Affiliation:
1. Clinical Nutrition Unit and Department of Medicine, Montefiore Hospital and University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, U.S.A.
Abstract
A function of the abundant cytoplasmic peptidases in red blood cells could be hydrolysis of oligopeptides circulating in plasma. To investigate whether human red blood cells actively transport dipeptides for this purpose, these cells were incubated with 14C-labelled glycylproline, glycylsarcosine, glycine, proline and alanine. There was uptake of each dipeptide, as indicated by their recovery as dipeptides in the cell cytoplasm. However, after a brief time (1-2 min) uptake of dipeptides abruptly ceased, while that of amino acids continued. As a result, after 30 min red blood cell uptake of amino acids was 5-13-fold greater than that of any dipeptide. Investigation of intracellular contents after 1 min of incubation revealed different metabolism for different dipeptides. The composition of intracellular radioactivity was 19-71% as intact dipeptides, 0-20% as free amino acids and 8-77% as neither dipeptides nor constituent amino acids. Investigation of the mechanism of dipeptide uptake by red blood cells showed: (1) a lack of hydrolysis by the plasma membrane, (2) no non-specific binding to the plasma membrane, and (3) a lack of saturation over a wide range of concentrations (0.05-50 mM). The data suggest that the mechanism of uptake of trace amounts of dipeptides by human red blood cells is either by simple diffusion or by a carrier system which has a very weak affinity for dipeptides. Upon entry, depending on the molecular structure, dipeptides are either hydrolysed or transformed into new compounds. The red blood cell uptake, however, does not appear to play any appreciable role in clearance of dipeptides from the plasma in the human.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
35 articles.
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