5 resultados para Transporter Protein
em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland
Resumo:
Drug transporting membrane proteins are expressed in various human tissues and blood-tissue barriers, regulating the transfer of drugs, toxins and endogenous compounds into or out of the cells. Various in vitro and animal experiments suggest that P-glycoprotein (P-gp) forms a functional barrier between maternal and fetal blood circulation in the placenta thereby protecting the fetus from exposure to xenobiotics during pregnancy. The multidrug resistance-associated protein 1 (MRP1) is a relatively less studied transporter protein in the human placenta. The aim of this study series was to study the role of placental transporters, apical P-gp and basal MRP1, using saquinavir as a probe drug, and to study transfer of quetiapine and the role of P-gp in its transfer in the dually perfused human placenta/cotyledon. Furthermore, two ABCB1 (encoding P-gp) polymorphisms (c.3435C>T, p.Ile1145Ile and c.2677G>T/A, p.Ala893Ser/Thr) were studied to determine their impact on P-gp protein expression level and on the transfer of the study drugs. Also, the influence of the P-gp protein expression level on the transfer of the study drugs was addressed. Because P-gp and MRP1 are ATP-dependent drug-efflux pumps, it was studied whether exogenous ATP is needed for the function of ATP-dependent transporter in the present experimental model. The present results indicated that the addition of exogenous ATP was not necessary for transporter function in the perfused human placental cotyledon. Saquinavir and quetiapine were both found to cross the human placenta; transplacental transfer (TPTAUC %) for saquinavir was <0.5% and for quetiapine 3.7%. Pharmacologic blocking of P-gp led to disruption of the blood-placental barrier (BPB) and increased the placental transfer of P-gp substrate, saquinavir, into the fetal circulation by 6- to 8-fold. In reversed perfusions P-gp, MRP1 and possibly OATP2B1 had a negligible role in the fetal-to-maternal transfer of saquinavir. The TPTAUC % of saquinavir was about 100-fold greater from the fetal side to the maternal side compared with the maternal-to-fetal transfer. P-gp activity is not likely to modify the placental transfer of quetiapine. Higher P-gp protein expression levels were associated with the variant allele 3435T, but no correlation was found between the TPTAUC % of saquinavir and placental P-gp protein expression. The present results indicate that P-gp activity drastically affects the fetal exposure to saquinavir, and suggest that pharmacological blockade of the P-gp activity during pregnancy may pose an increased risk for adverse fetal outcome. The blockade of P-gp activity could be used in purpose to obtain higher drug concentration to the fetal side, for example, in prevention (to decrease virus transfer to fetal side) or in treating sick fetus.
Resumo:
Fluoresenssiperusteiset kuvantamismenetelmät lysinurisen proteiini-intoleranssin (LPI) soluhäiriön tutkimuksessa Lysinurinen proteiini-intoleranssi on suomalaiseen tautiperintöön kuuluva autosomaalisesti peit¬tyvästi periytyvä sairaus, jonka aiheuttaa kationisten aminohappojen kuljetushäiriö munuaisten ja ohutsuolen epiteelisolujen basolateraalikalvolla. Aminohappojen kuljetushäiriö johtaa moniin oirei¬siin, kuten kasvuhäiriöön, osteoporoosiin, immuunijärjestelmän häiriöihin, oksenteluun ja runsaspro¬teiinisen ravinnon nauttimisen jälkeiseen hyperammonemiaan. LPI-geeni SLC7A7 (solute carrier family 7 member 7) koodaa y+LAT1 proteiinia, joka on basolateraali¬nen kationisten ja neutraalien aminohappojen kuljettimen kevyt ketju, joka muodostaa heterodimee¬rin raskaan alayksikön 4F2hc:n kanssa. Tällä hetkellä SLC7A7-geenistä tunnetaan yli 50 LPI:n aiheut¬tavaa mutaatiota. Tässä tutkimuksessa erityyppisiä y+LAT1:n LPI-mutaatiota sekä yhdeksän C-terminaalista polypep¬tidiä lyhentävää deleetiota kuvannettiin nisäkässoluissa y+LAT1:n GFP (green fluorescent protein) -fuusioproteiineina. Tulokset vahvistivat muissa soluissa tehdyt havainnot siitä, että 4F2hc on edel¬lytyksenä y+LAT1:n solukalvokuljetukselle, G54V-pistemutantti sijaitsee solukalvolla samoin kuin vil¬lityyppinen proteiini, mutta lukukehystä muuttavia ja proteiinia lyhentäviä mutantteja ei kuljeteta solukalvoon. Lisäksi havaittiin, että poikkeuksena tästä säännöstä ovat y+LAT1-deleetioproteiinit, joista puuttui korkeintaan 50 C-terminaalista aminohappoa. Nämä lyhentyneet kuljettimet sijaitsevat solukalvolla kuten villityyppiset ja LPI-pistemutanttiproteiinit. Dimerisaation osuutta kuljetushäiriön synnyssä tutkittiin käyttämällä fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) menetelmää. Heterodimeerin alayksiköistä kloonattiin ECFP (cyan) ja EYFP (yellow) fuusioproteiinit, joita ilmennettiin nisäkässoluissa, ja FRET mitattiin virtaussytometri-FRET -menetel¬mällä (FACS-FRET). Tutkimuksissa kaikkien mutanttien havaittiin dimerisoituvan yhtä tehokkaasti. Kul¬jetushäiriön syynä ei siten ole alayksiköiden dimerisaation estyminen mutaation seurauksena. Tutkimuksessa havaittiin, että kaikki mutantti-y+LAT1-transfektiot tuottavat vähemmän transfektoi¬tuneita soluja kuin villityyppisen y+LAT1:n transfektiot. Solupopulaatioissa, joihin oli tranfektoitu lu¬kukehystä muuttava tai stop-kodonin tuottava mutaatio havaittiin suurempi kuolleisuus kuin saman näytteen transfektoitumattomissa soluissa, kun taas villityyppistä tai G54V-pistemutanttia tuottavas¬sa solupopulaatiossa oli pienempi kuolleisuus kuin saman näytteen fuusioproteiinia ilmentämättö¬missä soluissa. Tulos osoittaa mutanttiproteiinien erilaiset vaikutukset niitä ilmentäviin soluihin, joko suoraan y+LAT1:n tai 4F2hc:n kautta aiheutuneina. LPIFin SLC7A7 lähetti-RNA:n määrä ei merkittävästi poikennut villityyppisen määrästä fibroblasteissa ja lymfoblasteissa. SLC7A7:n promoottorianalyysissä oli osoitettavissa säätelyalueita geenin 5’ ei-koo¬daavalla alueella sekä ensimmäisten kahden intronin alueella. LPI-taudin tautimekanismin kannalta keskeisin tekijä on kuitenkin aminohappokuljetuksen häiriö, jonka vaikutuksesta näistä aminohapoista riippuvaiset prosessit elimistössä eivät toimi normaalisti. Havaittu virheellinen y+LAT1/4F2hc kuljetuskompleksin sijainti edellyttää lisätutkimuksia sen mahdol¬lisen kliinisen merkityksen selvittämiseksi.
Resumo:
y+LAT1 is a transmembrane protein that, together with the 4F2hc cell surface antigen, forms a transporter for cationic amino acids in the basolateral plasma membrane of epithelial cells. It is mainly expressed in the kidney and small intestine, and to a lesser extent in other tissues, such as the placenta and immunoactive cells. Mutations in y+LAT1 lead to a defect of the y+LAT1/4F2hc transporter, which impairs intestinal absorbance and renal reabsorbance of lysine, arginine and ornithine, causing lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI), a rare, recessively inherited aminoaciduria with severe multi-organ complications. This thesis examines the consequences of the LPI-causing mutations on two levels, the transporter structure and the Finnish patients’ gene expression profiles. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) confocal microscopy, optimised for this work, the subunit dimerisation was discovered to be a primary phenomenon occurring regardless of mutations in y+LAT1. In flow cytometric and confocal microscopic FRET analyses, the y+LAT1 molecules exhibit a strong tendency for homodimerisation both in the presence and absence of 4F2hc, suggesting a heterotetramer for the transporter’s functional form. Gene expression analysis of the Finnish patients, clinically variable but homogenic for the LPI-causing mutation in SLC7A7, revealed 926 differentially-expressed genes and a disturbance of the amino acid homeostasis affecting several transporters. However, despite the expression changes in individual patients, no overall compensatory effect of y+LAT2, the sister y+L transporter, was detected. The functional annotations of the altered genes included biological processes such as inflammatory response, immune system processes and apoptosis, indicating a strong immunological involvement for LPI.
Resumo:
Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is a recessively inherited disorder characterised by reduced plasma and increased urinary levels of cationic amino acids (CAAs), protein malnutrition, growth failure and hyperlipidemia. Some patients develop severe immunological, renal and pulmonary complications. All Finnish patients share the same LPIFin mutation in the SLC7A7 gene that encodes CAA transporter y+LAT1. The aim of this study was to examine molecular factors contributing to the various symptoms, systemic metabolic and lipid profiles, and innate immune responses in LPI. The transcriptomes, metabolomes and lipidomes were analysed in whole-blood cells and plasma using RNA microarrays and gas or liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques, respectively. Toll-like receptor (TLR) signalling in monocyte-derived macrophages exposed to pathogens was scrutinised using qRT-PCR and the Luminex technology. Altered levels of transcripts participating in amino acid transport, immune responses, apoptosis and pathways of hepatic and renal metabolism were identified in the LPI whole-blood cells. The patients had increased non-essential amino acid, triacylglycerol and fatty acid levels, and decreased plasma levels of phosphatidylcholines and practically all essential amino acids. In addition, elevated plasma levels of eight metabolites, long-chain triacylglycerols, two chemoattractant chemokines and nitric oxide correlated with the reduced glomerular function in the patients with kidney disease. Accordingly, it can be hypothesised that the patients have increased autophagy, inflammation, oxidative stress and apoptosis, leading to hepatic steatosis, uremic toxicity and altered intestinal microbe metabolism. Furthermore, the LPI macrophages showed disruption in the TLR2/1, TLR4 and TLR9 pathways, suggesting innate immune dysfunctions with an excessive response to bacterial infections but a deficient viral DNA response.
Resumo:
Lipid movement in cells occurs by a variety of methods. Lipids diffuse freely along the lateral plane of a membrane and can translocate between the lipid leaflets, either spontaneously or with the help of enzymes. Lipid translocation between the different cellular compartments predominantly takes place through vesicular transport. Specialized lipid transport proteins (LTPs) have also emerged as important players in lipid movement, as well as other cellular processes. In this thesis we have studied the glycolipid transport protein (GLTP), a protein that transports glycosphingolipids (GSLs). While the in vitro properties of GLTP have been well characterized, its cell biological role remains elusive. By altering GSL and GLTP levels in cells, we have extracted clues towards the protein's function. Based on the results presented in this thesis and in previous works, we hypothesize that GLTP is involved in the GSL homeostasis in cells. GLTP most likely functions as a transporter or sensor of newly synthesized glucosylceramide (GlcCer), at or near the site of GlcCer synthesis. GLTP also seems to be involved in the synthesis of globotriacylceramide, perhaps in a manner that is similar to that of the fourphosphate adaptor protein 2, another GlcCer-transporting LTP. Additionally, we have developed and studied a novel method of introducing ceramides to cells, using a solvent-free approach. Ceramides are important lipids that are implicated in several cellular functions. Their role as proapoptotic molecules is particularly evident. Ceramides form stable bilayer structures when complexed with cholesterol phosphocholine (CholPC), a large-headgroup sterol. By adding ceramide/CholPC complexes to the growth medium, various chain length ceramides were successfully delivered to cells in culture. The uptake rate was dependent on the chain length of the ceramide, where shorter lipids were internalized more quickly. The rate of uptake also determined how the cells metabolised the ceramides. Faster uptake favored conversion of ceramide to GlcCer, whereas slower delivery resulted mainly in breakdown of the lipid.