

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    Human SLC4A11 Is a Novel NH3/H+ Co-transporter
    (American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2015-07-03) Zhang, Wenlin; Ogando, Diego G.; Bonanno, Joseph A.; Obukhov, Alexander G.; Department of Cellular & Integrative Physiology, IU School of Medicine
    SLC4A11 has been proposed to be an electrogenic membrane transporter, permeable to Na(+), H(+) (OH(-)), bicarbonate, borate, and NH4 (+). Recent studies indicate, however, that neither bicarbonate or borate is a substrate. Here, we examined potential NH4 (+), Na(+), and H(+) contributions to electrogenic ion transport through SLC4A11 stably expressed in Na(+)/H(+) exchanger-deficient PS120 fibroblasts. Inward currents observed during exposure to NH4Cl were determined by the [NH3]o, not [NH4 (+)]o, and current amplitudes varied with the [H(+)] gradient. These currents were relatively unaffected by removal of Na(+), K(+), or Cl(-) from the bath but could be reduced by inclusion of NH4Cl in the pipette solution. Bath pH changes alone did not generate significant currents through SLC4A11, except immediately following exposure to NH4Cl. Reversal potential shifts in response to changing [NH3]o and pHo suggested an NH3/H(+)-coupled transport mode for SLC4A11. Proton flux through SLC4A11 in the absence of ammonia was relatively small, suggesting that ammonia transport is of more physiological relevance. Methylammonia produced currents similar to NH3 but with reduced amplitude. Estimated stoichiometry of SLC4A11 transport was 1:2 (NH3/H(+)). NH3-dependent currents were insensitive to 10 μM ethyl-isopropyl amiloride or 100 μM 4,4'- diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid. We propose that SLC4A11 is an NH3/2H(+) co-transporter exhibiting unique characteristics.
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    Spinoculation Enhances HBV Infection in NTCP-Reconstituted Hepatocytes
    (Public Library of Science, 2015) Yan, Ran; Zhang, Yongmei; Cai, Dawei; Liu, Yuanjie; Cuconati, Andrea; Guo, Haitao; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, IU School of Medicine
    Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and its sequelae remain a major public health burden, but both HBV basic research and the development of antiviral therapeutics have been hindered by the lack of an efficient in vitro infection system. Recently, sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) has been identified as the HBV receptor. We herein report that we established a NTCP-complemented HepG2 cell line (HepG2-NTCP12) that supports HBV infection, albeit at a low infectivity level following the reported infection procedures. In our attempts to optimize the infection conditions, we found that the centrifugation of HepG2-NTCP12 cells during HBV inoculation (termed "spinoculation") significantly enhanced the virus infectivity. Moreover, the infection level gradually increased with accelerated speed of spinoculation up to 1,000g tested. However, the enhancement of HBV infection was not significantly dependent upon the duration of centrifugation. Furthermore, covalently closed circular (ccc) DNA was detected in infected cells under optimized infection condition by conventional Southern blot, suggesting a successful establishment of HBV infection after spinoculation. Finally, the parental HepG2 cells remained uninfected under HBV spinoculation, and HBV entry inhibitors targeting NTCP blocked HBV infection when cells were spinoculated, suggesting the authentic virus entry mechanism is unaltered under centrifugal inoculation. Our data suggest that spinoculation could serve as a standard protocol for enhancing the efficiency of HBV infection in vitro.
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