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Original Article

Taurine Transport in Human Placental Microvillous Membrane Vesicles

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Pages 223-228 | Received 13 Oct 1992, Accepted 14 Jun 1993, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Taurine, a β-amino acid, is actively transported across the in vitro perfused human placenta. To further characterize the transport mechanism microvillous membrane vesicles (MVV) were prepared from the apical brush border of human term placentae by Mg2 +-aggregation and differential centrifuga-tion. Vesicular uptake of taurine was measured by rapid filtration technique at 25oC using [U-14C] taurine. All data are expressed as mean ± SEM. The course of uptake over time in the presence of an inward Na+ gradient (n = 4) revealed an “overshoot” phenomena. When Na+ was replaced with K+ in the incubation medium (n = 4), the overshoot was abolished and the uptake rate was sharply reduced. Uptake velocities at taurine concentrations from 1 to 35 μM were studied (n = 6) showing that taurine uptake was saturable and the Km was 12.1 μM and the Vmax was 36.2 pmol/mg protein/min. Hypotaurine, β-alanine, and taurine all inhibited the uptake of taurine by MVV (n = 4). Taurine is actively transported into MVV from human term placentae by a Na+-dependent carrier that is inhibited by β-amino acids, and therefore conforms to the β-carrier described in other tissues.

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