Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire de Biochimie, Faculté de Médecine, 06 107 Nice Cedex 02, France
Abstract
To reinvestigate the “hydrolase-related transport” concept, neutral α-d-glucosidase, a membrane-bound disaccharidase of renal proximal tubule, was first purified from brush-border membranes and then asymmetrically reincorporated into egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles. Proteolytic treatments and immunotitration studies demonstrated that this enzyme was integrated in native and artificial membrane vesicles with a similar topology. The uptake of free glucose and glucose produced by maltose hydrolysis was studied using 1) proteoliposomes containing integrated neutral α-d-glucosidase, in combination with other membrane proteins, and 2) proteoliposomes containing only the other membrane proteins but incubated in a medium containing neutral α-d-glucosidase in its hydrophilic form. No modification was observed in the uptake of freed-glucose or d-glucose produced by maltose hydrolysis, regardless of enzyme localization. In contrast to previous findings on the hydrolase-related transport concept, these results rule out any participation of neutral α-d-glucosidase in the transport of free glucose or glucose produced by maltose hydrolysis. Hydrolytic activity and transmembrane transport appear to be two independent and sequential steps.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology