Title Molecular determinants of pH sensitivity of the type IIa Na/Pi cotransporter
Authors DE LA HORRA PADILLA, CARMEN, Hernando, N , Lambert, G , Forster, I , Biber, J , Murer, H
External publication Si
Means JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 1
SJR Quartile 1
JCR Impact 7.368
SJR Impact 5.435
Publication date 03/03/2000
ISI 000085654400037
DOI 10.1074/jbc.275.9.6284
Abstract Type II Na/P-i cotransporters play key roles in epithelial P-i transport and thereby contribute to overall P-i homeostasis, Renal proximal tubular brush border membrane expresses the IIa isoform, whereas the IIb isoform is preferentially expressed in small intestinal brush border membrane of mammals. IIa and Hb proteins are predicted to contain eight transmembrane domains with the N- and C-terminal tails facing the cytoplasm. They differ in their pH dependences: the activity of IIa increases at higher pH, whereas the Db shows no or a slightly opposite pH dependence. To determine the structural domains responsible for the difference in pH sensitivity, mouse IIa and IIb chimeras were constructed, and their pH dependence was characterized, A region between the fourth and fifth transmembrane domains was required for conferring pH sensitivity to the IIa-mediated Na/P-i cotransport. Sequence comparison (IIa versus IIb) of the third extracellular loops revealed a stretch of three charged amino acids in IIa (RER) replaced by uncharged residues in IIb (GNT). Introduction of the uncharged GNT sequence (by REK) in IIa abolished its pH dependence, whereas introduction of the charged REK stretch in Tm (by GNT) led to a pH dependence similar to IIa. These findings suggest that charged residues within the third extracellular loop are involved in the pH sensitivity of IIa Na/P-i cotransporter.
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