| Sodium leak pathway and substrate binding order in the Na+-glucose cotransporter Biophysical Journal, Volume 73, Issue 5, 1 November 1997, Pages 2503-2510 X.Z. Chen, M.J. Coady, F. Jalal, B. Wallendorff and J.Y. Lapointe Abstract The Na+-glucose cotransporter (SGLT1) expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes was shown to generate a phlorizin-sensitive sodium leak in the absence of sugars. Using the current model for SGLT1, where the sodium leak was presumed to occur after two sodium ions are bound to the free carrier before glucose binding, a characteristic concentration constant (Kc) was introduced to describe the relative importance of the sodium leak versus Na+-glucose cotransport currents. Kc represents the glucose concentration at which the Na+-glucose cotransport current is equal to the sodium leak. As both the sodium leak and the Na+-glucose cotransport current are predicted to occur after the binding of two sodium ions, the model predicted that Kc should be sodium-independent. However, by using a two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique, the observed Kc was shown to depend strongly on the external sodium concentration ([Na+]o): it was four times higher at 5 mM [Na+]o than at 20 mM [Na+]o. In addition, the magnitude of the sodium leak varied as a function of [Na+]o in a Michaelian fashion, and the sodium affinity constant for the sodium leak was 2–4 times lower than that for cotransport in the presence of low external glucose concentrations (50 or 100 microM), whereas the current model predicted a sigmoidal sodium dependence of the sodium leak and identical sodium affinities for the sodium leak and the Na+-glucose cotransport. These observations indicate that the sodium leak occurs after one sodium ion is associated with the carrier and agree with predictions from a model with the binding order sodium-glucose-sodium. This conclusion was also supported by experiments performed where protons replaced Na+ as a "driving cation." Abstract | PDF (816 kb) |
| Investigating the Conformational States of the Rabbit Na/Glucose Cotransporter Biophysical Journal, Volume 84, Issue 6, 1 June 2003, Pages 3690-3702 Daniel Krofchick and Mel Silverman Abstract The Na and voltage-dependence of transient rabbit Na/glucose cotransporter (rSGLT1) kinetics was studied with the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique and oocytes. Using step changes in membrane potential, in the absence of glucose but with 100 or 10mM Na, transient currents were measured corresponding to binding/debinding of Na and conformational changes of the protein. Previously, only a single time constant has been published for rSGLT1. We, however, observed three decay components; a fast (, 0.5–1ms) voltage- and Na-independent decay, and medium (, 0.5–4ms) and slow (, 8–50ms) voltage- and Na-dependent decays. Transient currents were simulated and fit using a four-state model to obtain kinetic parameters for the system. The four-state model was able to reconstitute an assortment of experimental data. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (266 kb) |
| Reduction of an Eight-State Mechanism of Cotransport to a Six-State Model Using a New Computer Program Biophysical Journal, Volume 74, Issue 2, 1 February 1998, Pages 816-830 Saïd Falk, Alexandre Guay, Catherine Chenu, Shivakumar D. Patil and Alfred Berteloot Abstract A computer program was developed to allow easy derivation of steady-state velocity and binding equations for multireactant mechanisms including or without rapid equilibrium segments. Its usefulness is illustrated by deriving the rate equation of the most general sequential iso ordered ter ter mechanism of cotransport in which two Na ions bind first to the carrier and mirror symmetry is assumed. It is demonstrated that this mechanism cannot be easily reduced to a previously proposed six-state model of Na--glucose cotransport, which also includes a number of implicit assumptions. In fact, the latter model may only be valid over a restricted range of Na concentrations or when assuming very strong positive cooperativity for Na binding to the glucose symporter within a rapid equilibrium segment. We thus propose an equivalent eight-state model in which the concept of positive cooperativity is best explained within the framework of a polymeric structure of the transport protein involving a minimum number of two transport-competent and identical subunits. This model also includes an obligatory slow isomerization step between the Na and glucose-binding sequences, the nature of which might reflect the presence of functionally asymmetrical subunits. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (292 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 6, 2405-2414, 1 December 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80110-4
Research Article
X.Z. Chen, M.J. Coady, F. Jackson, A. Berteloot and J.Y. Lapointe
Département de Physique, Université de Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Phlorizin-sensitive currents mediated by a Na-glucose cotransporter were measured using intact or internally perfused Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing human SGLT1 cDNA. Using a two-microelectrode voltage clamp technique, measured reversal potentials (Vr) at high external alpha-methylglucose (alpha MG) concentrations were linearly related to In[alpha MG]o, and the observed slope of 26.1 +/- 0.8 mV/decade indicated a coupling ratio of 2.25 +/- 0.07 Na ions per alpha MG molecule. As [alpha MG]o decreased below 0.1 mM, Vr was no longer a linear function of In[alpha MG]o, in accordance with the suggested capacity of SGLT1 to carry Na in the absence of sugar (the "Na leak"). A generalized kinetic model for SGLT1 transport introduces a new parameter, Kc, which corresponds to the [alpha MG]o at which the Na leak is equal in magnitude to the coupled Na-alpha MG flux. Using this kinetic model, the curve of Vr as a function of In[alpha MG]o could be fitted over the entire range of [alpha MG]o if Kc is adjusted to 40 +/- 12 microM. Experiments using internally perfused oocytes revealed a number of previously unknown facets of SGLT1 transport. In the bilateral absence of alpha MG, the phlorizin-sensitive Na leak demonstrated a strong inward rectification. The affinity of alpha MG for its internal site was low; the Km was estimated to be between 25 and 50 mM, an order of magnitude higher than that found for the extracellular site. Furthermore, Vr determinations at varying alpha MG concentrations indicate a transport stoichiometry of 2 Na ions per alpha MG molecule: the slope of Vr versus In[alpha MG]o averaged 30.0 +/- 0.7 mV/decade (corresponding to a stoichiometry of 1.96 +/- 0.04 Na ions per alpha MG molecule) whenever [alpha MG]o was higher than 0.1 mM. These direct observations firmly establish that Na ions can utilize the SGLT1 protein to cross the membrane either alone or in a coupled manner with a stoichiometry of 2 Na ions per sugar, molecule.